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Salesforce Trust in Company Key to Business Sustainability

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

After nearly 40 years in the direct selling business, I’ve learned a thing or two about companies and their products, the importance of compensation plans and some basic rules about money. For example, when it comes to products vs. compensation plans, providing the salesforce with unique high-value products to sell can often overcome poorly designed compensation and marketing programs. When people love a product, they will often work to sell it even if all the plans aren’t well-designed.

The opposite, however, is not true. A great compensation plan and the best marketing materials cannot overcome a poor line of products or products for which the value proposition appears to be overstated—certainly, not for very long.

I’ve also learned that there are only two rules about money that govern the success of every direct selling company:

  • Rule 1: If the salesforce is not earning good money, the company never will.
  • Rule 2: If the company cannot earn money, the salesforce will not have the opportunity to earn money for any significant length of time.

For the company to succeed, solid business practices must be in place so that both the company and the salesforce can prosper.

But most important, I’ve learned some lessons about trust, specifically the trust that should exist between the home office and the salesforce. As long as the salesforce trusts that the company is working in their best interest, they can overcome almost any obstacle and work through any necessary changes, even very emotionally charged changes, such as reworking a comp plan. Trust is often referred to as “the most precious commodity.” Just as you cannot demand that a shard of glass turn into a diamond, neither can a company demand trust from a salesforce which doubts management’s intentions. Trust is only earned, and only kept by continuing to act in good faith.

If a company takes the trust of its salesforce for granted, that company could set itself on a path of great difficulty.

In fact, creating and maintaining that bond of trust between company management and the independent salesforce may well be the single most important duty and obligation of every direct selling company CEO. Of course, the company must be profitable and investors must be satisfied with its performance. A company must also be in compliance with laws and regulations and look for all possible efficiencies to reduce costs and increase profits. But all of these tasks and efforts will go for naught if, in the course of carrying out these routine management tasks, the company loses the trust of its salesforce.

In my experience, there are two primary reasons that companies lose the trust of their salesforce:

First, there is a failure to pass on the understanding that this business is built upon mutual trust.

Many direct selling companies are founded by entrepreneurs, some of whom learned the business by selling for another direct selling company as an independent contractor. The companies often start on a shoestring budget, working out of a family home basement or back bedroom. The founder is often personally involved with both selling the products and recruiting and training the first independent contractors to join them in selling the products. Through this process the founder comes to understand that the “early adopters” who volunteer to join them in selling the products are doing so for two primary reasons: they like and will use the products themselves and they like and trust the founder of the company. There are strong personal relationship bonds, built through shared dreams and goals, between the company founder and home office team and the early volunteer leaders.

In turn, as some of the early adopters develop into effective and successful sales team builders, thus creating more volume and sales for the company, the founders become grateful to the early volunteer leaders for trusting them, and develop a sense of responsibility toward protecting the business and income opportunity of the volunteer salesforce. In other words, the founders of direct selling companies recognize the mutual dependence between the company and volunteer leaders. Each side must trust the other to do the things that together will make them both successful.

As the company grows on the business-building progress of the volunteer sales leaders, the founder often becomes less active as a seller and recruiter in the field and begins to concentrate more on building and maintaining the bond of trust with the salesforce. Founders do this by recognizing that volunteer sellers need a continuous flow of high-quality products to sell to their friends, family and neighbors with confidence. They take the time to build outstanding home office customer-service, driven by the need to never embarrass the volunteer salesforce if it can be avoided. That means delivering the right products to the right customers on time and every time. If they do make a mistake, they desire to fix it fast and with no hassle for the customer, and do it in a way that saves face for the salesperson.

As time passes, the founders, with their deep sense of gratitude and appreciation for the work and accomplishments of the salesforce, give way to the next generation of the family or hire outside professional managers, or sell the company and retire. Sometimes these founders have done a great job of preparing the next generation of management to understand that the success of the company is built first and foremost on maintaining that bond of trust with the volunteer salesforce. They help their successors develop a sense of gratitude and respect for the independent sales leaders. They inculcate the entire company culture with the understanding that only through the efforts and achievements of the salesforce can the company earn the money to pay employees’ salary and shareholders’ dividends.

Some founders pass on these fundamental understandings necessary to sustain the company. We see this in long-enduring successful companies. When we do not find these fundamental concepts of trust between the company and salesforce, we begin to see once great direct selling companies and brand names fall by the wayside, one after another.

All companies run into challenges and obstacles over time. Products must change and be modernized, services must improve, and training techniques must be delivered in ways that are relevant to the recruits of the day. But without the belief and trust of the salesforce, none of the changes inevitably required over time will succeed.

Second, short-term decisions are too often made in regard to efficiencies and profits only, without due consideration of how such decisions will impact the trust of the salesforce.

I have lived this nightmare both as a senior direct selling company executive and as a consultant to direct selling companies. Too often CEOs do not understand the foundational importance of the bond of trust between the company and the volunteer salesforce. New leadership tends to focus on the financial and statistical analysis of the business, often because they lack direct selling backgrounds or because they have come up through the company in jobs with little exposure to the salesforce.

As a result, the new leadership may not fully understand the fact that every product was sold by a volunteer. They may not  understand that if the salesforce loses trust in the company, then they will not recruit friends and neighbors to join the company. Because this fundamental component is not a part of their understanding of the company’s success, they might never stop to wonder how their decisions may be viewed by the salesforce. Will it make the sellers’ job easier or harder? Will it help or hinder their efforts to recruit new salespeople? Will the salesforce see any new program as increasing the independent sellers’ opportunity to build their businesses, or will they see it as the company decreasing the motivation of the sellers?

One can argue that trust is an important element of every type of business. All customers must trust that manufacturers will make safe, quality products. It is important no matter how those products are sold. Employees need to trust that management will make good decisions that will protect their jobs in every form of business.

No other form of business or distribution depends more on the trust and belief of independent volunteer sellers for its success than direct selling does. Every founder of every successful direct selling company learns the need for, and importance of, this bond of trust by working side by side in the trenches with the early adopter sales leaders. They quickly learn to recognize that salesforce trust and belief is a must-have, not a nice-to-have element of their business philosophy, and that every key decision must be made on that basis. When that critical bond of trust is lost over time, the company will go into decline. Not just sometimes—every time!

This is my personal perspective based on 40 years as a participant in the industry at the highest levels and as a consultant for the past 13 years who has observed the industry and worked personally with several hundred industry leaders. 


Alan LuceAlan Luce is Founder and CEO of Luce & Associates Direct Selling Consultants.

Filed Under: Working Smart

September 2011

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Arbonne International

Gretchen Price Gretchen Price

Arbonne International LLC announced the appointment of Gretchen Price as Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer. Price joins Arbonne from philosophy Inc., where she served as Executive Vice President, Administration and CFO since 2008. Previously, she served a 31-year tenure at Procter & Gamble, where she held various positions including Vice President and Treasurer, and Vice President and General Manager, Global Operations.

Price will work closely with Arbonne CEO Kay Napier in overseeing company financial and operations departments. Specifically Price will oversee finance and accounting, operations, human resources, operational aspects of information technology and international.

Price currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Cincinnati Financial Corp., a public property and casualty insurer. Price has also been a member of the Financial Executives Institute and the Board of Governors of the Institute of Internal Auditors. Her activities have included leadership and service on nonprofit community boards and committees that provide funding for fine arts and music, human service programs and student scholarships.


Primerica Inc.

Joel Babbit
Joel Babbit

Primerica Inc. has announced the election of Joel Babbit to the company’s Board of Directors. Babbit is the Co-Founder and CEO of Mother Nature Network, a resource for environmental news and information.

Prior to launching Mother Nature Network in 2009, Babbit spent over 20 years in the advertising and public relations industry, creating Babbit and Reiman (acquired by London-based GGT) and 360 (acquired by WPP’s Grey Global Group). Following the acquisition of 360 by Grey in 2002, Babbit served as President and Chief Creative Officer for the resulting entity, Grey Atlanta, until 2009.

Babbit also served as Chief Marketing and Communications Officer for his hometown of Atlanta when the city was awarded the 1996 Summer Olympics.


Immunotec Inc.

Daniel Audet
Daniel Audet

Immunotec Inc. announced the appointment of Daniel Audet as Vice President, Marketing.

Audet has over 20 years of experience in marketing, sales and corporate management with companies specializing in telecom, travel and nutrition, primarily in the network marketing industry. Most recently, he led a consulting team specializing in the development and launching of international direct marketing enterprises.

Immunotec is engaged primarily in the development and marketing of dietary supplements, food, vitamins and personal care and natural health products. Immunotec’s products are distributed and sold in Canada and the United States through a network marketing system.


LifeVantage Corp.

Dr. Joe M. McCord
Dr. Joe M. McCord
Dr. Brooks Hybertson
Dr. Brooks Hybertson

LifeVantage Corp. announced Dr. Joe M. McCord has been appointed as the company’s Chief Scientific Officer. In addition, Dr. Brooks Hybertson has been reappointed to the company’s Scientific Advisory Board. The Scientific Advisory Board provides input and advice regarding the technical research, intellectual property, and the internal and external education of LifeVantage products.

McCord is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on the body’s antioxidant defense system, and is credited with co-discovering the enzyme Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) in 1969, which marked the beginning of the study of oxidative stress and its impact on the human body. McCord serves as Professor of Medicine, Biochemistry, and Microbiology at the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center. He is also the Honorary President of the International Society of Antioxidants in Nutrition and Health. In his new role as CSO, McCord will focus on increasing awareness of LifeVantage products in the scientific community as well as on creating and promoting new science-based products.

Hybertson, MBA, Ph.D., is President of Salina Solutions LLC and a Clinical Associate Professor in the Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He has a background in scientific research and development, and has been the principal investigator on a variety of research projects pertaining to nutrition, oxidant/antioxidant balance, inflammation, cancer, materials science and drug delivery. He has extensive experience in laboratory research, product development and customer support.


MonaVie

Jeff Graham
Jeff Graham
Daniel Sharp
Daniel Sharp
Dr. Keith Jeffords
Dr. Keith Jeffords
Rita Cosby
Rita Cosby

MonaVie announced Jeff Graham has been named President of Sales for the company’s North America market.

Graham has served as Managing Director of Product Development and as Vice President of Product Management for MonaVie. Graham most recently has served as Senior Vice President of North America and will continue to oversee MonaVie’s product management, development and quality control while taking on the new role of overseeing sales and marketing efforts in the United States and Canada.

Daniel Sharp was appointed to MonaVie’s Business Advisory Board. He is the founding President and CEO of the Royal Institution World Science Assembly, Chairman of the Advisory Board of the Institute for Large Scale Innovation, and was Forum Coordinator of World Justice Project’s Rule of Law Forum. For 15 years, Sharp was President and CEO of The American Assembly, a national public affairs institution at Columbia University founded by Dwight Eisenhower. He is now its first Emeritus President.

Dr. Keith Jeffords, MD, DDS, has also been appointed to the Business Advisory Board. Jeffords is a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon.

He has lectured and presented papers to many medical societies and appeared on CNN Presents and the Daystar Network. He also has numerous media appearances in both radio and television.

Rita Cosby has joined the Business Advisory Board as well. She is a renowned Emmy® winning TV host, veteran correspondent and motivational speaker who anchored prime-time shows on FOX News Channel and NBC. She is currently a special correspondent for CBS’ Inside Edition.

Cosby has interviewed over 20 world leaders including several U.S. presidents, as well as numerous celebrities and sports stars.

Very passionate about supporting military/veteran interests, Cosby has also written two books, Blonde Ambition, and Quiet Hero: Secrets from My Father’s Past, both of which have hit several bestseller lists.


CieAura

Paul Rogers has been named COO of CieAura. Rogers comes to CieAura with more than 20 years of experience in the direct selling industry, both domestically and internationally. Prior to joining CieAura, Rogers launched direct selling companies in the telecommunications and Internet technology industries. He has held executive positions in several companies and helped facilitate the opening of new global markets.

CieAura is a startup direct sales company launched in March 2010 and currently distributing CieAura Transparent Holographic Chips™ that work with the body’s own inner energy flow.


Submissions
Please submit news of executive promotions and hires at your company to be included in the Executive Announcements section of Direct Selling News. Email pr@directsellingnews.com

Filed Under: Daily News

The Social Media Phenomenon

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment


Click here to order the Direct Selling News issue in which this article appeared.


by Brittany Glenn

DSN September 2011 coverTen years ago, social media did not exist. Today, almost all large companies and many small businesses invest resources into building their presence in the socialsphere. They have created corporate accounts on social media sites, and they spend time and money interacting with users, increasing their fan base, posting content, monitoring comments and measuring the results of their campaigns.

After all, the social media statistics can no longer be ignored by companies today:

  • Facebook boasts more than 750 million active users, and the average user has 130 friends.
  • Twitter has 200 million users generating 350 million tweets a day.
  • YouTube receives more than 3 billion views per day.
  • LinkedIn reports more than 100 million registered users.
  • A few weeks after Google+ debuted, the new social networking site accrued 20 million users.

According to the research-based advisory firm Altimeter Group, which conducted a survey of 140 corporations with at least 1,000 employees, the average number of corporate-owned social media accounts (including all business units, products or regions) is 178 per company.

Yes, social media has taken the business world by storm, and the direct selling segment is no exception. What started as a technological trend has turned into a central part of how direct selling companies do business today.

Multiple Means

How are direct selling companies using social media? Are social media sites viewed primarily as a means of communicating to distributors or external customers? Direct Selling News asked this of multiple companies in the industry—and discovered that the answers vary. We also asked each company which social media sites they used, as noted in parentheses.

“Our primary use of social media is to connect with the field,” says Brett Duncan, Vice President of Marketing for Mannatech (Facebook, Twitter and blogs). “It’s partly a distribution method but it’s becoming more of a conversation tool and a feedback tool.”

Dan Macuga, Vice President Marketing, PR and Social Media for USANA (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and LinkedIn), also says distributors are the company’s primary audience.

