Cover Stories - Direct Selling News https://www.directsellingnews.com The News You Need. The Name You Trust. Wed, 03 Jan 2024 19:20:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.directsellingnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/DSN-favicon-150x150.png Cover Stories - Direct Selling News https://www.directsellingnews.com 32 32 Cheers to 20! https://www.directsellingnews.com/2024/01/03/cheers-to-20/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cheers-to-20 Wed, 03 Jan 2024 19:19:28 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=20552 As we celebrate 20 years of innovations and insights, we take a look back on a few of DSN’s most important milestones. And, we asked industry leaders and legends to share how past evolutions and current opportunities are shaping the future of the industry.

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On DSN’s 20th anniversary, we asked industry leaders and legends to share how past evolutions and current opportunities are shaping the future of the industry.

In 2004, Stuart Johnson, now CEO of Direct Selling Partners, Direct Selling News (DSN) and NOW Tech, held a clear vision: to create a monthly publication that offered timely and useful information to direct selling executives. Today, that vision has expanded beyond a print publication to include podcasts, workshops, executive forums and informative in-person events featuring the biggest names in the industry. The format and appearance of the magazine has changed throughout the years, but the original foundation of Johnson’s vision remains unchanged.

As we celebrate 20 years of innovations and insights, we take a look back on a few of DSN’s most important milestones. But even before DSN’s debut in 2004, Founder and CEO Stuart Johnson had an illustrious career influencing the channel. He founded VideoDirect in 1987, which ultimately became VideoPlus and then SUCCESS Partners. He launched SUCCESS Partners University, an education conference for direct selling corporate executives in 2002.

DSN, now in its twentieth year of publication, continues to be the go-to resource for well-researched global industry news, expert insights and interviews with the founders and executive leaders behind the channel’s legacy companies and rising stars.

Deborah K. Heisz, now Neora Co-CEO, and John Fleming, a DSN Legend and former Avon executive, were two of the original staff members tasked with assembling the publication’s flagship print issues.

“At the time, there was no real periodical resource for legitimate news and information for people who were leading and operating direct selling companies,” Heisz said. “People were hungry for a trade journal they could rely on, and we received feedback from dozens—if not hundreds—of executives and owners across the industry letting us know we had truly filled a need.”

From a simple eight-page newsletter to the robust, global magazine it is today, DSN remains committed to supporting, informing, connecting and challenging direct selling executives across the US and around the world.

“I planned to stay for two to three years, but I remained Publisher and Editor in Chief for nine,” Fleming said. “We started by building something relevant and, in many ways, it has become far more relevant than we ever envisioned.”

Twenty Years of Industry-Changing Trends

The past two decades have been host to some of the most dramatic shifts in the channel, including the proliferation of the internet; the broad adoption of mobile devices; and pandemic-induced social distancing that forever changed the way shoppers buy products and interact with brands. With each paradigm shift, the direct selling industry learned to evolve and adapt.

We asked these executives: In the last 20 years, what changes have had the greatest impact on the industry?

“The vast majority of companies started in the industry by sharing products at home parties. Now, we’re sharing the opportunity virtually and across the globe without concern for physical barriers. Digital platforms forced all of us to adjust, while opening up a world of opportunity.”—Mark Pentecost / It Works! Founder and Chairman

“The operating landscape has permanently changed. Millennials want their own gig, but the average direct-to-consumer venture lacks the ability to scale up the way a direct selling company can with sales organizations.”—Rick Goings / DSN Legend, Chairman Emeritus and former CEO of Tupperware Brands

“Twenty years ago, signups and applications required a stack of paper. Today, it’s all done digitally. Technology has enabled much more efficient point-of-sale transactions and created the ability to connect and communicate with more people.”—John Addison / Addison Leadership Group; Board Member for Primerica, LegalShield; Senior Advisor to Utility Warehouse

“The digital revolution of the early 2000s felt, at the time, like a once-in-a-lifetime revolution, but it proved to be just the beginning of an avalanche of technology and business models that would profoundly change the world around us. Through all of these changes–the rise of social media, gig platforms and AI, and the challenges of the pandemic—we have demonstrated that, as a channel, we can adapt and evolve quickly.—John Parker / Amway Chief Sales Officer

“Technology has been the biggest gamechanger for us. I believe you have to have a robust strategy in both automation and face-to-face interactions for success in today’s marketplace. It is a delicate balance. Simplicity and speed can be the difference between success and failure.”—Kevin Guest / USANA Executive Chairman

The Next 20 Years

Lessons from the past 20 years have illustrated that change is not only inevitable; it is a critical part of healthy evolution. It was by welcoming social media, ecommerce and a digital-first footprint that the industry was prepared to not only survive but thrive during the pandemic. And as industry leaders look to the horizon, it will be that same bold approach and nimble, open mindset that will prepare the next generation of direct sellers for success.

We asked these executives: What actions should leaders be taking now to prepare for the future?

“We need to remember what got us here. We have always been an industry that focuses on building people, and then those people go on to build our business. We can ensure our future success by remembering that the most valuable asset any direct selling company has is our loyal, hardworking distributor field!Rudy Revak / DSN Legend, Founder of Symmetry and Xyngular

“As technology continues to create opportunities and disruptions, I believe the future of direct selling will have to be centered around community and the social dynamic in our businesses. Great products, compelling income opportunities, competitive customer and representative experiences will continue to be basic requirements, but the community and social experiences we offer can be real differentiators.—John Parker / Amway Chief Sales Officer

“We empower women and others to work a meaningful business in pockets of their day. That’s the best part of direct selling. That’s how we win. We must continue to create and emphasize this opportunity—the side hustle is always in style.—Sarah Shadonix / Scout & Cellar Founder and CEO

“Leaders in the channel should plan for growth. Those who stay current by investing in the technologies of today and tomorrow—including new ways to purchase, improve speed to customer and product value—will thrive.—Joni Rogers-Kante / SeneGence Founder and CEO

“Direct selling will continue to thrive where the exchange of value is ongoing and supportive—like in following a nutrition or fitness plan—because of the importance of accountability to achieve success, but we need to acknowledge that affiliate marketing will replace network marketing where the relationship is purely transactional.—Carl Daikeler / BODi CEO

“Personalization and integration of AI in customer service are trends that we find exciting and that we are integrating into our strategy. Direct selling is also very unique; we never work solely online or offline. The future is hybrid, and we are relying on hybrid solutions in our strategy and development to be active pioneers in our industry.—Rolf Sorg / PM-International Founder and CEO

Creating a Lasting Impact

DSN has always strived to stay on the cutting edge of direct selling trends, news and thought leadership through its educational initiatives and events. We asked these executives: How has DSN’s coverage and perspective impacted your businesses over the past two decades?

“DSN has challenged the way I think about our business and the future of our channel. It helps me sift through the hype and understand the real innovations and opportunities that will shape our future. I am so grateful for the connections and insights that DSN has brought to me and our industry.”—John Parker / Amway Chief Sales Officer

“What DSN provides is something critical for the industry: a collegial way to share best practices with one another. One of the great things about the direct selling industry is people’s willingness to share both their successes and failures. DSN gives executives a way to learn and grow their businesses.John Addison / Addison Leadership Group CEO; Board Member for Primerica, LegalShield; Senior Advisor to Utility Warehouse

“DSN is a powerful source of knowledge, allowing companies to learn from each other and grow. DSN has always offered great insights and innovative ideas. When there can be criticism of our industry, it’s important to have a platform like DSN to speak of the positive impact we’re having around the world.—Mark Pentecost / It Works! Founder and Chairman

“DSN is an important forum for keeping abreast to fast changing forces and how others are approaching and adapting to remain vital and resilient.—Rick Goings / DSN Legend, Chairman Emeritus and former CEO of Tupperware Brands

“The DSN articles and DSU events have been an amazing asset to the corporate leaders of this channel. They both create opportunities to gain valuable information, ideas and strategies, and they give guidance during changing and challenging times.—Rudy Revak / DSN Legend, Founder of Symmetry and Xyngular

“DSN continues to be an important voice and resource for steering the direction of this method of sales and marketing. It’s easy for institutions and regulators to lose sight of the individuals who legitimately use direct selling as their livelihood. DSN helps us all remember who is most important in this industry, and it’s not the company—it’s the distributors and customers.—Carl Daikeler / BODi CEO

“When DSN started, I remember thinking: ‘Finally! One place to get timely, reliable and insightful information on other direct sellers.’ Before DSN, people had to constantly scan multiple sources. It was very easy to miss company announcements and releases because so many direct sellers were private or just starting out.—David Holl / Mary Kay Chairman and former CEO

“DSN is my ‘go-to manual’ when I have questions; seek insight; look for surveys; or simply look for inspiration when I need it. I never throw away a publication, as I know I’ll need to refer to it one way or another. It helps me stay informed and current with what is going on in our channel.”—Joni Rogers-Kante / SeneGence Founder and CEO

“The community gains so much strength when we all work together, and DSN makes that happen. They are invaluable to the ongoing growth and professionalism of this industry, and I am so grateful for their work.”—Michele Gay / LimeLife by Alcone
Co-Founder & Chairwoman

“The coverage of the direct selling landscape in DSN is like no other, providing a clear and nuanced view into an industry that thrives on personal connections and innovative strategies. The articles are a testament to the precise research and commitment to detail that the team embodies, making Direct Selling News an invaluable resource for anyone involved in or interested in the dynamic world of direct sales. It’s journalism that not only informs but enriches and compliments the conversation around this unique sector of commerce.—Rolf Sorg / PM-International Founder & CEO

Building a Legacy Meant to Last

Reflecting on the past 20 years, the DSN team continues to build and plan for an even brighter future with more events, global coverage, expanding platforms and an unflinching grasp of Johnson’s original vision. The next 20 years will expand on that relevancy and commitment, providing more insights, developing broader resources and presenting more opportunities to support the executives working diligently to strengthen and scale the one-of-a-kind entrepreneurial possibilities found within the direct selling channel. 


From the January/February 2024 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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Give Yourself the AI Edge https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/12/01/give-yourself-the-ai-edge/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=give-yourself-the-ai-edge Fri, 01 Dec 2023 17:39:45 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=20339 There are few innovations that rival the potential impact of budding Artificial Intelligence (AI). In the same way the internet upended everyday communications and ultimately became the shared platform for everything from shopping to entertainment, AI is now poised to shift the traditional paradigms that leaders depend on to succeed in business.

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The Potential & Pitfalls of Artificial Intelligence

There are few innovations that rival the potential impact of budding Artificial Intelligence (AI). In the same way the internet upended everyday communications and ultimately became the shared platform for everything from shopping to entertainment, AI is now poised to shift the traditional paradigms that leaders depend on to succeed in business.

Multiracial business people working
DisobeyArt/shutterstock.com

Machine learning and AI improve and develop exponentially faster than any analog or human-driven technology could, so understanding AI means leaving room for relentless advances, changes and new offerings. This is the undeniable challenge that most leaders have become accustomed to when it comes to implementing new tech. It is constantly reinventing itself. With AI, however, this evolutionary process is supercharged. New apps, platforms and tools emerge weekly, daily, even hourly, as this trailblazing technology builds upon itself.

Change like this typically solicits two reactions—acceptance or rejection. While some executives see AI as jet fuel for the engine of their business that can propel them further, faster, others may see it as exciting but scary—something that is to be feared until we know how to better control it.

An argument could be made for both of these responses. But the truth is, most people are already utilizing and relying on AI without even realizing it. Siri schedules our appointments; Netflix learns whether we like rom coms or horror movies; Waze keeps us from getting lost; and our Apple Watches keep track of our steps. The forward motion of this technology is already in place. Regardless of whether leaders within the direct selling industry choose to embrace AI or not, an undeniable movement is underway. From this point on, AI will bring a competitive edge that simply can’t be replicated through traditional practices. The remaining time direct selling companies can stay relevant and competitive without AI is dwindling.

The only remaining question is how long will you wait?

It’s Not Too Late

Technology moves so quickly that it can be easy to feel behind. The good news is that the experts in this field are not lightyears ahead of everyone else. The technology is so new and fresh that the learning curve is still solidly in place.

More than that, expertise in this field isn’t necessarily the goal. Leaders don’t need to become savants in AI and its many iterations. They simply need to adopt a few simple ways to wield it and let the technology do the work for them. There is no need to know the nuts and bolts behind every platform.

There is growing concern that implementing AI will eliminate jobs and downsize employment opportunities. But Blake Mallen, Billion-Dollar Brand Builder and Host of DSN’s Direct Selling SHIFT Podcast, believes that instead of replacing humans, AI is a toolbox that can be used instead to inspire and equip the team members already in place in a way that amplifies their natural gifts while minimizing the impact of tedious tasks that slow down progress.

“AI is really practical; ridiculously low cost; and highly effective,” Mallen said. “We’re at a time when we can give our team what feels like superpowers.”

What AI Can (and Can’t) Do

Typically, when new technology breaks onto the scene, companies need a dedicated staff member who can gain expertise in that field, and then bring accommodations to the organization in a way that makes sense for the business as a whole. With this next generation of AI, that learning gap has been eliminated.

“Now there’s no-code tools,” shared Brandon White, AI expert and File Finder Founder and CEO. “That means they have written an interface that you can interact with on top of the actual technology, and what that allows you to do is basically use AI tools like you would a browser or a word processor.”

This user-friendly format doesn’t mean that AI doesn’t require supervision. ChatGPT, for instance, is a language model that pulls from pre-existing information online to provide responses. That can be incredibly resourceful—as long as it’s building answers based on correct information, rather than corrupt sources. There is still the need for a strong human component within this artificial world.

For now, AI particularly shines when it comes to customer service, data analytics and work flow automation, but the niche is rapidly evolving. New companies and platforms are popping up every single day that are utilizing the power of GPT-4 to pre-write prompts for users that will provide the results they are looking for.

All of these AI tools can save time, meet a tailored set of needs and deliver output far beyond the norm for capacity—as long as leaders lean into strategy first before rushing into total AI adoption.

“Identify the problems in your business first,” White said. “Don’t try to take AI and stick it in your business. Figure out where your problems are today, and then see if AI can fix those.”

wichayada suwanachun/shutterstock.com

AI Success Stories

eXp Realty Founder and CEO Glenn Sanford was one of the first executives within the direct selling industry to leverage the power of AI, describing his strategy approach as being “obsessed with the future to improve the present.” From the company’s virtual eXp World, which gives agents and employees their own avatars that can interact and attend meetings in a virtual campus, to its latest model, Luna, which leverages GPT-4 to assist agents with daily tasks; provide 24/7 tech support; and create brand compliant content generation, eXp is heavily focused on how AI can be used to free up agents’ time to focus on the most critical tasks in their businesses.

“Luna is just our first step toward using AI to empower agents,” Sanford said. “We believe that AI can be used in the metaverse to increase productivity and cultivate creativity. Looking forward, we have AI tools coming out in Frame for meeting summaries, surfacing relevant content during conversations and even improving accessibility for hearing- and sight-impaired users.”

High-performing entrepreneurs looking for their next venture already know the power of AI. Companies looking to attract these momentum builders embrace the robotic prowess of AI that allows users to scale quicker than would be possible without the propulsion of this technology to support them. There seems to be no limit to the potential and possibilities that AI presents the business world, but White wants leaders to remain optimistically aware of the pitfalls and shortcomings this technology presents.

“A word of caution,” White explained. “Unless you are running your own AI large-language model internally, be careful about putting your data into the AI system. The back end to these tools is ChatGPT, and if you read the fine print, it is sending that data back into their engine, which means your competitors can use that information. So, you do want to be careful. If there’s sensitive information, you do not want to put it into these engines.”


There’s an AI for That

Blake Mallen recommends 8 AI tools that take the heavy lifting out of everyday business tasks.

Otter.ai
Zoom and Meeting Note Taker
Voice-to-text transcription software that uses AI to turn voice conversations into searchable and shareable notes.
Try it >
Keep track of meetings without writing a word, then receive an actionable to-do list that can be sent to attendees. Take a picture of a whiteboard or presentation slide at an event during a recording, and it will insert it in line with the post-meeting transcript.

ChatGPT
Content Creation and Automation

AI language model that generates content that mimics human-like text responses.
Try it >
Reply to customer questions across social media; convert customers with generated emails that increase click-through rates; develop personalized training materials and scripts; and enhance customer service with a 24/7 customer support messaging platform.

HeyGen
Video Creation

Create videos using a library of AI avatars that support lip-syncing in more than 20 languages.
Try it >
Unleash a custom avatar complete with cloned voices; create a talking photo using only a portrait and text; produce studio-quality voiceovers.

Metricool
Social Media Simplified

Automate social media plans based on measurable analytics.
Try it >
Identify and analyze social metrics; streamline posting across all social platforms; enable content planning; monitor what content is getting the most traction; and manage ads.

ViralFindr
Content and Competitor Research Platform

Find the best-performing content, viral posts and top influencers online.
Try it >
Research high-performing content, study trends, determine what content works and generate content ideas.

Manychat
Chat Marketing

Drive sales even while on autopilot.
Try it >
Capture interested leads; drive sales and conversations online; automatically add customer contact info to a company database; engage with and attract customers.

Tango
How-To Guide Creator

Automatically document processes into a step-by-step interactive walkthrough.
Try it >
Document and create step-by-step tutorials, then share with a link or export by pdf.

Gamma
Flawless Presentations Fast

A fresh take on slide presentation preparation with user-friendly design.
Try it >
Create dynamic and visually appealing presentations without having to focus on formatting; utilize nested cards, publishing and analytics to engage with the audience; and add embedded GIFs, videos, charts and websites to documents, slide decks and webpages.


From the December 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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Hispanic Market is booming https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/11/01/hispanic-market-is-booming/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=hispanic-market-is-booming Wed, 01 Nov 2023 07:40:00 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=20133 In Mexico alone, the direct selling market is projected to surge to $19.48 billion by 2028. That staggering number doesn’t include the more than 60 million Latinos living and working within the US, or the fact that direct selling is already a staple for the Latin American population, where a quarter of beauty and personal care sales take place through a direct selling relationship (compared to eight percent globally).

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Are You Keeping Pace?

Building a smart international expansion strategy means looking for momentum-building markets with untapped growth potential. In 2024, that indisputably includes the Hispanic and Latino markets.

In Mexico alone, the direct selling market is projected to surge to $19.48 billion by 2028. That staggering number doesn’t include the more than 60 million Latinos living and working within the US, or the fact that direct selling is already a staple for the Latin American population, where a quarter of beauty and personal care sales take place through a direct selling relationship (compared to eight percent globally).

Happy latin women laughing and hugging each other outdoor in the city
Sabrina Bracher/shutterstock.com

“Latinos in the United States represent a larger consumption market than the entire economy of nations like Italy, Canada or Russia,” shared Judith Sanchez Lopez, PM-International General Manager, Latin America. “If Latinos living in the United States were an independent country, the US Latino GDP would be the fifth largest GDP in the world, larger than the GDPs of India, the United Kingdom or France.”

There are a number of direct selling companies who have already captivated the Hispanic and Latino markets and are thriving. There are two distinct scenarios at play here: US-based companies that are dominating in Hispanic markets and foreign-based companies doing the same.

DSN 2023 Bravo Growth Award winner Princess House successfully serves this corner of the US market. Other examples include 4Life, Hy Cite, Immunotec and relative newcomer ACTIVZ. These companies are also strong in other Spanish-speaking markets.

Betterware de Mexico and Omnilife are based in Mexico and making huge strides in that market and throughout the region.

It could be tempting to assume that the same strategies and approaches that work for US customers would be a fit for the Hispanic population living within the US, or even the neighboring Latin American populations, but that assumption is a sure-fire way to fail. Ignoring the unique communication styles of each individual market is not only ineffective, it’s disrespectful. There are cultural sensitivities that should be honored; product preferences that need to be prioritized; and local talent that deserve to be elevated to leadership.

“Companies that want to be successful need to stop making Latin American countries an extension of their current market,” said Mauricio Domenzain, Immunotec Chief Executive Officer. “By that, I mean you really need to commit to the market. We can’t simply send one manager to Latin America now and then wait to see if it’s going to work or not. It’s a full commitment, not just the addition of another flag on your wall or your website. You have to truly become part of that market to understand the cultural needs.”

Copy and Paste Isn’t a Strategy

What works in the United States doesn’t automatically translate to success on a global scale. That goes for products, but it’s also a good rule to live by when it comes to communication, marketing materials and events. For companies founded in the US or who predominantly operate within the US, expanding to include Spanish-speaking consumers is not as simple as hiring a translator or relying on Google Translate. These translations are often choppy, with no regard for local idioms or speaking rhythms.

Solving for this pain point has been a game changer for brands like 4Life, who overhauled their communication process to treat Spanish as its own first language rather than relying entirely on English. The company now enlists two separate content creator teams, one who is primarily English-speaking and one who is primarily Spanish-speaking, to design materials. The end result prevents poor translations that damage credibility.

“If you go to our convention, we are 80-85 percent Hispanic,” said Brian Gill, 4Life Chief Marketing Officer. “Five years ago, out of respect, we stopped translating English to Spanish. It’s not enough to have great translators. A Hispanic whose primary language is Spanish should be the one creating our materials. It’s about empowering the affiliate to share the brand, and a poor translation is not a credible connection they are proud to share.”

