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Report: #421027

Complaint Review: Axis Advertising - Tempe Arizona

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  • Reported By: Scottsdale Arizona
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  • Axis Advertising 2227 48th St Tempe AZ Tempe, Arizona U.S.A.

Axis Advertising Another company trying to do the Pyramid Scheme. TOTAL SCAM and deceptive hiring tactics! Has gone by many different names, Hyphire solutions, Landers group, etc.. Tempe Arizona

*Consumer Comment: Axis Incorporated Tempe SCAM

*Consumer Comment: Almost made the same mistake.

*General Comment: Thanks for the Info

*UPDATE EX-employee responds: An ex-employee of Hinshaw and Co. sounds off

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Axis Advertising has been known as many different names, Hyphire, Landers group, Pinnacle solutions to name a few.
I was drawn to this company from jobbing.com, it said in the ad that:

Our Management Training Program is recognized as one of the best in the advertising industry! Imagine representing the best clients and receiving FULL PAID TRAINING to jump start your career!

I should have known this was too good to be true the ad went on to say:
Receive world-class training with pay
Excellent pay structure / earn bonuses and incentive travel
Apply a proven business model
Represent an amazing portfolio of clients

Now this company is legit and they do I'm sure make money but their deceptive hiring process makes me skeptical that I would be making money right off the bat.
Also their "training" consists of 2 hours in the class room before you go out the first day to SELL to customers.

So here's the deal they call you after you send in your resume to interview. You go in to a room full of people in a small office where people are coming in and out of 2 doors. There are tons of interviewees all shapes and sizes filling out paperwork coming in and out. The first interview takes about 5 minutes they say that they cannot hire you on paper and then get you back for another interview the next day which is 4 HOURS long!
I unfortunately thought that this was a good sign, but oh was I wrong. So the next day I came in at 12 after the "trainers" class and was taken out with one girl the "trainer" and another girl who had just gotten hired yesterday.

So I was told to drive my own car, because they would be there a full day and I only needed to be there till 4.
So we get to home depot (one of their clients which I have to say is a pretty good). The thing is though that they aren't really affiliated with the store. They go in there and try to sell cabinet resurfacing to random people in the store. They go up to someone trying to buy tools and trick them into setting up a free quote for cabinet resurfacing. The sales person never asks them if they want to they just go through the motions.
Once they talk about it they ask the customer for their area code and call some call center in Florida to see if they are doing free quotes for cabinet re-facing in that area code and if they are they get the customer on the phone to give the person on the phone their info for the free quote. One guy we went up to was like "I don't want this! why are you bothering me?" and handed the phone back to the girl.

The trainer I was with told me that they went to everywhere in the store but the cabinet area to find people because they might not know it was an option. She made it seem like she was doing people a favor. She also said that they needed to talk to 100 people a day to get 6 sells.
After all this I started to think WAIT I did not sign up for sales I signed up for ADVERTISING!
It was all so weird. I also did not think they would want me to go around to people in home depots and pester them about getting something they didn't even come to the store to get in the first place.

She told me that each sell I would get $35 and if I could get 6 a day I would make $55,000 a year. This was working 6 days a week for 10 hours a day!

Now I am not saying this isn't impossible and that for some people this may be a great opportunity but for most of us "Entry-level graduates" we want a salary with benefits. This had no salary, no benefits until you become "Manager." And you are not even guaranteed that because it takes 4-6 months to become a manager.
And the managers make a portion of what the new people make so I'm assuming they make commission too based on how well the people below them perform.

Its basically a Pyramid Scheme. The company is hiring many people to promote to managers who can then hire their own people to make them money. So basically the girl who I went to home depot with is trying to recruit other people so that she can train them and make them work for her. I'm sure she did not think this was a scam and it sounded good but that is what they are doing. Then they go off to other cities with the people they recruited and start the process all over again because they have maxed out their resources in the other city.
So anyway after going out with the girl I was sent back to the office to take a "test." Then I was taken back into the office answered a few questions and the guys said "Welcome to our team!" and stuck out his hand to shake it. I asked if I could think about it and get back to him because I had other interviews. He said the offer was on the table now and he had a lot of other interviewee's that he was going to hire. I was really caught off guard so I shook his hand and left. Then, later on in the day I called them back saying that I would not take the offer and the lady was like "Okay, bye" that was it!

I just hope that for people who want a real career and want to do something worthwhile do not waste their time with this company. Its a shame that during this hard economic time people can try to exploit the need for a job. This company will hire just about anyone and right now people are really needy for a job. I just hope that people understand what this company entails and if you are going to get involved you know what you are getting yourself into.

I fortunately looked at this site after my second interview and found many complaints about this company. People had the exact same experience as I did and that made me understand it more. People even had the same experiences in other sates!

My advice is to keep looking and beware of companies like this one! Good luck out there it's tough but keep your head held high and realize every hard time must come to and end.

