M.Network is purging affiliates who dare question its vision for the company formerly known as Jamberry Nails.
The company announced yesterday it's ditching the Jamberry brand entirely, rebranding as M.Global in what executives are calling a "brand refresh." Senior Vice President Dave Webb unveiled the rebrand and new logo at a company event in Nashville, Tennessee, emphasizing unity over division. "We are a united group. We are not 'M' and Jamberry. We're 'M,'" he said.
But for hundreds of Jamberry Nails affiliates who joined M.Network after the acquisition, the message was brutal: fall in line or get out.
Multiple affiliates reported that M.Network staff infiltrated private Facebook groups where consultants were discussing the rebrand. Those who expressed criticism found themselves terminated without warning. Termination letters cited "Policy & Procedures violations" for disparaging the company and its staff. One consultant received this notice: "The comments made against Home Office staff and M.Network in a Facebook group were slanderous and violated the P&P that Consultants agree to follow."
M.Network has not provided any specific examples of the allegedly slanderous posts to the terminated affiliates.
The aggressive move marks a sharp departure from what many Jamberry loyalists expected after the acquisition. They believed they'd be able to continue selling the nail wraps they'd built their businesses around with minimal disruption. That calculation has shifted dramatically.
The rebrand itself signals M.Network's complete rejection of its predecessor. New M.Global nail wraps are rolling out to replace the Jamberry product line. The old brand name is being erased.
The handling of the transition has been sloppy from the start. When M.Network first acquired Jamberry Nails, executives went silent. Affiliates had no idea what was happening or what their futures looked like. M.Network refused to comment publicly. Now, after months of confusion and radio silence, the company is sending a clear signal: those uncomfortable with the new direction can leave on their own, or be pushed out.
What's troubling is the method. Rather than having transparent conversations with the affiliate base, M.Network sent staffers undercover into private group chats. When they found critics, they used those private conversations as ammunition for terminations.
Affiliate consultants had legitimate questions. They'd built relationships with customers around a specific brand. They wanted clarity on what was happening to their income streams. That's not slander—that's business concern. M.Network had the information these people needed and the responsibility to communicate it directly.
Instead, the company chose surveillance and swift punishment. It's a play that protects the rebrand but burns bridges with the very people who might have adapted if given honest answers and a reasonable transition period.
The message to former Jamberry Nails affiliates is unmistakable: accept M.Global completely or don't stick around. M.Network isn't interested in dialogue. It's interested in control.
🤖 Quick Answer
What did M.Network announce regarding its brand identity?M.Network announced a complete rebrand, abandoning the Jamberry Nails name entirely. The company unveiled a new logo and brand identity at a Nashville event, with executives emphasizing organizational unity under the M.Global designation rather than maintaining separate brand identities.
How did M.Network respond to dissenting affiliates?
M.Network staff reportedly monitored private Facebook groups where consultants discussed the rebrand. Affiliates expressing criticism or concerns faced removal or termination from the company, enforcing compliance with the new corporate direction and eliminating internal dissent.
What was the stated purpose of M.Network's rebrand initiative?
Company executives framed the rebrand as a "brand refresh" intended to unify the organization following the Jamberry Nails acquisition. Senior leadership positioned the transition as necessary for organizational cohesion and forward momentum under the M.
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