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Yor.net headquarters is located on the 8th floor of the Griffin Towers in South
Coast Metro , California. Yor.net also has redundant servers in the Qwest
data center in Burbank. Our award winning management team has a combined experience
of over 50 years in Network Marketing, Internet, Computer Networking, Software
Programming, and Business Operations.
All of the Yor.net products are hosted exclusively on Dell servers in the most
state-of-the art data centers. The network is managed by Microsoft Certified
System Engineers. A Microsoft Partner is responsible for the development of the
code, and the graphics are all created by a team of Certified Web Designers.
The most impressive aspect of the company, though, is the support. At Yor.net
you will find an extremely friendly and knowledgeable staff. Marketing Support
is always there to assist the Independent Representatives, and the Technical
Support staff provides world-class support to the Yor customers. Come Xperience
it for youself and catch the Xcitement! Welcome to Yor.net - Xtreme.
Yor.net Mission
To create a financial empire built on the foundation of truth and the
strength of friends
Yor.net Vision
To offer the greatest financial vehicle for the average person throughout
the known world.
Yor.net Industry
In 6,000 years of recorded time great improvements in technology have occurred.
The advances made in the last 100 years were good. The last 50 years were
better, but the last decade was simply incredible. The Internet is one of the
most revolutionary technological advancements ever created by the human race.
The Internet has emerged as a critical part of our every day lives. The
transformation of the Internet in the last couple of years has been amazing.
This will never happen again. We are moving from the Flintstone’s age to the
Jetson’s age. These advances have created several opportunities so the timing
couldn’t be any better today.
To make money in this world wouldn’t you want to be involved in one of the
greatest innovations ever in the history of mankind? The Internet revolution
has only just begun. To participate in the Internet industry you must think
bigger. Instead of being an average customer you must have the mentality of a
business owner. A successful entrepreneur knows that the near term future of
the Internet is heading towards High Speed (DSL, Cable, and Satellite) and
Wireless (3G, WiFi). We are still in the infancy stage of this next phase. The
biggest challenge facing the industry is availability and price. Consumers in
general are overcharged and poorly serviced by the monopoly carriers. Some
companies have tried to allocate massive amounts of resources in these areas.
Unfortunately most of the companies never generated a profit and have gone
bankrupt (Northpoint, Rhythms, Excite@Home, Relay Point, etc.). The successful
business owner should learn from these mistakes. Take the path of least
resistance and pick the fruit that is ripe, not green and sour. The ripened
fruit to pick today is definitely the "broadband alternative"- high speed dial
up. Now consumers can get the benefits of high speed Internet at a
price they can afford.
History has a way of repeating itself and we should learn from our humble
beginnings. Before the deregulation of long distance in 1984, AT&T was one
of the richest companies in America. Microwave Communications Inc. (MCI) used
to be a two way radio company for truckers. The company broke into AT&T’s
monopoly and prepared themselves for the ball game. They realized that
multilevel marketing was an extremely powerful way to reach consumers directly.
Instead of just trying to out-spend AT&T in advertising, they chose to
align themselves with a company called Amway which had a huge distributor base
selling household goods. In a short period of time large amounts of customers
switched their long distance service to MCI. The old telegraph system from
southern pacific railroad, renamed Sprint, incorporated the same marketing
strategy by teaming up with a company called Network 2000.
After MCI and Sprint amassed a large customer base both companies began spending
more money on advertising and traditional marketing. WorldCom, another start-up
telecommunications company was started by a former High School basketball
coach, Bernie Ebbers. He built a massive telecommunications empire and
developed enough resources to acquire UUNet, the world’s largest Internet
backbone. WorldCom eventually bought MCI and even tried to buy Sprint. The
small fish has now eaten the big fish. Through all of this AT&T has gone
from 100% of the market share to around 40%.
So as history repeats itself today, AT&T can be likened to AOL, MCI to
NetZero/Juno and WorldCom to Yor.net. This industry is more competitive than
ever. In the next two to three years AOL is going to continue to lose its
customer base to smaller, more aggressive companies. You have the opportunity
to become a part of the most creative and innovative of these companies-
Yor.net.
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