Homogenous, hand-me-down resources communicate the message that international markets are inferior, less valuable and unappreciated. Conversely, when companies allocate the resources and staff necessary to maintain and develop a culturally relevant, localized brand with tools that take local language, lifestyle and history into consideration, customers and distributors take note. A successful entry into Hispanic and Latino markets is one that allows the population to embrace entrepreneurial opportunity while preserving its own cultural DNA.

“Entering the Hispanic market was not secondary or an afterthought; it was our primary thought,” said David Brown, ACTIVZ Chief Executive Officer. “Our Spanish-speaking distributors are constantly amazed that they get new products and materials first and that they weren’t translated from English. Everyone responds well to attention and responsiveness, and that’s probably the secret to our success.”

Honor Culture Past and Present

Family is a core value for the Hispanic and Latin American markets, and consumers in these demographics typically have great reverence for their parents and their tightly-knit communities. The US ethos of independent, self-made success doesn’t land the same within these cultures, so even well-intentioned corporate leaders commissioned from the company’s US headquarters could get off on the wrong foot without realizing it.

“It’s not only the language, but it’s also the culture that you need to understand,” explained Domenzain. “You need to have people on the ground—people directly from those markets—who understand and can serve that market the correct way.”

Leaders also need to consider how each new generation brings their own energy and inspiration to the foundational values of the Hispanic and Latin American cultures. From a corporate standpoint, that means being willing to adjust the speed and style of work. Omnilife addressed this generational evolution by implementing a shift from graphic design to a focus on social media, leaving behind big format printing in favor of video and digital formats and encouraging all of its departments to embrace the Gen Z style of work, which is quick to adapt to change.

“We are integrating younger generations into our corporate team, and that has helped make us relevant,” said Eduardo Ros, Omnilife Marketing Manager. “Our communications and packaging have become younger. We have received testimonies from people in Ecuador and Peru who tell us that working with second- and third-generation distributors who are younger has helped them see how best to take advantage of this opportunity and approach the business differently.”

Recognize the Uniqueness of Each Market

Each country and community has its own unique traditions and habits, and the Latin American market is no exception. There is no one-size-fits-all approach that would respectfully reach this vast audience, and it’s important to remember that there are distinctions among the adjectives often used to describe this diverse group of cultures within and outside of the US. The word Hispanic describes Spanish speakers, including those living within the US and Spain, while Latinos is reserved for those living within Latin America, including Brazil, where Portuguese is the official national language.

“Hispanics in the US are not a monolith,” Sanchez Lopez said. “They are a combination of countries, cultures, slang, levels of acculturation and generations. You need to decide who you want to target, understand what sets them apart and then ask yourself if your company is communicating and interacting in a way that respects their cultural differences and strongest drivers.”

For companies with a broad footprint across countries with similar but distinct cultures, discovering what makes each market tick is critical to securing healthy, welcomed growth among distributors and potential customers. Hy Cite, for example, courts Latinos in eight different countries, including the US and Brazil. Efficiency is incredibly important, so the company harmonizes its content, but it also takes care to modify even the smallest details to communicate that each individual market matters.

“The way we present our products changes depending on the audience,” said Paulo Moledo, Hy Cite President and Chief Executive Officer. “Our recipes used on social media, for instance, feature arepas in Colombia and tacos in Mexico. We also pay attention to our call center services. We learned the hard way that the agent accent speaking to customers from different markets is an important variable.”

Moledo also emphasizes the significance of making sure corporate expresses with actions that they value distributors’ wellbeing just as much as their earning opportunity. For Hy Cite, that means facilitating a close relationship between executives and top leaders; leaning into recognition; and designing ways for distributors and customers to voice their opinions and experiences.

“Latinos, more than most, need to feel heard,” Moledo said. “As fast as we could after the pandemic, we started having events, conventions and meetings with independent distributors, and the attendance has been outstanding. We invest more today in events than we did pre-pandemic, but the return on that personal, face-to-face touch is great.”

Operating with inclusion and respect as the highest priorities is non-negotiable. It’s imperative that companies take the extra steps to ensure the opportunity they are presenting is tailor-made for the audience receiving it, and that their presence improves the quality of life for the people who call that country home. When diversity of backgrounds and ways of doing business are treated with dignity and honor, executives who have successfully built bridges into the Latino and Hispanic cultures say there is a shared entrepreneurial spirit that transcends language barriers and countries of origin.

“It doesn’t matter what language you speak or what country you’re in, everyone is looking for the same thing,” Domenzain said. “To be a part of something bigger than yourself.”


From the November 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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2022 Billion Dollar Markets https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/09/30/2022-billion-dollar-markets/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2022-billion-dollar-markets Sun, 01 Oct 2023 04:11:09 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=19942 2022 brought pressure for both the direct selling industry and sellers­—pressure with no singular cause, yet pressure that loomed heavily over the global landscape. Gains realized during the pandemic era started to normalize, while global inflation brought about obstacles and opportunities. Increasing competition from a widening array of income opportunities like home delivery, ride-sharing and other gig-driven employment applied […]

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2022 brought pressure for both the direct selling industry and sellers­—pressure with no singular cause, yet pressure that loomed heavily over the global landscape.

Gains realized during the pandemic era started to normalize, while global inflation brought about obstacles and opportunities. Increasing competition from a widening array of income opportunities like home delivery, ride-sharing and other gig-driven employment applied increasing pressure to the direct selling channel.

Yet, the World Federation of Direct Selling Associations, celebrating its 45th anniversary with a publication called WFDSA Stats, reported, “Overall, the global retail sales landscape has demonstrated resilience and positive growth during the above mentioned period, showcasing the industry’s ability to adapt and flourish even amidst challenging circumstances.”

As has been our tradition for 13 years, Direct Selling News once again utilized the painstaking global industry statistics offered up by WFDSA to create a synopsis of the state of the global direct selling industry and list the Billion Dollar Markets.

So, what does WFDSA’s global survey show for 2022? The overall global trend remains positive for the direct selling industry despite a slight dip in last year’s global sales. WFDSA cites three consecutive years of global sales growth and 2022 sales that surpassed both the pre-pandemic level of $168,117 million ($168.1 billion) in 2019 and 2020 pandemic sales of $172,147 million ($172.1 billion) as evidence.

These gains and optimism hold true with or without the inclusion of China, whose turbulent industry conditions and statistical inclusion impacts global sales figures. In 2022, China continued to experience widespread lockdowns and a governmental zero COVID policy.

While post-pandemic pressure is easing, members of the Asia/Pacific region anticipate another challenging 12-24 months, Jeoff Mulham, President of the Australian DSA noted in WFDSA Stats.

Direct selling regional market sales across the world mirrored global economic performance in 2022. Sukanda Chunhachatrachai, head of DSA Thailand, told WFDSA Stats, “Despite a decrease in sales, many companies have responded by quickly adapting to new trends and making good use of tools like social media, digital marketing and online marketplaces.”

DSA member companies in Germany reiterated the importance of adaptability during a time of heightened global political tensions, an energy crisis and supply chain disruptions. 2022 was a time for creative thinking, and it seems Europe’s direct selling industry fared better than that region’s ecommerce, which declined by 7.5 percent, Frederic Billon, Secretary General of the French Direct Selling Association, noted.

“Per the USDSA, direct selling fared better than some sectors and not as well as other sectors resulting from numerous factors, but what is clear is that direct selling revenue remains higher than the levels reported in pre-pandemic 2019. This is an important indicator of the vibrancy and resilience of the direct selling channel. Not unlike the economy in general, direct selling is still adjusting to the buying patterns and consumer expectations patterns in the post-pandemic economy,” WFDSA reported.

The Data

Note: All WFDSA data have been rounded throughout.

WFDSA reports global estimated retail sales of $172.8 billion (Constant US Dollars) for 2022, a decrease of 1.5 percent under 2021.

This figure reflects the global marketplace including the volatile China market. However, it has become WFDSA practice to offer up dissected totals that eliminate the volatility of the China market. Therefore, excluding China, global estimated retail sales for 2022 were $157.3 billion. Sales between 2019 and 2022 jumped 9.4 percent with a three-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3 percent for that period.

Regional sales performance in 2022 consistently lagged behind 2021. Estimated retail sales in The Americas were down 3.2 percent. Europe as a whole fell 1.1 percent, as did Africa/Middle East with a decline of 13.3 percent. South and Central America emerged as a regional bright spot experiencing growth of 2.5 percent, and Asia/Pacific kept steady up 0.2 percent.

The status of the global industry, as measured by the three-year CAGR showed a decline of 1.5 percent for the 2019-2022 timeframe and follows a static growth rate in 2020.

Very little positional shifting took place in the largest of the Billion Dollar Markets in 2022; however, there was minimal movement in the lower rungs. Three of the top five Billion Dollar Markets struggled with the United States, China and Japan all experiencing losses. Rounding out the top five, South Korea and Germany posted growth of 7.4 and 6.6 percent, respectively. Beyond the top tier, 2022 proved a tough year for smaller Billion Dollar Markets, too. Russia, United Kingdom and Canada registered near or above 20 percent losses. Significant growth was rare, but was seen in Vietnam, Argentina, Colombia, Malaysia and India.

Of the 24 Billion Dollar Markets, the United States leads global retail sales at 23 percent of the global market, followed by South Korea, 11 percent; Germany, 10 percent; China, 9 percent; Japan, 7 percent; Malaysia, 5 percent; Brazil, 4 percent; Mexico, 3 percent; France, 3 percent; and Taiwan 3 percent. All other reporting markets comprise the remaining 22 percent of global sales.

WFDSA reports nearly five million fewer independent representatives participated in direct selling worldwide in 2022 than in 2021. All told, 114.9 million participated in 2022. But this number represents a return to pre-pandemic levels after millions rushed to join the industry in 2020 and 2021. Global Sales Representative growth remains flat between 2019 and 2022. With the exclusion of China, however, slight growth of 1.1 percent was seen during this time.

The Americas

The Americas—North and South/Central—reported a combined $65.2 billion in estimated retail sales in 2022. While this region experienced a fall of 3.2 percent in year-over-year sales, the three-year CAGR held strong at 4 percent. The Americas represents 38 percent of global direct selling sales.

Seven Billion Dollar Markets are included in the North and South/Central America region. Wellness and Cosmetics run nearly even in their product category popularity at 29 and 27 percent, respectively. Household Goods and Durables remains third at 13. Nearly 29.9 million independent representatives affiliated with direct selling brands in 2022. That’s a drop of some 2.5 million people.

Regional data for the Americas reported together. However, the Americas are split here to better understand each of the distinct markets.

North America

After two years of pandemic conditions that drove sales skyward, 2022 brought a post-pandemic normalization and decline of 6 percent to North America as it posted $65.2 billion in sales with a year-over-year loss of 3.2 percent.

US global sales share remained at 23 percent, and the $40.5 billion in sales generated solidified its number one ranking in the world marketplace. While year-over-year sales dropped by 5 percent, the US CAGR is 4.8 percent.

Canada’s pandemic-era sales growth of 26 percent posted in 2020 all but slipped away with 2021’s flat performance and 2022’s decline of 18.4 percent. Nearly $2.6 billion in sales posted in 2022 with a CAGR of 0.8 percent.

Cosmetics gained ground as a product category of choice, leaping from 14 percent in 2021 to 35 percent in 2022. Wellness followed closely at 34 percent and Household Goods and Durables at 18 percent.

Independent representative numbers for North America continued their decline following pandemic highs with a regional total of 15.7 million independent representatives. 14.6 million partner with companies in the United States and 1.1 million in Canada.

South/Central America

The South/Central America countries of Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Argentina told a mixed story which included high-end sales performance, flat lines and losses.

Argentina continues its trend of top-end sales growth and posted a 58.1 percent increase. While it’s important to note the highly inflationary aspects of Argentina’s market, these increases continue to stand out and represent a country CAGR of 65.3 percent. Colombia’s growth was also notable at 7.9 percent. After Brazil experienced a sizeable downturn in sales performance in 2021, losing nearly $800 million in sales, 2022’s statistics showed flat-line performance.

South/Central America’s estimated retail sales were up 2.5 percent over 2021 at $22.1 billion with a regional CAGR of 3.1 percent.

Individual country market statistics are: Brazil ($7.4 billion, 4 percent of global market, -0.2 percent CAGR), Mexico ($5.9 billion, 3 percent of global market, 0.8 percent CAGR), Colombia ($2.3 billion, 10.5 percent CAGR), Peru ($2.1 billion, 0.2 percent CAGR), and Argentina ($1.9 billion, 65.3 percent CAGR). Inflationary economies like Argentina typically report restated data later in the year.

Cosmetics and Personal Care products once again dominated regional sales at 57 percent, but continued trending slowly downward since 2017’s 67 percent high. Wellness ranked second at 17 percent, while Clothing and Accessories slotted third at 11 percent. Independent representative numbers declined by some 700,000 in 2022, reported at nearly 14.2 million.

ASIA/PACIFIC

Eleven Billion Dollar Markets are located in the Asia/Pacific region and comprise 41 percent of the global retail sales for 2022. $71.5 Billion in estimated retail sales were generated in 2022, representing an increase of 0.2 percent. While static in nature, this growth represents the first regional increase in five years, when Asia/Pacific boasted 48.7 percent of global retail sales. The region’s overall growth remains negative at 1.7 percent for 2022.

More than 6.5 million independent representatives left the ranks of direct selling companies in 2022, but 67.6 million remain affiliated and sell primarily Wellness (42 percent) products. Cosmetics and Personal Care (21 percent) and Household Goods and Durables (20 percent) are also popular.

As in years past, China continues to impact Asia/Pacific’s regional statistics due to its population size, turbulence in the direct selling marketplace and post-pandemic recovery. For the fourth consecutive year, China’s estimated retail sales have fallen year-over-year. Down 8 percent, China posted $15.8 billion in sales in 2022, representing a compression of more than 40 percent since 2018 when the country seemed poised to overtake the number one ranking of Billion Dollar Markets. It remained fourth for the second year with a CAGR of -13.6 percent. Independent representative numbers fell slightly below 3 million.

A newcomer to the Billion Dollar Markets list last year, Vietnam showed its strength with a fifth year of double-digit growth and ranked 21st. Vietnam produced estimated retail sales of $1.2 billion in 2022 and reported a CAGR of 19.3 percent.

The Asia/Pacific market is enormous and intricate in nature, thus innately volatile due to cultural, environmental and governmental differences. For example, China’s continued descent contrasts sharply with significant growth in country markets like India, South Korea, Malaysia and Vietnam. Smaller emerging markets like Kazakhstan and New Zealand, not members of the Billion Dollar Markets List, are also increasing sales. In fact, Asia/Pacific was the only regional market worldwide that experienced growth, albeit a slight 0.2 percent, in 2022.

South Korea’s 2022 sales growth led the Asia/Pacific market at 7.4 percent and generated $18.5 billion in sales, which solidified their second ranking on the Billion Dollar Markets List. India’s growth of 5.4 percent has normalized and represents the fifth consecutive year of expansion. Malaysia came on strong generating $8.6 billion in sales, 5.6 percent year-over-year growth and a 9.8 percent CAGR. After a rebound year in 2021, Australia lost ground dropping 7.8 percent. Japan and Thailand are in decline, as are The Philippines and Indonesia. Taiwan posted flat figures in 2022.

Asia/Pacific Billion Dollar Markets data reports as follows: Australia ($1.2 billion, 1 percent CAGR), China ($15.8 billion, 9 percent global market share, -13.6 percent CAGR), India ($3.2 billion, 13.3 percent CAGR), Indonesia ($1.4 billion, -2.2 percent CAGR), Japan ($11.6 billion, 7 percent, -3.6 percent CAGR), South Korea ($18.5 billion, 11 percent, 5 percent CAGR), Malaysia ($8.6 billion, 5 percent, 9.8 percent CAGR), Philippines ($1.2 billion, -5.1 percent CAGR), Taiwan ($4.6 billion, 3 percent, 3.1 percent CAGR) and Thailand ($2.3 billion, -5.1 percent CAGR) and Vietnam ($1.2 billion, 19.3 percent CAGR).

EUROPEAN UNION & THE REST OF Europe

The whole of Europe is responsible for 20 percent of global direct sales. This includes countries inside and outside the European Union. Six countries qualify as Billion Dollar Markets. Europe experienced a decline of 1.1 percent in 2022 with estimated retail sales of $34.7 billion and a regional CAGR of 1.6 percent.

2022 statistics show 12.6 million independent representatives, a drop of just over three million since 2021. Of those, 6 million reside within the European Union and 6.5 million in the Rest of Europe. By category, 18 percent of products sold in Europe are designated Wellness (15 percent, EU); Cosmetics and Personal Care (15 percent, 12 percent EU); Home Improvement (13 percent, 14 percent EU); and Household Goods/Durables (12 percent, 13 percent EU).

European Union

France, Germany, Italy and Poland comprise the EU Billion Dollar Markets and reported $30 billion in estimated retail sales for 2022, an increase of 1.8 percent. The subregion has a CAGR of 1.6 percent.

The news was good out of Germany and Italy, reporting gains in 2022. Germany led 6.6 percent year-over-year, posting $18 billion in estimated retail sales and establishing a CAGR of 3.1 percent. At $2.9 billion in sales, Italy’s year-over-year increased 3.9 percent with a CAGR of 1.2 percent.

France and Poland did not fare so well in 2022, suffering declines of 5 percent and 6.8 percent, respectively. France reported sales of nearly $4.6 billion with a CAGR of -2 percent, while Poland sales dropped to $1 billion they hang on to a positive CAGR of 2.8 percent.

Rest of Europe

The outlook in the Rest of Europe is a mixed bag with Russia in decline by 22.6 percent in 2022, reporting $1.7 billion in estimated retail sales and a CAGR of -7.3 percent. But despite losses of 21 percent in the United Kingdom, they brought in $1.2 billion in sales for 2022 and hold tight to a 21.2 percent CAGR thanks to back-to-back years of growth in the pandemic era.

Product category reporting is unreliable for the Rest of Europe as a whole; however, 42 percent of Russia’s 3.9 million independent representatives sell Cosmetics and Personal Care products, while Wellness is the focus of 37 percent. United Kingdom reports 46 percent Wellness and 40 percent Cosmetics and Personal Care. There are just over 400,000 independent representatives affiliated with direct selling companies in the UK.


About the Research

THIS COLLABORATIVE, GLOBAL DATA COLLECTION EFFORT of the World Federation of Direct Selling Associations and local direct selling associations and their member companies around the world, depicts the state of the global direct selling industry for 2022.

This is a collection of individual market data in local currency figures, which are converted into US dollars using current year constant dollar exchange rates to eliminate the impact of currency fluctuation. All statistics are based on estimated retail sales and in some instances may be restated using actual sales data as they become available. Statistics for some markets represent direct selling association member companies only and not the entire industry in that country. Other statistics are WFDSA research estimates. All statistics expire June 2024.

WFDSA Stats reported compilation of data takes more than 5,000 person hours to complete with independent third party vendor, Paul Bourquin of The Cadmus Group, responsible for direct contact between DSAs/member companies handling the data to ensure it remains completely confidential. Without strict confidential protocols, none of this work would be possible.

Want to Know More? You can read the full report.


From the October 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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The Inflection Point https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/09/01/the-inflection-point/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-inflection-point Fri, 01 Sep 2023 18:06:48 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=19734 Letting go of what was and doubling down on what’s next. We’re experiencing a return to normal. Does this phrase sound familiar? The pandemic brought an unexpected boom to the direct selling industry. Many companies saw revenue increases and incredible growth. As the pandemic has eased, so too has that explosive growth. Only 18 companies made our 2023 list of companies who experienced three consecutive years of revenue growth.

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As the channel regroups post-pandemic, DSN offers five strategies to maximize growth

Letting go of what was and doubling down on what’s next.

We’re experiencing a return to normal. Does this phrase sound familiar?

The pandemic brought an unexpected boom to the direct selling industry. Many companies saw revenue increases and incredible growth. As the pandemic has eased, so too has that explosive growth. Only 18 companies made our 2023 list of companies who experienced three consecutive years of revenue growth. And overall, the industry saw the beginning of a decline in total retail sales at the end of 2022.

It would be easy to assume that these numbers reflect a natural market correction—one that doesn’t signify a decline in progress or relevancy, but rather a return to pre-pandemic levels. After all, U.S. direct selling revenues reached $40.5 billion in 2022, which is a decline from 2021, but still a sizeable increase from $35.2 billion in 2019.

The problem with this theory is that consumer spending hasn’t followed this trajectory. In July, Deloitte released its State of the U.S. Consumer report, revealing that retail sales were up 31.6 percent from pre-pandemic levels and non-store sales were up 69 percent. Consumers are buying—particularly in discretionary categories—so why aren’t direct selling revenues reflecting that boost?

As the research shows in The Future of Work: Insights into the Gig Economy Workforce, the gig economy is growing four times faster than the traditional economy. However, the number of gig workers representing direct selling has decreased from 5.2 percent to 2.3 percent. The DSEF Growth and Outlook Study shows an eight percent decline in the number of direct sellers in 2022.

At Direct Selling News, we believe the direct selling industry is in, perhaps, one of the most important Inflection Points in its entire 100+ year history. The term inflection point originated as a mathematical description depicting that moment when the curve of a graph changes direction moving up or down. A point when business leaders must proactively address the future of their brands and the relevancy they bring to market.

