I worked for Nicholas Gow at his previous company in Maitland, FL, BlackRock Consultants. Anyone interested in working at Next Consultants should also check out the reviews on BlackRock. Gow spoke openly about writing fake reviews on Glassdoor when I knew him. If you check the dates on the BlackRock reviews you will notice that the positive ones are all dated very close to each other, and are similar in style and tone.
A common tactic for pyramid schemes is that they often change their names and locations as soon as the reviews to get too bad and people will no longer work for them. Now that BlackRock is permanently closed, I can only assume that Nick has transferred his previous business model to a new office in Illinois. The tactics should be the same: he will mislead you in the interview, which is mostly a sales pitch, about the work you will be doing, the hours you will have to put in, and the pay that you are likely to receive. Most people quit very quickly when they realize that they have been misled. While it is technically true that you CAN make a lot of money, anyone who is not already very comfortable in sales should steer clear. It is very difficult, very demanding work that will drain you emotionally. I came very close to having to live out of my car while I worked for Nicholas Gow. During the day I had to drive extremely far with no gas compensation to go door to door selling a really mediocre product. You are trained to lie to your potential customers regarding the services they will receive.
Unsurprisingly, most people are not receptive to a stranger knocking on their door. You will be cursed at, slandered, have doors slammed in your face, and 95% of the people you meet are going to hate you. And there will be many days where you go through all of that and will walk away with absolutely nothing to show for it, because the job is 100% commission.
IF you are already an excellent salesperson, with an extremely thick skin, this job might be worth it for you. But, you could probably still make more working in a different sales environment. You can make a LOT of money if you end up opening your own office, but unless you're also comfortable lying to YOUR future employees to make that money, probably your conscience will be better served working elsewhere.
The time I spent working for Nick Gow was the darkest time of my life. I regret it immensely. It was very damaging to my mental health and well being, it made me feel worthless and small. I sincerely wish I could take it back.