Written by Raisinberry

One of the common denominators shared by “career path consultants” on Pink Truth is how they know they are responsible for the decisions they made in Mary Kay, yet they still feel as if they were “led” and manipulated, by the “do what your director says” training they absorbed “sitting at the feet” of their upline.

Some people want you to think that our concerns here at PT are abnormal and do not reflect the “opportunity” that the majority of Mary Kay directors have experienced. This has intrigued me on many levels, since so many want to blame MK directors for what has happened to a great deal of them as if they hadn’t an ethical bone in their bodies.

It wasn’t like we (former directors) did unethical things all throughout our careers. It isn’t that we wanted to succeed without working for it. We certainly didn’t want to become directors to hurt anyone, nor did we want to let anyone down. For the most part we did what we could to have good months, and when it looked like it wasn’t enough, we sucked it up and started over.

We knew our jobs. Hold appointments to present marketing, to present inventory, to present prize programs and move people up using the “big picture” motivation of company events. We supported our NSDs to do guest events and keep the ball rolling. We were hunting for recruits and the orders to hit goals set by ourselves and those above us. And we soon realized there were all kinds of ways to get things done.

This is the information that the average beauty consultant does NOT have… When many of us came out of the fog, and could no longer press for orders when we knew our people hadn’t sold what they already had, and the “numbers” started dropping, a return to clarity, integrity and truth was manifested. You cannot be a leader over a pseudo-small business that offers only pin money profits from actual sales, and also sell “the Mary Kay opportunity” which has been self described as executive level income part time from home!

Directors who want you to believe they are comfortable with the income they make from Mary Kay have relinquished all responsibility for the 85% of their consultants who ordered and ordered and then fell into attrition. In fact, I would challenge every Director out there to gather up her old reports and COUNT how many consultants have come and gone over your tenure. Count up your production YTD over all your years.

Do you really want to say that all that merchandise was SOLD at retail? No, you know who buys and buys because she likes recognition. You know who has not held a class in months. You know who “stretched” to meet some qualifying contest you dangled in front of her… and now you pretend that we who have admitted it all are “unethical” whereas you are not. Like I have said before, if God opened up all knowledge about the secret deeds done in the dark concerning each director’s journey, each National’s journey, there would be none left standing.

So can we assume you know that thousands of dollars of merchandise purchased by all your past consultants went unsold? And yet YOU still got paid?

There is some “special” training that you get when your NSD or Senior Director has a goal that you are associated with. This is the “secret training,” made up of things you never thought of, that reveal themselves only in the presence of other girls who put on “big girl panties.” Since we have come clean ourselves, and revealed some of these little known atrocities, we are periodically accused of making bad decisions with finances and ethics.

Other directors apparently have convinced their crew that none of what we talk about here has EVER been a part of “their world”. Makes me laugh out loud. We are left holding the bag, shaken out of our denial and facing the very same questions that Miss Ethical consultant wants to ask us. “Why did I order more? Why did I activate those last 5 people for DIQ? Why did I go to Seminar on credit when I had no money? Why did I “qualify” that last recruit just to walk on stage? Who really cares about name badge ribbons? Can I afford to lose all this production to start over again? So what if I don’t qualify for the luncheon? Should I lose my car for the sake of a $1,000 order?”

A million questions. And apparently there are directors and consultants out there who think each of these crises of conscience could all have been answered with a resounding, “Suck up the failure and start again.”

Oh if it were so easy.

In cult systems, members are groomed to conformity (Why do you suppose you have a ridiculous uniform to aspire to?), holding an unshakeable belief in the authorities above them. Every objection has a scripted response that soothes the concerns of the members, and each member is urged to simply trust and obey, (Do what your Director says and all will work out.)

When sophisticated manipulation systems are perfected and used on the “masses”, along with a directive to never be negative, the members find themselves unable to speak of the thing that bothers them, or to get a true answer or feedback as to whether the course they are pursuing is right.

Should they know what’s right? You would think. But in peer dependent situations where you are told to believe in an unseen outcome, in order to “bring it about”, the mind lets go of the practical for the supernatural. “What you think about you bring about” are the words often spoken on the last 3 days of DIQ, along with, Believe and achieve, find a way or make a way, if it is to be its up to me, and “the pain goes away when you win”.

With that “counsel”, would any of us expect that our DIQ would not exhaust herself with every “idea” possible to make it happen? So she calls her director for help. And what do you know. There IS “special training” available. Back in the day, I was given the phone number to the distribution lobby to call and see if I could get a director out of the waiting line to take down my newest recruit’s information and walk the order in. Yes they were willing to do it. As directors they experienced the terror of the last day of DIQ and were happy to help. Otherwise there was no way to get the recruit’s information in for the month.