What we are experiencing is not a return to normal; it’s a critical moment to address the channel’s strengths and opportunities to evolve forward. A time to determine if next year’s P&L sheets will reflect a positive shift in momentum or another year of steady decline?

DSN worked closely with channel advisors, executives and analysts, compiling five strategies to help companies understand the current state of their business so they can more effectively position themselves for growth.

We must be candid and honest about where the channel has been and is. The so-called normal of 2019 doesn’t exist anymore. This is a critical moment in time where companies have two choices. Stay in a state of comfort and complacency and expect similar results. Or, let go of what was and move forward with open, innovative minds and embrace evolution to build for the future.

Ultimately, the choice is yours. But the time has come to make that choice.

1 / Dig into the Data

It’s time to take a brutally honest look at the statistics surrounding the last few years. The drastic bump that most of the industry enjoyed during 2020 and 2021 was not typical, nor does it appear to be continuing. Allowing this data set to incorrectly inform future projections and strategies prevents companies from reaching their full potential.

It is imperative that companies dig into their historical information to genuinely understand the impact the pandemic had on their most important statistics. The priority must be to look for trends that indicate future habits; identify key patterns; and discover exactly what behaviors your fields are engaging with today—successfully and perhaps not-so successfully.

2 / Avoid Being a Regulatory and Compliance Target

The channel has to work together. Clean, simple and transparent are the obvious antidotes to a tough regulatory environment, but no one company or brand can turn the tide in the industry’s favor to heal decades of reputational damage.

“We have got to make ourselves unimpeachable,” said Heather Chastain, Founder and CEO of Bridgehead Collective, a consulting firm for the direct selling industry. “You don’t have to be a bad actor in the channel to gain a bad reputation. Take a look at the transparency of your programs, incentives and compensation plans and eliminate any loopholes or obfuscation. We have to be on a mission for transparency.”

Larry Steinberg, chair of the Buchalter Law Firm’s MLM Practice Group agreed, “Now is as good a time as ever to refocus your business plan on retail sales, a robust preferred customer program and communications with your field about the importance of compliance. There is ongoing rulemaking activity in the business opportunity, earnings claim and restrictive covenant areas. Staying under the radar is becoming increasingly more difficult, and the stakes are higher than ever.”

Eliminate hidden fees. Make it simple to opt out of an auto-ship agreement. Communicate with the field about the importance of compliance. Use dollar amounts instead of points to pay commissions and achieve bonuses. Do whatever it takes to communicate that your product and opportunity can withstand a critical eye. When in doubt, choose transparency.

3 / Understand Changes in the Marketplace

Today, customers want a seamless shopping experience that is transparent from end-to-end. They want to engage with companies who deliver on their promises with little-to-no barrier to entry, frictionless experiences, minimal clicks, streamlined shopping cart processes and reward incentives that are attainable and delightful. If there are 17 hoops to jump through to get the prize, you’ve missed the point—and you’ve likely lost a loyal customer.

Zooming out a bit, digital fluency is crucial. Consumers, particularly younger generations, expect everything from first impressions to shopping, purchasing and delivery, to have a simple, yet impressive, responsive digital component. The way people buy is now staggeringly influenced by a brand’s digital footprint, even if they ultimately buy in person or in a retail environment.

Shoppers are still spending, but only where and how they want to shop. The direct selling product and customer proposition must be on point and at the same level or greater than massive online platforms like eBay and Amazon.

The growth of ecommerce is proof of the concept that people are shopping differently. The growth and use of the digital platform provides an opportunity to compete with any brand, at any time, through people who love what they are experiencing and desire to share with others what was shared with them.

Make sure your products and platform serve today’s customer in meaningful, memorable ways that will make them want to come back time and time again—and bring their friends along with them.

4 / Challenge Old Mindsets

For decades, the direct selling industry has positioned itself as a massive, team-building opportunity. Marketing messages traditionally lauded the six-figure earner, the luxury car bonus and a certain lifestyle to spark interest. Not so much today.

“Gen Z and Millennials don’t respond to that like generations before them did,” Chastain said. “They are more interested in making an extra $250 or $500 a month to supplement additional income streams and rarely have an interest in building a downline, much less lead a team.”

Chastain and her company Bridgehead Collective recently released a first-ever research study conducted with Jason Dorsey on the impact of Gen Z and Millennials on the marketplace including specific implications for direct selling.

Businesses and brands are more than their compensation plans, but it’s imperative to analyze whether the incentive and payout structures in place are truly meeting consumer and distributor demands. Take a deeper look at the touchpoints that could move customers from casual purchasers to loyal repeat buyers.

Direct selling companies should be thinking of themselves as brands first. If you still think your compensation plan is the most important way you can attract new customers and prospective independent contractors to your company, it may be time to change your mindset and the language you use to position yourself in the marketplace.

5 / Be Mindful of Chasing Trends

Identify what needle you’re trying to move and then put straightforward, clear strategies in place to deliver those results.

“Be really thoughtful about the buzzwords you use to describe your strategic decisions,” Chastain said. “Some companies are saying they are jumping on the affiliate trend, but are they really? Or are they just simplifying the front end of their compensation plans?”

Consider how your culture supports ordinary people who want to participate in your company’s unique niche and mission. Grow your customer base to boost revenue, rather than investing in a few top team-building leaders. And—above all else—cultivate a brand identity, shopping experience and product story that sparks love, loyalty and longevity in the hearts of shoppers.

Straightforward Strategies Win

There appears to be a clear direction that industry analysts and experts agree will move the channel in the right direction: streamlined, transparent operations focused on selling quality, high-value products and services.

A focus on the fundamentals of brand building means a focus on everything—not just commissions or compensation plans, but incentives, recognition, gifts—everything. If that sounds like it might dig into the bottom line, that’s because it likely will. But the payoff, Chastain says, is well worth it.

“Find profitability elsewhere,” she said. “The dated approach to compensation plan design may be costing the company too much as it attempts to be relevant in a very different marketplace. Refocus your energy on delivering quality content. Be ruthless with the products that earn a spot in your lineup. When you focus that kind of efficiency within your company, it will free up the few margin points you need to support a simple, generous combination of commissions, incentives, recognition and community for affiliates, distributors and customers.”

A lot has changed since early 2020. Smart and strategic companies aren’t focusing on what they see in the rear-view mirror. They are focused on the road ahead—what’s working today and how to build for the future.

Believing that the industry’s recent dip in overall numbers is simply a “return to normal” means buying into a strategy of a pandemic era when nothing was truly normal—not the economic landscape, not shopping habits, not everyday life.

We can all agree that there will be geopolitical challenges domestically and globally as we move forward. But in spite of those uncertainties, direct selling decision makers must look to the future based solely on current market conditions and best practices, free from outdated models, ideals and traditions.

As company leaders prepare to make strategic plans for 2024, they will have to decide if this will be the year the direct selling industry participates in an evolution that will make it more relevant and accessible for the months, years and decades to come.


From the September 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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DSN 40 Under 40 https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/06/30/dsn-40-under-40/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dsn-40-under-40 Fri, 30 Jun 2023 23:14:33 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=19339 DSN recognizes—for the first time ever—a group of innovative trailblazers, whose contributions push their companies’ trajectories upward, while reshaping the direct selling channel for the rest of us. More than two dozen companies answered the call to nominate their most accomplished achievers under the age of 40, who exemplify the kind of leadership skills and innovation that best represents the future of the direct selling channel.

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Meet the Young Innovators Shaping Direct Selling’s Future

Constant marketplace change keeps the focus of most DSN content on how companies rise above challenges. We interview founders and C-Suite executives to talk about industry trends and progress, shifting business models and compensation plans, rebranding and tech and compliance and product development. The list goes on and on.

Less frequently, do we feature the young, corporate standouts who so prominently figure in getting all those things done. But that changes with this issue, as DSN recognizes—for the first time ever—a group of innovative trailblazers, whose contributions push their companies’ trajectories upward, while reshaping the direct selling channel for the rest of us.

More than two dozen companies answered the call to nominate their most accomplished achievers under the age of 40, who exemplify the kind of leadership skills and innovation that best represents the future of the direct selling channel.

And to that end, we proudly present the 2023 DSN 40 Under 40—a group of youthful standouts, who are rockstars in their current roles—vocal champions of direct selling with just the right balance of knowledge and enthusiasm to ultimately lead the industry.

Their day-to-day contributions help their organizations navigate the changing marketplace and they constantly impress. It matters not what field these stellar people represent—be it IT, marketing, training/field development, product development, customer service, HR or even the C-Suite itself—each has won the admiration and respect of their peers and bosses, alike.


Vida Achundsada

Senior Manager, Business Relations / North America

As Senior Manager, Business Relations for Mannatech North America, Vida Achundsada exemplifies outstanding leadership and a depth of understanding for direct selling that drives growth and fosters success within the organization. Vida’s passion, drive and relentless pursuit of success in her primary role of leading and supporting Associates and leaders from both the U.S. and Canada garners the respect and admiration of colleagues and peers alike.

But Vida also dedicates her energies to the Direct Selling Association of Canada, where she serves as a distinguished representative and holds a position on its Board. Her appointment reflects her long-standing commitment to the industry, as well as her proactive nature in shaping its future.

“She has proven herself to be a dynamic and influential leader, actively seeking innovative solutions and spearheading positive change,” said Patricia Anthe, Vice President North America, Mannatech. “She embodies the spirit of the next generation of leaders in direct selling.”

“One of the main challenges in direct selling is overcoming negative perceptions and addressing regulatory and legal complexities. Direct selling companies need to work more towards building trust, educating the public about ethical practices and ensuring compliance with various laws and regulations,” Vida shared. “Companies can tap into the global demand for entrepreneurial opportunities and consumer products by leveraging digital platforms and providing convenient online purchasing options.”


John Alcala

CEO

Direct selling inspires John Alcala because you don’t need specific qualifications, levels of education or experience or to be the most talented. “You only need the grit and determination to change your current situation,” he said.

John experienced the power of direct selling first-hand, working as a top field leader for It Works!. He and wife, SheriLynn spent seven consecutive years in the Top 10 prior to joining the corporate team and John becoming CEO.

“If not for this man (It Works! Founder Mark Pentecost) coming into my life nine years ago, I would have never believed there was more for my life. His belief in his vision for his life and his family’s legacy made me believe that I was made for more. I couldn’t be more blessed to have a mentor and friend that pushes, challenges and believes in me the way he does. He is the GOAT in this industry,” John said.

A methodical, strategic and passionate leader with a big heart, John is always interested in hearing other people’s perspectives and learning from them. He trusts the talents of his corporate team which adds positivity to the work culture. Hendrik Cloete, Chief Financial Officer said that John always puts people first and knows that—as a result—everything good will follow.


Sherilynn Alcala

Head of Field Strategy

At 30, SheriLynn Alcala was a stay-at-home mom with two babies in diapers, when she clicked “join now” on the It Works! site and changed her and husband, John’s, life course. Now, they have checked off more dreams before 40 than most accomplish in a lifetime, thanks to nearly a decade in the field and some “out-of-the-box” thinking by the company’s founder.

Founder Mark Pentecost tapped two of his best field leaders—John and SheriLynn—to run the company earlier this year. “Now part of the corporate team, I’m excited to help our field change the trajectory of their lives. This channel doesn’t discriminate; it is for anyone and everyone willing to show up and work!” Sherilynn said.

Resilient, SheriLynn understands setbacks are part of the journey—merely learning opportunities for growth. She’s mastered stepping outside her comfort zone, taking risks and putting in the effort to make things happen. “She doesn’t wait for opportunities to come to her but goes out and creates the opportunities,” Kate Martin Carlson, Vice President of Marketing and Sales, shared.

“I believe more companies could benefit from hearing the field perspective because the goal is the same for both sides: to sell life-changing products and grow our sales force. I’m so excited to share my perspective, knowledge and insight. We are better together!” SheriLynn said.


Uzma Azim

Senior Director of Information Technology

FOR MORE than a decade, Uzma Azim has been the face of technology at Neora, collaborating to bridge gaps between challenges and technological solutions, something she finds deeply satisfying. “I find fulfillment in leveraging the power of technology and innovation to streamline manual tasks, enabling both myself and my team members to devote our attention to more engaging and fulfilling work.”

“Uzma has a very valuable gift of explaining very complex IT ‘speak’ to actionable steps across all departments,” Beth Hisey, Director of Marketing, shared.

Proof is the recent, successful Neora website revamp, where Uzma and her team were tasked with a heavy workload and short deadlines, while balancing usual day-to-day demands. The project was important to bring more ease and a better user experience for customers, brand partners, as well as prospects.

Software development experience early in her career—and the desire to learn more—led to a graduate degree in computer science by 2016, which was instrumental to her flourishing career, growth and advancement at her first direct-selling experience at Neora.

There, she met a remarkable mentor in Deborah Heisz, Co-CEO of Neora and CEO/Co-Founder of Live Happy. “With her vast oversight of various business domains, there is always something new for me to grasp and learn. Her guidance and mentorship have been invaluable in shaping my professional growth,” Uzma said.


Bethany Balsdon

Director of Global Market Partner Experience

Bethany Balsdon grew up in direct selling, inspired by stories of “fearless” women who chose the industry and changed their lives with hard work and perseverance. That’s how she knew her own potential was limitless.

MONAT Global is Bethany’s fourth direct selling partner, having joined in 2015 during the company’s Canada launch. She is lead strategist for main stage global salesforce event content. Bethany also leads a team in design, implementation and integration of recruiting and retention tools, programs and assets for 450,000 Market Partners which contributes to retention and activity.

“She is a value- and results-driven communicator, skilled at directing multiple training and sales initiatives while delivering results on primary objectives. Bethany is known for developing enduring and trusting internal and external relationships,” shared Ray Urdaneta, CEO, MONAT Global.

Catherine Scott, Vice President of Global Field Development and Bethany’s mentor, pushes her to be bold and taught her how to unapologetically hold a seat at the table while leading with kindness. “While working under Catherine, I had my first child. She models what being a stellar businesswoman and mother can look like. I would certainly not be where I am today or on this list without her,” Bethany said.


Alexander Bogart

Director of Media and Technology

The dynamic environment of direct selling inspires Alexander Bogart to adapt, continually improve and be open to acquiring new skills. He said that’s why he gets up in the morning, and in challenging times his type of innovation and creativity profoundly impacts operations.

When Alexander stepped in to cover the extended absence of a co-worker diagnosed with a brain tumor, despite having his own workload to manage, CEO/Founder/President of Jordan Essentials, Nancy Bogart shared that, “He carried the load with an outstanding attitude, showing remarkable dedication and commitment to his colleagues and our organization.”

Alexander brings expertise and experience in video production, web and graphic design, as well as 15 years coordinating and executing direct sales events and conferences. But it’s his eagerness to learn and willingness to expand his skill set that make him a go-to resource for assistance and support across multiple departments.

Addressing a wide range of needs excites Alexander. “I find joy in streamlining operations and improving logistics to support our home office team. Helping bring impactful marketing strategies to life; executing successful events; and enhancing our brand’s visual identity are all areas where I can make a positive impact. Having a diverse skill set allows me to provide comprehensive support and contribute to the success of our company.”


Laura Brandt

President

AS A third-generation direct sales businesswoman, Laura Brandt feels a deep sense of responsibility to carry the opportunity and empowerment torch forward. Direct selling impacted the lives of her family and nurtured her entrepreneurial spirit, igniting a desire to make a meaningful difference in the lives of others.

“I am particularly passionate about the direct sales space as it has granted me the privilege of meeting and building relationships with diverse individuals from all walks of life,” Laura explained.

When Mark Bennett, Chief Business and Legal Officer of IDLife, hired Laura, he told her he would train her to take his job. “I thought it would take three-plus years, but it only took her 18 months,” he shared. “Laura is one of the brightest minds in the business I have ever met. She’s level-headed, a voice of reason and a natural born leader. She wasn’t given the title of President, our employees treated her like the president, she made decisions like a president, and she had the ‘presidential’ respect of our vendors and brand partners before she ever received the title.”

Misconceptions and stereotypes can create hurdles for the direct selling industry and Laura believes the best way to overcome is to educate the public about legitimate and ethical practices and to build a strong industry reputation based on transparency and integrity.


Ian Chen

Director of Business Relations

Ian Chen’s career spans four network marketing companies including starting one in China. At Mannatech, Ian is an invaluable asset driving growth in the North America Chinese market. He demonstrates unwavering dedication and works tirelessly with field leaders.

“I greatly admire his remarkable ability to forge and nurture relationships with our distributors. He understands the importance of establishing strong partnerships and setting mutual goals, all while effectively balancing his responsibilities as a corporate employee,” Patricia Anthe, Vice President North America, Mannatech shared.

“My two years as a distributor in the field revealed so much of what network marketing is about. I wouldn’t exchange those two years with any other experience,” Ian explained. “Working hand-in-hand with some of the most accomplished leaders in network marketing inspires me just about every day. In the age of automation, what distinguishes us as humans are those fundamental elements of friendship, love, happiness and a sense of belonging.”

His innovative mindset, coupled with an eloquent and effective communication style and unwavering reliability, allows Ian to spearhead new initiatives and consistently deliver outstanding results.

“The biggest challenge in this industry is the constant change in both regulatory environment and technology. The opportunity of the future lies in the younger generations. Companies will have to adapt to culture and consumer preferences of those generations which are evolving over time,” Ian said.


Vivian Chung-Patterson

Vice President Global Marketing

Vivian Chung-Patterson has a keen eye for detail that makes her successful in creating 360-degree marketing plans that produce actual results. In her role with Partner.Co spearheading global marketing operations, events, social media and communications efforts, she exhibits exceptional leadership in both managing and motivating teams and efficiently launching new products and services on an international scale.

“Her commitment to delivering high-quality work is unwavering, and her dedication to the company is second to none. Vivian’s unwavering effort and expertise have contributed tremendously to the successful launch of Partner.Co,” CEO Darren Zobrist said.

With a background in communications, including being the youngest person at 24 ever hired by Hearst Publications’ Hong Kong Division to media liaison with prestige, luxury-brand clients like Christian Dior, she learned early on that being successful is tied directly to one’s own effort and motivation.

From her tenure with Hearst, too, she learned to develop and maintain the highest marketing standards for every project, and to teach those skills to others. When they created special ads for Christian Dior, for example, she said, “I’d sit at the print shop for days to ensure every batch of stock paper was the exact same weight and the same shade of white, and I’d reject every print that was darker/lighter than the approved color.”


Meredith Cook

President

In founding Green CompassMeredith Cook became a mission-driven leader of an all-natural, holistic brand of quality hemp products. But for her, it was always about making a greater impact and building a passionate community empowered to share and heal. Her vision, leadership skills and personal passion solidify a strong corporate mission and purpose that’s felt in every aspect of the business, including R&D, formulating, manufacturing and distribution.

“She leads with purpose, gratitude and compassion—never straying from her commitment to people, whether that be consumers, advocates or employees,” Lori Burgher, CMO, said.

“I’ve always seen the value in bringing people together around shared passions. There is power in connecting people,” Meredith shared. “If you are passionate, you can have success. And success looks so different for everyone, which is incredible to see. At the end of the day, you just have to care enough to show up and share.”

Following the pandemic’s shift away from in-person gatherings, Meredith committed to a “hybrid” business building opportunity that meets people where they are. “But I will never shy away from bringing people together! The energy and excitement that comes when our advocates gather and share their experiences is so contagious, and it always fills my cup.”


Brandon Craddock

Director of Digital Marketing

Brandon Craddock brings a quiet, calm demeanor and a lead-by-example management philosophy to a fast-paced, deadline driven environment at Ambit Energy, where he’s consistently advanced his skills in video creation, social media trends, website design and mobile technology to help define a life-long learning culture.

Closely tied to that pursuit of learning is Brandon’s constant reinforcement and insistence that Ambit’s creative team is most effective when it engages and listens to field leaders about what works and what doesn’t.

“He does all of this with a keep-your-cool, laid-back, never-ruffled style—always ready to step up and get the job done,” shared Eric Reisdorf, Chief Development Officer. “When I suggested Brandon to my management team as our nominee, the positive response was swift and absolutely unanimous.”

This former ad agency art director crossed to direct sales 12 years ago, bringing a consumer mindset and ability to relate that he’s since distilled into easily digestible best practices for consultants.

He feels the gig economy changed how people think about entrepreneurship, creating simple ways to earn extra income. “Direct selling is honestly no different and has many advantages over other gigs out there. It’s our job to make direct selling simple and accessible and to educate entrepreneurs and future business owners about those advantages,” Brandon explained.


Arielle Dothard

Director of Operations

Novae is Arielle Dothard’s first direct selling foray, but she embraced its culture and mission Day One. CEO/Founder/President Reco McCambry said Arielle is a major piece of the puzzle that keeps the company moving.

“There is no problem that our executive team brings to a meeting where she is involved that we don’t have a list of possible solutions within 24 hours. Competency is one thing, but having a great attitude and being just as eager as ownership to succeed is everything! That’s Arielle’s MO!” Reco said.

Arielle is a thinker and problem solver who is constantly pushed to expand her knowledge. She believes much of her success ties to her ability to adapt, learn and implement.

