Maria-Louise Genet
 
Initially, my main goal was to regain my health. I was recovering from a burnout, and I noticed that the supplements were doing wonders for me. Gradually, I started to feel better, and I didn’t want to stop taking these supplements, which are made from natural ingredients and, as such, actually work in the body (unlike the synthetic rubbish from the chemical industry). I can trust Beyuna 100% that no synthetic fillers, excipients, or colourings are used in the final product. Additionally, every batch is tested for doping-related substances, which is highly exceptional compared to companies that only carry out random sampling of their products.
Beyuna’s supplements are costly because the production process is entirely different and much more intense than in the factories of the chemical industry, which can run 24/7. While chemistry relies heavily on automated processes and synthetic vitamin C often comes from unnatural sources, Beyuna partners with suppliers whose ingredients come from farmers who do not spray their land. For example, Amla berries can only be harvested once a year. The farmers (and fishermen) are paid fair wages, and there is no child labour involved. These are all values I personally hold dear, as I have a background as a university lecturer in soil and human rights, medical liability, and contract law.
During the Academy, you learn a great deal about these aspects, which is when you realise why these products carry a different price tag than supplements you’d find in a drugstore. There’s still a lot of manual labour involved, and fully automated capsule machines cannot always be used, meaning the production process is much slower than in companies where everything is fully automated. Moreover, the capsules are of extremely high quality, unlike most capsules made from gelatin (slaughterhouse waste) or chlorine-bleached wood fibres (HPMC), which may cause digestive issues or result in the unintended ingestion of high levels of hormones, antibiotics, pharmaceutical residues, and other toxic substances without the consumer being aware of it. This is exactly why the products are not sold in stores but only through individual distributors. Knowledge transfer is something we highly value.
It took me a while to realise what a unique opportunity Beyuna offers to people who no longer fit into the system for various reasons, particularly for truth-seekers and truth-tellers. Once I truly understood that, a whole new world opened up for me, and now, I wouldn’t want to do anything else. The opportunity to run a business independently with the support of Beyuna is a blessing.
"If you dare to take this leap, it’s one of the most beautiful things that can happen to you. "
I’ve largely regained my health and am well on my way to financial independence. This means freedom, and freedom is, personally, the most important value in life for me. I want to speak, think, and work freely. However, with freedom also comes responsibility, which is not for everyone. If you dare to take this leap, it’s one of the most beautiful things that can happen to you. I am extremely grateful to Beyuna for all the opportunities I’ve been given here. I know no other company that is as integral and transparent in everything they do. I believe I’ve learned more this past year than I did during my law studies and legal training, even though I did acquire essential knowledge in those seven years.
I’m honestly very curious to see where I’ll be in five or ten years or where the world will be at that point. We’re living in very turbulent and confusing times, and I personally feel like we’re in the eye of the storm. Therefore, it’s important to stay focused and keep our course steady, navigating well and letting the dot on the horizon be my compass.
What I find most beautiful about Beyuna is that money in the world is distributed in a very different way than we’re used to from multinational corporations. Here, the money goes to the people who are actually doing the work, not to useless advertising agencies and large investment firms that only drain the local economy. In these corporations, perverse financial interests take precedence, and there is often a tendency to turn a blind eye to corrupt practices. Beyuna, however, places people at the centre: ‘health over profit’ rather than the other way around. As it should be.
The distributors are first and foremost ambassadors (rather than salespeople). We also use the products ourselves and, through weekly training sessions for those who want them, delve deeper into the products and their active ingredients, so we can properly advise others on which products might be beneficial for them. We are actually compensated for these pieces of advice. This is a much fairer way of working. It’s also a smarter way of working; we help each other, and we all benefit from that. The money doesn’t “leak” away but stays within the local economy. In short: a wonderful way of working that benefits everyone.
 
            