After our 7pm cut off, there was also the time that our NSD suggested a west coast director walk the order in. We loved our west coast director who would have to print off orders and forge signatures of course, in our grand goal of gettin’ her done for the month. All of this was applauded. Each director giving the “wink-wink” for knowing the secret way to make it happen.

Years after becoming a director, I was made aware about re-signing old consultants and getting them new consultant numbers so they counted as brand new. I just didn’t think that way, and kind of went “wow” when told all about it. Others had been doing it for years and I was apparently clueless. There was a time when we had to have 30 to get paid commission, so if we fell short because at the last minute a woman who promised to activate, failed to answer the phone, what could we do, but “find a way or make a way.”?

See the set up? Will you lose hundreds of needed dollars to live on or pay off debt, for the sake of another $225 order placed in Betty Busy’s name? Unethical? Or smart business? All the bait to “stretch” is firmly in place from new beauty consultant all the way to National.

It is so easy for people who are not in the position to judge whether we made ethical decisions or not. But it is hard to judge or determine what is ethical when the lines are blurred. Between visualizing your success, believing in what is not seen, faking till you make it, finding a way, helping with the goal, qualifying for the recognition, not letting the area down, not embarrassing yourself, speed of the leader, saving the unit, you’ll sell it next month, product is an asset, you have to be there! And of course, jumping your personal commission from 9 to 13% if you only place another $200 to hit $600… the things you do that seem to make sense today, become one stupid decision after another in hindsight.

The problem is all of Mary Kay’s marketing plan, for career path consultants, will place them at some time, in a position to hurt themselves, hurt their area, or pretend that everything is alright. Since we cannot consistently bank on sales from consumers, and the business DEPENDS on what other people do, and if you are at their mercy, will you let the dam burst, or will you find a patch and hope against hope that you can find real cement next month to make it solid again?

That is what a director is trained to do. That is why she makes the decisions that she does. She is always working, always trying, always asking, always interviewing, always holding her meeting and always waiting for her guest to show, or your guest to show, so she has another way this month to stop the bleeding.

The reason is because the direct selling home party model is one that exploits family relationships and friendships, and is for the most part resented. The hit and miss income soon becomes discouraging for the masses and they stay only as long as it takes them to figure out they are losing money. Career Path consultants, who are accustomed to “living on morsels” and are convinced the real money is in Directorship, press on.

And it’s a perfect symbiotic relationship because the Senior Director NEEDS the DIQ and red jackets to drive the production. Periodic classes produce some income and frankly the director is so happy to have a venue to meet others to recruit, she hardly notices that she has a pretty crappy customer base. (After all, if you keep recruiting you keep adding competition within your own market! This fails to pierce the pink fog, however)

When you sift the whole thing together, you have women pretending they do better than they are, chiming platitudes and sayings, pressured into performance and encouraged to do things outside normal ethics to “make it happen”, with a *wink wink* “we all did it” understanding. Anything to keep the director on the Career Path, “STRETCHING” for those dollars, that Caddy, that Unit Club, That trip, that head table, that name badge recognition, that reception and that throne.

Knowing how common this is, I can not say that all the decisions that directors have made, that have gotten them into financial hot water, belong squarely on their shoulders. They got a whole lot of help to go overboard from people who benefited from those financial decisions. They got the emails that listed every Director who ordered or qualified, in a thinly veiled attempt to guilt them into being on the list. They heard the conference call where bottom director did a $2,400 order to make up her own production, and yea for her commitment! Oh the manipulation… polished and perfected aimed at the heart of the director trying to fit in and be a part and a team player… until the coffers go bare.

And when the washed up directors bail, there is nobody who cares. It was, after all, her decision. So yes, I have heard all about being unethical and making decisions that were stupid. And I have also heard Directors share how their NSD turned the blame on them, fully knowing that they were acting on the NSD’s counsel, or subtle manipulation. (“Speed of the leader!”)

It is funny how I have never heard that accusation from a director in the same position. You really don’t know what you are talking about until you walk in another’s shoes. You really won’t know what you’ll do, when all eyes are on you, when your failure will be observed and obvious, when your colleagues promote a secret way to save face, and when your “leader” (and God) expects “your excellence”. (The definition of “excellence” from your NSD speaking for God, is making it happen and working till the final second because that’s when the miracle appears).

As phony as that is, I have also discovered that all those directors who appear so “ethical”, have simply not come clean. I can assure you there are other ways to be unethical… like frontloading a woman who hasn’t a chance in hell to make money at this, encouraged a new recruit to sign up with their consultant rather than their relative in another state, coercing customers from other consultants who appeared to not be “servicing” the customer very well… and on and on.

The “opportunity” is set up to turn well meaning women into predators, rationalizing all manner of behavior to hit the goals, win the prize, make the name. So when you are criticized here or on other sites, Miss PT Director, for sharing your sordid past, just remember, they are still doing it, and you are no longer, so who really, is the more ethical?