“I’m blessed to have leadership I can look to for direction whenever I need it. I’m able to talk through mistakes and turn them into learning experiences—and turn the good ideas into tangible results by proactively working through potential holes. They’ve really provided a safe space for me to learn and be inspired,” Arielle said.

Applying creativity and knowledge to function helps Arielle build a solid foundation for her family, something she aims to continue in the next decade. “I’d like to be in a position where I can use the knowledge I’ve gained and pour into others so that they can build steady foundations for themselves,” she said.


Kenton Engel

Chief Strategy Officer

Network marketing is at an inflection point, where many platforms and technologies are shifting. For a Chief Strategy Officer like Kenton Engel, there’s little better than bringing innovations to bear in a well-established industry and disrupting it.

A well-educated man, who holds two master’s degrees as well as a PhD in pediatrics, Kenton also spent a decade digitally marketing sports nutrition products. “In my career, I have generated almost $300M in quantifiable and trackable digital sales; I have founded or co-founded four brands, all of which became 8-digit revenue earners; and I did all of this while pursuing full-time studies.”

“Kenton has been instrumental in finding key markets and technologies to help expand our Awakend Nation blueprint,” Rodney James, Awakend Founder and CEO, said. “He played a critical role in our partnership with innovative third-party technologies that have helped grow our business.” That includes a new app and integration, as well as review of all compliance-related materials.

Legitimacy, Kenton believes, is the industry’s biggest challenge with its historical legacy that’s roundly negative. “But with all obstacles come equivalent opportunities; meaning that the newest generations of direct selling brands have an opportunity to be forces for positivity; to be innovative product developers; and to lead the way in digital marketing that is fundamentally honest.”


Stefani Green

Director of PR and Communications

Stefani Green leverages her experience in fashion, food, fitness and beauty to help energize Arbonne’s future. “I have a solid understanding of the marketplace and I am intrigued by its evolution. I spent my longest tenure at Mattel working on the Barbie brand, and Barbie has had a huge influence on my career,” she said.

While Arbonne is her first direct selling position, Stefani finds the entrepreneurial spirit motivating and inspiring. She loves the initiative and tenacity the industry requires, including in her role collaborating with partners across the industry.

Joining less than two years ago during a major transition, with new leaders and a new corporate structure, Stefani jumped into the role eager to connect Arbonne to new consumers and media through conversation and exposure.

“Stefani took the opportunity to create synergy across business units, build excitement with consumers and employees and truly reignited the brand’s place in culture and with media,” shared CMO Jorden Bell. Stefani integrated Arbonne’s communications strategy to consider multiple stakeholders and launched a PR campaign at New York Fashion Week resulting in 15 high-profile editorial placements and a 15 percent increase in organic story engagement and total impressions on IG Stories. Brand awareness, she said, is the biggest industry challenge and opportunity.

“Through empowering messaging and increased accessibility, we can transform direct selling to be more understood and highly desired.”


Jeff Harwood

Finance Director

Jeff Harwood is a stalwart and true team player, someone who is constantly sharpening the saw, brainstorming and assisting across departments as well as always going the extra mile to support distributors, Ryan Mumford, Vice President of Finance, shared.

A Utah State and Disney Institute grad, Jeff’s business administration, leadership, employee engagement and quality service schooling helped during an unorthodox new hire training at Activz. When the boss’s wife had a baby in his first week, Jeff dug in.

“I chose to take upon myself my own training, learn the ways of the business and make myself an extremely valuable asset to the company, to not stop until I had figured things out. Even though I was suddenly thrust straight into the fire, I consider that one of the best moments in my career and what influenced me to get to where I am today,” Jeff explained.

His exceptional diligence “is invaluable while launching new markets, releasing new technology improvements or simply reorganizing a department,” Mumford said.

“It’s amazing to interact with so many people that want to increase their value and develop themselves into something great,” Jeff said. “I learned a long time ago that it’s better and more fulfilling to lift others and discovered that by doing so, they in turn lift you.”


Ashlee Headlee

Chief Program Officer

Ashlee Headlee always dreamed of starting her own direct selling company and creating an authentic community, so she is living her wildest dreams and is the most fulfilled she’s been in her entire career.

“I instantly fell in love with all the elements of this industry. I’ve spent the last 11 years working and consulting for companies ranging from billion-dollar brands to start-ups. The fact that I got to take all the knowledge gained over these years and create my own company in this channel is a bit surreal,” Ashlee said.

As a mother, mentor, yogi, wellness advocate and business owner, Ashlee’s passion for people shines as she helps them wake up and remember how incredibly powerful they truly are. She’s the visionary behind three main pillars to abundant living that work synergistically with Awakend products, programs, tools and technology.

Ashlee feels the direct selling industry has been on the forefront of revolutionary for decades but has also experienced a copy-and-paste philosophy of highlighting the same things over and over again. She hopes to create a new model for the future.

“I believe people are looking for more. More connection. More truth. More authenticity. More. This industry—out of all industries—is primed and so capable of providing more on a life-changing scale,” Ashlee shared.


Kenneth Hernandez

Chief Technology Officer

Software development is Kenneth Hernandez’s playing field. He’s spent over a decade on the technology side of healthcare, entertainment, hospitality and direct selling, executing roles like senior software engineer, software architect and chief technology officer.

“I have worked with a variety of companies in the direct selling space, in multiple industries with a variety of compensation plans, all of which have helped me succeed in this channel,” Kenneth said.

“Not only is Kenneth a master at coding he is an excellent problem solver and leader. He embodies the core mantra of our founders to constantly grow and improve and his team exudes this principle as well,” CMO of inGroup, Doug Corrigan shared.

He believes the key to creating a brighter future for direct selling rests on education, innovation and values. A mentor who has a positive influence on Kenneth is inGroup’s Co-Founder Frank Codina. “Frank has not only been a mentor with my career but in life as well. His business and leadership values continue to inspire me,” Kenneth shares. The biggest opportunities exist in connecting the world through technology. “We are witnessing our partner teams span many countries, and we have never seen a time where we can connect with people so easily,” Kenneth said.


Kristi Hudson

Vice President, Associate Marketing and Incentives

Kristi Hudson joined LegalShield at 19. Since then, she’s gained diverse experience in customer service, data analytics, membership retention and leading agile development projects. Three years ago, she earned a promotion to VP and recently finished an M.A. in strategic communication and digital strategy from the University of Oklahoma.

Driven by a strong work ethic, Kristi thrives on tackling challenges head-on with her exceptional problem-solving abilities. High expectations equal her belief in her team’s capabilities. Actions, she said, are more powerful than mere words. So, she rolls up her sleeves to work alongside them, prioritizing teamwork because the best ideas and outcomes stem from collaborative efforts.

“I was honored to receive the Employee of the Year award at LegalShield. This award recognized my leadership and project management during the launch of the company’s brand to LegalShield, along with all-new associate marketing sites and web commerce sites. That award hangs in my office today and remains one of the biggest highlights of my career,” shared Kristi.

She gives a special shoutout to Don Thompson, President of LegalShield’s network division, as an outstanding teacher; is inspired by legacy founders like Madame C.J. Walker for creating success on their own terms; and admires Red Aspen’s founders for their empowerment of women.


Tamila Kerimova

Senior Vice President and General Manager

Tamila Kerimova proudly said “yes” to big geographic moves early on, working in Moscow, Cairo and Lagos. That global perspective informs her current role driving MONAT Europe’s spring 2023 marketing opening in France and welcoming new Market Partners at a first-ever Parisian event. “I love Europe!” she said.

Her “cultural map” encompasses Europe, Africa, parts of the Middle East and the Commonwealth of Independent States region in a career spanning just under a decade. To be a global leader means living in and understanding other cultures. “Learning more about Asian direct selling and adding that experience will allow me to create a truly global profile,” shared Tamila.

“It’s no surprise that her career focus is on people empowerment and business development,” said Ray Urdaneta, CEO, MONAT Global.

Strong management, communications skills and a hands-on mentality makes Tamila adept at setting up, managing and coaching multi-functional international teams focused on revenue.

Part of the bridge generation, who experienced social media’s rise but remembers life before, Tamila explained that, “Appearing on this list is a great opportunity to highlight why diversity in both age and background is so important across leadership. We are living in times of great change. To thrive and succeed requires keeping an open mind, maintaining a strong vision and not getting distracted by trends.”


Elisa Kurzban

Director of Operations

Elisa Kurzban’s resilience extends beyond her professional role. Elisa is a boxer, underscoring her ability to overcome obstacles and rise above adversity—a characteristic she brings to work with her every day.

An MIT undergrad in mathematics provided a strong analytical foundation, but the draw to problem solve in the real world meant seeking an MBA from the prestigious Wharton School of Business. Elisa now enjoys engaging with people directly and tackling stimulating business problems for Qyral, where she finds the proximity to technology and innovation and the immediate, positive impact on customers’ lives exciting.

“Groundbreaking endeavors necessitate visionary thinking, as well as a strong and scalable operational foundation. Elisa has exemplified these qualities, ensuring that our company remains resilient and capable of handling rapid growth,” shared Hanieh Sigari, Qyral’s Founder and CEO. “Her resourcefulness is unmatched, and she consistently provides creative solutions to any problems that arise. Elisa’s enthusiasm and adaptability have been instrumental in conquering unique challenges.”

Elisa is thankful for the guidance and support she’s received. “Hanieh’s mentorship provides me with a unique opportunity to learn from her diverse experiences as a biochemist, mom, entrepreneur and advocate for longevity and healthcare. Our mentor/mentee relationship is a source of motivation, encouragement and invaluable knowledge, making it incredibly valuable in my journey at Qyral and beyond.”


Matthew Kuzio

Chief Financial Officer and Director of People Services

No job is too big or too small for Matthew Kuzio. Finance, HR, IT challenges, custom resource planning systems, even replacing paper towels and stocking snack drawers.

“No matter the problem, Matt is always ready to assist anyone at Red Aspen in need of help in a quick timeline and with a smile on his face. He adds a priceless sense of humor to the Red Aspen office and is truly such a joy to work with,” CEO/Founder Jesse McKinney said.

Matt’s an adaptive, positive team player with international development, business finance and renewable energy backgrounds, who believes direct selling is “one of the most democratic and inclusive forms of capitalism.”

His operational, entrepreneurship and tech experience stem from ventures in Mongolia, where he founded and managed a climate-focused micro-finance program and partnership with the United Nations and Asian Development Bank to produce energy-efficient products like heating stoves and insulated yurts locally to combat pollution.

Matt’s passion for startups took root and he came state side, eventually landing at Red Aspen. “As a growing startup, I love how fast we move. It feels like every six months my role evolves into something new. We continually work to evaluate our practice, and the challenges associated with building that momentum are epically fun to solve!”


Erin Lokteff

Director of Operations

Erin Lokteff delivers inspiration in everything she does. In fact, Amanda Moore, Co-Founder/Chief Operations Officer calls her “coach” and says Erin manages Red Aspen’s largest team with grace, grit and good, old-fashioned fun.

Previously a teacher and athletic coach, shaping young women and men of strength, dependability and reliability comes as second nature to Erin. She thrived through nearly three years of hypergrowth by using a results-driven communications style to train and develop a 30+ member shipping team, while elevating operational function with forward-thinking planning and order projections.

“I am inspired by the concept that not all success has to look the same. Each of us has a life that is unique to us, with its own heartbeat and its own source of air. Direct sales provides a means to find that source of air for ourselves,” Erin said.

Erin loves that Red Aspen is female owned and 95 percent female run. “We are modeling for a community of not only strong female leadership, but also showing that traditional gender roles are antiquated.”

Jesse, Erin shared, is “a big idea thinker, goofy and infectiously positive” with a silver lining always in her sights—someone who always leaves the right amount of pause time to allow for response. “Jesse’s compassion has allowed me to develop and grow as a leader.”


Madison Mallardi

CEO

Working by her family’s side, Madison Mallardi learned to value community and take care of loyal customers. By the time she was 21, Madison ushered in a new era at the family’s professional make-up company, and in just four years LimeLife by Alcone achieved over $100 million in sales.

She’s literally had her hands in everything—operations, product development, finance, sales, customer care, branding and marketing. She’s addressed every problem, found solutions and driven forward-thinking strategies to retool her grandfather’s company.

“She has a maturity well beyond her years to stay calm under pressure; respond and never react; and ensure that the best path is taken. She is also incredibly fun and funny and can be seen late at night with our sales field dancing or playing beer pong,” said Michele Gay, Chairwoman.

“It is not one person that can make a company great but a community of people, who love a company just as much as their CEO. I think direct sales is the only industry where you can witness such a phenomenon,” Madison shared.

So far, over 100,000 people have said “yes” to the LimeLife opportunity with commission pay outs over $200 million. “I have no idea where this road is going to take me, but I know I am only getting started!” Madison said.


Amanda Neumann

Director of Events

Amanda Neumann sets a new standard not only for BELLAME’s future but also for today’s entrepreneur industry by masterfully crafting experiences of appreciation for their Brand Partners. They are made to feel important, valued and seen—all while capturing the essence of BELLAME’s brand and mission.

“Amanda’s unmatched commitment to BELLAME’s events, marked by meticulous planning and attention to detail is unlike anything I have personally seen in my 30 years in this industry. She delivers a world-class, unforgettable event,” said Melissa Thompson, Founder/CEO.

There’s never a dull moment in events, especially at a start-up brand, but Amanda’s loved planning since she ordered free Disneyland brochures and charted pretend vacations as a child. In college, she connected with Make-A-Wish Greater Los Angeles working in events and development, then moved on to travel the world in bartending competitions, for which she earned a place in the Top 50 Bartenders in the U.S.

“Everything I’ve done has gotten me to where I am now. Working for BELLAME has been a blessing. I love getting to curate each event and experience for our Brand Partners. I keep setting the bar higher and higher,” explained Amanda. “I am excited to see where this journey takes me and look forward to the growth and achievements that lie ahead.”


Jazlyn Olmedo

Senior People Services Leader

Jazlyn Olmedo has drive, skill, a positive outlook on life and a passion for her career that shines every day. In three years at Red Aspen, she’s worked full time, served as a graduate assistant in STEM and diversity research at Boise State University and completed a master’s degree in organizational performance and workplace learning.

She injects a true passion for creating an inclusive workspace, brand and community that fosters a welcoming environment at Red Aspen’s Treehouse and with Brand Ambassadors, for which Jazlyn leads a voluntary group through annual product, promotion and campaign planning through the lens of diversity and inclusion efforts, CEO/Founder Jesse McKinney shared.

“Overseeing our People Services team and creating a workplace that is fun, welcoming and supportive for all our employees is very rewarding in itself. Additionally, I find leading our Philanthropy and Beauty Inclusion Council program to be inspiring and fulfilling—to lead such positive change and continue making Red Aspen a leading company in both the beauty and direct selling industries while carrying out our mission and values,” Jazlyn said.

Red Aspen is Jazlyn’s first direct selling experience, and her role will continue to evolve as the company grows. That excites her. “We have so many goals and ideas to continue serving our reps and are consistently courageous to pursue those.”


Jessica Pape

International Vice President of Marketing

Jessica Pape is the ultimate team player, who brings talent, skill, fierce loyalty, positivity and a witty sense of humor that keeps everyone at NeoLife International on their toes. She joined the company just before a major rebrand and name change and now finds herself leading a digital transformation and brand refresh.

“It’s exciting to have the ability to drive new brand initiatives. Evolving the visual elements that represent NeoLife and differentiating ourselves from the competition at this significant time in our 65-year history is a challenge I find thrilling,” Jessica said.

Having built a part-time NeoLife business and ranking up to director, Jessica coalesces that field experience with a unique understanding and passion for the industry. “She loves serving our field and makes every decision with their best interests in mind—all with a goal of equipping them with tools and support to make a positive impact,” CEO Kendra Brassfield shared.

Kendra introduced Jessica to direct selling, and now Jessica relies on and values her mentorship. “Kendra has been instrumental in my personal and professional development. She has a remarkable ability to instill self-belief and uncover and amplify strengths. Kendra challenges me to step out of my comfort zone, identifies areas for improvement and enables me to think more creatively.”


Lauren Paul

Chief Brand Officer

It takes a very strong leader to understand the needs of a start-up company like Olbali, and Lauren Paul is just that sort. “Lauren is not afraid to roll up her sleeves and get the job done by any means necessary,” said Courtney Adeleye, CEO/Founder.

According to Lauren, helping women learn to market and brand themselves fills her with excitement. “There’s so much untapped potential out there. So many talented women who are afraid to put themselves out there and take a step into the spotlight.”

“I’m able to unlock a whole new world of possibility for these women, simplifying marketing and providing them with the tools they need to take that critical first step outside their comfort zones,” Lauren said of the presentations, video and graphic content she and her team create.

With her creative vision and eye for detail, she has transformed Olbali into a stand-out company and ensures every aspect of the brand reflects the right messaging and values. She approaches each project with a heart of servitude—a reflection of her nursing background—and is motivated by making every consumer feel like family.

“Lauren brings happiness to the entire team with her ability to build a great working environment around her, ultimately transforming the way Olbali approaches marketing,” said Courtney.


Natalia Potter

Product Strategy Senior Manager

Sometimes when posting a job description, HR is aware there’s a slim chance they find a perfect fit. But then there’s a candidate like Natalia Potter, who joined Red Aspen last year and Genie Reese, Co-Founder/Chief Strategy Officer, considers a “unicorn.”

A results-driven specialist with a decade of experience in international business projects, product development and online sales, Natalia exceeded Red Aspen’s best-case scenario. She’s phenomenal at tackling existing challenges, implementing efficient work processes and successfully identifying new growth opportunities.

Hardworking, dedicated, organized, fun and professional, Natalia oversees the entire product development process from ideation to launch, including ensuring that every product adheres to Red Aspen’s “clean beauty” standards and single-handedly developing an ordering timeline to combat the worst supply chain issues.

The world of direct selling is new to Natalia, who is a Japanese translator, was educated in Japanese economics and gained product development and project management experience working in Japan for six years.

“I love seeing the reactions of our brand ambassadors when we launch new products,” shared Natalia. “Our team spends a lot of time concepting, designing and formulating products. And seeing the process all come together with such excitement at the end, so many social media posts about the new products and great feedback is really rewarding.”


Juliana Rochelle

Director of Product Development

Juliana Rochelle earned amazing global knowledge in brand marketing and product development at L’Oreal for a decade before transitioning to Neora in 2021. “She brings innovation and a keen eye for market trends. Juliana is fearless, collaborative, forthcoming and insightful,” Beth Hisey, Director of Marketing, said.

Her skills as a collaborator with Neora’s formulation partners means Juliana is constantly testing and pushing the team to go further.

“I absolutely love what I do!” Juliana said about the exciting and fulfilling freedom she has to develop products that respect a disruptive innovation pace. “A lot of times in this industry you see companies growing mechanically. Here, I’m not tied to a specific launch window that a retailer pushes on me, so I have the freedom to work with R&D labs and push a formula until I know I have hit something that delivers outstanding results, no matter how long it takes.”

Juliana said of her boss and mentor, Amber Olson Rourke, “She has such a clear vision of what her brand needs to stand for and the non-negotiables of her consumer base, and it has helped me greatly to transition into this new industry. It’s easier to work for someone that shares your same values and vision.”


Amber Olson Rourke

CMO/Co-Founder

Amber Olson Rourke is a force at Neora—a passionate creator, marketer, mentor and visionary. She’s a tireless, natural-born leader, who cares about her work, home office teams and the field she supports, empowering people to “own what we do and learn from it—and her,” shared Beth Hisey, Director of Marketing.

After earning a BA in business marketing from University of Florida, Amber began her career in marketing/advertising, which was invaluable to learning how to craft a compelling story and create a brand that resonates with consumers. She also owned and operated a medical spa, giving her an up-close, small business perspective.

Amber has an amazing eye for details—from graphic design layouts to messaging to comp planning. She boils big concepts down into a language that suits her audience and provides direction with clear, actionable steps. Always on top of social trends, marketing perspectives and changes in relationship marketing, Amber’s never afraid to try something groundbreaking. “Her inherent intuition of the business is enviable and admirable,” said Beth.

Her future? According to Amber, the path is clear. “Continuing to evolve Neora to meet the ever-changing landscape of how people want to work and shop. And continuing to be an example to my three girls that they can achieve anything they want with hard work fueled by belief and passion.”


Brittan Sanders

Director of Vision and Strategy

Brittan Sanders climbed the field ranks to lead thousands and earned PaperPie’s prestigious President’s Award. She transitioned to corporate last year and spearheads growth efforts that will impact literacy and learning along with content creation and curation for social media.

After a decade of teaching in the classroom, Brittan is now a direct selling model champion, full of innovative ideas to which her creativity knows no bounds. Gracefully juggling the responsibilities of wife and mother of three, she’s a customer of PaperPie books with immeasurable product knowledge and insight she translates into usable tools.

“Brittan has a pulse on what can take us to the next level and is willing to put forth the effort to make it happen. She works tirelessly, digging in alongside her peers and team members until the job is done,” shared Heather Cobb, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer.

No two days look the same with infinite projects, events, marketing campaigns and leadership strategies. “I cannot express how excited I am for the season ahead of us—the clarified mission, the cohesive and current branding and the energy, joy and passion it has brought to and rekindled in our Brand Partners,” Brittan said. “But I truly think the most fulfilling thing is to see a child’s world change because of a PaperPie product.”