“Additionally, we use social media to bolster the brand,” he adds. “It’s the way business is moving. It’s direct selling at its finest.”

However, other industry companies use social media as a means to engage primarily with consumers. “We have more customers on our fan page than we do consultants,” says David Sattler, Digital Marketing Manager for Scentsy (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Foursquare).

“We primarily use our social media platform as a tool to engage consumers,” says Yvette Franco, Vice President of U.S. Marketing for Mary Kay Inc. (Facebook, Twitter and YouTube).

Stella & Dot (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and LinkedIn) also interacts with consumers on its Facebook page, which was named one of the 20 best company pages in the Inc. magazine story, “20 Awesome Facebook Fan Pages.”

“We use social media to spread the word on our brand and customer service, and to offer style solutions to our customers,” says Jessica Herrin, Founder and CEO of Stella & Dot.

For other companies, social media platforms are viewed as a means to increase engagement with both distributors and consumers as well as for brand-building, marketing and public relations.

“Our primary audience would be our distributors and our existing customers because social media is an engagement tool,” says Jeff Chandler, Director of Corporate Communications for XANGO (Facebook, Twitter and blogs).

“We also consider it as a retention tool.” Ryan Blair, CEO of ViSalus Sciences (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Vi-Net), says, “We’re giving our distributors the tools necessary for them to more efficiently market the business, enroll people and manage their businesses on mobile devices.”

Jim McLain, Manager of Global CRM and Digital Marketing for Amway (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blogs), says the company uses social media to tell the Amway story. “From a global standpoint we also use social media to build our product brands,” he adds.

“We view social media as a way we can strengthen our economic engine by maximizing effectiveness with our distributors, customers and other influentials,” says Kara Schneck, Senior Director of Corporate Communications for Nu Skin (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blogs).

Sarah Gulbrandsen, Communications Manager for Belcorp USA/L’Bel USA (Facebook, Twitter and YouTube), believes social media provides the opportunity to engage both internal and external audiences. “We’re able to give our brand a face and make it accessible for people.”

Benefits Boon

Being active in the socialsphere offers multiple benefits to companies. Social media sites can drive increased traffic to a company’s website, encourage product sales, promote brand recognition and loyalty, and provide a direct communication link to distributors and customers.

“Social media does a wonderful job at giving a brand a personality,” says Brett Duncan, Vice President of Marketing for Mannatech. “In direct sales that can’t be understated.”

The most obvious benefit that comes from being active on social media sites is that companies can garner insights and feedback from the multidirectional communication that takes place there.

“The main plus for social media is that you can hear directly and immediately from consumers,” says Yvette Franco, Vice President of U.S. Marketing for Mary Kay Inc. “It provides an avenue for two-way communication. Building the social community takes time, effort, resources and people dedicated to the initiative.”

Sarah Gulbrandsen, Communications Manager for Belcorp USA/L’Bel USA, says Belcorp values the immediate feedback they get from distributors and consumers. “It’s like an online focus group,” she adds.

Another benefit of social media sites is that they drive search-engine visibility.

“Social media benefits our SEO [search engine optimization], and we’ve done a lot to make sure we have great content,” says Kara Schneck, Senior Director of Corporate Communications for Nu Skin.

cover story

Changes and Challenges

Although it’s usually free to join social media sites, the sheer popularity of the socialsphere requires companies to devote significant resources to social media. Many companies have full-time employees dedicated to engaging with customers and distributors on sites, writing and posting content, monitoring comments 24/7 and analyzing metrics.

Monitoring tools such as Radian6 and content aggregators such as HootSuite provide helpful assistance, but at a price. Still, the greater toll is the time it takes to stay on top of social media.

“With social media it’s not so much an investment of dollars as much as it is an investment of time, which ultimately requires resources,” says Jeff Chandler, Director of Corporate Communications for XANGO.

Nu Skin’s Schneck also emphasizes that writing content and monitoring social media sites take time. “If you don’t have relevant, valuable, interesting and timely content, people are not going to continue to come to your site,” she says. “You also have to focus on monitoring, making sure that you’re being responsive to comments or questions that come up.”

David Sattler, Digital Marketing Manager for Scentsy, says that the change to becoming a content-publishing team is a big part of social media. “To be really involved in social media means that you become an organization that can quickly generate quality word-of-mouth content,” he says.

Participating in the socialsphere also necessitates relinquishing a degree of control. “You have zero control over what your constituents are going to post so you want to be prepared for how you’re going to deal with certain posts that show up on your wall or on your blog,” says Barb Alviar, Manager of Digital Marketing Services for Amway North America.

Belcorp’s Gulbrandsen agrees that one of the minuses of social media is the inability to control what’s being posted on sites. “People can post positive but they can also post negative,” she says. “You have to be on your toes and know how to respond  to that.”

Dan Macuga, Vice President of Marketing, PR and Social Media for USANA, offers good advice on how to handle negative comments. “The No. 1 thing I tell people about negative comments is to leave them alone,” he says. “There are people who don’t care for our industry or maybe they have had a bad experience, so they post negative things. As things get commented on or they get ranked, it draws relevance to that story, which will drive it up in search-engine results.”

Ryan Blair, CEO of ViSalus Sciences, adds even more weight to this, saying social media has changed how companies have to do business today.

“It used to be you could have a bad customer service experience and no one had any vehicle to tell people about it,” Blair says. “Now every direct selling company is on notice that they are one upset customer away from having a significant backlash to their brand.

“Companies like Apple, Zappos and Amazon are doing an exceptional job at customer service,” Blair adds. “If we don’t compare favorably, then they’re going to spend their money over there. We can no longer hide in the dens and living rooms. We now have to compete head to head with the Apples and the Amazons for precious consumer loyalty and discretionary spending.”

Executive Edict

One interesting trend to note is that several of the industry’s companies have executives who are active on social media sites—representing themselves and their brands. It is almost not enough for companies to be active on social media sites as corporate entities; their founders and executives may now also be expected to have a presence. This, of course, takes time—a precious resource for busy executives.

Executives at Nu Skin and XANGO also devote some of their spare time to social media. “Several of our executives have Facebook pages,” Nu Skin’s Schneck says. “Also, our executives blog about their experiences through our Nu Skin Force for Good Foundation.”

Chandler says several of XANGO’s founders and executives have active Twitter and Facebook accounts. “They are having regular interaction with consumers,” he says. “It really gives the distributors a sense of what the company is doing.”

ViSalus Sciences is another company whose executives take an active role in the socialsphere.

“I have close to 12,000 fans that follow me on Facebook,” says Blake Mallen, CMO of ViSalus. “We all  manage our own personal Facebook accounts. Facebook is a channel where you communicate your personality, and you can’t automate personality.”

Blair adds, “Every one of our founders has thousands of fans online. The world is all connected by a few degrees of separation. My advice to my colleagues is they shouldn’t go hire a social media department; they should become the social media department.”

Industry Innovation

Several of the industry’s companies have made notable achievements in social media innovation.

Belcorp regularly hosts “Facebook chats” where the company’s beauty advisors and customers can interact with the company via its Facebook wall. “Because our beauty advisor/customer base is primarily Hispanic here in the United States, we also do bilingual chats,” Gulbrandsen says.

Belcorp even hosts blogger events where beauty bloggers are invited to the corporate office for cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. “Our blogger events are aimed at bringing online communities together at offline events,” Gulbrandsen says. “They enable us to build key online community relationships while simultaneously informing new audiences about our company and products.”

Nu Skin offers a mobile application to help distributors share the business and product opportunity. “The application is designed to serve as a full-service app where you can shop, share presentations, track volumes and genealogy, view the latest Nu Skin videos and sign up new customers and distributors from your mobile device,” says Andrea Hayhurst, Vice President of Business Technology for Nu Skin.

ViSalus Sciences even trains distributors on how to use Facebook and Twitter to promote the Body by Vi Challenge in a social way. “When a distributor or promoter enrolls there’s a full training program called the Facebook Factor where we teach them how to turn their Facebook into a promotion tool,” Blair says.

In 2008, ViSalus introduced Vi-Net, a customized back-office application with social media integration. Mallen says the Vi-Net platform is similar to Facebook. “Everybody who joins the challenge logs in to a private community where they have profiles, photos and videos, and everybody has the common thread that they’re all on the challenge,” he says. “Vi-Net syndicates content so when you post to Vi-Net you can automatically update your Facebook and Twitter.”

Mobile Movement

In 2011, ViSalus went a step further and introduced the Vi-Net Mobile application, which is compatible with iPhone, Android and BlackBerry smartphones. Vi-Net Mobile includes a real-time dashboard with quick reports that allow distributors to see who’s close to the next rank or position in their downline. Distributors can enroll customers and distributors and even swipe credit cards through a device that attaches to a cell phone through the earphone jack.

For its mobile app, ViSalus also created a “reverse group offer” that allows the company to promote products Groupon-style.

“The reverse group offer allows us to introduce a short-term promotion where the more people who take advantage of it, the cheaper the price is for everybody,” Mallen explains. “Everybody on the mobile app gets notified when there’s an offer and the group sells each other because everybody wants to get the best price. So it creates a very viral promotion effect.”

The Vi-Net Mobile app also allows users to find and attend Body by Vi Challenge parties near them using their phones’ GPS capabilities. Once they arrive, they are able to “check in” via their phones.

“When you get within a certain vicinity of the party you can ‘check in’—similar to how Facebook Places or Foursquare works,” Mallen says. “People are always checking in to all these challenge parties, creating a viral frenzy.”

Blair says ViSalus intends to make today’s back office obsolete—meaning a distributor will never have to log in to a desktop or laptop computer unless he wants to.

“Technology makes our old-school, very simple business model sexy,” Blair says. “My goal is to have the most mobilized, efficient salesforce through use of technology on the planet.”

And although companies have traditionally struggled to measure the direct correlation between social media and return on investment, he dismisses this idea.

“Your company is going out of business if it doesn’t engage socially,” Blair says. “So your ROI is whether or not you have a company five years from now. There’s your ROI.”

With its emphasis on mobile technology, ViSalus has one foot in the present and one foot in the future.

“The mobile devices of tomorrow are going to be the center of the social universe,” Mallen says. “The companies that can move the quickest and maximize those channels with a social message and real transparency are going to redefine the boundaries of this industry. The future of network marketing really is social networking.”

“Mobile is going to shift the entire way business is done in the industry,” Blair says. “My advice to every one of my colleagues is to get out their checkbooks.”

cover storyFuture Trends in Social Media

What’s on the horizon for companies and social media? Are there any “must-haves” or “must-do’s” that companies should be aware of? Several social-media experts believe companies should keep their eye on two emerging trends: mobile technology and social search.

Gerry Corbett, Chair-Elect of Public Relations Society of America and CEO of Redphlag LLC, says the world is in the midst of a mobile explosion. “Sales of desktops and PCs are dropping like a rock and more people are using their smartphones as a replacement,” Corbett says. “Mobile is going to have a huge impact, and I think we’re only seeing the very beginning of it.”

Shane Rhyne, Digital Strategies Manager for Ackermann PR, also believes mobile platforms are the future of social media.

“It’s not an accident that one of the first things Google+ developed was a mobile app,” Rhyne says. “Google understands that is where the world is heading. If you don’t have a mobile strategy in place that includes social media then you need to start thinking about one. Within just a few years, smartphones/tablets will be the No. 1 device of choice for consumers.”

Kerri Scarbrough, Senior Strategic Director of Multi-Media and Mobile Solutions for VideoPlus, points out that mobile technology and social media go hand in hand. “We’re only going to see more and more integration of social media into mobile aspects, and that’s a trend that people just can’t ignore,” she says.

Something else companies might want to consider is that social-media sites are doubling as search engines today. Rhyne says, “When many people want to know about something their first instinct is not necessarily to go to a search engine anymore; it’s to go to their social network and ask the question.”

This is not surprising, considering the high degree of trust consumers have for each other in social media spaces. According to a poll by Econsultancy, 90 percent of consumers online trust recommendations from people they know while 70 percent trust the opinions of people they don’t know personally, such as those in consumer reviews. Additionally, Nielsen Online concludes that after friends and family, the No. 1 driver for brand trust is online reviews and feedback from social media sites.

User-generated content is simply word-of-mouth advertising in an electronic format, so it’s no wonder that consumers trust it. Consumers have relied upon their trusted networks—family, friends, co-workers, neighbors, etc.—long before Facebook was launched in 2004. But today, social media sites enable consumers to extend their reach considerably. Google’s addition of the “+1” button to its site is a nod to this trend.

“Search engines are building in the ability for your network and your habits to help feed and direct what results show up for you in a search,” Rhyne says. “That’s a fascinating yet scary proposition for marketers because that means it’s all about developing good relationships with consumers on social-media platforms. That will help drive your ability to be ranked highly in social search results.”


Shaping a Social Strategy

If your company hasn’t jumped in to the socialsphere yet, experts say it’s a good idea to first devise a strategy. According to emarketer.com, the most common elements that companies include in their social media strategies are resource-allocation guidelines for ongoing activities, registration of branded usernames on social sites and research into competitors’ use of social media.

“It’s a good idea to outline what your purpose is and to also figure out which networks are going to be the most relevant for your message,” says Sarah Gulbrandsen, Communications Manager for Belcorp USA/L’Bel USA.

Dan Macuga, Vice President of Marketing, PR and Social Media for USANA, says companies should determine why they think they need a social presence and then identify the goals they hope to accomplish. “You also have to make sure you allocate enough resources to monitor and update it regularly,” he adds. “You’ll fail if you don’t monitor and update on a regular basis.”

A strategy is a must for companies that are new to social media, says Yvette Franco, Vice President of U.S. Marketing for Mary Kay Inc. “There are many considerations for executing a plan, including: What audience are you targeting and how will you speak to them? Do you have a content plan and a steady source of content? Who will be responsible for managing and monitoring your company’s social media presence? How will you manage feedback?” she adds.

