| RF lady seems really busy at work during the day, taking the time to respond individually to all these posts, |
Mine, too - except I'm the one who sold them for a summer in college. 20-something years ago. Parents are still using them. Good knives! |
| Anyone have dirt on Thrive Le-vel? Vitamins and shake. |
| LOL at the Office pic. |
It's just not how normal people phrase things. They'd say four figures, not six digits. Six digits sounds like you're trying to be literally truthful, but misleading. |
Sorry, I posted this before reading the whole thread (procrastinating at work!). I didn't mean to pile on. |
My mother sells Tastefully Simple and has for 16 years now. She worked a corporate job for 13 years prior to selling and overlapped the last two years. She happened to be in the right place at the right time and built a team in the hundreds and was at the very top for many years. She's still in the top leader category, but the business overall isn't doing as well so her salary is more on par with what it was a few years ago. In the hayday though, she was making six figures and is still pretty close. If you are passionate about the product, you can make it work. And for most people, sometimes all they want is a discount on the product and an extra $500 a year is a lot to some people. |
This is my income at my full time, professional job. |
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I just wanted to make a quick comment on "counter girls" at makeup counters vs. the RF Lady MLM. When I first moved here, I worked for Estee Lauder at Hecht's. I had worked as a makeup artist through my college training, which was theater. In the five years that I worked for them (started f/t then switched to p/t when I got a job in my field), they paid for countless trainings on products and skincare and makeup techniques, they paid for my licensure as a makeup artist (this is back when DC and MD required that - they don't anymore except for permanent makeup/tattoo), they gave me around $900 of free products per year to make sure that I used and knew the products, and they had contests and incentives for superior sales and service - I won a handbag and airline tickets one year, and cash bonus when our store won counter of the year for sales. I also had the opportunity to advance from sales to counter trainer to counter manager, and when I moved on to my chosen field they still had me on part time to work promotions as a makeup artist. And all the while they paid a solid hourly wage plus commission, and I got health insurance and vacation benefits. And they never charged me for product, or to set up my "business". They were a great company to work for, and they stood behind their products.
I'm posting this because there was an earlier comment to the effect of "I probably know more than a MAC counter girl", and it really rubbed me the wrong way. A number of very famous makeup artists got their start at MAC counters, and MAC and EL train their staffers very well. A friend of mine was selling Mary Kay, and I was surprised when she had me apply all the products on my skin myself, as they are trained not to touch the person - to avoid licensing legality issues. So you invite people over for a "pampering party", and they end up putting their own facials and creams on because you don't have the training to do so or want to avoid the licensing in your state? Go to your local Sephora or Ulta and talk with one of their line specialists (BeneFit, Anastasia, Lorac, etc.) I bet you they will know their products inside out, as well as show you how to apply them and new tips and tricks. Same for the big counters at Nordstroms or what have you. The R+F "I know these products because I use them" argument is the case for any over the counter company. And you walk up to the counter or makeup chair to start your purchase, vs. being pressured by a friend. |
| Thanks for posting that PP, makes me really want to go to shop at the MAC or EL counter now. I never knew that! |
| I have a family member who was into network marketing. From what I saw, they get brainwashed ... A few at the top of the scheme do make money but it is next to impossible for the people lower down in the totem pole to make much. In these companies you make the most by signing people under you not by actual selling the product. |
| Ugh, my friend who used to lament the R+F sellers just signed up as a "distributor" for Advicare. How much is this going to suck? |
| By the way, this is pp above, I actually don't mind the ones like Stella and Dot (at least it's cute jewelry, sometimes) or Pampered Chef - I bought a few things from a friend who sold that. But many of them are total schemes without a good product. |
YES, please. My childhood friend is currently sinking money into getting trained on this BS. I can't wait until her fb is full of offers to evaluate my life insurance needs or whatever. But the people who recruited her are making six figures a year, she says excitedly! Ugggggggh. |
| Here's a new one. On my flight from DCA to Chicago, the woman next to me tried giving me her doTerra sales pitch! It started off friendly- she asked me if I was from DC, what I was visiting Chicago for, explained that she was in DC touring colleges with her son, la la la. Then, somehow the conversation shifted and BAM! The next thing I know she's handing me a business card, telling me how essential oils are so much better than that "chemical-ee" (her word) junk, and I'd feel SO much better "about it all" if I tried the essential oils. She ended with a friendly, "I'm always available at this number if you have questions," and all I could think about was coming back to report to DCUM. So, if you're reading this, Essential Oils Lady in row 15 on Delta yesterday, congratulations on your infamy. |