Andrew Schmidt

Managing Director / North America

Andrew Schmidt’s leadership of a global discretionary incentives redesign was applied across 100 countries and impacted a million plus Amway business owners. He partnered with CEO Millind Pant strategizing a plan through 2029, which catalyzed growth in emerging markets. Then he spearheaded product sell-through visibility and performance trend enhancements, digital tool development and product price-point strategies to better meet customer and ABO needs.

“Andrew is an architect of lasting change—setting organizational pace at the front and leading at the grassroots,” Cynthia Droog, Vice President, Global Communications shared. “His energy is limitless and inspiring—he races against only himself in pursuit of improving the lives of others. We are proud to have a leader like Andrew at Amway.”

It’s the fundamental appeal of direct selling to the human spirit that inspires and excites Andrew to work closely with both corporate and the field. “The working partnership that we have is a source of excitement and fulfillment every day. We are working together to make the Amway business better in real time.”

Watching his mentor, John Parker, during his decade with Amway has taught Andrew what it means to genuinely listen to distributors, be humble and always approach contentious discussions as opportunities for collaboration. “His leadership is an example I aspire to emulate every day,” Andrew explained.


Blake Shaver

Director of Business Development

Blake Shaver’s ability to foster close working relationships with both Brand Ambassadors, as well as internal and external stakeholders, is pivotal in driving key, new business growth at Plexus Worldwide. His strategic role oversees the development and implementation of sales enablement tools, campaigns, acquisition and loyalty programs, incentives and promotions.

“Blake is the total package­—a strategic and innovative leader with strong interpersonal skills and the ability to influence others at all levels and across roles. He sets the bar for work ethic and leadership accountability by being a role model for others at Plexus and in the field,” shared Joanna Gonos, Director of Internal Communications and PR.

Future focused and results oriented, Blake doesn’t settle for the status quo. Instead, he blazes the trail in an industry this former personal trainer admits caught him by surprise. He credits great people and perpetual learning for propelling his career and now enabling him to call the industry home.

Blake explained what he feels are the channel’s biggest challenges and opportunities. “Staying relevant without losing who we are. It’s important to keep up with technology and continually innovate our approach to the business model. The heartbeat of this channel is people and relationships. I believe it’s what makes us truly special.”


Amber Snow

Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

For more than a decade, Amber Snow’s changemaker prowess has ensured Amway’s approach to employee engagement and culture is thoughtful, impactful and results driven. As one of few diversity, equity and inclusion leads in the industry, Amber blazes a path for other companies to follow with her strong communication and dynamic leadership skills.

From developing brilliant strategy that helps Amway engage meaningfully and impact lives positively to leader advocacy, training and development, hiring and talent processes, inclusion networks, education and awareness, community engagement and data-driven goals and accountability, Amber ensures the company creates a diverse culture.

“Each day is dedicated to integrating diversity and inclusion in every role she’s faced at Amway,” shared Cindy Droog, Vice President, Global Communications.

“We are creating a system designed to bring equity to all, especially those who’ve had systemic barriers to success in a corporate environment,” Amber shared. “Being able to embed diversity, equity and inclusion into our everyday business practices and create a corporate culture that represents all voices is what gets me up each morning.”

For Amber, the biggest industry challenge and opportunity is one and the same. “It’s that we are reliant on the most powerful, yet unpredictable, thing in the world: people!”


Sheila Tran

Digital Art Director

As digital art director for The Happy Co.Sheila Tran’s role brings together the best of artistic expression and strategic impact. “I can shape and elevate the visual identity of the company, playing a key role in capturing the attention and imagination of customers and driving sales through compelling digital experiences. Witnessing the tangible results of my work, such as increased sales, brand recognition and customer loyalty, can be incredibly rewarding,” Sheila explained.

Proactive doesn’t do Sheila justice—she’s constantly looking for ways to improve, whether through branding or user experiences. Sheila possesses all the qualities employers look for in the perfect employee, Clare Holbrook, The Happy Co.’s Chief Marketing Officer explained. “Her flair for graphic design is incredible. Her creativity shows up in everything she touches. Sheila is innovative and has a never-ending flow of ideas.”

Continuous growth, innovation and making a significant impact in the digital space—that’s what Sheila intends for her career. “Embracing emerging technologies, leading creative teams, collaborating strategically with cross-functional teams, enhancing user experiences and contributing to the industry as a thought leader. By pursing these objectives, I aim to make a lasting impact in the digital creative space, drive business success and continue to evolve as a dynamic and innovative professional.”


Kevin Trask

Chief Financial Officer

Kevin Trask came aboard Awakend as a start-up—cold, without previous relationships with its founders. It’s a testament to his proficiency and ability to cultivate trust that he was elevated to CFO in six months.

He’s passionate about establishing strategic growth metrics and KPIs, while maintaining operational and initiative funding liquidity. This strategic vision enabled more than $25 million in sales in the first six months.

“This can be a very delicate balance when overseeing the financial health of any company, but more precarious with a startup, where every penny is acutely analyzed, measured and planned,” said Justin Rose, Awakend President.

An actively licensed CPA, he audited small and large, private and public companies including direct selling companies, while in public accounting. His skills transferred easily and said rejoining the industry has created new opportunities to learn and develop.

From a “finance guy” perspective, without the common goal of generating brand loyalty among younger generations, Kevin said, “We will find our industry contracting in the coming years and decades.”

However, there’s immense industry opportunity in providing a successful landing place for people looking for a side hustle. “They start to see the returns on their money and time investments, then we can attract top leaders to come and grow with us,” Kevin explained.


Kara Trousdale

Chief Commercial Officer

Kara Trousdale comes to Beautycounter following a successful career at Amazon. This outside perspective gives Kara a modern, fresh approach. She prioritizes strong listening, collaboration and partnership building. And—in short order—she has modernized Beautycounter’s highly competitive compensation plan and has been a positive influence to all.

“While this is my first job in direct selling, many principles I learned at Amazon apply to Beautycounter. Two that have been most helpful include ‘Customer Obsession’ and ‘Working Backwards.’ At Amazon, you are trained to always listen to the customer and work backwards to create the products and tools that meet their needs. I have applied this at Beautycounter and encouraged my colleagues to do the same. Some of the strongest insights have come directly from listening to the team that knows our business the best—our Beauty Advocates.”

It’s an approach that is making a difference. Her colleagues shared that, “She embraces all that is so special about the direct sales channel and pairs this with strong ideas on how to innovate, making her a unique leader with a competitive edge. Kara is not someone who stops at simply executing with excellence, she lifts up and inspires others along the way and has the incredible ability to drive this positive influence to her team and ultimately inspire the entire industry.”


Javier Urdaneta

Chief of Staff

Javier Urdaneta’s tireless dedication, leadership and initiative helped him build an operations team from scratch when he was still in his twenties, and he’s since piloted MONAT through fast growth, industry-wide slowdowns, international expansion and a pandemic.

Long before he was aligning day-to-day MONAT activities, supervising systems and process enhancements saving millions, improving customer service and increasing revenue, Javier’s parents gave him an insider’s look at the industry. “I’ve been able to see and experience first-hand the dynamics of working in the field, working with people and witnessing how the industry transforms lives,” he said.

Ray Urdaneta, CEO, MONAT Global, believes Javier to be the face of direct selling’s future—a man highly effective at managing cross functional team relationships, constantly learning and gaining insight to optimize operations. “His team always works ‘with’ him and not ‘for’ him.”

“No day is ever the same. I’m involved in multiple areas, each with its own unique processes and challenges which keeps everything very dynamic! It also provides me with a 360-degree view of the business,” Javier said.

Adapting to realities of post-pandemic life poses challenges, but opportunities await as the industry adapts to Gen Z and leverages new AI technology. “When it comes to AI, companies need to engage now or be left behind,” Javier said.


Lu Urdaneta

Chief Culture Officer

Having grown up in the industry, Lu Urdaneta was a child at her first “rally” with her father. His hunger for life and determination to make things happen, even when they seem impossible, inspired her. “He is a man of his word, honest, passionate and family focused…He shows me every day with his lived example that records are set to be broken and that everything is possible when you believe.”

Lu began work in the industry at 16. Today, she is a guardian of MONAT’s all-important brand voice, leading the family-focused mission; recognizing and developing an all-embracing organizational culture of love, care, unity and gratitude; and reaching out in philanthropy and community engagement through MONAT Gratitude, whose donations top $7 million to fund over 100 community service initiatives to date.

“Lu has inspired a global grassroots movement of giving, making a positive impact on communities around the globe,” Ray Urdaneta, CEO, MONAT Global, said.

“It is my goal to ensure that our culture shines through in everything we do, everywhere we go and to keep a strict focus on these values throughout MONAT,” Lu shared. “It’s often overwhelming to see how kind, generous and determined the MONAT Market Partners are when it comes to supporting those in need.”


Tiffany Wojtkiewicz

President/Co-Founder

Tiffany Wojtkiewicz, co-founding VP of Sales and later Chief Revenue Officer, grew ONEHOPE Wine from 0 to over 250,000 cases, helping place them among the top 200 wineries by volume in the U.S. Today, she leads as President.

“A true channel believer, Tiffany’s goal is democratizing opportunity for diverse peoples and enabling them to break into the wine business. Under her direction, ONEHOPE built one of the wine industry’s most innovative and scalable platforms,” Jake Kloberdanz, Co-Founder, said.

After 15 years, she still comes to work every day excited about growing the brand, bringing purpose to all and working with her Co-Founders, who she names as her greatest mentors. “I cherish the built-in network that we have…always ready to listen, support and challenge each other as well.”

“I oftentimes refer to her superpower of aligning ONEHOPE’s executive team as ‘keeping the band together.’ She inspires our community to be better and more productive. Tiffany is an incredible leader,” Jake explained.

Tiffany’s leadership has not only helped the brand scale in size, but grow its impact. The company, which donates 10% back to a customer’s cause of choice, has proudly donated over $9 million supporting 40,000 nonprofits. “We are changing the world with every bottle sold,” noted Tiffany.


From the July/August 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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2023 Global Celebration | Honoring the channel’s innovators, achievers & visionaries https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/06/01/2023-global-celebration-honoring-the-channels-innovators-achievers-visionaries/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2023-global-celebration-honoring-the-channels-innovators-achievers-visionaries Thu, 01 Jun 2023 15:29:23 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=19020 Hundreds of people representing 53 companies from around the world attended in person. And thousands more watched the event via free livestream. Awards and honors were revealed in several categories, including a Lifetime Achievement Award, the Bravo Awards and the DSN Global 100 List.

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It’s been a year of transition as direct selling companies and distributors continue to refine and redefine what it means to participate in the channel. While revenues for many companies remained flat or declined, several companies did report remarkable gains.

And—most importantly—companies across the industry continued to embrace and incorporate new methods of doing business to attract new people to the channel and to inspire current participants to expand their vision. There is much to celebrate.

And celebrate we did at the 14th DSN Global Celebration, a live hybrid event held on Tuesday, April 18, 2023 in Frisco, Texas. It was an exciting night hosted by DSN Chief Brand Officer Shelley Rojas and DSN Strategic Advisor Heather Chastain. Hundreds of people representing 53 companies from around the world attended in person. And thousands more watched the event via free livestream. Awards and honors were revealed in several categories, including a Lifetime Achievement Award, the Bravo Awards and the DSN Global 100 List.

Lifetime Achievement Award

For only the third time, DSN bestowed its Lifetime Achievement Award. This prestigious award was given to a true legend in direct selling, Rudy Revak.

Rudy is the craftsman behind multiple highly successful direct selling companies including Symmetry and Xyngular, which he founded in 1995 and 2009 respectively and was instrumental in the acquisition and rebranding of PUREhaven in 2016. He’s also the Chairman and Founder of Global Ventures Partners, an investment capital firm committed to creating opportunities for common people to achieve uncommon results.

Stuart Johnson and Rudy Revak

Born in Germany and the son of a World War II refugee, he escaped to America when he was just five years old. He’s a living breathing example of the American Dream in its purest, most inspirational form.

When asked to reflect on his years in the industry and what it has meant to him, Rudy spoke eloquently of the impact direct selling has had on his life. “I’ve loved this industry for all these years. I’m still in it because I love it—not just for what it has done for me, but for what it continues to do for so many people. It provides the opportunity for people to reach their dreams. I would do it all over again, 100 percent.”

The two previous recipients, John Fleming and Stan Frederick, were on hand to warmly welcome Rudy into this illustrious club. To read more about Rudy’s enduring legacy, please see page 60.

The Bravo Awards

Each year the Bravo Awards panel recognizes companies for outstanding achievement and excellence in areas of leadership and the highest percentage of revenue growth. Specialty awards are also given to individuals and companies for their achievements in and service to the direct selling channel.

ROLF SORG , PM-International / Recipient of the Bravo Leadership Award

The Bravo Leadership Award is given to an individual, recognizing outstanding achievement and exceptional leadership of a direct selling executive. This year’s recipient was Rolf Sorg, Founder and CEO of PM-International in honor of his visionary leadership and strategic direction he has displayed throughout the 30-year history of the company. PM-International is now ranked #8 on the DSN Global 100 list with $2.55 billion in 2022 revenue and a presence in 45 countries.

The Bravo Global Good Award recognizes companies that take a proactive approach to environmental, philanthropic and social responsibility issues. This year the honor went to Arbonne. Arbonne is known for its passionate commitment to empowerment, transparency and sustainability. In 2022, Arbonne earned recertification for its B Corporation status. Among Arbonne’s recertification achievements are a reduction in water consumption globally by 60 percent; a 55 percent reduction in Scope I and II emissions since 2019; and a 42 percent decrease in electricity consumption since 2019.

DSN honored three companies with the Bravo Impact Award this year. The award recognizes the achievements of well-rounded companies that take a holistic, measured and incremental approach to growth, innovation and operational integrity and excellence. These companies positively impact their customers, distributors, staff, communities and the channel as a whole. They are helping to lead the way forward in shifting the public perception of direct selling.

The first award went to LegalShield. LegalShield has devoted the past 50 years to providing affordable assistance with everyday legal matters from wills and real estate to family law and consumer issues, as well as privacy management. LegalShield has served 4.5 million people and more than 140,000 businesses and taken over 50 million requests for legal services since its inception and has paid out over $1 billion in commissions over the past ten years.

The second Impact award honoree was Princess House. Celebrating their 60th anniversary this year, Princess House is marking this milestone with an unprecedented period of growth. They credit this success to creating a true partnership with the field. Their field, comprised mostly of Latina women, have embraced a new digital approach that has greatly expanded their reach. A streamlined product offering and a philosophy of training up has increased their overall order size by 40 percent.

LIMELIFE BY ALCONE /
Recipient of the Bravo Impact Award

The final recipient of the Impact Award was LimeLife by Alcone. Plunging ahead into the unexpected and refusing to fit in is part of this company’s DNA. Having started in 1952 selling stage makeup to Broadway performers, Alcone eventually grew into a nationwide leader in professional makeup for the television, film and theatrical industries. The company’s commitment to quality, DEI-focused strategies and passion for female entrepreneurship is nothing short of inspirational!

Two Bravo Growth Awards were bestowed on domestic direct selling companies. This prestigious award celebrates the direct selling company with the highest year-over-year revenue growth on the Global 100 List. One is given to a product-based company, and another is given to a service-based company.

This year’s product-based Bravo Growth Award was given to Princess House. This market leader in kitchenware and home goods grew 114 percent between 2019 and 2022.

The service-based award was given to eXp Realty for the third year in a row. The company has well over 85,000 independent agents worldwide and continues to grow at an exponential rate. In fact, this publicly traded company grew from $3.8 billion in 2021 to $4.6 billion in 2022. An $800 million-dollar increase representing 21 percent in year-over-year growth.

Two Bravo International Growth Awards were also announced. These were also given to one product-based company and one service-based company.

The product-based winner was no stranger to the Global Celebration stage. Based in Luxembourg, PM-International has enjoyed 29 years of continuous growth. They are on quite a run, growing from $1.7 billion in 2020 to $2.38 billion in 2021 and achieving $2.55 billion in 2022.

Utility Warehouse won in the service-based category. This UK-based company ranked #10 on the Global 100 this year.

DSN added two new awards to the Bravo line up this year. The first, the Bravo Innovator Award, recognizes direct selling companies that embrace and deploy the emerging technologies and future-focused strategies that propel the company forward and serve as an inspiration of what’s possible. The inaugural Bravo Innovator Award was given to FASTer Way To Fat Loss.

The final award of the evening was the Bravo Excellence Award, another new award this year. This recognition is reserved for executives with a long history of leadership, excellence and integrity. These individuals are champions of the channel and positive mentors to all who serve it. The award was given to John Parker, Chief Sales Officer and Regional President West of Amway.

For more in-depth information of our Bravo Award winners, please see our expanded coverage starting on page 66.

The Global 100 List

One of the most eagerly anticipated announcements each year at the Global Celebration is the unveiling of the Global 100 list. This list determines the top direct selling companies in the world for 2022. Inclusion on the Global 100 has become a point of much-deserved pride.

The List offers a unique perspective on the global impact of the industry by recognizing companies’ revenue achievements. Recognition for each of these companies is the culmination of months of research and the cooperation of many individuals around the world.

This year’s DSN Global 100 list acknowledges 53 companies achieving more than $100 million in revenue for 2022. Full coverage of the list as well as analysis on important and emerging trends can be found starting on page 114.

Oh, What a Night!

The DSN Global Celebration is the industry awards event of the year—a night designed to celebrate, inspire and motivate! If you missed the broadcast, you can catch it on replay at DSNG100.com for a limited time. Gathering together in person creates an incredibly positive sense of community and energy within the room—the magic of those moments is definitely must-see viewing for supporters of the channel.

From the 53 thriving companies on the Global 100 List to the 11 Bravo Award winners and our Lifetime Achievement Award winner, Rudy Revak, DSN recognized the best of the best of the channel we all love and believe in.

Congratulations to the winners and thank you to the hundreds in the room and thousands of viewers worldwide. And a sincere thank you to all our Supporter Companies and Supplier Sponsors for helping DSN provide this night of celebration, recognition and camaraderie. 


From the June 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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Direct Selling’s Roadmap of the Future­—Precision Positioning https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/05/01/roadmap-of-the-future/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=roadmap-of-the-future Mon, 01 May 2023 16:01:21 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=18792 How Gen X, Millennials & Gen Z really feel about direct selling. A first-of-its-kind study details how every generation of Americans across all genders, geographies and socio-economic levels perceive, engage with and measure success and opportunity in direct selling.

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How Gen X, Millennials & Gen Z really feel about direct selling.

A first-of-its-kind study details how every generation of Americans across all genders, geographies and socio-economic levels perceive, engage with and measure success and opportunity in direct selling.

Times have changed, but in the direct selling channel executives can easily assume (read: hope) that some things never will.

arrow sign on floor
ponsulak/shutterstock.com

That belief was challenged last year when Jason Dorsey, President of the Center for Generational Kinetics (CGK), presented his generational research at Direct Selling University. Generational research identifies differences between generations in underlying motivation, actions, behavior and predictable tendencies. And while his findings illustrated how deeply the generational divide impacts how people perceive and engage with the world around them and detailed how companies cannot simply rely on one messaging style to effectively reach all ages, all the insights were borrowed from research done in other industries. As I dug deeper into this game-changing topic, I quickly discovered that no generational study of any significance had ever been done just for the direct selling industry.

As a (ahem) seasoned executive and the founder of Bridgehead Collective, a firm founded to help companies in the channel innovate, form and execute strategic plans in a dynamic digital environment, I know the importance of well-researched data. Operators at our core, we use data to help companies maximize every dollar spent. Data is the foundation for determining how to allocate investments; where to leverage human power to lead through change; how to identify and overcome internal and external obstacles to growth; and how to decide which strategies will have the most robust impact on measurable results. That’s why, as I listened to Jason, I knew that we needed to harness the power of original generational research in a way that would specifically analyze the direct selling industry. If we want answers that we’re willing to dedicate all our resources towards, then we must do the research. As much as we’d like to think we’ve been around long enough to have all the answers, we often need to reach out to those who actually do.

New Generation-Specific Strategies

In a first-of-its-kind study, Bridgehead Collective chose to partner with the Center for Generational Kinetics, which has led more than 100 research studies in all major industries. Their seminal annual study, The State of Gen Z, formed the basis for the best-selling book, ZConomy and has been consistently featured in national and global media including The Wall Street Journal, New York Times, CNN and many more. I set out to discover America’s perceptions of entrepreneurship, the gig-economy and, more pointedly, direct selling. Statistical significance was of ultimate importance in this analysis, so the study represents a wide-sweeping sample that is reflective of America, with an equitable mix of genders, demographics, employment status, education levels and location that allows for a 97 percent confidence level.

When we launched the study, my biggest fear was that I would spend a year immersed in this process, only to resurface with findings that were predictable. I anticipated a year full of “Well, as we suspected…” but instead, I was thrilled by the differentiated and potentially game-changing nature of our results, and I think you will be too.