“If you don’t know what you want from social media it’s hard to sustain the level of resources and time that you have to devote to it,” says Kara Schneck, Senior Director of Corporate Communications for Nu Skin. “You’re going to have to figure it out at some point, so it’s better to start at the beginning.”

A Personal Note from Gary V.

by Gary Vaynerchuk

If you talk to an older person—think grandparents—they’ll mostly tell you they lived in a completely different world where the local grocery store owner watched them grow up and the local butcher knew exactly what they would be ordering as soon as they walked in the door. If a business owner was rude and not an asset to the community, that business owner wouldn’t be in business for very long. A business would live and die off of its reputation, which was mostly shared with others by word of mouth. If a customer was pleased, they told all of their friends and family about their experience.

a personal note from gary v.

Social media is bringing business back to small town “rules”—even in the biggest of urban communities. Word of mouth is more powerful than ever. Brands and businesses have the tools to help show customers that they care, and these tools come in the form of social media.

Social media doesn’t just let you tell your friends and family about your experiences. No, today, the entire world is your audience. The real question is if the tools will be used properly. We see time and time again where people are using social media to talk, talk, talk. They need to be listening. It’s all about listening!

Back in the spring, I was headed to Toronto for a speech. I was booked on the last flight out on Sunday night and scheduled to speak bright and early on Monday morning. I was pumped up for my talk and when I got to the airport … my flight was delayed 4 hours. Everyone around me was freaking out and angry while I was kind of happy. I was thinking “I’m about to get even more work done in the airport.” I was laser-focused.

Not even 10 minutes later, they announced that the flight was actually cancelled. I went from being ecstatic to panic. Was I going to be able to make the conference? I ran through all of the options —one of which was driving to Canada—but I found myself on a 6 a.m. flight the next morning and I pretty much ran from my car from the airport right on stage.

On my drive back to my apartment after my flight had been cancelled, two things were going through my mind: For one, I was excited because I was going to surprise my wife and we would get to spend some more time together. The second thought was, “Hmm, what would it really cost, in this day and age where we have so much data on our consumers, for the airline to send me an @ reply on Twitter at that moment apologizing for the cancellation?”

We can’t control Mother Nature, of course, but whenever there is an issue with an airline we are automatically upset. We see what we are missing and not what could have happened to cause the delay. This is why our anger is directed towards the airline regardless of whether or not they control the issue. I fly all the time and I’m a top customer of most airlines, but I want the same courtesies extended to everyone regardless of it being a person’s first flight or not. If an airline were to go that extra mile and send you a tweet apologizing for issues with your flight, your context with that airline would be changed forever. I promise you that you would see them in a different light from that day forward.

I usually talk about how content is king. Well, I feel that if content is king, then context is god. That tweet that XYZ Airlines just sent you has forever altered your opinion of how they feel about you. They cared enough to consider the frustration and inconvenience you experienced with your flight troubles. That is what’s key in The Thank You Economy—caring.

Twitter is invaluable. http://twitter.com/search should be the most important website in the world for you since it’s the key to listening. You can listen and see the conversations that people are having—and they don’t necessarily have to be about your brand or area of expertise—and then take part in those conversations.

Our world is running away from push marketing. Do you remember when you used to be excited to see a new email in your inbox? I do. What happened with email? We ruined it. We went from brands sending an email a week to sending an email every few days. When that went over smoothly, the sales emails started being pushed every day … and now sometimes multiple times a day. Stop pushing! People are sick of it! Push marketing is a thing of the past, and a brand’s world instead should revolve around listening and forming relationships with every single one of its customers.

When I say that brands need to listen and care about their customers, I mean that brands need to listen and care about their customers. It must be authentic and heartfelt because it will be disgustingly obvious if it is not. Brands and companies that instill a culture of caring will win in this age.

Here’s an example of what we’ve started doing in the Wine Library Thank You department:

We have a customer in Chicago who has made two large opening orders with us. We’ve been following this customer on Twitter because that’s how we roll at Wine Library. While following his tweets, we’ve noticed that he’s probably the biggest fan in the world of Jay Cutler (quarterback for the Chicago Bears). Wine Library isn’t going to send this customer a free shipping code. Our Thank You department is going much further. The Thank You department will be going on eBay to find a signed Jay Cutler jersey and sending it to him as a thank-you for shopping with us.

A thank-you like this hits an emotional center. You need to do things that actually matter instead of pushing more coupons on people. We could have sent him a nice bottle of wine, but that’s in the context of what he always does with us. You need to take things outside of the familiar context and get to a different place with your customers. I’ll tell you one thing. This customer most likely won’t be shopping for wine anywhere else since his context with Wine Library has changed forever.

Brands can reach customers on a deep personal level that hasn’t really been possible before … and the customers will respond. We are living through a dramatic change in the way people do business and it focuses around the very essence of what it is to be a human being: communication. Businesses and brands are being humanized.

It may sound crazy, but business is starting to follow the path of the pet dog. If we look at the data of the pet dog in the 1950s, the pet dog was an outside animal. Spot was outside. The end. The only time Spot was allowed inside was when it snowed (and we’re talking heavy snow). Over the last 50 years, Spot has made the jump to inside of the home. If we look at the percentages now, the pet dog is now very much an inside animal. Spot’s getting pretty crafty at this point because Spot is being humanized. Guess where Spot is now? The bedroom. Spot didn’t stop there though because Spot isn’t just in the bedroom—Spot is in the bed. Not only that, but Spot wears better clothing than his or her owner now. Spot probably also eats gourmet food more frequently than the owner does.

As human beings, we have a deep need to communicate and to humanize things. When we’re done humanizing our social graph and the people around us, we start humanizing other things. These other things include Spot. It’s in our DNA. This is simply how we are wired. Yes, we are humanizing brands just like we did with pets. We need to care about things and we want to be cared about.

Brands need to be ready to listen when things go wrong and when things go right. It doesn’t matter how big or small the issue or praise happens to be. What matters is that the brand truly cares about all of it. The only way to succeed in The Thank You Economy is to care. Do you “out care” your competition? If you do, you will win. Building relationships through social media translates into social equity. Social equity translates into sales. Engage. Care. Be human.


Gary V.Gary Vaynerchuk, author of The Thank You Economy and Crush It!, and co-founder of VaynerMedia, a boutique agency that works with brands and start-ups.

cover story

Can social media really make a difference for your brand?

A summer competition held by the Minnesota/St. Paul Business Journal (MSPBJ) answered that question with a resounding Yes! During June and July, the newspaper held a “Brand Madness Online Tournament,” which pitted 64 iconic Minnesota brands against one another in a bracketed tournament—the brand with the most online votes in each set advanced to take on the next brand. First up was Target Corp. and scrapbooking direct selling company Creative Memories.

In possibly one of the best illustrations of how the number of fans isn’t as important as the passion of fans, Creative Memories’ fan base of 67,000 outvoted Target’s fan base of 5.2 million to move the brand to the next bracket. As news of the tournament spread through social media sites, Creative Memories’ fans also carried their favorite Minnesota company past brand icons Wheaties, Mall of America, Dairy Queen, and ultimately, the esteemed Mayo Clinic.

Other well-known brands in the competition that couldn’t rally more fan support included Schwan’s, General Mills, Best Buy, Post-It Notes and Scotch Tape!

Probably the great wish of every marketing team is to establish a brand identity that engages customers so deeply that they are moved to action on the brand’s behalf. Clearly, one way to create an emotional bond is to connect with customers on a deep level. “A product like ours reaches the emotional core of people because we walk through their lives with them,” says Bob McClintick, Channel Marketing Director for Creative Memories. “Because that connection runs so deep, consultants and customers alike are more than willing to express their passion for the brand.”

In the final face-off, fans of Creative Memories and the Mayo Clinic left hundreds of messages supporting their vote, encouraging others to vote, and putting forth reasons and arguments why either brand should prevail. The comments clearly demonstrated that people cared deeply about both brands. Nancy S. writes, “Both companies are beacons of light in their own way—one helps save lives, the other helps share lives. I am grateful we have both.”

In an article covering the final results of the brand contest, mspbj.com quoted John Karlson, owner of JumperCable Marketing: “A great brand is one people talk to their friends about because they believe in it.”

Are you tapping into the power of social media to reach your fans? And if so, are you turning them into a passionate community that will spring into action on your behalf?

Filed Under: Cover Stories

Princess House: Cooking Up a Growing Opportunity

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Princess House logo

Company Profile

  • Founded: 1963
  • Headquarters: Taunton, Mass.
  • President: Tim Brown
  • Products: Household and Kitchenware
  • 2010 Revenue: $94 million
  • 2011 DSN Global 100 Ranking: No. 89

Perfect partnerships can produce premier results. Just ask anyone at Princess House®, where the corporate staff and the company’s consultants are a record-breaking team.

Together the team has transformed the company. It will turn 50 in 2013, but its product-line evolution and passion for togetherness has generated the growth rate of a youngster. Since 2009—a difficult economic environment for most companies—its number of consultants has grown 44 percent.

For much of its life, Princess House was known for crystal—decorative figurines, beverageware and serveware. But as consumer tastes and needs changed, sales slowly shrank. In 2006, the Princess House team of corporate staff and field leaders analyzed sales and discussed what they heard from customers. The numbers and feedback showed the same trend: Family life was moving into the kitchen. So Princess House started an evolution that positioned it for growth when most companies were struggling to maintain.

Princess House President Tim Brown with Founder Charlie Collis.

Princess House President Tim Brown with Founder Charlie Collis.

Within the Princess House culture, the process wasn’t unusual. Ever since Charlie Collis founded the company in what was once a chicken coop, its focus has been on providing consultants with the products and support they need to be successful. His philosophy? “The only way to truly help yourself is to truly help others.” He made it his mission to help women feel like princesses in their own homes, while at the same time earning income and achieving their full personal and professional potential. In 1963, that was a visionary idea.

For insights on how to help his independent sales consultants achieve those lofty goals, Collis made it a habit to stay in close touch with them. That custom turned into culture at Princess House, and the partnership was born. Collis, who was inducted into the Direct Selling Association Hall of Fame in 1981, retired from Princess House years ago, but his influence continues.

Today’s Princess House President Tim Brown first joined the company in 1995, left in 2001, and returned in 2006. He says that when he first joined the company, he’d do anything just to be in the same room with Collis, and he still regularly visits the company’s inspirational 96-year-old founder.

“When we sit down and talk about Princess House, 15 years melt away,” Brown says. “He still gets so excited to talk about his baby. His values are so much like our current owner’s [Ray Chambers’] values. They’re both very caring people whose life’s work is helping others.”

Bicultural Bliss

Brown has equal admiration for the Princess House field leaders. He follows Collis’ example, staying in close touch with them not only to help them succeed in their Princess House businesses, but also because he has cultivated many close, trusting, personal relationships. His conversation is sprinkled with their stories and successes.

“We’ve had some dynamo leaders who, 30 or 40 years ago, recognized that Princess House was an opportunity for them,” he notes. “In the beginning, what we didn’t understand was the cultural opportunity that was presenting itself slowly but surely. As our Hispanic market has grown, we’ve been able to provide not just translation, but also important cultural understanding of how this market works and what they need for continued growth. Today we have a wealth of resources dedicated to helping Hispanic women grow their businesses. We are proud of our evolution in terms of cultural sensitivity, and we continue to learn every day about how we can help more women—all women—succeed and help themselves and their families.”

Some of those resources come from the evolving product line, beginning with stainless steel cookware. The evolution began in 2003 when the company introduced its stainless steel product line. Before that, bakeware and cookware were primarily glass. Since then, Princess House has more than tripled the number of units in its stainless steel line, ensuring consistent top quality through partnerships with the best manufacturers of stainless steel products.

As the stainless steel line grew, crystal diminished, and the kitchen became the heart of the Princess House product line simply because it was the heart of customer homes. Today’s product line includes bakeware, cooking accessories, cookware, entertaining products such as serveware, serving accessories, beverageware, dining accessories, and home accents, plus packaged food products, such as spice blends. More than 85 percent of sales are from kitchen-related items.

Princess House also tracks trends to determine what will sell. Through its Voice of the Customer program, its corporate team goes on the road, visiting the homes of customers to watch them cook and see the products they use. Those visits led to another recent product introduction.

“As we visited homes of customers, we would see not only our classic cookware, but someone else’s nonstick cookware,” Brown says. “That led to our adding a nonstick option to our stainless steel line. We’ve been able to see what people want and to provide it.”

Many direct sellers are working hard to appeal to the Hispanic market—the fastest-growing demographic in the country. However, it has long been a thriving market for Princess House. Through collaboration with its Hispanic field leaders, Princess House evolved to offer a product line that focuses on functionality while maintaining its beauty.

Field First

Vice President of Marketplace Initiatives Robin Ehrenzweig says that the company’s evolution has created products that provide more value to customers, and therefore more income to  consultants.

“We spend a lot of time talking to hostesses and our field salesforce,” Ehrenzweig says. “We do a lot of focus groups and talk about their product needs. At the core of our products—cookware and others—are items relevant for everybody. About 80 percent of what we offer works for everybody because our products are functional and useful. They have daily value. Those have the greatest appeal.”

The appeal to consultants goes beyond great products though. Communications and events are also carefully thought out. For example, Princess House doesn’t simply translate English communications into Spanish.

“We customize communications to meet the needs of the marketplace. The writing, photography, verbiage, style and design are developed especially for each market,” Ehrenzweig explains. “We go to great lengths, and we have staff that is bilingual and culturally sensitive.”

Events are tailored similarly. Princess House eliminated its huge national convention years ago in favor of regional events. They find that they reach larger numbers of consultants.

Princess House consultants—17,000 strong—appreciate the teamwork that results in great products and programs. Some grow so attached to the company that they stay for decades. The bond is so strong that top consultants often refer to Princess House as my company. Those consultants also represent one of the highest productivity ratios in the industry, producing $94 million in revenue during 2010, and landing the No. 89 spot on DSN’s Global 100 list.

