OPINION | By Michael Cody
Why Direct Selling Is One of the Most Risk-Managed Income Paths in a Volatile World
By the end of 2025, something shifted.
Not in earnings dashboards.
Not in platform press releases.
But in conversations.
Field leaders across the world began hearing the same quiet refrain from prospects coming from everywhere. Gig work. Corporate roles. Freelancing. Real estate. Even traditional small business ownership.
“I’m working hard, but I’m not sure the path I’m on actually makes sense anymore.”
That question, does this path make sense, is the real signal of the moment we are in.
The gig economy did not collapse.
Corporate careers did not disappear.
Entrepreneurship did not stop being attractive.
But across every major income path, risk has become more visible, more front-loaded, and more unevenly rewarded.
That is where Direct Selling deserves to be re-evaluated. Not emotionally. Not defensively. But comparatively.
The Post-Gig Reality: what 2025 made impossible to ignore
According to multiple labour-market and platform-economy studies published over the past two years, the global gig economy now exceeds $600 billion in estimated value, and platform-mediated work continues to expand.
At the same time, the research converges on a consistent pattern.
Earnings are increasingly compressed once unpaid time, expenses, and incentive volatility are considered.
Algorithmic management governs pay rates, visibility, job
