Brad...
Have you ever sold Kirbys, or been a Kirby distributor? Back a few years, I sold G4s, a lot of them. I did training for my distributor. SOME distributors make a good living, and some of those deserve to. Some do not. Ethics, for many distributors, not all, but many, take a backseat to profit. I have seen it. I was on track to be a Kirby distributor three different times. Ultimately, I could not stomach the lack of ethics in the Kirby structure. They talk a good game, but nowhere, at anytime did I ever hear a distributor say things like "Illegal drugs have no place in my organization." or "A demo is not a date. Keep your clothes on and keep your personal life out of your professional life." From what I witnessed, those things need to be said, and said regularly.
Trust me, even distributors who are successful feel cheated out of revenue from bags, belts, rebuilds, and accessories sold via the internet in their territory. And there is not a regular factory sponsored program for selling Kirby cleaning products and solutions. It is a revenue stream that would be grown to undreamed of heights if the distributors were to receive compensation for it. And it would help struggling dealers by giving them opportunities to sell additional products to their customers, including family and friends who did not purchase a Kirby.
The average longevity of a distributor is key. Many do not last very long. Some do, many do not. It takes more than sales ability to be a good distributor. In fact, often the very traits that make the highest unit volume salesmen make for unsuccessful distributors, because they lack the interpersonal skills that make them good developers of future distributors. Distributor development is pretty much a 'sink or swim' technique.