The top consultant at Princess House, Triple Diamond Field Organizer Lilliam M., started her Princess House business in 1974 and now heads the largest organization of Princess House business owners. She appreciates the access she has to top executives and the way they really listen to her suggestions.

“Before they start a new program, they speak to us and see how we think it will work,” she says. “It’s like a family. I’m very proud of my company—and it is my company. I’ve felt that for 37 years.”

Lilliam says she is always excited about Princess House products, incentives and hostess and customer programs.

“We’re always motivated,” she says. “Princess House always cares about the Hispanic community. We are different and they understand the difference, and they provide for us.”

Diamond Field Organizer LaVonne M. has been with Princess House for 40 years. She agrees that consultants and corporate staff are tightly connected.

“From the day I started, I always felt like we were a family,” she says. “It’s unusual for any business to be that way. I’ve known some of the people at the Home Office as long as I’ve been in Princess House. They really care about the field. They really know that without the field, you don’t have a company. If we didn’t like the products, programs or contests, we wouldn’t work.”

LaVonne’s organization began as an English-speaking group, but soon she began doing home shows with Hispanic women, and she had to learn to work with people who spoke only Spanish, which she didn’t speak. She says she could always find someone to translate at parties, but building her downline in the Hispanic community required Spanish-language materials. With her close connections to headquarters, she was able to make her needs known. Other consultants were voicing similar needs, so Princess House provided the field with its first Spanish-language materials.

Lilliam and LaVonne both feel free to speak their minds, whether on conference calls or in face-to-face meetings. They know that the corporate staff appreciates their candor and genuinely cares about them.

Decades of Devotion

The staff cares so much, in fact, that it works hard to retain every consultant. Ehrenzweig says three things are especially helpful to retention. First is to have relevant products and programs that motivate the field to sell and recruit so that they have a steady income stream; second, is to provide excellent service to consultants; and the final thing is the company’s field first attitude and culture.

Princess House headquarters in Taunton, Mass.

Princess House headquarters in Taunton, Mass.

“We work tirelessly to provide that little extra support that will help someone,” Ehrenzweig says. “For example, one of our organizers was struggling with what to do for a meeting to motivate her team. My headquarters group got together and came up with a list of 20 ideas and sent them to her. She was able to implement them, and she was so excited. We didn’t just give her a pep talk; we took an extra step to help her.”

She notes that field first is both a culture and the name of a specific department. It reflects the company’s consistent mindset of respect and admiration for the consultants and its commitment to helping their businesses thrive.

The relationship between field and corporate staff may have started with the company’s founder, but it is grounded in the Princess House mission and values. Goodness, hard work, respect, accountability, results, fun/enjoyment and good earnings are the fuel for the company’s mission: to provide life-enhancing opportunities to people from all walks of life. People at Princess House try to live these concepts every day.

Working closely with the field has also allowed Princess House to provide something that consultants value as much as the money they make: personal development. Employees benefit from that focus, as well, and everyone rises together.

“We believe that the more we develop ourselves, the better we become and the better we can serve the field,” Brown says. “And as we better serve our field, they continue to develop personally, professionally and financially. This philosophy of continual development has served us well, not only in building relationships, but also in creating strategic and financial plans. It’s critical to everything we do.”

Brown has become known for the word he coined that summarizes the Princess House passion for continuous improvement: betterness.

“We talk a lot about how to do things better and how we can help people do their jobs better,” Brown explains. “At Princess House, every role is important. Regardless of what you’re doing, it has a huge impact on our mission and the people who come in contact with us—whether you’re a field member, an employee team member, a vendor who partners with us, or the UPS driver. Our No. 1 goal is to ensure that absolutely everyone who comes in contact with Princess House feels really good about their experience.”

Princess House puts processes in place to reach that goal, including development for every employee—through formalized quarterly training sessions, free online skill-building classes and an annual appraisal process that is less a report card about how an employee has performed and more about creating an action plan of how they’ll develop, personally and professionally, in the future.

“There are many managers who have implemented their own development plans with their teams—and it all contributes to a culture of continued learning, curiosity and idea generation,” Brown says. “Ultimately, I believe this creates a positive, creative, happier workplace.”

That just might be the reason why Princess House headquarters has earned a place on the list of The Boston Globe’s Top Places to Work for three years running.

That kind of management-by-respect and the corporate culture that has resulted have given Princess House something that every direct seller seeks: retention, both in employees and consultants. Brown says turnover among top leaders is rare. What’s more, nearly 30 percent of Princess House employees have been with the company for 20 years or more.

Seasoned staff and consultants—equipped with products that customers really want to own and use—produced a 2010 where results were up 25 percent. This year, sales are already up 39 percent. The company complemented those great results with a close eye on operating costs, margins and quality.

Such strong growth is inspiring Princess House to look at geographic expansion. Some 55 percent of its business is in the southwestern United States, so Brown asks, “How much opportunity is in the rest of the country?” He thinks it’s a lot. Market trends show that people—including Generation Y—are getting in touch with their inner chef. Cooking shows are proliferating on television, creating celebrity chefs who inspire more and more people to experiment with new flavors, foods, and yes, kitchen tools. Princess House is more than ready.

“We feel really good about what we’ve built as a solid foundation,” Brown says. “We have the right products and pricing strategy. We’re doing great things in our existing markets.”

With its numbers rising like a beautiful soufflé, Princess House is cooking up a bright future.


Philanthropy: Living Their Values

Princess HouseJust as Princess House improves lives for its consultants, it looks for the same opportunity in every charitable program it supports across the country.

Since 2006 the company has supported the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women movement, raising more than half a million dollars. But it takes the partnership a step further. Princess House consultants incorporate information into their product demonstrations that raises awareness of healthy cooking options and healthy lifestyles. That’s especially important in the Hispanic market, because studies report lower awareness levels among Hispanics about heart disease risk factors and their impact on quality of life, according to the AHA. Every year in the United States, nearly 500,000 women die from cardiovascular disease—the country’s No. 1 killer of women.

“It’s a grassroots effort to share information about living healthier,” says Princess House Vice President of Marketplace Initiatives Robin Ehrenzweig. “We know that we can’t control what people cook and eat with the products they buy from us,” she says. “But we can explain how small changes can make a difference in their lives—things like using less salt or the ability to use less fat by using nonstick cookware.”

Princess House headquarters has achieved the American Heart Association’s designation as a Fit-Friendly Company by becoming a smoke-free facility and offering smoking cessation classes and weight-loss programs on-site. Employees also participate in the local AHA HeartWalk each year.

Beyond its AHA partnership, Princess House shares its cookware with deserving nonprofit organizations across the country. Last year it gave away 50 sets of Princess Heritage<sup>®</sup> Stainless Steel cookware, valued at more than $33,000, to places such as women’s shelters, soup kitchens and group homes. In 2010, the first year of the Cooking Toward A Better Future campaign, more than 160 nonprofits were nominated. True to its focus on consultants, Princess House field leaders in 25 states presented the cookware to the winning organizations.

The company has been a United Way participant for more than 15 years, raising more than $40,000 last year in employee contributions. But more than money is involved. Employees also give their time, participating in the nonprofit’s Day of Caring by working at a United Way organization to help with anything from landscaping to cleaning.

Princess House also looks for ways to help its neighbors through Toys for Tots as well as by providing disaster relief through the Red Cross. It’s all part of its mission to enhance lives and spread the goodness that’s an essential part of their culture and values.

Filed Under: Daily News

Jeunesse: The Science of Youthful Aging

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Jeunesse Global founders Randy Ray and Wendy Lewis
Jeunesse Global founders Randy Ray and Wendy Lewis

Company Profile

  • Founded: 2009
  • Headquarters: Altamonte Springs, Fla.
  • Founders: Wendy Lewis and Randy Ray
  • Products: Anti-aging
  • 2010 Revenue: Nearly $60 million
  • Distributors: 50,000

In 2011, the baby boomers—defined by the U.S. Census Bureau as those born between Jan. 1, 1946 and Dec. 31, 1964—began to turn 65. In fact, every day for the next 19 years 10,000 baby boomers will turn 65. This is a trend that is not just occurring in the United States. Technological improvements and lifestyle changes are improving life expectancies in developed countries around the world, according to the National Research Council.

And, according to Wendy Lewis and Randy Ray, founders of Jeunesse Global—a company that provides anti-aging product offerings—these people don’t want to age like their parents and grandparents did. They want to age youthfully. Jeunesse was created to help them do just that.

Jeunesse’s tagline is deceptively simple: “The science of youthful aging.” But there are two critical components here. First, the concept of aging youthfully, which few would argue is a desire firmly held by those of the baby boomer era as well as those in the generations that follow them. Second, the concept of science.

Lewis, COO, and Ray, CEO, were first introduced to their now exclusive anti-aging product through Dr. Nathan Newman, a Beverly Hills-based—and world-renowned—cosmetic surgeon. When Ray was contemplating a trip to Singapore for stem cell treatments for his right knee, he had heard about Newman and his work with stem cells and wanted to know if he might be able to receive the treatment he was seeking closer to home.

“While talking to [Newman], he started to tell us about all the wonderful things that can be done and that one of the things he had done was create a serum that can activate your body’s own stem cells and regenerate collagen and renewed elasticity and luminescence for the skin,” Ray recalls.

“I asked him how many bottles he sold, and he said about 40 a month. I said: ‘How would you like to see 40,000 a month?’” Newman was intrigued and soon a relationship was established.

On Sept. 9, 2009 at 9 p.m. (09-09-09 at 9), Jeunesse was born. The numbers are significant. In Chinese, the number nine means longevity. The name Jeunesse is also significant; it’s a French word that means youth. Less than two years later, the company runs offices in 12 countries, counts 50,000 distributors worldwide and has a sales volume near $60 million annually.

Everyone involved seems happy with the results—Jeunesse has paid out millions in distributor commissions in the last two years. Today, Newman serves as a medical advisor to Jeunesse and continues to do ground-breaking work in the area of bio-technology.

Jeunesse’s flagship product was Luminesce, the serum Newman created. The product line now includes the serum, a daily moisturizing complex and a nutritional supplement. Additional anti-aging products are being released in September, based on the work of Dr. Vincent Giampapa, a board-certified plastic reconstructive surgeon and assistant clinical professor of plastic and reconstructive surgery at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Both Newman and Giampapa serve on Jeunesse’s medical advisory board, along with Dr. William Amzallag, who serves as General Manager of the European Union and has decades of medical industry experience, including a background in anesthesiology and intensive care and a degree in Chinese medicine.

It might seem obvious to tie the company’s success to its products, and the science behind them. But, there’s more to it than that. Neither Ray nor Lewis was new to the process of bringing exceptional products to the masses. In fact, their early success was in providing the back-office operations and technology to allow other direct sales organizations to streamline their operations. “Wendy and I had run other companies in the past, and we contracted with several companies over the years to run their back offices and do the compensation plans and the customer support and the shipping, so we had lots of experience,” admits Ray.

Jeunesse headquartesJeunesse Global headquarters in Altamonte Springs, Fla.

They were also able to hit the ground running by bringing staff that they had worked with for a number of years in other settings. This solid infrastructure of technology and people combined, of course, with a science-based youthful aging product and a population around the world aging at a breakneck pace, virtually guaranteed their success.

Ray attributes much of the company’s accomplishments to the staff. “Some have been with us for more than 20 years in other businesses; a lot of them have a lot of seasoning and knowledge of the industry.” Scott Lewis is one of them.

Bench Strength, Commitment and Support

Scott Lewis is Vice President of Global Operations at Jeunesse and is the corporate General Manager for the Pacific Rim. He worked with Ray and Lewis in their office support service company, which gave him contact with a wide variety of companies in the industry, a knowledge of market trends and distributor relations. His strong background in direct sales and international operational processes, combined with experience in legal compliance has, he says, helped him significantly in his current role.

The experience Scott Lewis has and connections he’s made over the years, literally around the world, have also served him—and Jeunesse—well. “I know a lot of good people in the industry and, especially in Asia, we have a lot of capable people we can trust, which allows you to get everything set up more quickly.”

The ability and willingness to be flexible when working with diverse people and cultures has also been a key benefit driving Jeunesse’s rapid success, says Scott Lewis. “I think flexibility is a key benefit that a lot of big companies lack,” he says. That flexibility is critical, he says, when expanding into non-U.S. markets.

Kyle Copeland, Executive Vice President of Business Development at Jeunesse and the corporate General Manager for the Americas, agrees. “What works here in the U.S. does not always work internationally. You have to be able to adapt and understand the local customs and adapt your business to meet local needs. I think we’re extremely good at that.”

In fact, Jeunesse is good at a lot of things and has a solid grasp and years of combined experience working with the broad range of elements that lead to success in direct selling.

Copeland adds, having a product that is unique and that “has a story to it” are foundational elements of success. “Having a product that people can be passionate about creates long-term retention of your team members,” he says. “It allows them to have that interesting story that they can go out and talk about.” It is, he says, like a good movie that you just can’t wait to share with others. Having that in a direct sales product has the same viral effect. It’s just icing on the cake to have a product that is not only interesting but also backed by scientific evidence of its efficacy.

Copeland says that Ray and Lewis are really what drove him to join Jeunesse in February of this year. Their approachability, he says, provides a big benefit for the company. “When they go to events they immediately walk over and start talking to distributors,” he says. “It’s almost a family-like atmosphere. They’re so down-to-earth that people like to be around them.”

Offering a Product That People Want to Buy

In addition to having an experienced staff and generous owners, Jeunesse is not only surviving during a tough economy —it’s thriving. “A huge difference for us, right now, is that we have a product that people want to buy,” says Copeland. “I think our message is very clear with ‘the science of youthful aging’,” he says. “When you explain that message it’s simple, it’s clear and it resonates.”

In fact, he says, he experienced the power of the message himself while attending a neighborhood gathering not long after moving from Utah to Florida to work with Jeunesse. His wife was talking to a group of about 10 women and he walked up to introduce himself. “When I said I work for a company that has anti-aging products every single person in that circle said ‘I want them! Where can I sign up? How can I buy?’ I’ve never had that response before.”