We designed the study to provide Actionable Insights across 10 Key Categories:

  • Perception of Industry and Channel
  • Recruiting and Prospecting
  • Motivations and Decision Criteria
  • Onboarding and Getting Started
  • Training
  • Compensation and Value Proposition
  • Recognition
  • Incentive Trips and Events
  • Retention
  • Duplication and Role of Team Building

What did we learn? So, so much! Every generation has strong feelings about how we recruit, onboard and train. That maybe we knew. But no two generations are remotely the same in what motivates them to want to stay in or leave a business. In fact, as we looked at the data, it was common to see results that were significantly polarized. Each of these 10 key categories provided new, actionable insights that every marketing, sales, field communication and compensation team will want to design around. Following are just a few of these standout insights from one of those categories.

Leading with a one-size-fits-all approach is from a bygone era; I don’t think anyone is still stuck in that model. But many companies are still relying on a historical positioning of the direct selling opportunity that doesn’t really fit anymore. We must consider just how much perceptions have shifted and strategize with generational chasms in mind.

What we need is a new roadmap.

Precision Messaging

Blank directional road sing on sky background
Billion Photos/shutterstock.com

It’s common to hear direct selling executives and field leaders say they are eager to pursue Gen Z. They are the next generation of customers, after all, and represent the threshold to what’s next. In an effort to court the youngest shoppers, however, brands can jump on trend bandwagons that have the opposite effect for older generations, effectively alienating their already loyal customers and distributors in the Gen X and Millennial age brackets.

The key, then, is to deliver our messages with precision. No two generations have the same preferences, experiences and motivations, so our messaging shouldn’t either. We need to become students of generational divides, knowing how to fine-tune our communications so that they speak the language of each specific customer and what our sellers want to be called for maximum credibility (Spoiler alert: it’s not Ambassador).

This will create the trust we need with each generation to ensure our messages are heard, understood and embraced. With the right data, it’s possible to truly reach everyone by refining our audience and tailoring our messages for maximum impact.

The Sweet Spot of Opportunity

The good news is, across the board, Americans are generally interested in starting their own business. Even better, a whopping 42 percent have considered working in the direct selling industry. If we stopped there, we might be misled to think that a large segment of every generation is ready to receive the direct selling opportunity without reservation.

When we dig deeper, we find that Gen Z (ages 18-26) and younger Millennials (ages 27-35) are significantly more likely than older generations to be working or to have considered working in the direct selling industry. However, older Millennials (36-43) and Gen X (44-55) are much more likely than their younger counterparts to have never considered working in the direct selling industry.

In fact, the study told us that younger generations, especially younger Millennials, not only have a significantly more positive perception of direct selling compared to their older counterparts, they’re also considerably more comfortable learning about the opportunities it can offer.

From this survey question, another statistic was buried within the data that took us by surprise: men are 11 percent more likely than women to have a positive perception of direct selling and seven percent more comfortable learning about a direct selling opportunity.

For years, many direct selling brands have spent their energy courting Gen Z women shoppers and mom-preneurs, but the data is telling us that Young Millennial men, ages 27 to 35, are potentially our biggest missed opportunity.

If we use precision messaging, we can advance recruiting in this demographic while also tailoring our communications with the older, more skeptical demographic in a way that speaks to their doubts and concerns.

Barriers by Generation

Being an entrepreneur is no easy task, so it’s no surprise that high startup costs (54%) and failure itself (46%) are the biggest barriers Americans face when considering a new business venture. But those challenges increase as we step into the direct selling genre.

Candid waist up portrait of creative couple looking at camera while standing against green wall
SeventyFour/shutterstock.com

Taking all ages into account, 46 percent of Americans who have a negative perception of direct selling just have a general belief that the industry is a scam or predatory, and 43 percent are convinced they would have to get their friends to buy something in order for them to be successful.

These are big numbers that represent big barriers for any prospective distributor or customer. How can we reposition our messages to assuage these beliefs?

By digging into the data. Our study exposed exactly what words to use to overcome these barriers; how to position the opportunity; where and how to reach them; and the most effective language to use for each generation.

Once we’ve addressed these gateway obstacles, we need to consider how Americans want to be approached with the opportunity. Most generations prefer an in-person conversation with a family member or friend—surprisingly, 70 percent or more of Gen Z and all Millennials favor this method.

What no generation preferred was a group discussion led by a distributor. Group meetings, whether on Zoom, at an event or in a coffee shop, scored low across the board. There was one caveat: Younger Millennials were the most receptive of all generations across a number of categories and approaches.

This was one of the most surprising insights from the entire study. Younger Millennials don’t really care where or how they learn about direct selling. They simply want to hear about it, even more than we might have thought.

What’s Their Win?

Making extra money is by far the biggest benefit Americans seek when getting involved as a direct selling distributor. From there, having control over when and where work happens (43%) was a strong driver.

For older generations, getting paid weekly significantly influences their likelihood of engaging in the direct selling industry, while younger generations prioritize learning new skills that can be used in their daily lives and building their influence and impact.

Money is the best and most welcomed benefit by a long shot, and getting paid and receiving money is what makes people want to stay working in the industry. In fact, it’s the highest predictor of whether or not an American would choose to keep working their business after the first three months.

While this is obvious, there is more to the story. In a generation-specific analysis, we see that Gen Z is also deeply impacted by a belief that they are part of a cause or movement, and that helping at least three other people get started would absolutely convince them to stay at a direct selling business after the first three months, significantly more so than older generations. For Gen X, it’s all about getting paid and seeing the product or service they’re selling work in their own life.

How Much Is Enough?

We have all been reframing our business opportunity in increasingly compliant ways, referring to “extra or additional or supplemental income” instead of a specific dollar or some other atypical earnings amount. The problem though is that this general approach to pitching opportunity will mean different things to different people. However, now, with this research, we know for the first time how much money “additional or extra or supplemental” income really is. An extra $500 a month is enough for 83 percent of Americans to say they would get involved in direct selling, but the exact amounts vary significantly by generation. For older generations, $1,000 or more in the first month convinces them that direct selling is worth it. For younger generations, that number is only $250-$499 and the mention of more than $1,000 can raise red “ick-factor” flags that will deter them from ever joining! We have the data to show you why.

Much to my surprise, cash bonuses for hitting certain sales thresholds beat out a simple consistent selling percentage as the number one preferred performance incentive across the board. In contrast to Gen X and older Millennials, younger generations valued recognition in front of their peers or at a national or international meeting as a highly effective performance incentive.

It’s important to take note that respondents rated some of the most common industry recognition tools as the least likely to make them feel valued as a distributor, which when armed with this data, should have some of you rethinking how you recognize on social or those increasingly ubiquitous give-back trips.

Unlock Untapped Opportunity

The study clearly shows us that generations perceive this industry in vastly different ways than we may have thought.

The often-touted homogeneous, funnel marketing technique may appear more efficient, but this study proves that it is likely also less effective. We must balance efficiency with effectiveness. When we think about investment, we need to also think about changing the lens with which we’re viewing that investment. What’s a bigger spend: one cheaper, ineffective communication approach or a multi-pronged message that may cost more but delivers results?

For instance, if you want to go after younger Millennials, talk about the opportunity to earn an extra $250 a month and offer them a trusted guide to help them develop the skills they need. If you want to go after Gen X, focus on the potential to earn an extra $1,000 a month and the efficacy of your products.

There are wide bands of Americans that genuinely want and are looking for what we have to offer. All of the insights above were from just one of the 10 categories of questions, and they all offer equally insightful and actionable data we can apply to every facet of our businesses. When we fine-tune our target market and let the data guide our message there is vast opportunity waiting to be unlocked.

Want to learn more? Join us at the DSN Deep Dive event happening Friday, May 19 in Flower Mound, Texas. Jason and Heather will share their biggest surprises from this game-changing research and provide key action items to keep your messaging and methods on point for each generation. They will also be joined at the event by direct selling and social selling executives.


With 20+ years of cross-functional experience in direct selling, Heather Chastain brings a solid understanding of sales, marketing, technology, manufacturing, operations and C-Suite challenges as well as a strong collaborative and relational style of leadership to the table. Heather has held executive roles at Shaklee, Arbonne International, Celebrating Home and BeautiControl. Heather also serves as the Strategic Advisor at DSN and is the Founder & Chief Executive Officer of Bridgehead Collective.

From the May 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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Great Expectations https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/04/01/great-expectations/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=great-expectations Sat, 01 Apr 2023 13:42:00 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=18530 We were all hopeful that the record highs the direct selling channel experienced in 2020 and 2021 would continue its upward trajectory. But as we settle back into the normal rhythms of day-to-day life, we’re seeing that the macrotrends that were already in play before the pandemic are still inescapable.

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Setting, managing and meeting customer and distributor expectations.

We were all hopeful that the record highs the direct selling channel experienced in 2020 and 2021 would continue its upward trajectory. After all, 80 percent of companies with an average of $50 million in annual revenue saw year-over-year growth in 2020, and 30 companies experienced $100 million+ revenue growth.

The social dynamics and restrictions of that time meant we had a captive audience with a heightened demand for products that didn’t sit on a store shelf. But as we settle back into the normal rhythms of day-to-day life, we’re seeing that the macrotrends that were already in play before the pandemic are still inescapable. These shifts are generational, technological and carry cultural momentum.

To remain relevant and succeed in today’s direct selling landscape…we must overcome the misperceptions and stigma of the past by being completely committed to setting, managing and meeting the expectations of our distributors and customers alike.

Sell Attainable Success

From the outset, the channel and distributors are often face-to-face with a negative public perception, but it has in part been one of our own making. Too often, companies highlight and promote the most extreme examples of success. We know, however, that hitting the highest ranks or sales tiers requires a tremendous amount of time, effort and dedication.

When we were the only game in town for side hustles and supplemental income, we were able to procrastinate dealing with this unmet expectation. Now, the gig economy offers up countless earning opportunities that can be completed in the margins of a workday or with underutilized resources. Competition today is fierce. Whether a person jumps on Fiverr, Taskrabbit or another gig-based platform, it is understood right out of the gate what the income potential could be and what effort is required to earn that income.

Direct selling’s default pitch has been to talk about the highest potential for success when it comes to both the income opportunity and benefits of our products, but we are now in a day that requires a different approach.

Generation Realist

Today’s distributors are different. They don’t join with pie-in-the-sky ambition or hopes of becoming a top-ranking affiliate. Instead, this generation only moves up the ranks when they witness the opportunity with their own eyes and see how it can change lives. The aspirational ladder-climbing pitch is now a bygone era. It doesn’t click with this demographic anymore.

Instead, attainable goals like an extra $500 or $1,000 a month are today’s most effective carrots. Gig work companies like Etsy don’t tell prospective affiliates that they could make six figures a year, even though it has been done. They gain trust from the beginning by the expectation being set for what is likely, rather than possible.

It’s not that we shouldn’t help distributors reach their lofty income goals, but rather that we should provide the map for the next earning echelon only when those affiliates are ready. In the meantime, laying out realistic milestones makes it easier for distributors to see their own progress and for us to bring enhanced integrity to the channel while gaining loyal, satisfied customers and representatives.

Switch to a Product-First Mindset

It’s now more socially acceptable to share products with friends and strangers than ever before. In the social media age of influencers and affiliates, we’ve grown accustomed to seeing sales pitches in our feeds all day long and to buying from individuals rather than large corporations.

Direct selling pioneered this person-to-person selling more than a century ago. We’re exceptional at it. But to be a leader in this space, we now need to consider what we’re offering customers—and in what order we present it. Sequencing matters. Years’ worth of data points tells us that if a company attempts to offer customers the product and the opportunity simultaneously in its first few impressions, customers are less likely to convert to buyers.

That means that all brand touchpoints that are customer-facing—especially the website—should have no more than one mention of the opportunity. Potential buyers should arrive at the brand website and become captivated by the product first and foremost. This will be a drastic shift for some legacy companies, but I’m convinced it’s one we need to make in earnest.

Social media, like the website, needs to be product-driven. If you want a social feed promoting the sales opportunity, make a separate one. Instagram, TikTok and Facebook should be a welcome mat for people who are completely uninitiated in your brand.

All brand touchpoints that are customer-facing—especially the website—should have no more than one mention of the opportunity.

Only after customers experience the product and have their expectations met and exceeded should a company introduce sharing and then team building. We’re still trying to deliver too many messages and concepts all at once, but we need to respect and understand that all of our customers have unique and different journeys in relation to our products and opportunity.

Customize Messaging

Personalized algorithms found in everyday technology like grocery store apps and online shopping mean that customers and distributors now expect companies to know their preferences, needs and habits. Our marketing should be tailored for the individual. But, overall, the direct selling channel is unfortunately still using the same megaphone and message for every person.

If a new customer expresses interest in our products but we send them email blasts, text messages and campaigns all about team building or events they don’t care about, we may think that we’re inviting them into the opportunity side of the business, but what we’re actually doing is eroding trust, squashing interest and providing a bad customer experience. It’s alienation—not an invitation.

By segmenting our messaging through marketing automation, we can provide an independent route for each individual person. Evergreen email and SMS campaigns, designed to deploy when triggered by certain customer behaviors, can offer bite-sized steps that walk people through the different parts of their journey and advance them down the appropriate path. There are tools that can make this easier to install, like Hubspot or Klaviyo, and we must ensure that each message and brand touchpoint is laser targeted for the right audience and sets the right expectations and tone.

Is it Easy to Do Business with Us?

Last year, more than 60 million Americans freelanced, yet direct selling remains a small slice of that gig economy pie. To keep up, we need to consider what gig workers expect and analyze our channel’s greatest opportunities for growth.

First, the direct selling opportunity should feel as easy as becoming an Uber driver, and the income should be as immediate. Today’s consumer wants instant proof, by way of immediate value from a product or paycheck, so it’s time for us to adopt instant commissions and overhaul our traditional paycheck process. The goal is to get people out in their worlds sharing the products. Reducing or removing the initial “buy-in” cost and monthly minimums to earn a paycheck makes us more competitive.

Second, for most gig opportunities such as Lyft, Upwork or Etsy it’s easy to get started in just a few clicks, so that’s our new baseline. If we’re being honest with ourselves, it can be pretty challenging to get a direct sales organization up and running; to understand a compensation plan; to learn how to sell the product; and to comprehend what it takes to earn commissions. Even getting registered or ordering can be full of friction. We need to simplify and reduce the complications and barriers within these processes.

The direct selling opportunity is the original side hustle. We know how to harness the power of word-of-mouth marketing, social selling and community better than any other business. If we will systematically remove the hurdles and hoops in our processes and properly set, manage and meet the expectations of customers and distributors, we’ll deliver a life-changing opportunity to the next generation. And we’ll gain trust and credibility as a channel as well.


The 3 Keys to Setting, Managing and Exceeding Customer Expectations

The next generation of potential customers and distributors demand realistic goals and instant proof of success. Here are three goalposts to make sure the experience you provide meets the expectations they prefer.

1/ Sequence

Introduce your company to customers in the proper order. The product should always come first, so don’t flood first-time buyers with information about the opportunity. Any information about team building should be reserved for loyal customers who express interest in sharing the product with others.

2/ Segment

Tailor messaging to each unique visitor. Websites and social media should be product-focused and customer based, while event and corporate information should be sent to field leaders. Automating evergreen SMS and email campaigns to match a customer’s progress can help them take their next steps and create customer satisfaction.

3/ Simplify

Reduce friction by limiting the number of steps required to buy or register—and ditch monthly minimums and hefty buy-ins. Take every opportunity to minimize clicks and dial down complexity.


Wayne Moorhead

Wayne Moorehead has deep experience in marketing and brand strategy. Wayne’s rare blend of experience and success has shaped his philosophy on effective growth strategies, and he believes the future of the channel will blend the best of direct selling with the best of direct-to-consumer. He also hosts the DSN Direct Approach podcast.

From the April 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

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Taking the Lead https://www.directsellingnews.com/2023/03/01/taking-the-lead/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=taking-the-lead Wed, 01 Mar 2023 15:48:12 +0000 https://www.directsellingnews.com/?p=18240 The heartaches suffered, hurdles cleared and groundwork laid by direct selling’s extraordinary founding sisters are but one turn of a spinning wheel of inspiration. The next empowering turn comes from the bold, creative and tenacious spirits of these 35 current day female founders, whose modern leadership and vision reflects many of the ideals and principles of their predecessors.

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35 Female Founders Shaping the Channel’s Future

From that first time she answered the door and a Watkins “man” stood before her, direct selling carved out a place for women—at first, primarily as customers. Women controlled tight household purse strings and sought products to make domestic chores efficient and ease common ailments.

Yet, eager 20th century female entrepreneurs would soon shine as direct sellers themselves. Evelyn Fuller outsold her husband, Alfred—the original Fuller Brush man—on her first day in 1908 and replicated that accomplishment every day after for two years straight.

By 1910, Madam C.J. Walker—born in 1867 on the same Louisiana plantation where her parents were once enslaved—trained 3,000 “hair culturists” in the use and direct-to-customer sale of her African-American haircare products. She helped originate the role of the self-made, 20th century businesswoman, someone who promoted female talent, rewarded agent success, upheld justice, encouraged political activism and contributed to charitable causes. And let’s not forget, she was also America’s first female millionaire.

Madam C.J. Walker helped originate the role of the self-made, 20th century businesswoman, someone who promoted female talent, rewarded agent success, upheld justice, encouraged political activism and contributed to charitable causes.

“The girls and women of our race must not be afraid to take hold of business endeavor and, by patient industry, close economy, determined effort and close application to business, wring success out of a number of business opportunities that lie at their very doors,” Madam Walker said.

Reflect upon that commanding imagery—”wring success out of business opportunities that lie at their very doors.”

Sheer empowerment lives in that statement. From Madam C.J. Walker’s time until present day 2023, tenacious, brilliant and giving women have stood strong, reached out and empowered their sisters forward, while giving rise not only to some of direct selling’s most successful companies but arguably the present-day industry itself.

Generations of women have always found a way to make life the best it can be for their families, regardless of the challenges. Facing economic hardship, broken relationships and single motherhood, early 20th century women wanted more than the status quo could provide. So, it’s little wonder Frank Stanley Beveridge and his wife Catherine’s home demonstration method for Stanley Home Products exploded in 1939 and delivered American housewives a viable way to work within the confines of home and family, earn money and confidence all while building powerful social networks. Sound familiar?

Women were culturally and professionally under-appreciated into the postwar 1950s and they remained essentially “economically invisible.” But inspired by what they learned at Stanley Home Products, Brownie Wise (Tupperware), Mary Kay Ash (Mary Kay Cosmetics), Mary Crowley (Home Interiors) and Jan Day (Jafra) would soon launch women to new horizons and solidify their own legacies as phenoms of direct selling.

Brownie Wise knew how to speak to the dreams of women, but even her marketing genius—the brilliance that created the Tupperware Party—succumbed to 1950s social norms. Thousands of dealer recruits and $100 million in corporate sales, the first woman on the cover of Business Week had no written employment contract and was forced out seven years into her tenure, receiving only $30,000 severance after a court battle. Earl Tupper sold his company for $16 million a few short months later.

Brownie deserves respect as the inventor of the modern party plan, but also for her plucky spirit and drive to empower women that 1950s society pushed to the periphery. “Remember the steam kettle,” she liked to say, “though up to its neck in hot water, it continues to sing.”

“For every failure, there’s an alternative course of action. You just have to find it. When you come to a roadblock, take a detour,” Mary Kay Ash said.

In 1963, Mary Kay did just that. Passed over for a promotion at Stanley in favor of a man she had trained, Mary Kay set out to make change, not just for herself but for all women. She launched the predecessor of Mary Kay Cosmetics while mourning the sudden death of her new husband, George, disrupted the status quo and turned the male-dominated workplace on its head.

“Most people live and die with their music still unplayed. They never dare to try,” Mary Kay said. That didn’t sit well with her. She pictured everyone wearing a sign that read, “Make me feel important.” She led with unwavering integrity and fervently believed her company was doing something far more important than just selling cosmetics. Mary Kay changed women’s lives.

At a time when the “American Dream” remained elusive to so many due to societal bias, direct selling made a place for women to finally become economically visible by using their social networks to advance careers beyond “mad money” earnings. Legacy female founders, like Jafra’s Jan Day and Eunice Dudley, who met and worked alongside her husband Joe at Fuller Products, Inc. for decades before co-founding Dudley Beauty Corp., helped women from all walks of life discover what was on the inside and pull it to the outside.

“Success is not money in the bank or the car that you drive or the clothes that you wear or your status in the community,” Mary Crowley, founder of Home Interiors, said. “But success is really the ratio between what you have done and what you can do.”

“Nothing was quite like the reality of getting in that car, packed up with all my things, leaving my family at home and driving in rush hour traffic at night to Ruth’s house,” Pampered Chef Founder Doris Christopher recalled.

Slow traffic gave Doris time to second guess. Was she crazy for thinking kitchen shows would work? She was scared, but she kept driving.

“It’s just such an amazing thing to think about how uncomfortable I was when I had to really do this show and how quickly those fears were at least put aside, if not totally erased by success, by the positive response we got from customers,” Doris said.

The heartaches suffered, hurdles cleared and groundwork laid by direct selling’s extraordinary founding sisters are but one turn of a spinning wheel of inspiration. The next empowering turn comes from the bold, creative and tenacious spirits of these 35 current day female founders, whose modern leadership and vision reflects many of the ideals and principles of their predecessors.


Bianca Lisonbee

Bianca Lisonbee’s advice to women? “Be yourself. Who you are is your greatest asset.”

