... the greatest entrepreneurial opportunities will be in DISTRIBUTING rather than in manufacturing wellness products." Paul Zane Pilzer

"By the year 2010, the wellness industry will reach one trillion dollars. It'll exceed any other industry on the horizon including the internet and the stock market." Paul Zane Pilzer

Paul Zane Pilzer Interviewed By John Milton Fogg
(Network Marketing Lifestyles Magazine, September 2001)

Every generation, among the thousands of brilliant and merely-bright social commentators, the human race produces one or two visionaries whose stunning insights burst the bounds of their own specialist's expertise and cut across all disciplines. We have our Benjamin Franklins, our Buckminster Fullers - and Paul Zane Pilzer, the man who sizes up seismic shifts in our economy.

Pilzer is quick to assert that he has no crystal ball: it's all in the data. But the three-times New York Times best-selling author and economic advisor to two presidential administrations has an uncanny knack for assembling masses of facts and figures and seeing the forests those reams of trees represent. His penetrating insights have attracted the attention of network marketers for over a decade.

Now he's back, with a new message: We are witnessing the explosive birth of a new trillion-dollar industry, and network marketers everywhere are poised to be the vanguard of that explosion.

After two centuries of economic opportunity for the pioneers of manufacturing, we have entered the age of distribution. Today, the greatest opportunity for wealth awaits those who can deliver what Pilzer calls "intellectual distribution."

He is describing network marketing. He is, as the saying goes, singing our song.

Q: Paul, you were the first well-known economist to have anything kind to say about network marketing. What got your attention about the business in the first place?
Q: Can you give us some examples of those "richest people" who made their fortunes in distribution?
Q: How did your observations about wealth and distribution get network marketers' attention?
Q: That was over a decade ago, and you've since become a household word to thinking network marketers everywhere. Obviously, your thinking hasn't stood still; what has happened in the ten years since?
Q: For example...?
Q: Why is that where the real opportunities are today?
Q: So where do we learn today?
Q: How does network marketing's way of doing that contrast with more conventional ways of marketing - through advertising and other mass channels?
Q: So you've seen the weight of opportunity shift from manufacturing, to physical distribution, and now to intellectual distribution. How else has your own thinking changed? What is the focus of The Next Trillion?
Q: Can you define "wellness" for us?
Q: Is there a ray of sunshine here?
Q: Why do you call this the "next" trillion?
Q: Who is spending this Money?
Q: Do you get reactions, people saying, "What...a trillion dollars?!"
Q: Does that same challenge of the bottleneck, the need for intellectual distribution, apply to the wellness industry, too?
Q: What connection do you see between network marketing and this wellness revolution?
Q: You change the channel.
Q: What do you see for the decade ahead, Paul?
Q: As a part-time rabbi and someone who has been vegetarian (as you say in your book, for spiritual reasons), you've become pretty passionate about wellness, haven't you?