Distributors are really customers too. While an aging international population, a science-based product and exceptional people on staff are critical to Jeunesse’s rapid growth, Wendy Lewis also points to the distributors as a lynchpin for the organization. “We have great distributors—that’s what makes you or breaks you in this industry,” she acknowledges. “We have the infrastructure and customer service in place all around the world; we have the servers and the programmers in-house—all of the things it takes. But, without the distributors we’d have nothing.”

Scott Lewis agrees, noting that the ability to effectively support the distributor network is critical and a best practice for Jeunesse. “We have to serve our distributors and we have to be available to them at any moment,” he says. “We need to make sure they get quick answers if there’s an idea or a question that comes up. We need to be available and flexible.”

He notes that “everyone in the company really has a servant’s heart. … We are tireless in our efforts to help make this company successful—to help make our distributors and their teams successful.”

As an international organization, Scott Lewis notes, Jeunesse runs a 24/7 operation. “Business never stops for us,” he says. “We respect the fact that Asia is awake when most people in the U.S. are asleep.”

And, adds Wendy Lewis, a competitive compensation plan doesn’t hurt. “It allows people to truly become financially independent depending on the amount of time they want to devote to the business opportunity.” Flexibility, she says, allows people to make a few hundred dollars a month or, as some Jeunesse distributors have done, hit the million-dollar mark. “You have to have a compensation plan that’s adaptable to the many goals of the various types of distributors that join your company,” she says.

Then, Ray says, you need to provide materials, training and support and “get out of their way.”

Copeland agrees, saying, “We’ve got science behind us. I moved my family 3,500 miles from Utah down here because I saw that this is what it is all about, and I really believe in it. Everybody says we’re going to be the next billion-dollar company and I really believe that, based on the product, the science and the people involved.”

While Jeunesse is a relatively young company it is taking a long-range view. “We have a 10-year strategic plan in place,” says Scott Lewis. “We’ve laid out the markets and how they’re going to be launched and where we’re going to go with our promotions and marketing platform. We really have a long-term vision of the company and where we want it to be 10 years from now—not just two years from now.”

He says, “We’ve seen companies come and go very quickly, but we’re focused on having a solid foundation for many, many years to come.”

Filed Under: Daily News

Stella & Dot: A Foundation of Strength

September 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Students are pictured from a new school buildOn helped to fund.

Stella & Dot Foundation logo

Company Profile

  • Founded: 2003
  • Headquarters: San Francisco
  • Founder and CEO: Jessica Herrin
  • Products: Jewelry

The Stella & Dot team offers women a helping hand to recognize and reach their potential, resulting in healthier families and communities.

When Jessica Herrin, Founder and CEO of jewelry company Stella & Dot, started her business, she was motivated by the desire to give every woman the means to style her own life. That desire became the company’s core mission. And that core mission is extending to women and children in the darkest corners of the country and around the world through the Stella & Dot Foundation.

A Focused Plan

While many young girls were dreaming of becoming nurses or teachers, Herrin was looking forward to someday starting her own business. And she wasted no time doing so. Her first stab at business ownership was founding the WeddingChannel.com, a successful enterprise that she later sold to The Knot and is now a publicly traded company and the world’s leading wedding website. Not bad for a girl fresh out of college. Having met and married her husband, Herrin’s next goal was to travel the world with him before settling down to start a family—and her next business.

“The seeds of Stella & Dot were already starting to grow before I sold the Wedding Channel,” Herrin says. Although Herrin enjoys becoming absorbed in her work, she knows that not every woman is like her. That fact motivated Herrin to create a company that allows women to work as much or as little as they desire. “There are many levels of success in our business,” she says. “Some women are successful when they reach their goal of $300 a month in extra income, while others define success at $300,000 per year.”

In its infancy, the company offered kits for women to make their own jewelry at home parties. After a few years of that format, Herrin felt it was time to change the product offering to that of boutique-style jewelry at reasonable prices. “We design every piece of jewelry we sell and are the first company to offer this genre of jewelry at an affordable price point,” Herrin says. “When we rebranded, we changed both the product and the name of the company, formerly Luxe Jewels.” And it worked. Stella & Dot has grown every day since this rebranding in 2007, in spite of a declining national economy.

Choosing Partners with Purpose

In January 2010, exactly as she planned, Herrin was ready to start the process of creating the Stella & Dot Foundation. She hired Agatha Precourt, Director of Corporate Strategy, to assist in the development. “We hired Agatha to do some digging and help us discover where we would do the most good within our focus,” Herrin says.

Although there are numerous causes to support, Herrin and her associates felt it was important that the foundation be an extension of the mission already promoted within the company—to create positive change in women’s lives through the support of organizations that encourage women through education or economic empowerment.

Narrowing the list was not without challenges. It was important to Herrin and her executives at Stella & Dot that the recipient organizations be well-operated, mission-minded and benefit women and children around the world. The three organizations that rose to the top during the search were ACCION USA, buildOn, and Girls Inc. Precourt and her team did extensive research of the business practices of each group and interviewed their leadership. “We asked many questions, including exactly what the organizations would do with the money we raised on their behalf,” Precourt says. “We are passionate about making a difference in the lives of individuals and want to know that they are truly being helped.”

ACCION USA is a private nonprofit organization that provides people with the financial tools they need to work their way out of poverty with dignity, according to their website. Those tools include micro loans, additional financial services and business training. “Although ACCION is an international organization, the funds we give them are used specifically to benefit women in the United States,” Precourt says. Their domestic group is the largest nonprofit microfinance network in the United States. They have 14 field offices, as well as an Internet lending team, that provide loans from $200 to $150,000 to small businesses.

The second organization supported by the Stella & Dot Foundation is buildOn. Often, urban communities across the country suffer from alarming high school dropout rates, in some cases as high as 95 percent, according to Herrin. Founded in 1992, buildOn works with inner-city students by providing in-class and intensive afterschool youth service programs.

The students work diligently through various forms of community service to improve their neighborhoods. They are also given opportunities to build schools and bring literacy to children and adults in developing countries around the world. Precourt says the efforts of buildOn have drastically reduced dropout rates in the areas in which they work, as the young people learn to take pride in their communities and to help others less fortunate around the world. And Stella & Dot executives are proud to have committed funds to help impact the lives of young women through buildOn’s endeavors.

Girls Inc. has influenced young girls since 1864, in some local areas, and since 1945 as a national organization. Their primary goal is to empower girls to reach their full potential and to understand, value and assert their rights. Girls Inc. celebrates girlhood and as their mission statement reveals, inspires all girls to be strong, smart and bold. Throughout the decades of the organization’s existence, society has provided various reasons for women to either suffer under the circumstances facing them or rise above them with boldness, according to its website. Girls Inc. understands that confident girls grow to be confident women, able to style their own lives.

The Philanthropic Cycle

The strategy for raising money for the foundation is to design specific pieces of jewelry, the proceeds of which are sent to the foundation. That money is then directed to the trusted organizations. The Stella & Dot representatives in the field, known as stylists, are schooled in the details of the benefactors and are encouraged to be involved in their local chapters if they so desire. “We are one with the stylists in the field,” Herrin says. “We work closely with them and value their input.” The stylists have embraced the causes chosen by the executive team, excited to be giving back while doing something they love and earning an income.

The Stella & Dot Foundation bracelet was inspired by joy.
The Stella & Dot Foundation bracelet was inspired by joy.

The first jewelry created to fund the foundation is the brainchild of Chief Creative Officer Blythe Harris. “The inspiration for the bracelet I created is joy,” Harris says. “It is a colorful collection of semiprecious stones in sizes for both adults and children.” In addition, there is a charm that represents the flower in the foundation logo and is handmade in Thailand. Due to Harris’ fascination for jewelry, she has traveled extensively observing artisans in various cultures using materials from their native surroundings. And although she loves designing jewelry for others to enjoy, her passion is working for a cause greater than herself. “I come to work every day with a smile on my face knowing that I am working for a company with a heart for helping others,” Harris says. “It is like a calling and a mission for me.” And it warms her heart to see the passion of the stylists as they sell her creations in order to make the world a better place for other women.

Although the bracelet and charm are the first pieces created for the foundation, the offerings will be refreshed on a yearly basis.

The Results

In the first year of its existence, the Stella & Dot Foundation raised double the money it planned. “Our goal for the first year was to raise $180,000 and we finished with over $350,000,” Herrin says. With such amazing results, they have raised their second-year earnings goal to half a million dollars, with plans to add a fourth organization to support.

But the most rewarding results are not monetary—they are the stories of the lives of women and children touched by the generosity of the Stella & Dot stylists and customers.

Fauzia, a hard-working mother in Bronx, N.Y., has operated a food cart outside of Yankee Stadium for six years, offering multicultural and organic meals. Several years ago her cart needed to be upgraded and a friend referred her to ACCION for help with the expenses of the upgrade. She was given a loan of $16,000 and was able to purchase a new food cart, and her business grew. Her cart became so successful that she was featured in The New York Daily News, and was nominated by New Yorkers for a Vendy Award (an award program for the best street vendors). In 2011, she approached ACCION for a second loan to expand her business. They loaned her $6,000, with which she bought a new cart and hired two employees to run it.

Stella & Dot has financially supported the building of two schools in Nicaragua through buildOn, one of which they were traveling to help build in August. Living under the direst of conditions, people in the remote villages do what they can to educate their children, according to Precourt. And their hearts are filled with gratitude for the efforts of buildOn, she says. A little closer to home, buildOn has changed the lives of many young people, including a high school girl named Kasiemobi (Kasie). Kasie is a first-generation U.S. citizen and the daughter of a Nigerian single mother living in Oakland, Calif. She is tasked with the responsibility of taking care of her young brother and the household while her mother works two jobs to support them. Until recently, her mother was an illegal immigrant, adding the threat of separation to their already difficult lives.

Kasie credits buildOn with helping her hang on to a tiny thread of hope. And that hope has come in the form of an ongoing service project through buildOn. Each weekday from 3 to 6 p.m., she becomes responsible for 15 children in a kindergarten class. She has witnessed the effect that consistent care and concern can have on their behavior and outlook. One young boy with challenging behavioral issues is a completely different child due to Kasie’s efforts, according to buildOn. He now thanks her for being his best friend. And through her involvement with buildOn, Kasie can look forward to the future.

Girls Inc. tells the story of young Jodeci. She joined the organization at the age of 10 after enduring a childhood full of fear while living with a father who was a drug dealing gang member. Though Jodeci and her family eventually left her father, she encountered a different set of problems at her new school as one of the only Latinas in her fifth grade class. Discovering Girls Inc. introduced Jodeci to a community that looked beyond her family’s past and ethnicity. The friends she made and the supportive staff at Girls Inc. inspired her to strive for good grades and not repeat her father’s mistakes. With their help, she began seeing her painful childhood as something she overcame to become mature and strong. When Jodeci’s father died as a result of a drug overdose, the support she received from her friends and the staff at Girls Inc. enabled her to remain strong despite her anger and confusion, according to the organization. They reminded her that the outcome of her life was not determined by the choices her father had made. This fall, Jodeci will be the first person in her family to attend college. According to Girls Inc., Jodeci was able to focus on setting goals for her future instead of remaining in the pain of her past.

“It’s amazing what women can do when given a chance,” Herrin says. The very name of the company she founded is inspired by two strong women: Herrin’s grandmother, Stella, and Blythe Harris’ grandmother, Dot. “The women of that generation sailed across oceans, learned new languages, got the vote, went to work when the country went to war, raised their families—and they did it all with style and grace,” Herrin says. The fortitude of their grandmothers became the foundation on which Herrin, Harris and the entire team now stands as they empower women around the world to find their own inner strength.

Filed Under: Daily News

Brand: New Thoughts

August 5, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Since our launch in 2004, Scentsy has grown steadily, from sales of less than $100,000 in 2004 to more than $380 million last year. Within the last year alone, we moved up 31 spots from No. 64 to No. 33 on the DSN Global 100 list of the top direct selling companies in the world. Each season has seen us do some things well and some things poorly. Like most direct selling companies, we have not been immune to consultant discontent, financial concern, poor execution, bad communication or competitive pressure, yet we have grown steadily. Through it all, we constantly ask ourselves the probing questions of how and why. As insight into our success so far, I’d like to share with you Scentsy’s thoughts on brand and how it guides our decision-making.

Brand Democratization

A brand is more than a name, logo and tagline. It is the sum of the perceptions of all its stakeholders. It carries with it a characteristic spirit defined by the aspiration and values of the organization it represents. Whenever an individual engages in a behavior that produces a brand benefit, that person becomes a brand stakeholder. As stakeholders, they earn the right to a portion of the physical goods (money) and emotional goods (goodwill) produced by the brand. This right is in direct proportion to the brand benefit they create.

To illustrate this principle, I draw upon a story from history. In the 13th century, Spain’s sheep industry came under the control of a handful of the largest land-owning families. In exchange for their tax revenues and political support, the king of Spain granted these families the right to graze their sheep on all the fallow land in the country. To protect this right, the king declared farmers could not close off their ground with fences. Not surprisingly, just as a farmer was about to harvest the fruit of his labor, these enormous flocks of sheep swept in and destroyed all attempts at agriculture. As a result, farmers had no incentive to plant crops even though the kingdom desperately needed food. The king was unwise for favoring a few politically entrenched individuals at the expense of his kingdom as a whole, and he was unjust for giving one group something that belonged to another.

Entrepreneurs and business leaders often repeat the folly of the Spanish king. Rather than seeking input from new distributors, customers or entry-level employees, as one would in a democratized brand, these leaders look to entrenched managers, industry experts and senior distributors for answers. What often follow are recognition programs, incentives and policies of the status quo at the expense of new and innovative ideas. These decision-makers find themselves adopting a strategy of “emulate the status quo and hope for the best,” and then wonder why their “farmers don’t plant crops.”