And from her birth, being Bianca meant embracing a unique origin story. Her immigrant parents were literally enroute from Italy to America when she was born. Her passport lists her birthplace as “At Sea” and each time she signs her name is a reminder of the name of the vessel that carried her family to a new home—Conte Bianca Mano.

“You can imagine the strange looks I get while going through Customs and Immigration when I travel. Reactions range from outright laughter to suspicious looks. The responses make me wonder if officials think I might be some sort of mermaid in disguise!” Bianca joked.

But it is precisely this unlikely beginning that engrained in Bianca an empathy for immigrants. In living that story and in its re-telling over the decades that have passed, Bianca has inspired countless 4Life affiliates and customers around the world. It informs her day-to-day as a founder within the direct selling industry, as well as the good works she undertakes through the creation of the 501(c)(3) nonprofit, Foundation 4Life.

Because she shares the role of founder with her husband, David, hers were not the challenges faced by many other female founders who have shouldered that responsibility alone. But as Bianca shared, “In my experience with women who have done just that, I think it’s important for us to have a passion for what we are doing. That passion breeds a level of confidence that others are drawn to regardless of gender or anything else. Nothing can stop an enthusiastic woman who believes in what she is doing!”

“Women like Mary Kay Ash are truly legends in this industry. I love how she didn’t wait for anyone to give her permission to succeed. She found a space she was passionate about and went for it,” Bianca said.

Bianca believes it’s not necessary for females to try to be like their male peers. Women often possess a natural ability to network and connect. That’s a great advantage in a relationship business like direct selling. But what all would-be leaders must do is learn from the examples around them.

“It’s important to make sure your company provides a level playing field for growth and progress for all your employees and that would, of course, include women. This is something that needs to be visited and revisited regularly. And yes, it is very important to us because it makes for not only individual satisfaction in the workplace, but helps the entire organization move forward in dynamic ways because an employee who feels valued in their contribution will bring a lot of positive energy and talent to the table.”


Melissa Thompson

Melissa Thompson BELLAME

Nearly 30 years after Melissa Thompson became an Avon representative, she sat in the founder’s seat at BELLAME and asked a simple question. “Why should someone have to pay us to represent our brand?” The mind-blowing answer: they shouldn’t have to.

This revelation led to Melissa’s construction of direct selling’s first omni marketing opportunity, an increasingly relevant business model in a significantly shifted post-COVID world. “We have gone from entrepreneurs looking for a brand to represent, to them looking to add us to their personal brands,” she explained.

With that comes the need for companies to respect those personal brands and provide entrepreneurs flexibility for multiple brand representation. It’s a new and exciting shift in what direct selling is and will be—one Melissa is truly excited by. She is committed to blazing a trail and changing the game with this forward-thinking business model, not just for BELLAME’s predominately female field, but for the future of entrepreneurship and the direct selling channel.

“The merging of affiliate and network marketing allows us to be perfectly positioned to be the most relevant opportunity for the next generations of social sellers. While I am beyond proud to have pioneered the omni marketing opportunity, I am even more inspired witnessing other brands moving in this direction!” she said.

Melissa’s career started by calling on customers door-to-door but eventually landed her in management, where she passionately advocated for entrepreneurs and their customers. Unlike her male colleagues who expressed equal exuberance and exhibited “true leadership,” Melissa was labeled “dramatic or bossy” in those predominately male boardrooms.

“This obstacle became a catalyst for shaping my career and later creating a brand and environment that celebrates passionate leadership,” Melissa shared.

“I experienced firsthand what it means to step into being unapologetically YOU, but it took a good 15 years to get there. I wish I could share with my younger self what I share now with others: Be confident. Speak up. Embrace who you are and what you have to offer and never, ever play small!” Melissa emphasized.

“From a field perspective, we are a female-dominated industry, yet many boardrooms continue to be male dominated. Creating the next generation of female corporate executives should be a goal for us all as an industry. It is a goal for BELLAME. I plan to help develop tomorrow’s industry leaders, whether they stay with us forever or move on. We are doing our part to ensure the long-term success of our industry,” she said.

Be confident. Speak up. Embrace who you are and what you have to offer and never, ever play small!


Mindy Lin

Mindy Lin, Damsel in Defense

Mindy Lin never envisioned this path or this journey. She did see herself clearly as a mother that would keep her children safe from things she had faced as a child. But the broader scope—the ability to lead a company that would leave a whole world of women and children safer—that was a bit unexpected. However, she said, “That’s the vision and the dream now.”

“I’ve been continuously inspired by how far and how much good people are willing to go and to give to make a difference in the world,” Mindy said. Her company’s Damsel House Project, a sex trafficking rescue, and the connection of her company’s field to the work in those homes is proof.

“Put a big heart in front of a child that was rescued because of their hard work, and you will never lose them. And place a strong heartfelt mission in the middle of an industry and watch a network of people you barely know, and even “competitors” in the space, rally around to support it,” Mindy said.

Her greatest joy—the ability to make change for the most vulnerable—presents personal difficulties at times. “I would say my greatest challenge has been staying in my lane as the Founder and CEO and not taking on the hardships of the field as my own. Understanding their trauma and what they have overcome, it’s very easy to blur the lines between founder and friend, when you are an empath who loves the people you are leading,” Mindy said.

Yet, this former Mary Kay consultant has found a way. She’s always believed that nothing could stop a woman with a strong work ethic and an even bigger vision. Surrounded by women within her own company and the larger industry that so readily lead by this example, Mindy thinks of them as the modern day versions of the founding female direct sales icons like Mary Kay Ash and Doris Christopher.

“I think that we, as women, are some of the best natural innovators. We face a problem at home or at work and quickly assess for solutions. Make us do the same inefficient task twice and watch us revolutionize it with a hack or delegate it without ego to someone who can do it better,” she said.

“Today, we lead armies of inspiring women bolstered by and proud of their abilities to make a difference in the world for others, not just in themselves or in their households. What an incredible evolution of impact for young female professionals to follow.”

Today, we lead armies of inspiring women bolstered by and proud of their abilities to make a difference in the world for others.


Ursula Dudley Oglesby

Ursula Dudley Oglesby, Dudley's

Ursula Dudley Oglesby doesn’t remember a time when direct sales wasn’t a part of her life. At ten years old, her parents—who met working for Fuller Products, Inc., spent years at the company’s helm and eventually created their own beauty brand—had Ursula selling door-to-door.

“I wrote my Harvard college application essay about my escapades,” Ursula remembered. She’s certain those direct selling experiences contributed to her acceptance and later work as a student recruiter in Harvard’s Admissions Office.

Ursula had never envisioned becoming the leader of the brand that her parents, Joe and Eunice, built. But, she said, “The universe had a different plan for me.”

A 30-second fire at their company facility resulted in more than property damage. While no one was hurt thanks to quick-thinking employees, she said, “The ensuing challenges almost became too much to bear.”

But the family-owned and -operated business rallied, restructured and in 2008, Ursula found herself as President and CEO of Dudley Beauty Corp. “I had to use all of my knowledge and experience up to that point to lead the company. It was challenging and exciting at the same time.”

Ursula learned to trust herself and believe in her abilities and now tells young women, who are just starting their careers, to remember: “You have everything you need to be successful. You will encounter challenges and obstacles, but always remember your mission and you will prevail.”

Taking inspiration from Mary Kay Ash, an icon and legend she was privileged to meet, Ursula shared, “She let nothing stop her and built a fabulous company. Her life helped me to develop part of my mission statement. My chief aim is to give men and women a dose of hope by enriching their lives so that every time they look in the mirror, they can truly see the beauty on the outside and the inside and know in their mind that ‘God didn’t take time to make a NOBODY!’”

Ursula is no fan of bureaucracy and empowers her staff by keeping an open door and open mind. She channels her passion for business and personal development into classes that she teaches whenever she can. And to survive and thrive through the COVID pandemic, creative and innovative thinking came to the forefront of her leadership style.

Dudley Beauty Corp’s multi-channel business model faced significant challenges during the world health crisis. “The majority of our business had been through beauty salons, and they were shut down. I had to learn how to pivot quickly and to make critical business decisions,” Ursula said.

“I began to sell hand sanitizer, developed programs for the hair stylists to earn money from home and increased my eCommerce footprint. Dudley Beauty Corp. became a leaner and healthier organization as a result,” she said.


Sylvie Rochette & Amelia Warren

Sylvie Rochette & Amelia Warren, Epicure

Like so many young mothers, Sylvie Rochette was feeling the pressure of dinner. It needed to be fast. It needed to be healthy. And she needed her kids to eat it. But accomplishing that every night with what was available at her local grocer was increasingly unlikely. It seemed like nobody cooked from scratch anymore. Everything was highly processed and boxed and not very good for you—or your family.

Sylvie began experimenting at home with wholesome seasonings and spices and soon met success around her own dinner table that would spill out to family, friends, farmer’s markets and trade shows. In 1997, she launched Epicure, which would go on to become direct selling’s largest Canadian-founded party plan company.

Amelia Warren was one of those kids sitting around Sylvie’s table and says her mother gave rise to a food movement that has nourished and changed millions of lives. “Since then, our family business has been a woman-run company, empowering women in our corporate team and our community,” Amelia said.

“We understand that for our home team to fill the cup of others, they must fill their own first. We believe in women; we empower women; we support women; we walk the walk and talk the talk,” Amelia shared.

That means equal opportunities for career advancement, a safe work environment, open communication as well as education and development opportunities. “We support our parents with flexibility (hours, remote), paid time off to attend medical appointments or a school play, paid sick days, paid maternity and paternity leave and create awareness through regular diversity, equity and inclusion training for both our home office team and field leadership,” Amelia said.

Epicure meets its Canadian and U.S. staff where they are with what they need to be successful at work and at home. They meet their field consultants and their customers using the same attention-to-need philosophy.

“Customers must be able to easily purchase from us—whether that’s online, on social media, in person, at cooking classes or via a frictionless eCommerce experience,” Amelia said. “To differentiate, we need to add value in every interaction.”

And it is the brand ambassador who remains vital to Epicure expanding its reach. “Equipping them with simple tools and strategies they can implement quickly to monetize their community, grow a robust client base and build customer loyalty is key,” she said.

Amelia leads an agile and entrepreneurial company bent on expansion and growth, applying vertical integration strategies, rapid product innovation, a focus on higher product quality and increased availability.

“While we are always evolving, as a multi-generational family business, we make all our decisions with the next generation in mind. We are not a flash-in-the-pan company; we will be here through the tough times and thrive because we have a big mission—to serve our communities by helping time-starved families connect across the table to share epic food, eat healthier and live better.”

While we are always evolving, as a multi-generational family business, we make all our decisions with the next generation in mind.


Meredith Cook

Meredith Cook, Green Compass

Meredith Cook is well acquainted with the success sentiment that says, “You just have to start where you are and not wait until you think you are ready.”

Despite a deep fear of public speaking, Meredith armed herself with marked up notes and took refuge behind a podium every single time she addressed a crowd during the early days of Green Compass Global. She relied heavily on them, until finally—little by little—fear loosened its grip.

“I am not embarrassed to admit any of this because I know it helps our Advocates develop confidence in themselves and know that they too can get outside their comfort zones, feel the fear but jump in anyway,” Meredith shared.

“I think that many people have been conditioned to play small and that makes sense when you understand that your brain just wants to keep you safe. Our survival instinct equates sameness with safety,” she explained.

That’s probably why naysayers perpetually popped up when Meredith shared what they thought were “unrealistic” goals. Most people couldn’t envision the rapid growth she knew her hemp-based wellness company would attain. Of course, there was also the added factor of being a female founder.

“I have encountered times when my vision was taken even less seriously, especially by male counterparts or I was patronized when casting my vision,” she said. But unwavering support, respect and belief flowed freely from her husband and Co-Founder, Sterling, as well as Green Compass’s entire executive team and many others.

“As women, one of our many superpowers is to lead with both our intuition and our intellect. In hindsight, I can confidently say that intuition, intellect and unwavering belief in myself and my vision has led to my success. There’s no room for doubt, so instead I’ve learned to trust myself and inspire those around me to think bigger—even when it’s uncomfortable,” she said.

According to Meredith, it’s vital to never let other people’s doubts shrink your vision. Women should follow their hearts and trust their intuition, then partner it with grit, determination, belief in yourself and hard work. “But you must take that leap into the unknown and get outside of your comfort zone. Don’t be afraid of where you will land. Once you jump, your safety net will appear!”

The trick to empowerment is in creating a safe environment where women can be honest, authentic and take risks. It takes connection and trust to build a sanctuary of sorts like Green Compass, where women know they can be vulnerable. It also takes a leader who purposefully targets and prioritizes empowering women, leads with empathy and admits to mistakes.

“When women know you believe in them and trust their abilities, value their opinions and expertise and care about them, they can thrive,” she said. “People need to hear from your heart and feel your energy.”


Kathy Coover

Women push to do more and be more, prioritizing family and wearing an array of “hats” multiple times a day in order to balance work and life. Kathy Coover—a self-proclaimed over-achiever—doesn’t see that changing. “Over-achievers often think we must do everything ourselves, but training others and learning to trust others is crucial to your success and well-being,” she said.

Kathy did her fair share of swapping hats when Isagenix was a fledgling direct selling company. “That’s where I believe true learning happens,” she said. And that hectic, unbalanced time taught her to embrace her passion for field sales and marketing, then stretch to grow into the rest.

Soon, Kathy used her decade as a top field leader to simplify business growth for associates and gave them what they needed to succeed. “It was special to me because it allowed me to link arms with the field and work together for a common goal. To this day, I believe bonding and collaborating with the field creates the most successful outcome, culture and loyalty,” she said.

Post-pandemic, amid a competitive business climate that not only includes other direct selling companies but also the likes of Amazon, people who want and need sustaining incomes demand simplicity. “If it’s not easy, they’re not interested in the model because they have other options like becoming an Amazon influencer. People want to know exactly what they will get paid, so affiliate options become very desirable,” Kathy said.

According to Kathy, direct selling companies must continue to adapt and create platforms for like-minded Millennials and Gen Z to create bonds, seek personal growth and fulfillment, learn new life skills, challenge themselves and take control of their destinies.

“When used properly, these influencers can attract many new customers, and customer base is key,” she said.

For female entrepreneurs, Kathy said, “They aren’t dependent on anyone else to make or break their careers; promote them or hold them back; review their work or judge them in any way. It’s a very satisfying feeling to be in control of your career.”

Were she able to advise her younger self, Kathy shared that she would remind herself of a few simple facts. “Success takes time. Be patient with yourself. Set big goals with deliverable actions attached to them. Constantly evaluate your results and make necessary adjustments. Collaborate more. Collaboration stimulates everyone to be creative and think out-of-the-box. Watch what other successful companies and leaders are doing to get ideas to expand your reach. Never stop challenging yourself.”


Nancy Bogart

“I was tired of people telling me how far I could go,” Nancy Bogart said. And the company she founded in her Missouri kitchen not only propelled her career to unimaginable heights, but also offered limitless potential to so many others.

Nancy was told “no” over and over because she was a woman. She was ignored because she was a woman. It happened so frequently, she said that, “It became quite comical to me. I sometimes would just mentally take note and think what a fun chapter they would be in my book someday.”

On days when rejection seemed to pile up, it was that future success story where she focused and gained immense inspiration to keep going. “Our first bank said ‘no’ to us, but our second bank said, ‘yes.’ They got over $30 million in business that the first bank missed out on,” she said.

Nancy’s best advice? Stop second-guessing. It’s a waste of time. Arm yourself with double-checked facts; be true to who you are; and just go for it. “If you screw up—you can fix that too!” she shared. “Write your story, sister!”

Nancy also took a deep dive into the histories of direct selling’s legacy pioneers before she started Jordan Essentials, reading book after book. Then she cultivated “deep roots” with contemporaries—Jill Blashack Strahan, Joan Hartel, Joni Rogers-Kante, Madolyn Johnson and more—who each became amazing friends and mentors.

Deeply rooted relationships like these create a unique vibe within the industry—with customers, consultants and coworkers. “I do not see this anyplace else. I love it!” she said.

As Nancy thinks about the future, meeting the challenges brought by competition and consumer needs, she said, “Those deep roots weather the storms and have kept us going 23 years later—and they will keep us going long into the future.”

“My business is not in my kitchen anymore, so it’s 100 percent very different than I had envisioned and much more spectacular than I could have imagined. I am so very grateful and humbled daily,” Nancy shared.

Yet, as her story continues to unfold, it can at times be personally challenging to drive corporate growth without succumbing to her workaholic tendencies, and she constantly strives to find and maintain balance and fulfillment in each aspect of her life. Nancy’s most significant obstacle as a direct selling founder has been striving to succeed without losing sight of her original purpose.

Write your story, sister!


Michele Gay & Madison Mallardi

Driven by achievement and a diligent focus on earning the next level, field leaders at LimeLife by Alcone simply burned out in the early days of the company. Their businesses caused friction at home and took a toll on the women and their families. When Michele Gay and Madison Mallardi figured out what was happening, they re-prioritized female wellness over results and changed their model for success.

“We didn’t know if that was going to lead to our decline, but it didn’t feel right to push women to the point of breaking. What we discovered was that by asking them to pull back, they were able to achieve much more,” Michele said.

Rethinking how time and energy are spent, especially when it comes to work/life balance, remains top of mind for everyone. With no limit to earning potential, the ability to make a difference in lives quickly and access to support from people who want to help you, direct selling makes sense. But perhaps the most compelling advantage is the way direct sellers can immediately practice and adopt desired entrepreneurial behaviors for success.

“If you put 100 direct sellers in a Tony Robbins training, most will leave and put into practice the behaviors he is hoping you will adopt. I don’t think you get that result with 100 non-direct sellers,” Michele said.

“The key is for the next generation to understand that owning your own direct sales business is real entrepreneurialism,” Michele said.

But if you’re just getting started, Madison believes in perseverance. “Don’t be discouraged. Working in this industry is a journey, not a destination. Make time to celebrate the wins—big or small—even if it feels like there is no time.”

And take a look at direct selling with a wide lens. Few jobs allow kids to see their moms in action at work. “I think it is very inspiring to the next generation to watch their parents in direct sales; doing what they love; putting in the work; and going after their goals. Children are more likely to be entrepreneurial and have higher expectations for their careers one day,” Madison explained.

With the normalization of social media influencers monetizing their personal brands, Michele said, “I think we have a real opportunity to turn the negative stigma of our model into the very best financial opportunity for influencers.”


Amber Olson Rourke

Amber Olson Rourke’s passion for the direct selling industry lies in helping women find their voices. Tapping into a woman’s truest and strongest voice can help her learn to use that voice for good and create a business that can increase and optimize her life choices down the road.

Amber grew up in direct sales with parents who first built large, successful field organizations, then worked as executives. She had a front row seat to the power and beauty of the business model. Eventually, the trio worked together to build Neora.

“Hands down, this industry provides one of the best platforms to directly impact people’s lives,” Amber said.

Direct selling companies are inherently agile and lean. This nimble way of doing business can accelerate execution to market, as well as individual employee growth when compared to traditional corporate environments.

“Within Neora, we have several director level managers who started in our call center and worked their way up. And I know this to be true in many other companies as well. When we identify good people, we invest in developing them,” she said.

“Anyone who is going to make a truly big impact has to be willing to take risks, willing to deal with disappointment, willing to advocate for their ideas and have a massive amount of passion and vision,” Amber said.

These are the characteristics Neora cultivates within the ranks. “For us, it is all about creating a culture where everyone feels valued, included and has an equal seat at the table. If you create that environment, the right people will rise up regardless of what gender, ethnicity or sexuality they are. We are very proud of the diverse nature of the people who have risen to leadership roles within Neora,” Amber said.

Intuition has never led Amber wrong. She has, however, deferred to those who were more seasoned and later regretted it. So now Amber listens to her truest and strongest voice and stands firm in her viewpoints. At the same time, she’s challenged herself to calm those nurturing tendencies that come so easy and stop riding to the rescue.

“If you fix everyone’s problems, you are robbing them of the opportunity to learn the lessons and are making them dependent on you for the solutions. An effective leader creates other leaders, not followers. So, changing my natural responses to be ones that coached and challenged people in love, so they could develop into leaders is not something that came naturally to me. I had to put in the time to develop this skill,” Amber explained.


Chani Reeve & Misty Kirby

“Women who decided to go for it will always be a source of inspiration for us. We admire anyone who is brave enough to share their vision with the world,” Chani Reeve said.

And in many ways, Chani and her fellow founder, Misty Kirby, are exactly those kind of women. Paparazzi Accessories was born organically from customers who loved and purchased their products at fairs and expos then wanted to host home parties. Word-of-mouth spread, the requests became more frequent and Chani and Misty sought new ways for others to participate.

In the beginning, they were quick to dismiss Paparazzi’s potential for changing lives. But their field of consultants proved they could apply the business model to overcome incredible obstacles and hardships to shape lives they never dared to dream about. Almost daily, the company founders feel lucky to hear their stories of perseverance and success.

“Women are notoriously adaptable, and there is no doubt that younger generations will find innovative ways to reap the same rewards from the business model for years to come,” Chani said.

