A Shipboard Lesson

January 21, 2009 by Angela | 0 Comments

The New York Times:

Durning high school, I worked part time in a men’s clothing store in Wheaton, Ill., where we lived. When I was 17, I read an ad in the newspaper that said, “Make $400 a month selling Grolier Encyclopedias.” I tried doing that for two months. I never sold a set. I went door to door from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.


I would say, “I’m with the Grolier Society and we want to place an encyclopedia in your home.” Not “sell,” but “place” with you. The set sold for $400, and I was going to earn a 50 percent commission on all sales. I felt it was expensive, and the customers must have sensed that. I decided to make ends meet by joining the Navy.

I recall standing on the wing of the bridge on the ship. It was 2 a.m., and I was talking about life with the navigator of the watch, a young officer named Reese. I looked at a few of the enlisted guys on the bridge who were drinking their paychecks at every foreign port. I saw the contrast between them and Reese, who was a role model in his dignified professional demeanor. It was like seeing two paths in life, and it resonated with me.

I started college on the G.I. Bill but dropped out after the third year. It was too slow for me, and I was older than most of the other students. I moved to Charlottesville, Va., and started a fire-alarm company in 1970 with a friend. I had the same shyness as when I sold encyclopedias, but I took out ads in papers and went to campuses to recruit for the sales staff. We sold tens of thousands of alarms.

About 14 years later I was recruited by Avon to be director of direct sales development. I moved to New York. After my first week, I was in a meeting with 10 people. I thought, “these people are just like me.” Until then I had the impression that people from New York were from some other planet and had gifts I didn’t have. As I listened, I felt I could keep up with anyone in that room.

Warren Batts recruited me to Tupperware in 1992 as president of Tupperware Worldwide. I loved the brand. My mother still had the salad crisper she bought when I was 10. She was still using it for lettuce. I recruited designers from the beauty industry and brought in colors. I knew I had to change the image of the company from June Cleaver who stayed at home to women who had careers. I realized that women wanted to get together and didn’t want to sit and talk about burping bowls for an hour.

Logo from Tupperware.

In Network Marketing Men, Network Marketing News, Network Marketing Success

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