Recognition in the direct selling industry is very important. The contribution of one group is recognized relative to the contribution of others. But what about the contribution of the masses who don’t reach the threshold? Are they to be forgotten? In a democratized brand, every contribution is valued, regardless of how small it is, and there is an expectation that contribution will be recognized appropriately. In hindsight, Heidi and I realize this attitude is a function of our age and mindset; we are Gen Xers.

We soon discovered our target market—Generation X and Y individuals—felt the same way. This group feels connected to brands they contribute to, even if their contribution is small. Gen X and Gen Y individuals aren’t interested in being recognized relative to others, but they do want to be acknowledged for their contributions, whether it is in selling, recruiting or evangelizing the brand to others. By seeking input from people others ignored and recognizing all stakeholders relative to their contribution—not relative to each other—we were able to create an organization full of alignment, energy, innovation and growth. Thus, our brand spoke clearly to the group of people most interested in buying our products and joining our business.

Brand Stewardship

Any brand that has more than one stakeholder cannot have an owner. Physical control of the common stock of a company does not translate into ownership of a brand, and position in the organization does not translate into moral authority. Rather, ownership and title carry with them the responsibility of stewardship on behalf of all stakeholders collectively. To the extent people are given authority to make decisions, they have an obligation to exercise that authority with wisdom and justice.

This concept is illustrated in Scentsy’s finances and, specifically, in our history of bootstrapping. Heidi and I put in a total of $60,000 paid in capital, and the company’s total liabilities have never exceeded our inventory asset. To do this, we believed every dollar of revenue came with a promise to every stakeholder we had to keep. To keep this promise, we strongly resisted any ongoing or long-term commitments. Unless we could pay cash, we didn’t purchase assets, and until we had a reliable stream of income, we didn’t take on commitments like employees or leases. Until cash flow was sufficient, we worked for free in a rent-free facility. Until we could afford software, we calculated commissions by hand. As cash flow increased, so did our ability to invest in personnel, plant and equipment. This created a mindset of frugality and efficiency that was appreciated and promoted by our employees and consultants, and adopted by our vendors. Most important, it demonstrated to the people who built our brand that we were good stewards of their contributions. They learned they could count on us to respect their involvement and compensate them appropriately.

Brand stewardship is the process of guiding a democratized brand by focusing the energy created as people interact with the brand toward a common benefit. At Scentsy, we value every interaction with our brand, even when it comes with no obvious monetary benefit, because we know brand engagement inspires long-term trust and cooperation. An example of this is how we use social media not to sell, but to build genuine relationships through fun and engaging activities. Scentsy “fans” choose to align with our brand because they like it and trust it. Therefore, they are much more likely to buy product, become a consultant, say good things to a potential customer or consultant, or share an innovative idea.

Brand Promise

Brand promise is most often thought of as a company’s logo or slogan. But for me, the fulfillment of a brand’s promise is when brand democratization and brand stewardship come together to fulfill the expectations stakeholders have about the brand. Scentsy, like any other organization, thrives when we promote behavior that recognizes the contributions of all brand stakeholders and rewards them appropriately. Alignment, energy, growth, innovation and happiness are indications of this organizational vigor, not the cause of  it.


Orville ThompsonOrville Thompson is Co-Owner and CEO of Scentsy.

Filed Under: Feature Articles

Goin’ Mobile

August 4, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

In 1971 when Pete Townshend of The Who belted out the lyrics, “I can stop in any street and talk with people that we meet, goin’ mobile,” who could have imagined what goin’ mobile would imply in today’s world. With the speed of technological advancement growing every day, direct selling companies are presented with a wealth of technology in various forms and more than ever feel the need to embrace it in order to remain viable and sustainable. At the vanguard of the technological explosion are mobile applications and devices.

At Next Wave Logistics, we’ve found that sales fields love the flexibility of goin’ mobile to help manage their busy lives. For example, a rep might be in the midst of entering a large party order using his or her home computer, and if the call to duty of family life sidelines them at a soccer game, they can complete the order with ease. Or, the other way around—if a sales rep starts an order on her smartphone while she’s out, she can suspend it, and complete the order when she arrives home.

Create a Plan

While most companies feel they should embrace something in social media and mobile connectivity, it’s imperative not to jump in without a solid plan. Here are some factors to consider in identifying your level of readiness to embrace the mobile marketplace:

First, define your company goals and reasons for implementing a mobile platform. According to Gleanster.com—a company that measures, surveys and benchmarks best practices in technology-enabled ventures—the top three reasons to consider implementing a mobile-based strategy are to:

  • Increase site traffic
  • Increase customer acquisition
  • Increase marketing ROI

Next, ask whether your IT and marketing infrastructure can support the real-time readiness required in this channel. Consider the following questions:

  • Is your website mobile-enabled?
  • Are your marketing campaigns mobile ready, or are you merely extending traditional email marketing?
  • Can you handle explosive growth and activity?

Then review whether your company has technology and personnel that can focus on the four main delivery technologies for mobile content. Typically, you will need the following:

  • A content management system that offers centralized administration to deliver a variety of media and content through multiple channels: mobile, personal websites, corporate sites, regional sites and sales rep business portals
  • SMS capabilities for instant notification of a new recruit, a new qualification, a new promotion or a successful party
  • An integrated email system, which can work hand-in-hand with other marketing efforts while providing real-time results
  • A promotions tool that enables real-time flexibility

Lastly, determine how you will measure success. Clicks, conversions and impressions don’t always add up to increased revenue, so how will you know if your programs are bringing you value? Consider the following:

  • Understanding the right metrics to measure is imperative, but knowing how to act on the business intelligence is even more important.
  • Market penetration and consumer growth rates are critical factors, but further analysis will help you make strategic decisions based on true audience behavior and buying patterns.

According to Morgan Stanley Tech Analyst Mary Meeker, within the next five years, mobile Internet usage will ramp up substantially faster than desktop Internet usage did. Meeker, a heavyweight in tech analysis and now head of the global technology research team at Morgan Stanley, has compared iPhone/iPod Touch adoption rates to those of AOL and Netscape in the early ’90s, and determined that adoption of Apple devices is taking place 11 times faster than adoption of AOL did, and several times faster than adoption of Netscape.

This increased mobile usage will result in growth in e-commerce. Users appear to be more willing to pay for content on mobile devices than desktops for a variety of reasons, including the ability to personalize, small price tags and easy-to-use/secure payment systems.

A Tale of Two Companies

Once you’ve got a handle on your mobile strategy plan, the next challenge is developing a solid rollout to your salesforce. ABI Research, a marketing research firm specializing in technology, predicts that by 2015 more than $119 billion worth of goods and services will be purchased via mobile phones, a process now called m-commerce. End-user spending is expected to reach $15.9 billion for 2012. The winners in this arena will be companies that are focused on unique features tailored to the environment of the mobile user, not those merely building an extension of their current online applications.

Winning mobile apps must have simple-to-use features that cater to the mobile environment rather than act as a mobile extension of their online presence. More and more companies in direct selling are looking into mobile adoption, and the strategies can vary widely. What’s important is that executives in the company create a mobile strategy relevant to its needs. In comparing the processes we went through for two different companies, we can highlight some of these issues.

We first developed a mobile strategy for each, Company A and Company B. The underlying mobile platform was identical for both companies but the capabilities and targeted users were quite different. Client A wanted to offer a browsing user experience to anyone who wanted to download the app onto their iPhone or Droid. Several choices make this possible: Shop their products catalog, view specials and promotions or search on products with a “how-to-purchase” button and direct call to action offering options for hosting or attending a show or contacting a sales rep.

The mobile products catalog was managed by using our centralized content management tools—the same tools already in use for managing their products catalog, promotions and specials presented on their corporate website, sales rep personal websites and sales rep business portals. This is a game changer for direct sellers looking to deploy mobile apps, as most online content management systems do not offer centralized administration to multiple channels.

Client B took a different approach. They wanted to use mobile technology as an extension of their salesforce. Since the salesforce demographics were different from consumer statistics, we designed the mobile app specific to their sales reps. As a result, Company B embraced our mobileDS full m-commerce suite. Once logged in, a sales rep could place a personal order, a party order or a customer order; shop the complete catalog with the ability to view product videos; access a streamlined checkout process by using credit card and shipping information already stored; view news, specials, promotions and company announcements; and check order and shipping statuses—most of the key information a sales rep would access through an online business portal, but offered through a completely different mobile-user experience.

We can manage each of these strategies from our centralized content management system.

In the case of these two examples there is no right or wrong as to how a direct selling mobile strategy should be deployed; the key is having a solid mobile-enabled foundation and platform so your company can expand its service offering over time.

Looking Ahead

Building a strong foundation for extending products through this emerging channel is a great first step for any direct selling company to dip their toe in the m-commerce pool, but there is so much more available.

Gartner Inc., an information technology research and advisory firm, has identified what it believes will be the most important mobile applications in 2012. They include location-based services (LBS), more social networking, and mobile search and commerce.

The first one listed, location-based services, represents those apps which make use of the geographical position of the mobile device, for example directing you to the nearest movie theater, coffee shop or brand location. Location-based services also empower users to find interesting things to do in their general vicinity and to share details about locations or venues they frequent.

The convergence of geo-location, personal preferences and social influences will allow companies to serve up applicable contextual-based information. Yes, this means promotions with a punch and higher rates of returns on marketing dollars. Object recognition will become mainstream as our devices evolve into mega-pixel wonders. QR codes—a popular trend now—will be joined by other recognition encoding that completely outdate them.

Companies like Cisco are already redesigning their architecture to allow messaging and email applications to connect users without the need for 4G (or 5G or 6G)—these technical advances will turn the smartphone into smartoffices of the near future. The truth is we are already doing so, just not as efficiently as is possible in the next 24 months. Gartner expects mobile email users worldwide to increase from 354 million in 2009 to 713 million in 2014.

With all these promising and exciting capabilities coming at us at light speed it is important to remember that when goin’ mobile there are varying speeds that will get companies to their ultimate destination, as long as you clearly understand your audience—your salesforce—and their needs. At the end of the day that is what matters.


Greg Fink is Vice President of Sales at Next Wave Logistics. Greg Fink is Vice President of Sales at Next Wave Logistics.

Filed Under: Working Smart

Update: The Direct Sellers Association of Canada

August 4, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

The Honorable Julian Fantino, Minister of State, and Ross Creber share the stage at the Fraud Prevention Conference.

This time last year, Canadians were emerging from the dramatic economic crisis in which so many people had lost not only their jobs, but also their hope for the future. But as predicted by so many “economic think tanks,” Canada did rebound from the recession sooner and in a much better position than other countries.

The Canadian market has always been and continues to be a very receptive and profitable market for direct selling. Our research shows a high degree of consumer acceptance when compared with other channels in terms of quality products, product knowledge and customer service. It is a mature market, although somewhat underpenetrated—as is the U.S. market—in terms of percent of retail sales.

While retail sales of our members in 2010 declined 6 percent, more than CAN$1.3 billion was reported, and the number of independent sales consultants (ISCs) increased by 12 percent. The industry represents 16 percent of non-store retail sales in Canada, a position it has maintained during the past six years, and it continues to make significant economic and social contributions to Canadians and the nation by injecting CAN$4.55 billion of sales into the marketplace; contributing CAN$815 million in taxes that impact education, health services and community growth; and donating CAN$7.7 million to charities.

In terms of DSA members’ performance, 43 percent of the 48 companies reported an increase in 2010, with 26 percent reporting an increase of 15 percent or more. While overall party plan sales declined by 3 percent, 33 percent of these companies reported an increase in shows, attendance and average show sales, proving that consumers are looking for fun yet economical socializing opportunities.

As for the Direct Sellers Association itself, 2010–2011 has been a strong year for us as we have focused on strategic planning, government relations and developing the “DSA brand.” We want to be able to achieve a similar level of success with our branding to ISCs and Canadian consumers as we have with federal and provincial governments, where we are viewed as an important stakeholder by bureaucrats and elected officials alike.

Government relations once again dominated much of our work. This past year has been a combination of reacting to regulatory challenges as well as continuing a more proactive approach of seeking opportunities and partnerships that will ultimately benefit our companies and the hundreds of thousands of ISCs across the country.

If you have plans to come to Canada, make us your first contact point. If you are already marketing in Canada and are not a member of the DSA, let’s talk about the “value proposition” of being a member in the DSA of Canada.

For more information or to become a member, please contact info@dsa.ca.


Ross CreberRoss Creber is President of the Direct Sellers Association of Canada.

Filed Under: Daily News

August 2011

August 2, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

DSA Hall of Famer and DSEF Circle of Honor Awardee Robert H. King Passes Away

Robert H. King
Robert H. King

Industry icon Robert H. King passed away the last week of June at his home in Eustis, Fla. He was 90.

With an extensive and successful career in direct sales, King served as Chairman of the Board and CEO of World Book, as President of Time-Life Libraries and as Vice President of Sales for Encyclopedia Britannica Inc.

King served as Chairman of the DSA Board of Directors for two terms, in 1977 and 1978. He was also inducted into DSA’s Hall of Fame in 1980 and received DSEF’s Circle of Honor award in 1992.

After helping to establish the Direct Selling Education Foundation (DSEF) and serving the foundation for 30 years as Chairman, Treasurer, Development Committee Chairman and member of its Board of Directors, the Robert H. King Board of Directors Chair was created for him as a lifetime seat with full voting privileges.

King also led the formation of the World Federation of Direct Selling Associations (WFDSA) and served as the founding Chairman of the organization from 1978 to 1984. He later received the WFDSA Lifetime Achievement Award.

King was a consultant to numerous companies and mentored many individuals in the industry.


Nature’s Sunshine Products

Gregory L. Probert
Gregory L. Probert

Nature’s Sunshine announced the appointment of Gregory L. Probert as Executive Vice Chairman and member of the Board of Directors, where he will serve as a Class II Director. Probert has extensive direct selling experience, as well as marketing and operational experience in consumer-oriented businesses.