Loulou
Scottsdale, Arizona
U.S.A.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 02/06/2009 11:50 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/axis-advertising/tempe-arizona/axis-advertising-another-company-trying-to-do-the-pyramid-scheme-total-scam-and-deceptive-421027. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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#4 Consumer Comment

Axis Incorporated Tempe SCAM

AUTHOR: greengaloshes - (United States of America)

POSTED: Wednesday, April 20, 2011

I personally have been a victim of this scam taking place in Tempe, Arizona. Company called Axis Incorporated offers great marketing and management positions for motivated individuals. They schedule you for an interview right away and tell you that it's a great managerial position with advancement opportunities. You just have to go through a 6-month training that is fully paid with no obligations afterwards. Too good to be true.

After coming to the second interview they still don't tell you what the job actually entails after you're "on the location" where a person just like you that have started working very recently is telling you how wonderful this job is and how much possibility it gives. In the meanwhile they mention that yes the 6-month training entails you selling items/services to people in stores like Home Depot, Best Buy, Walmart, Costco, etc. Because you have to learn sales part in order to be eligible for advancement in to the managerial position that will allow you earn $75K+ a year.

Unfortunately neither on the phone nor in the 1st interview anyone tells you that you will have to be doing in store sales for months and it's not a REAL marketing job. Even after getting advanced to the next level, you never work in marketing but it's an HR job to interview and bring in as many people as possible to do the in-store sales. You manage the people and hope they will weed out after 6 months or advance to the next level to again hire people to do in-store sales and so forth. It's like a spinning wheel and a pyramid that is growing and people have no idea what's happening!

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#3 Consumer Comment

Almost made the same mistake.

AUTHOR: desertdoll - (United States of America)

POSTED: Saturday, February 19, 2011

I had an interview with them last week. I was suspicious about what the girl was telling me on the phone and googled it. Glad I found this report.

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#2 General Comment

Thanks for the Info

AUTHOR: Trepaz - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Thursday, August 26, 2010

I wasn't sure about this company! I sent in my resume, they called me & I was invited for an interview. I thought the interview was way too short. So when I got home, I did a google on it and was glad I found your blog.


I don't need a job, that bad!
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#1 UPDATE EX-employee responds

An ex-employee of Hinshaw and Co. sounds off

AUTHOR: Brian - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Tuesday, June 09, 2009

It almost sounds like you got off easy. You're "day of O" only lasted 4 hours. Mine lasted 9.

First just let me say this. In a strictly technical, literal way, these companies (affiliated with Innovage/DS_Max/Cydcor) conduct a very simple, elegant, basic business model. They source cheap merchandise or service offerings from overseas, (or the cabinet company working with Home Depot) and then advertise them to the target audience. This does actually produce MUCH more business than some pamphlet somewhere.

So how do these seemingly simple, basic companies end up so reviled on sites such as these? These sites are swarming with angry ex-employees who feel that these companies have drastically hurt them in some way. Where do these companies go so horribly wrong?

Well, the reality is, this is a truly dismal job to actually do. I did the cruising around Home Depot thing and it might be decent, except that you have to do almost anything to get these people interested. We never pretended to be helping them as this girl was, but we were very pushy and annoying I'm sure. I also pitched some DirecTV in the Depots and even slung some coupon books a few times.

Now the Phoenix, now Tempe office you were at is actually one of the less awful offices from what I've read on these sites. On a scale of 1 to 10, 1 being an office run by some scumbag ex-con who practically rapes his female employees as some offices apparently are and 10 being a legitimate, sustained business, Hinshaw's operation probably rates a 6. But the bar is low for DS-Max companies no doubt.

The problem with these companies is that you feel that you being scammed basically from day one. I remember my first day in the field, I asked for a realistic estimate of how much I could expect to make. The campaign leader told me with a dead straight face, "Oh about $60,000 to $80,000." It doesn't take a genius to realize that this comes to over $1000 a week. My best week EVER in the almost three months I worked there was about $360. Why do these companies have to knowingly lie so grandiosely? You are constantly being promoted the phenomenal money being made by these owners. Yet they all lived in Hinshaw's basement.

I've never worked in another place where intelligence and education was so mocked. It's as if they should have a sign that reads "only the dumbest, most ignorant, incredibly stupid, naive, gullible, pathetic, moronic, idiotic, fools alive need apply" posted on the front door. I honestly feel sorry for many of the leaders and managers. They all have so much invested in this lie that they essentially have no choice but to continue the charade. This organization WILL take over your life if you stick around long enough. Hang in the company long enough and your friendships will be in ruins, you will have accumulated the debt of a small country, and will have no life outside the "opportunity". Not to sound melodramatic, but this business tragically wastes the time and energies of some originally well-meaning people. I don't think many of these people started out wanting to scam people. But most people end up in some desperate straits in this business, and these people desperately lie to people almost out of self-preservation. They actually encourage people to drop out of educational programs to chase this ridiculous dream.

One day you'll probably see a documentary on this organization. Maybe that will stop this organization from spreading. Until then, I pray they harm as few people as possible..

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