6 COMMENTS

  1. So well said Raisinberry. This line got me thinking…

    “The ‘opportunity’ is set up to turn well meaning women into predators, rationalizing all manner of behavior to hit the goals, win the prize, make the name.”

    I will argue that all of the terminology used in Mary Kay, from “production” to the misuse of common business terms, to all the silly titles and awards, is all a slight of hand to distract participants from what is really going on. Mary Kay Corp and the xSDs are promoting a business plan whereby an elaborate story is told to trick women into believing the are business owners in order to get them to order overpriced product in quantities too large to sell or use personally.

    Make no mistake…that is MKC’s goal. Retailing the product is simply not part of the business plan. Every bit of coaching that comes from the upline is especially designed to distract from this underlying goal.

    Magicians have mastered this craft, taking one’s attention away from what is really going on to give the illusion of something “magical” taking place. Mary Kay is no different. Pay no attention the man behind the curtain, or the significant, mounting losses in every MK downline. Look at this shiny object (accolade, trinket, title) instead of the money being lost personally and across every downline.

    There is nothing magical about a magician’s craft, just like there is nothing magical about the MLM opportunity. If you participate, the MLM/Mary Kay will get your money. You have to believe in magic if you believe your downline, or any MLM downline, can be profitable in the aggregate.

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  2. Is MK’s approach any different than the Nazis? Think about it. Tell people what to think about, and how to think about it; get people to do things they ordinarily would never do. Make all of this the ONLY acceptable path.

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    • T, some of my “light summer reading” was The Rise & Fall of the Third Reich. I didn’t read it cover to cover, but I read enough of it to agree with what you mention. The ability to shift the thoughts of the masses with propaganda. An over the top “leader” to guide the path and idolize. History is fascinating, and it does indeed repeat itself.
      Be careful when you follow the masses – sometimes the “M” is silent.
      (One of my favorite newer platitudes haha!)

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  3. Thank you for the inside info,.Raisinberry.

    I am curious about one thing. Because MK is still a young company here in Asia, is enriching women ever a genuine ethos among consultants, then among the directors and the NSDs in the USA ?

    I just want to share that here, on the side of the world, It’s really being used to push consultants do skin care classes and to “share the opportunities”
    I quote the favourite sayings of the NSDs here,
    “We have the responsibility to enrich and empower women. It’s not about ME anymore, it’s about them.”

    Is that still being used in USA?

    • Good question, Ubi. That is the same verbiage used in the US. The surface of MK is very giving, loving and benevolent. “Enriching women’s lives.” Creating positivity. Encouraging strong work ethic. Finding like-minded women to do life with. It all SOUNDS great.

      But scratch the surface. “Enriching women’s lives”–how? 99.6% of consultants and directors will lose money with this venture. “But that doesn’t count sales.” True! But with competing consultants and directors regularly offering products at cost, ebay and Amazon offering products below cost, and the encouragement to recruit everyone with skin (thus creating more competition among your friends and family circle), very few consultants are making money on product sales.

      Creating positivity–by discouraging any and all thoughts contrary to the company line. You can’t question anything. You can’t express frustration. You can’t speak out loud that you’re not making any money or you’ll be branded “negative” and excluded. Worse, you’re taught that your friends or family or even your husband are being “negative nellies” when they express concern about this non-business. Check out the divorce rate among NSDs. It’s abysmal.

      Encouraging a strong work ethic–wonderful! Except this all boils down to accepting personal responsibility whenever something doesn’t work out. Usually not a bad thing. But, again, it WON’T work out for 99.6% of the people who try. With numbers like that, blaming yourself instead of the system just prolongs the inevitable collapse of your personal business. And it really messes with your sense of self worth when you can’t make it work and the only answer you’re given is to work faster and harder.

      Finding like-minded women to do life with–awesome. We all want positive, hard-working friends. I do! But these women are toxically positive and squash critical thinking. They blame you (and themselves) for failure in a losing business. And they drop you the minute you leave (see this week’s article about Kelly Brock). People deep in a cult aren’t your friends if you dare to question the cult.

      I’ve not seen what’s coming out of Asia, but what you described sounds like it could have easily come out of the US. Benevolent-sounding, but the only person getting enriched is corporate, and maybe the NSD.

  4. I’m way late to this thread, but this paragraph stood out to me as perhaps the best description I have ever seen of this business model and the different trajectories followed by its victims:

    “The reason is because the direct selling home party model is one that exploits family relationships and friendships, and is for the most part resented. The hit and miss income soon becomes discouraging for the masses and they stay only as long as it takes them to figure out they are losing money. Career Path consultants, who are accustomed to “living on morsels” and are convinced the real money is in Directorship, press on.”

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