Probert served as a consultant in the direct selling industry since May 2008, including consulting with Nature’s Sunshine since October 2010. At Nature’s Sunshine, he focused on the U.S. Sales division. Prior to his consulting work, Probert was the Chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO for Penta Water Company and held executive positions within the direct selling industry. Prior to working in direct selling, he was the CEO of DMX Music, held significant management positions at iMovieStudio and PlanetLingo and served in various positions at The Walt Disney Co., including Executive Vice President of Worldwide Home Entertainment.


Mannatech Inc.

Alfredo Bala
Alfredo Bala
Tait Switzer
Tait Switzer
Ronald Norman
Ronald Norman
Mark Nicholls
Mark Nicholls
Brett Duncan
Brett Duncan

Mannatech recently announced promotions to its executive sales, marketing and operations teams.

Alfredo Bala was promoted to Executive Vice President of Sales. Bala joined Mannatech in 2007, and previously had held the post of Senior Vice President of Global Sales. In his new position, Bala will assume primary responsibility for Mannatech’s sales activity in North America.

Ronald Norman was promoted to Senior Vice President of International. Norman joined Mannatech in 1996. He has been instrumental in opening each of the 16 international markets in which Mannatech operates. Norman has a background in tax and accounting and is a CPA.

Brett Duncan was promoted to Vice President of Marketing. Duncan joined Mannatech in 2009 and has led all online marketing initiatives for the company since then. He has been in the direct selling industry since 2002.

Tait Switzer was promoted to Vice President of Research and Development of Technical Services. Switzer most recently was Senior Director of Product Development for Mannatech, serving with the company in increasingly responsible positions since 2002.

Mannatech also announced that Mark Nicholls was named Vice President, Treasury and Tax by the Mannatech Board. Nicholls joined the company in 2007 as Senior Manager of Tax.


Herbalife

Jose Reinhart
Jose Reinhart
Roman Malkov
Roman Malkov
Dr. Banu Cayci
Dr. Banu Cayci

Herbalife Ltd. has announced that medical experts from Ecuador, Russia and Turkey have joined its Nutrition Advisory Board.
The Nutrition Advisory Board comprises leading experts around the world in the fields of nutrition and health who educate and train Herbalife independent distributors, and in China, sales employees, on the principles of nutrition, physical activity and healthy lifestyle.

Jose Reinhart, M.D., from Ecuador, has practiced sports medicine for over 40 years at the Hospital del Valle and Hospital Metropolitano de Quito. His expertise combines sports medicine with nutrition, helping athletes to perform their best and to use nutrition for a competitive edge.

Roman Malkov, M.D., also specializes in sports medicine, treating patients and conducting research to improve athletes’ performance at the Anokhin Institute of Normal Physiology in Moscow. He is the author of three nutrition books and is a contributing writer to Men’s Health, Russia.

Dr. Banu Cayci’s research has focused on the relationship between obesity, exercise, antioxidants and disease. She is an associate professor at the School of Medicine and the hospital at Gazi University, where she has instructed since 1995. Cayci has authored over 100 research articles in international journals.


Phototron Holdings Inc.

Douglas Braun
Douglas Braun

Phototron Holdings Inc., the designer, manufacturer and seller of the PHOTOTRON Hydroponic Indoor Grow Systems, has announced that its Board of Directors has appointed Douglas Braun as Chief Executive Officer. Braun will also serve as President and CEO of GrowLife Inc., the wholly owned direct selling hydroponic gardening subsidiary of Phototron Holdings.

Prior to joining Phototron and GrowLife, Braun served as President of a leading direct seller of wellness home technologies. Previously he held numerous executive marketing positions in the industry.

Kara Knell has been appointed Chief Operating Officer of GrowLife Inc. Knell previously owned and operated two companies, providing merchant processing services and consulting services in sales and operations.


4Life

Rafael Fernandez
Rafael Fernandez

4Life has announced the promotion of Rafael Fernandez to Vice President, Europe.

Previously, Fernandez spent more than three years as the General Manager of 4Life operations in Spain and Portugal.

Fernandez brings more than 20 years of experience in direct selling to his new assignment, which includes oversight of Spain and Portugal along with Germany, England, Eastern European countries and developing markets throughout the European Union.

Fernandez will work with the 4Life executive team on strategic objectives for the continent as well as methods to support field leaders who conduct business in Europe from other parts of the world. He will headquarter in Barcelona and work closely with the staff in Spain and Daniel Taylor, International Director Europe.


Zurvita

Allen Rejonis
Allen Rejonis

Zurvita has announced the promotion of Allen Rejonis to Vice President of its new Commercial Division, featuring Zurvita’s ZLinked business program, which focuses on the online advertising and search directory services market.

Rejonis joined Zurvita in January 2008, serving most recently as Director of Operations. Prior to joining the company, Rejonis worked in marketing for insurance, primarily in life and health products and essential consumer services. Prior to that, he worked at The Walt Disney Co. for 19 years in both Florida and California in a variety of leadership roles in both the Operations and Human Resources departments. In his new role, Rejonis will report directly to Jay Shafer, Zurvita’s Co-CEO.


North American Power

John Costino
John Costino
Bradley J. Tayles
Bradley J. Tayles

North American Power announced that John Costino has joined the company as Vice President of Sales and Training. During the past 17 years, he has trained more than 750,000 individuals to run home-based businesses as a national sales trainer for multiple companies. In his role at North American Power, Costino will work to educate the team of independent sales representatives on the opportunities that exist within the energy industry.

Bradley J. Tayles joined the company as Vice President of Operations. He has over two decades of network marketing experience, including executive operations positions.


GeneLink Inc.

John A. Webb
John A. Webb
Maggie Palazzolo
Maggie Palazzolo
Stephanie May Heinrich
Stephanie May Heinrich

GeneLink Inc. has appointed John A. Webb, CPA, as Chief Financial Officer. Webb has served as the Director of Finance/Controller of GeneLink Inc. since 2008. He has over 25 years of experience in corporate and entrepreneurial financial management, both as a CPA and financial executive.

GeneLink also expanded its Scientific Advisory Board by appointing two new members, Maggie Palazzolo, M.S., and Stephanie May Heinrich. Palazzolo is a clinical validation protocol expert and currently Project Manager, Informatics, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

Heinrich is a genomicist and currently a researcher with the Faculty of Medicine at the Institute for Human Genetics at Justus-Liebig University in Giessen, Germany. Heinrich is expected to join GeneLink’s corporate team later this year.

The company’s Scientific Advisory Board consists of experts in the fields of genetics, genomic research, medicine, pediatrics, nutrition, public health, neuroscience, clinical laboratory medicine, nuclear medicine and imaging, and quality assurance.


Submissions
Please submit news of executive promotions and hires at your company to be included in the Executive Announcements section of Direct Selling News. Email pr@directsellingnews.com

Filed Under: Daily News

Stream Energy and Ignite: Stream of Conscientiousness

August 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Company Profile

Founded: 2004
Headquarters: Dallas, Texas
Chairman & CEO: Rob Snyder
Products: energy

From supporting homeless children to helping low-income families pay their energy bills, Stream Energy is meeting the needs of people where they are.

From the earthquake and tsunami in Japan to the devastation of Greece’s economy to the unrest in the Middle East, the world today is in a lot of pain. But one need not look abroad to find suffering: there are families and children in need here in America.

One company acutely aware of this fact is Stream Energy and its network marketing arm, Ignite. A U.S. company, Stream Energy is lending a helping hand to the poorest citizens right in its own backyard through its ongoing charitable support program called “A Big Difference Starts Small.”

Stream Energy focuses its charitable giving efforts on two underpriveleged groups: homeless children and low-income families who need help paying their energy bills due to job loss, poverty and other hardships.

“Network marketing traditionally identifies itself as a people-helping-people business, and at Stream Energy we think it’s important to put our money where our mouth is,” says Paul Thies, Senior Director of Communications at Stream Energy. “We’ve been very fortunate in the success that we have seen, and we feel there’s a responsibility to give back to our brothers and sisters who need it the most—and homeless children were top of mind. We also feel strongly about giving to low-income families who need some assistance paying their energy bills.”

Stream Energy sells energy products—electricity and natural gas—in Georgia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Texas. The company, headquartered in Dallas, supports charities in all four of the states in which it does business.

“Because of our network marketing model we have associates in each jurisdiction, and we think it’s important for them to see that we support these types of efforts, not in just our home territory of Texas but also in their markets,” says Stream Energy Chairman Rob Snyder.

Giving Hope a Helping Hand

According to the United States Conference of Mayors’ annual Hunger and Homelessness Survey (December 2010), across the nation’s largest cities an average of 27 percent of homeless people needing assistance during the last year did not receive it. Emergency shelters in 64 percent of the survey cities turned away families with children because no beds were available for them.

In North Texas, the statistics were just as dire. A 2010 census of Dallas County’s homeless showed that women and children made up 47 percent of the known homeless population. On any given night in North Texas, more than 1,100 children fell asleep in homeless and domestic violence shelters. Additionally, 66 percent were under the age of 9 and 31 percent were infants and toddlers under age 3.

These statistics motivated Stream Energy to make contact with Captain Hope’s Kids (www.captainhope. org), a nonprofit agency based in Dallas whose mission is to meet the critical needs of homeless children. It is the only agency that actively solicits donations and funds for the sole purpose of providing supplies to homeless children throughout the North Texas region. Captain Hope’s Kids touches the lives of more than 40,000 homeless children every year, with the help of Stream Energy and its employees and associates.

“It’s been a blessing to be involved with Captain Hope’s Kids,” Thies says. “The nonprofit organization was initially brought to our attention by one of our employees, Curchara Jones. We’ve done a number of things for Captain Hope’s Kids since they’re right here in Dallas where our corporate headquarters are.”

Snyder says of the organization, “We thought it was absolutely a terrific cause. We have a committee here in-house that is in charge of the company’s charitable efforts. When they looked at the scope of charities out there, considering both need and merit, Captain Hope’s Kids was at the top of the list.”

Captain Hope’s Kids provides life’s necessities for the most vulnerable of the homeless—babies and toddlers. An impressive 92 percent of funds received by the organization are applied to programs.

“Captain Hope’s Kids works with 40 agencies around the metroplex to provide all sorts of life essentials to homeless children,” Thies says. “That population is probably the most distressed population in our community. Who is more deserving of assistance than homeless children? Our efforts started with a toy drive that was pretty successful. We coupled that with a diaper drive. Last year, our employees donated more than 46,000 diapers. We’re told that allowed Captain Hope’s Kids to help over 6,000 homeless children, supplying four shelters with diapers.”

From left to right are Brad Boss, CHK Program Director; Jeanne Reyer, CHK Executive Director; Rob Snyder, Stream Energy Chairman and Co-Founder; Brenda Cannon, CHK Development Director; and Mark Steele, CHK Board Member.
From left to right are Brad Boss, CHK Program Director; Jeanne Reyer, CHK Executive Director; Rob Snyder, Stream Energy Chairman and Co-Founder; Brenda Cannon, CHK Development Director; and Mark Steele, CHK Board Member.

 

Providing Comprehensive Support

Through the years, Stream Energy employees have donated much of their time and energy to the cause of Captain Hope’s Kids, supporting them in many ways, including toy drives, diaper drives, a license plate fundraiser and special events such as an Easter egg hunt and a fireworks show dedicated to spreading the organization’s message.

“Last year, we sponsored the WFAA-TV fireworks spectacular for the Big D NYE New Year’s bash in Victory Park,” Thies says. “More than 35,000 people attended, and half a million viewers tuned in to watch. As part of that sponsorship, WFAA provided us with commercial airtime. Rather than use those commercials to promote our energy services, we opted instead to use that airtime to feature the work done by Captain Hope’s Kids. Our message was ‘during this holiday season don’t make a resolution, make a difference.’ ”

At Ignite’s annual conference, Ignition, the company set up a Captain Hope’s Kids booth where Ignite associates made donations. “Stream Energy matched the individual donations made by Ignite associates,” Thies says. “As a result, together we provided more than $17,000 in cash donations to Captain Hope’s Kids.”

Captain Hope’s Kids is equally enthusiastic about the partnership. In 2010, the organization named Stream Energy Community Partner of the Year, and at the Ignition conference, Snyder was presented with a plaque of appreciation by Jeanne Reyer, Executive Director of Captain Hope’s Kids. Thies was also named a member of the organization’s board of directors.

“Stream Energy exemplifies the concept of corporate responsibility,” Reyer says. “It seems Stream is always looking for ways to better the community. They don’t wait for someone else to step up. They take the lead. We experienced that firsthand at the conference. It was amazing to talk to a group of people who were all of one mind that was focused on giving back. Our good fortune started at the top, and the giving didn’t stop.”

According to Reyer, Stream Energy makes a point to invest in social change for the betterment of local communities, like the ones her agency serves. “Stream Energy identifies with issues and invests in organizations that are effectively addressing these issues,” she adds. “In the case of Captain Hope’s Kids, the result is an improvement in the community and in the lives of those who will directly impact the future—the children.”

Both Snyder and Thies—along with many of the employees and associates who are part of Stream Energy and Ignite —feel strongly about supporting such a worthy cause.

“Kids in homeless families are very vulnerable and terribly disadvantaged,” Snyder says. “They’re spending their developmental years in relative deprivation. To the extent that we can help ameliorate that, we’re all for it.”

Thies says, “When you’re a child you don’t have a lot of control over your life. When you throw homelessness into that equation, what should be your carefree years are filled with fear and uncertainty. Homelessness is scary, but for a child that must be a very terrible burden to carry—the total lack of control. It’s a very daunting issue, and it’s one that we, as an organization, feel very passionate about.”

