A say in your own life — Become a Shaklee Ambassador in NZ
An honest case · written for people who hate being sold to

You don’t want more money.
You want a say.

Once the bills are covered, the biggest driver of how you feel about your work isn’t the size of the paycheck. It’s autonomy — a real say over your hours, your effort, your direction. Here’s the case for building something that’s genuinely yours, with no hype attached.

01 — The premise

The most reliable predictor of a good working life is the feeling of being in control of it.

Decades of research in self-determination theory — the work of psychologists Edward Deci and Richard Ryan — keeps landing on the same three things that make work feel worth doing: autonomy, competence, and connection to other people. Of the three, autonomy is the one most consistently tied to job satisfaction and wellbeing.

The money matters too — but mostly up to a point. Once your basic needs are met, a bigger number on the payslip barely moves how you actually feel day to day. A real say over how you spend your time moves it a great deal. That’s not wishful thinking; it’s one of the more replicated findings in work psychology.

Most jobs quietly take autonomy away. This is one of the few kinds of work built to hand it back.

Autonomy isn’t a perk. It’s the thing all the other perks are trying to make up for.
AutonomyCompetenceConnection
02 — Reasons that actually hold up

Seven reasons — and not one of them is “be your own boss.”

i

Autonomy you can actually feel.

You set the hours. You set the targets. You decide whether this is a quiet thing you do around your life or the main event. Nobody approves your leave, and there’s no ceiling someone else drew for you. That isn’t a motivational poster — it’s the structural difference between earning a wage and working for yourself.

ii

It isn’t a here-today company.

Most “opportunities” that land in your inbox are eighteen months old and built on a product nobody buys twice. Shaklee has been operating since 1956 — close to seventy years — and its founder created the first vitamin ever sold in the United States. You wouldn’t be putting your name behind something that might evaporate by next winter.

Founded 1956
iii

There’s real science behind what you’d be recommending.

This is rare in this industry. The Landmark Study — run with researchers at the University of California, Berkeley and led by epidemiologist Dr. Gladys Block — examined long-term Shaklee users and found notably better biomarkers for heart, brain and cognitive health than non-users. It’s a company-sponsored, observational study rather than a controlled trial, so read it as encouraging context, not proof. But a real, published study is more than almost any competitor can point to. Add astronauts carrying Shaklee supplements into orbit, a world-first Climate Neutral certification, and a full money-back guarantee — even on an empty container — and you’re recommending things you can stand behind. That’s the only kind of selling that lasts.

UC Berkeley · NASA · Climate Neutral
iv

The skills are yours to keep.

Whatever happens with the business itself, you walk away knowing how to sell, market, build an audience, look after customers and run your own books. Those skills transfer to anything. A salaried role almost never hands them to you so directly.

v

The downside to finding out is small.

You can start in New Zealand for roughly the price of a nice dinner out — a digital starter kit around NZ$50 — with no garage full of stock, since products ship direct from the Sydney warehouse. If it turns out not to be for you, you simply stop. Set that against the cost and risk of almost any other route into running your own thing.

≈ NZ$50 to begin · no inventory
vi

You’d be early in New Zealand.

Shaklee is well-established globally but still early in its growth here. Being early in a market is the one genuine timing advantage this model offers — fewer people ahead of you, and more room to build something before everyone else arrives.

vii

The work is built around people, not against them.

Remember the third thing the research said we need — connection. This is one of the few kinds of work where the job is talking to people about feeling better. If you genuinely like that, the social side stops being a tax on the work and becomes the point of it.

03 — The part nobody puts on a landing page

Now the bit that’s true rather than flattering.

Most people who join network-marketing businesses make very little, and a real share lose money once you count what they spend. Regulators who’ve reviewed dozens of these companies found most participants earned around a thousand dollars a year or less — before expenses. Shaklee makes no income guarantees, and neither will I.

Autonomy cuts both ways. Nobody hands you a salary, which is exactly why the income is genuinely up to what you put in — and for plenty of people, that turns out to be modest. So go in clear-eyed: treat the start-up cost as money you’re willing to spend to find out, use the products yourself first, and judge this as a small business, not a lottery ticket. If anyone ever promises you guaranteed riches, walk away — from them.

~70years Shaklee has been trading — since 1956
≈$50NZ to start — no inventory to buy or store
0income guarantees. Real, but unpromised. Earnings depend on you.

The honesty is the point. The seven reasons are the real ones — they don’t need inflating.

04 — Be honest with yourself

Whether it fits comes down to who you are — not how hard you’re sold.

A good fit if you…

  • already like the products, or the wellness world generally
  • want flexible, self-directed work you control
  • have patience and will treat it as a real business
  • actually enjoy talking to and helping people

Probably not if you…

  • need guaranteed income, and need it now
  • dislike selling or putting yourself out there
  • are hoping for money with no real work behind it
  • can’t comfortably afford to lose the start-up cost
05 — How it works in New Zealand

Four steps. No pressure, no theatrics.

i

Use the products first.

Believe in them before you ever recommend them. Everything good downstream depends on this.

ii

Activate as an Ambassador.

Pick up the digital starter kit — around NZ$50 — which registers you and sets up your account.

iii

Share, and earn on what your customers buy.

Orders ship from the Sydney warehouse. You earn commission on sales — with no income promised, by design.

iv

Build at the pace your life allows.

Side-thing or main event, fast or slow — that call is entirely yours. Which was rather the whole point.

The decision, fittingly, is entirely yours.

No hype. Just the strongest honest case there is for trading a little of someone else’s control for a lot more of your own.

Become a Shaklee Ambassador
Have a question first? Reach out — a real reply from a real person.
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