Direct selling offers hope and empowerment, but it takes hard work. “We’ve found that people are often hoping for an easy fix, with their focus being on finding the next best thing, rather than resolving issues as they arise. We have always been problem solvers and continue to address issues head-on which is not always easy, but always worth it,” Chani said.

This means facing the largest of obstacles for any company—growth. “When a company starts to become successful, in order to maintain a growth curve, you have to grow individually. Growth can be a roadblock or a challenge. Finding more space, more employees and keeping up with inventory can become overwhelming if you let it,” she said.

Learning opportunities are disguised as problems and obstacles. So, staying open to that education and trusting your instincts along the way is the best advice for young women just starting out in their careers.

“Mentoring the women within our corporate organization is important to us. We strive to do this by reinforcing the company vision and our mission statement. Women empowering women is at the core of our business. Sometimes, the only way to grow is to step back and let them make their own mistakes. Once they have learned the ins and outs, place them in roles that allow them to use their strengths—and everything else falls into place,” Chani said.


Patty Brisben

One of Patty Brisben’s constants in life is education—the never-ending desire to learn and teach. Disseminating information about women’s sexual health has made all the difference for her and the lives of countless others that have heard her speak; worked and advocated alongside her; and purchased Pure Romance products.

Sharing and contributing to society’s knowledge base through college lectures meant Patty connected with men and women from all walks of life who shared some degree of commonality—they were in some way ignorant about their own and each other’s bodies. During Yale Sex Week—a favorite of her experiences—she remembered thinking, “These are the people that will run our country one day, and they don’t even know their anatomy.”

“To this day, when I’m out and about, I run into someone that tells me I spoke to their class, and that it influenced their career. Now they are physicians or gynecologists or working in women’s sexual health. It really makes me so happy. I am so proud of all the doors we have opened for women’s sexual health through Pure Romance and the Patty Brisben Foundation,” she said.

Patty never expected Pure Romance to grow so rapidly. She never looked at the company as a way to sell products. Instead it was a path toward education and empowerment for consultants and consumers. She surrounded herself with positive, good people who pushed her forward and helped when times got tough.

It was vital, she learned, to turn off the noise and stay clear of negativity. “I feel extremely lucky that when I started there weren’t dozens of social channels where people could openly express their opinions. You can’t get caught up in the negativity and opinions of others if you want to continue growing as an entrepreneur and business owner. You need to spend your energy on growing your company,” Patty explained.

Staying true to her “why” guided Patty through many challenges, including potentially dangerous ones like when she was not taken seriously as a female founder by men who joined her company. “It has the capability to change the dynamic in the room when you bring others that may not support your vision fully to the table,” she said.

“I look at everything as a learning opportunity, and we can all focus together on getting better and stronger.”

That means empowering others by always listening, bringing people to the table and allowing them to present their ideas and opinions.

“My biggest reward is seeing people who have come from nothing who build confidence and succeed. I have witnessed this throughout my career, and it is what keeps me excited and fulfilled every single day,” she said.


Jesse McKinney, Amanda Moore & Genie Reese

There’s no way Jesse McKinney, Amanda Moore and Genie Reese’s founding expectations included leading Red Aspen through hypergrowth during a global pandemic, but that’s the amazing ride they got.

“I did not envision how fulfilling it would be, how hard it would be, nor the impact this company would have on women across the United States,” Jesse shared.

“It was a difficult time to have children and be a woman because trying to manage a work/life balance was challenging,” Amanda agreed.

Red Aspen offered little pleasures—indulgences for at-home self-care—and their product popularity launched them into hypergrowth and the subsequent management of thousands of brand partners from a small home office space.

“Hypergrowth forces you to reach new levels of flexibility, dedication and determination,” Jesse said.

But Jesse, Amanda and Genie were unwavering in their support of each other and bent on riding that roller coaster together. “I firmly believe that our established support, trust and compassion for each other helped us be successful as co-owners of a business,” Jesse said.

Developing and empowering women inside their headquarters that they call the “Treehouse” is a major priority and practice for positive company growth. “As founders, our mission is to inspire women to stand up, stand out and stand together by uniting passion with purpose,” Amanda explained.

With a 90 percent female staff, women drive forklifts and trucks. They may hire in for shipping, but move quickly to the support team. Company leaders dig into employee talents and channel them into the best corporate roles for individual growth. “Ultimately, creating a space where team members can grow in their profession, is a valuable tool in building empowered team members,” Genie said.

When they consider the stories of legacy female founders of direct selling, it’s easy for these three determined women to see parallels to their own experience. They began as a small team with limited funds, alongside a big dream they wanted to accomplish. Following the lead of pioneers like Mary Kay, they created and continue to operate Red Aspen in a way that empowers their brand partners and allows them to be successful.

“We are continuously amazed at how hardworking, close-knit and supportive our direct selling community is. We are not just a network of female business owners, we are like a family,” Jesse said. “The people, places, events and decisions that we have met, been, had and made at Red Aspen have helped us, as Founders of the company, to be better leaders, visionaries and entrepreneurs.”


Dr. Katie Rodan & Dr. Kathy Fields

Timing is everything. And six months after Rodan + Fields launched their retail brand in 2004, Estee Lauder Companies came calling, and they were acquired. But department store traffic fell off with the recession of 2008 and soon Founders Dr. Katie Rodan and Dr. Kathy Fields risked it all to buy back their company and relaunch their brand in the direct selling channel.

“Based on our Proactiv experience—a brand launched on infomercials in 1995 during a recession—we learned two things that influenced our decision to retreat from retail: First, recessions bring out the entrepreneurs—and second, alternative forms of selling and distributing products can be highly successful,” Katie said.

In the beginning, they never imagined they would create skincare brands that would rival the biggest companies in the world. But they did and, in doing so, invented a paradigm shift in the way acne, and now other skincare and haircare issues are treated. In turn, the lives of millions of people across the world changed. Skin issues should no longer take a toll on self-esteem or confidence.

“We heard a lot of ‘no’s’ before we launched Proactiv. When we started out, neither Katie nor I had the business background that made traditional investors trust our vision. There were many closed doors,” Kathy remembered.

Relaunching Rodan + Fields as a direct seller also presented challenges, but they stuck to their vision. “We had a passion and have always been compelled to go forward,” Kathy said.

“Unlike a lot of guys who were born with ‘swagger,’ I’ve observed that, especially in women, achieving success is stepwise and comes from proving to yourself that you can do hard things. In other words, personal growth doesn’t happen overnight. Self-improvement is a worthy lifelong pursuit and much of what I have learned about myself, I learned through being an entrepreneur,” Katie shared.

Balancing it all hasn’t been easy. “We are women with families; we are also entrepreneurs, practicing dermatologists and take our commitment to our R+F community and practice patients seriously. We have learned you must collaborate and partner. It’s all about getting our aces in the right places—surrounding yourself with the right people, the right expertise and the right talent,” Kathy explained.

As Rodan + Fields celebrates its 15-year anniversary, they are proud of their majority female executive team, consultant base and the many women serving in leadership roles. “We also value balance,” Dr. Rodan said. “We are strong believers that the best teams have diverse perspectives and expertise.”

They respect the strong vision and steadfast purpose that trailblazing direct sellers like Mary Kay Ash and Brownie Wise applied while creating legacy brands. “It’s inspirational to think about these strong women, who thrived against all odds and succeeded in building companies that have been around for decades. We are still talking about them today,” Kathy said. “What they created is incredible—they truly had no playbook.”


Heidi Thompson

“Love,” Heidi Thompson said, “is the fuel and reward for what we do.”

And it’s love that surprised her the most over the years and influenced so many corporate decisions—from how to finance operations to the amount of time personally invested in the lives of their people.

“I tend to view the employee experience from the position of a mom and advocate for policies and practices that support that point of view. I find that when we create an environment where moms can feel valued, supported and understood at work, even the men find work more pleasant,” Heidi explained.

Scentsy’s intuitive Founder relishes the child-like wonder, contagious optimism, connection, love and kindness of her chosen industry. And the impact of the company that she started in a tiny, converted barn on the family sheep farm has surpassed her expectations time and again.

“I was looking for a way to get out of debt; then it was to provide a living for my family; then it became about setting a good example for my children and serving people who believed in and helped us. Serving others motivated every good decision and led to every positive impact,” Heidi shared.

But at times, fear drowned out her voice. “As we grew, we hired people who were more educated and experienced than me. I knew what needed to happen, but I couldn’t explain myself well enough to data-driven executives. I felt intimidated and went along with decisions I didn’t support. Fear stopped me from speaking up,” she remembered.

Scentsy’s culture suffered; sales declined. To return to growth, Heidi said, “I had to trust my instincts; overcome my fear; advocate for necessary change; and reform the executive team with people who could respect my voice.”

Heidi stopped limiting her potential. As Sir Richard Branson once said, “If people aren’t calling you crazy, you aren’t thinking big enough!”

Out the window of their first “office” was a vacant 320,000 square foot building. It was for sale for $15 million. Her husband and Co-Founder, Orville said they should find a way to buy it because in five years Scentsy would need it, and it would cost twice as much.

“I thought he was crazy. That building was 1,000 times bigger than our little office, and our sales were less than $500,000 per year!” Heidi said. Turns out, Orville wasn’t thinking big enough back then. Scentsy occupies more than 1.5 million square feet today.

“Direct selling will always appeal to people at a certain time in their lives. Each year there are new people entering that time of life, but there are also people leaving that time of life,” Heidi said. “We see our market as a target with a certain demographic as the bullseye. Each year the people in that demographic change—so must we.”


Sarah Shadonix

Taking that first step—the initial foray into a lesser known industry or business—that’s what Sarah Shadonix shared was the hardest part of founding a company. A novel idea sparks excitement, but that idea alone doesn’t make for a successful company.

“We have to flesh it out, cast vision to others and show them how they can win alongside us if we want to succeed. Along the way, we encounter naysayers and critics who tell us all the things that are wrong with our idea,” Sarah said. “But we have to keep going. We have to filter through the noise, identify the valuable feedback, continue to ideate, adjust, build consensus and momentum and never give up.”

By founding Scout & Cellar, a clean-crafted winery, Sarah stands firmly straddling a line between direct selling and the alcohol beverage industry, which has been a man’s world for generations. “The alcohol beverage industry has a diversity problem that includes, but also extends beyond gender,” Sarah said.

To her way of thinking, that means the entire alcohol beverage industry is missing out. If customers aren’t represented in the boardroom, on leadership and marketing teams, how can they speak authentically to customers or prospective customers?

“We should be hiring women, listening to them and creating space for them to grow and elevate,” Sarah explained. But it’s about more than just creating opportunity for workers, diversity is vital to creating opportunities for businesses too and expanding the entire alcohol industry.

“That’s what we’ve done with our mostly female field of independent consultants and our executive team. But we have a long way to go and can do so much more to broaden our diversity beyond gender,” she noted.

The direct selling industry “empowers women and others to work a meaningful business in the pockets of their day and still be present as parents, partners or in other relationships and also have other careers,” Sarah said.

That’s the best part of direct selling. “That’s how we win. We must continue to create and emphasize this opportunity—the side hustle is always in style.”

While direct selling carries a stigma that remains an obstacle, Sarah commits Scout & Cellar to lean fiercely into their core values, respect the regulatory environment and celebrate their spirit of innovation. They do so to overcome the negatives because direct selling positively impacts people, offers fast-paced and innovative product lifecycles and allows individuals to work with people from diverse industries.


Joni Rogers-Kante

Like many people laying the groundwork for their own company, 24 years ago Joni Rogers-Kante thought it might be easier than it really was. She launched SeneGence with a flagship product—the first, long-lasting lip color ever—and it took the market by storm. Success seemed inevitable, and it was.

As Joni shared, “What a journey we have had! Putting a company together from scratch was definitely a learning experience and test of grit!”

Success, she said, is never achieved alone. Hers is a family company with husband Ben and their eldest son Alan in vital roles, and many staff members include husbands, wives and children of employees. “This creates a legacy both inside and outside the walls of our offices,” Joni explained.

Being a company founded for women by women makes empowering them to be successful part of the SeneGence DNA. Call it paying it forward, perhaps, because Joni fondly recalls her days as an independent distributor and the connection she felt to Mary Kay Ash. “I met with Mary Kay Ash personally on several occasions and was blessed to learn this industry directly from her. She was not only an influence, but a role model I hope I’ve lived up to,” she said.

Today, Joni advises women, “You know best what works for you. However, you must be honest with yourself and recognize your own shortcomings and put together a plan to overcome them. Trust your gut and do what feels ‘right’ for you, your family and your life.” And show up for work every day—consistency pays off.

Despite encounters with people who thought they knew best and tried to convince Joni of it, she’s remained consistent in her vision and commitment to the unique SeneGence culture. She’s learned that credentials and resume expertise don’t always “fit.” The nuances associated with really knowing and understanding a company is vital to contributing to its success in the long term.

That said, Joni believes adapting to an ever-changing market is at once the industry’s biggest opportunity and challenge. “We can’t allow ourselves to get caught up in, ‘This is how we have always done things.’ We must access and evaluate our business constantly. However, we must always be true to who we are, protect our company culture and keep our independent distributors’ best interests at the forefront of everything we do.”


Chrissy Weems & Bella Weems Lambert

Hard work is at the heart of the Origami Owl origin story. Chrissy Weems wanted to teach her then 14-year-old daughter, Bella, the importance of work ethic, perseverance and chasing dreams. Bella had her eye on earning enough money to buy a car, but the company this mother/daughter team created in 2011 turned into something far greater.

Growth came quickly, and Chrissy unexpectedly found herself leading the home office team and Purpose Partners (field distributors). “We never could have anticipated how quickly we grew. Because of my daughter’s dream and ambition, my life as well as the lives of countless others have been changed—truly changed—in immeasurable ways,” Chrissy said.

Today, Origami Owl is but one brand under the umbrella of Think Goodness, a collective launched in 2021 that broadens its overall product portfolio to include wellness, lifestyle and good-for-you beauty products. They’ve also established the Giving Goodness Foundation, a nonprofit that expands and focuses their charitable endeavors to create a ripple effect of good in the world.

“It’s the people. Observing the growth in our internal team members and with our Purpose Partners has been beyond fulfilling. I’m so passionate about helping others find meaning and purpose in their lives. It’s inspiring to witness the change in confidence, self-esteem and personal growth these women develop by being part of our mission,” she said.

Direct selling provides the opportunity for individuals to create change in their lives, and Chrissy believes the same can be true for the industry itself, but there are challenges. “As a channel, we’re antiquated and misunderstood. There are many misconceptions about direct selling based on poor leadership and shady practices from bad actors within the industry. This stigma hurts us all,” she said.

By collectively making forward-thinking decisions as industry leaders, credibility can be gained. The industry needs to face fear: “fear of change, fear of channel conflict in an omni-channel world, fear of losing leaders, fear of innovating our businesses to remain relevant in the modern world,” Chrissy said. “The world has changed. I believe we must evolve and adapt.”

It’s a customer-centric world. The way consumers shop and what they have access to have drastically changed. While many direct selling companies have robust back-end reporting systems and commissions engines, their front-end eCommerce experiences fall short. She’s certain that to succeed, customer experience must be a top priority.

“Social media is reshaping the way people see direct selling,” Chrissy said. Having grown to adulthood within the industry, Bella is expanding her reach and finding success cultivating relationships on YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. “We must evolve with the times by utilizing new tools and strategies to foster relationships and share incredible products, Chrissy explained. “Influencer marketing is what the direct selling channel has always been, and utilizing social media is just the new way of doing business in today’s world.”


Cindy Monroe

Mary Kay Ash once said, “Women only step into 10 percent of their potential.” That has stuck with Cindy Monroe for years and inspired her to not only live in more of her own potential, but also to help other women tap into more of theirs.

Her journey with Thirty-One Gifts has taken many turns, and as one would expect some were within her control and some without. The company has exceeded her expectations for growth over and over again, but that doesn’t mean she hasn’t learned valuable lessons about the nuances of being a female founder.

“There have been times when the feedback I received from my male direct reports was less than honest, simply because I am a woman,” Cindy recalled.

“I think men are used to cutting to the chase and being direct with other men. When it comes to communicating with women, they learn to respect the females in their lives, such as their mothers and wives—which I admire—but when it comes to business, I need to hear it straight. There have been moments when the company suffered because men would hold back from telling me the truth. I value honesty—even if it’s uncomfortable—and as female executives, we need it,” Cindy said.

She has led Thirty-One Gifts with heart and built the company culture with relationships at its core. And it’s the love, respect and admiration she feels for the employees and sales associates and their families that continues to inspire her. “The relationships that I have because of direct selling totally exceed what I have ever thought was possible in a career!” Cindy said.

Getting to know kids’ names, their dogs and favorite vacation hideaways—even when their daughter or son gets married—these details build authentic relationships at corporate and between sales associates, but especially with customers.

“The challenge today is it’s easy to get away from that and rely too much on social media tools and influencers to promote products. We need to lean back into our core of building relationships,” Cindy said.

Social media hearts and likes don’t qualify as a “connected contact,” and as Thirty-One Gifts focuses its efforts on relationship building, consultants find more sales and sponsor new team members.

If given the chance to speak to her younger self, Cindy would say, “Embrace change early and see it as a positive. Invest time into an executive forum before you ‘need’ it. Listen to your inner coach and don’t give the data too much weight. Create a margin between your role at the office and home. Set clear expectations for your team and hold them accountable.”


Mary Young

When Mary Young’s husband, Gary, told her he wanted her to take the job of CEO, she argued against it. She never envisioned herself in such a leadership role. She was Gary’s partner. They were a team, going back to the days when they founded Young Living.

“I didn’t believe that I could do it,” Mary remembered.

Yet as Co-Founder of a wildly successful direct selling business, Mary assisted Gary in nearly every facet of the company. She knew the business well and over time came to realize she could take charge; she could lead; she could inspire others to join her.

Using logic and common sense as her guide, Mary learned the business from the ground up, sharing in the decision making with Gary until his passing. “There was a tremendous loss without my husband,” Mary said. “But gradually, we have filled those gaps and so many employees have risen to great heights in understanding how we want to grow our business.”

The power of the CEO, she said, is to work to empower others. Mary enjoys looking for opportunities, encouraging and watching people grow and become successful in their individual responsibilities.

“We have many female leaders at Young Living who are guided by nature’s journey in our mission to empower wellness, purpose and abundance for communities around the world,” she said.

“The appeal of direct selling lies in its potential for individuals to become entrepreneurs, own their own businesses, and create their defined success. It’s a thrill to see women, especially in some other countries, where they have little opportunity to create their own independence and financial freedom. Today, more women want to be entrepreneurs. They want to have their own businesses and create their own success. Young Living offers this kind of freedom for women of any generation,” Mary explained.

What advice would she offer to young women entering the channel through corporate direct selling or the field? Surround yourself with honest, skillful, intelligent people who care about others and about doing what is best for the business. Communicate and be open to those you hire. Listen and never jump to conclusions. Carefully consider the best interests of the company, brand partners and employees in every decision.

“With strong female leaders who continue to share our story, we can challenge outdated perspectives and promote an exciting future full of discoveries of success in the direct sales industry,” Mary said.


Erin Bradley

Erin Bradley, Zyia

Developing female leaders is absolutely a purposeful target for Erin Bradley, and she believes that direct sales offers a unique opportunity for women to truly learn what it means to lead.

Leadership roles in typical corporate jobs often resemble an “or else” scenario. It’s a leadership style with “many sticks and not enough carrots,” Erin said. But direct sales is different. “Instead, leaders have to blaze a trail; create the map to guide their team; inspire them to follow it; and cheer them on at every stage. It’s a lot more work but far more rewarding and with more enduring results.”

This crystallized for Erin when demand and growth at Zyia Active surged during the pandemic. “It wasn’t easy. We had to rethink most of our supply chain, double our staff and triple our warehousing capacity in a very short timeframe,” she said.

While exciting, the pace paired with safeguarding the health and safety of staff challenged them. However, Erin said, “This period in our growth cemented a lot of partnerships and taught us who we could rely on both internally and externally.”

“The majority (around 70 percent) of our leadership roles are held by women. To date, we’ve never hired a woman into a leadership role from outside the company. Each manager, director or VP grew into their role by rising to challenges through our high-growth period, mentoring others and demonstrating initiative and teamwork at every turn,” Erin explained.

This is surely a by-product of a culture that places cooperation and community in high esteem and relegates competition and division to the trash heap. “It’s a delight to see leaders from different teams organizing events together, training each other’s teams and shouting out each other for a job well done. That doesn’t happen everywhere,” Erin said.

To Erin, people matter more than projections, numbers and data. “If you surround yourself with good, smart people who share your vision and your drive, you’re going to accomplish incredible things, and the numbers will work and fall into place.”

Erin believes society no longer believes direct saleswomen are simply filling their time or earning “mad money.” With the help of social media, women are leveraging direct sales opportunities to support families, build wealth and intentionally, ambitiously and strategically “own” their time.

Lines between influencer, affiliate, sales representative and enthusiast blur. As Millennial and Gen Z women continue to opt out of the 9-to-5, Erin believes there’s no better fit for someone who wants to forge their own path, become their own brand and own their life.

“I think the changemakers of the future will be familiar with the sales and marketing tools from different industries and continually find ways to take inspiration from other sales models to drive growth,” Erin shared.


From the March 2023 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.

The post Taking the Lead first appeared on Direct Selling News.

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