Addressing Energy Poverty

But Stream Energy’s charitable efforts are not just focused on its home state of Texas. “We also provide energy service in Georgia, Maryland and Pennsylvania,” Thies says. “Out of respect for our customers in those states—and to demonstrate our goodwill as community partners—we’ve made donations to the Fuel Fund in Maryland, the Utility Emergency Services Fund in Pennsylvania, and the Heating Energy Assistance Team (H.E.A.T.) in Georgia. We felt it was important to support communities there as well.”

One of the benefits of selling energy is that it is so essential to everyone’s life—but this very fact makes energy poverty all the more debilitating.

“In a down economy, you’re more likely to cancel your gym membership than you are to not pay your energy bill,” Thies says. “However, energy bills tend to be a sizable portion of someone’s household budget. We donate to these energy assistance funds and then they help low-income families pay their energy bills, regardless of who their provider is.”

Snyder adds, “We’re in the business of selling power. To the extent that customers in the jurisdictions in which we operate aren’t able to afford power, it’s an issue. So we think it’s important to support those types of charitable organizations that do give consumer assistance in regard to bill payment. We understand that most of the time Stream Energy doesn’t benefit from that.

A Big Difference Starts Small“At the same time it does send a message to not only our field but also to our customer base that we are involved in their local communities,” Snyder continues. “We realize that people do have problems paying their bills, and we want to make sure there’s a vehicle for them to accommodate that. It’s just one less thing that people have to worry about when they’re under financial distress.”

Janet H. Joseph, Executive Director of Tucker, Ga.-based Heating Energy Assistance Team (H.E.A.T.), explains the issue of energy poverty.

“Low-income families spend as much as 19.5 percent of their annual incomes on energy costs compared to 4.6 percent for median-income households,” Joseph says. “The strain on household budgets often causes unavoidable trade-offs between food and energy—many families have to choose between ‘heating and eating.’ These trade-offs have serious consequences for the health and learning of young children. Additionally, living in a cold home can lead to illness, especially for children and elderly women.”

Joseph says only about one-third of the more than 700,000 Georgia households that would potentially qualify for energy assistance actually receive it; therefore, additional funds are needed to help address this growing issue. Stream Energy is certainly doing its part to help.

“The money that Stream donates to H.E.A.T. helps families avoid the discomfort and consequences of living in a cold home,” Joseph says. “Stream’s support helps families help themselves by giving them the boost they need to get through a difficult time in their lives such as the financial burden of coping with an unexpected illness or the inability to make ends meet due to job loss or limited income.”

Like Reyer, Joseph also believes that Stream Energy has demonstrated that it is committed to improving the lives of families in the communities it serves. “Assisting families with their energy needs helps them remain in their homes and continue to be productive citizens in the community,” Joseph says. “That not only helps families economically but it also helps build healthy communities as well, which is a great example for other companies to follow.”

Despite its impressive charitable giving program, Stream Energy remains humble and aware there is much more to do.

“We are still a young company; we’re just getting started but as we grow we expect that we can—and will—do more,” Thies says. “We’re trying to give where we can and keep the momentum going. The important thing is to just get involved. At least if you’ll take a first step, you can build off of it. That’s the spirit behind our campaign ‘A Big Difference Starts Small.’ We can all do something, and every bit helps.”


Stream Energy’s Charitable Giving

Fast Facts

  • 2009 Toy Drive for Captain Hope’s Kids netted 1,711 toys.
  • 2010 Toy Drive for Captain Hope’s Kids netted 1,834 toys.
  • 2010 Diaper Drive for Captain Hope’s Kids netted more than 46,000 diapers.
  • 2011 Diaper Drive for Captain Hope’s Kids netted almost 75,000 diapers.
  • At Ignition 2011 (annual convention), cash contributions to Captain Hope’s Kids totaled $17,348.
  • For 2010, the company was designated by Captain Hope’s Kids as its Community Partner of the Year.
  • For the past five years, the company has conducted annual employee blood drives on behalf of Carter BloodCare—the drives combined have collected 303 pints of blood from 327 participants, helping to save as many as 909 lives.
  • The company has supported the Heating Energy Assistance Team of Georgia for three years (2008, 2009 and 2010) and has expanded its charitable donation efforts to include cash donations to the Utility Emergency Services Fund based in Philadelphia and the Fuel Fund based in Baltimore.

Filed Under: Daily News

Belcorp: International Beauty

August 1, 2011 by DSN Staff Leave a Comment

Belcorp’s founder Eduardo Belmont is surrounded by some of Belcorp’s first Beauty Advisors over 40 years ago in Lima, Peru.

Company Profile

Founded: 1968
Headquarters: Lima, Peru
President & CEO: Eduardo Belmont
Products: Beauty and Cosmetics

Belcorp logo

The United States is a land of opportunity for many, including companies headquartered in other countries. Peru-based cosmetics direct seller Belcorp is one that has chosen to make something of it. The company expanded with a big goal: to become the top prestige network marketing company in the United States.

Belcorp brought its line of luxury beauty and skincare products, which it sells under the L’Bel brand, to the United States in 2005. For five years it operated under the single-level direct selling model that had given its parent company success, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, for more than four decades. Growth was modest. After all, its name wasn’t well-known in the United States, and the economy was starting to stall.

Belcorp believed that it could do better, even during a sluggish economy, so late last year the company made a big decision. For the first time in its 44-year history, one of its subsidiaries would break away from its usual business model. Belcorp USA adopted a multilevel compensation plan. The timing coincided with the retirement of Maria Montoya, the woman who had launched Belcorp in the U.S. market. Succeeding her was Mona Ameli, whose background included 18 years of experience in a variety of companies, including Herbalife and Shaklee. Though she also worked outside the industry, Ameli’s network marketing experience had shown her the life-changing power of direct selling, and she jumped at the chance to get back into what she loved.

“When I left for a couple of years and then came back to the industry, I saw that I thrive here,” she says.

Brand Building

Strengthening the Belcorp brand is one of Ameli’s immediate objectives, and one that is essential to achieving the corporation’s lofty goals.

Strategically, the United States is a significant region for Belcorp. As one of the world’s largest markets for both direct selling and beauty products, it holds vast growth potential. So Ameli wanted to use all of Belcorp International’s many benefits as creatively as possible to quickly penetrate the North American market. Belcorp already does business in 14 other countries in South and Central America and manufactures products in France.

Though Belcorp USA is still working to become well-known, its parent has earned industry respect through its rich reputation and longevity. The 11th-largest direct selling company in the world, Belcorp International was ranked among the Top 25 beauty brands in 2009 by Women’s Wear Daily and it boasts more than 850,000 beauty advisors in the Americas and 8,000 global Belcorp employees. It’s the third-largest beauty company in Latin America.

Belcorp’s award-winning L’Bel skincare products and fragrances are developed and produced in France, where some of the world’s most respected scientific laboratories and dermatological centers research and test innovative formulas. The process is exacting. Because of Belcorp’s rigorous requirements, a final formula may take as long as five years to create. Up to 1,000 women test products before they are made available to the public. They conduct as many as 200 clinical, dermatological, hypoallergenic and ophthalmologic tests. Up to 50 formulas may be tested before the company finally approves a new product. Each must have proven results and offer visible, verifiable results within four weeks of use. Products are never tested on animals.

Commerce + Charity

Strengthening its brand also falls under one of Belcorp’s main objectives, to empower women in the countries in which it does business. In this aspect, Ameli’s heart is as large as her business acumen is sharp. She shines as brightly in the nonprofit world as she does in the boardroom. Moreover, she believes that the two together can form a fierce force.

“Being successful isn’t just about the bottom line,” she says. “It’s about seeing lives change by being part of our business.”

So when Belcorp began to stretch its marketing model earlier this year, one of the benefits of the parent company that Ameli turned to was its charitable foundation, which runs programs designed to help women transform their lives with specific coaching and training on business development.

“More than 12,000 women have benefited from our programs in Latin America,” Ameli notes. “One is called Amazing Woman. It is designed to train women in the areas of self-confidence, business creation, entrepreneurship, how to socially network, and how to become an independent entrepreneur. A second program is called Women Enlighten Women. It is a scholarship program for young girls whose families are not able to provide them with educational opportunities. Specific scholarships help women go to school and advance. When a woman becomes involved in one of the programs, we consider her part of our Belcorp family.”

Ameli plans to bring the active empowerment of women that Belcorp has so successfully initiated in Latin America to the United States, using a similar model. While agreeing that women in the United States have more opportunities and advantages than those in many other parts of the world, Ameli is still passionate about reaching into specific communities where women do need a helping hand. She is especially passionate about steering young girls in less-advantaged areas toward becoming independent, empowered and able to control their destiny.

“It’s a very integrative approach,” she says. “We work together to make a contribution to our community. We’re not just a company worried about our financial bottom line. Our bottom line includes the personal, financial and emotional growth of our beauty advisors.”

And when it comes to L’Bel’s 250 products, the scientific savvy and French prestige behind them doesn’t bring big price tags. One of the company’s goals is to make them available to as many women as possible, whether they live in Oakland, Oklahoma or Ohio.

“Every woman wants to feel special,” Ameli notes. “One of the dreams of [Belcorp Founder and President] Eduardo Belmont when he first started this business was to be able to make beauty and prestige accessible to women in Latin America and Peru, countries which were never known for beauty or entrepreneurial spirit. You don’t have to be a wealthy person making a six-figure salary to have access to prestige products.

“Through L’Bel, you’re able to be pampered, feel special, and be unique just the way you are. When I talk about becoming the No. 1 prestige company, it’s prestige at an affordable price—with the opportunity of creating a business around it. We offer a quality brand that women can afford.”

Beauty on a Budget

To pamper themselves affordably, L’Bel’s devotees often turn to the brand’s flagship product, Concentré Total, a concentrated treatment cream designed to act on all the signs of age at once. Ameli describes it as “the crème de la crème of anti-aging.” She says it reflects the company’s dedication to technology and science while also capturing its dedication to prestige and beauty in every product.

One of L’Bel’s latest product sensations is NeuviveSi, formulated to renew and protect skin cells and produce radiant-looking skin by stimulating the skin’s cellular renewal cycle.

“Many of us get a dull complexion, dark circles and spots because our skin or body is exposed to pollution or stress simply because of the way we live and work in this world,” Ameli explains. “NeuviveSi is aimed at bringing back radiance to the skin.”

L’Bel products deliver such predictable results and feel so luxurious to use that they almost sell themselves, Ameli says. And once a woman experiences the L’Bel difference, she often wants to take the next step and build a business around it. She can build the businesses through individual contacts, parties or both.

“I have consistently heard from our leaders that they love Belcorp and L’Bel products for two reasons: the products themselves and the human side of our business,” she says. “They have an amazing relationship with those of us in the corporate office.”

The Personal Touch

Ameli notes that the company’s relatively small size is still an asset to beauty advisors, who enjoy the support of a predominantly female staff who know their families and even the names of their children. Belcorp

Now that Belcorp has expanded into a field team-building model, its support is expanding as well. The company has a methodical 90-day step-by-step training plan designed to help new beauty advisors become successful quickly and earn the income their upline described to them. Joining Belcorp USA is inexpensive—under $100. That translates into a fast return on investment.

And Belcorp’s tools provide every new advisor with everything she needs to show L’Bel products and the Belcorp USA opportunity to friends and family members. The Starter Kit includes full-size skincare products that, when sold for their combined recommended retail price, produces more than 100 percent ROI. It also includes product samples, travel-size cleansers and toners, a fragrance kit and skincare diagnostic tools, as well as training manuals, a L’Bel tote bag and the current catalog. Training comes from both the new consultant’s upline sponsor as well as from Belcorp. And a free replicated website lets her become an immediate e-commerce entrepreneur, as well as take advantage of a free back-office business management suite of online tools.

Over the next three years, Ameli and her Belcorp family of employees and beauty advisors plan to continue to grow the company and to turn it into the No. 1 prestige cosmetics direct seller in the United States. It’s a huge goal, but Ameli thinks that it’s possible.

“First, we have to reveal to the United States this best-kept secret of Latin America, which is Belcorp,” she summarizes. “We want to link Belcorp USA back to its mother company and to leverage the strengths, reputation, stability, growth and contributions that Belcorp International has made in the last 44 years. My goal is to bring those same things to the United States.”


Entrepreneurs Without Borders

Mona Ameli, General ManagerBelcorp USA’s new General Manager Mona Ameli acknowledges cultural differences between Latin Americans and U.S. Americans, but she believes that entrepreneurs are alike everywhere.

Ameli has lived and worked in several countries around the world, so she can claim some expertise. She was born in Iran but considers Paris her hometown. She earned degrees in France and is fluent in English, French and Spanish. In her professional life she has held responsibilities for markets that include North America, Western and Eastern Europe, Asia Pacific and Latin America. So her reflections on culture carry weight.

“In the United States there have been earlier possibilities for women to have access to jobs and to be able to become financially independent faster,” she says. “Latin women experienced it later. At the time when Belcorp was founded 44 years ago in Peru, it was not well viewed for women from good families to work.”

But she notes that in both Latin and North America, certain women share some key similarities.

“Among women in the United States and in Latin America who want to start a business, there is a common thread of self-confidence, of really being able to believe in themselves,” she observes. “That exists in any culture. Belcorp was founded and continues to exist to say to women, ‘I believe in you and we’re here to help you.’ That’s something that exists across both continents.”

One of the key Belcorp voices expressing support for women is the Belcorp Foundation, which Ameli is bringing to the United States.

“When we’re able to fully expand the Belcorp Foundation, it will be an amazing asset to bring to women in the United States,” she says. “We will be able to partner with women to help them take their dreams to the next level and truly achieve them.”

She notes that while the United States offers some of the best educational opportunities in the world, many cities have districts where children face significant educational challenges.
“There are still school districts where children are not getting a good education and don’t have adequate access to food and clothes,” she says. “But also in those areas, there are moms whose biggest dreams are to help their children have a better life than they have. As we look across the United States—especially with the economic downturn—we see many circumstances where we can help, and we know that those women are already searching for opportunities for growth.”

Filed Under: Daily News Tagged With: Shaklee

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Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
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Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
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