Every Consultant Can Hold 2 Classes a Week

I’m not sure how a Kaybot can presume to know the details of everyone’s life and conclude that anyone and everyone can hold 2 Mary Kay classes a week… but that’s not stopping them! Below is another one of those “if you can’t do it you’re a loser” type of rantings from a Mary Kay NSD.

In the Mary Kay world, “2 classes” is easy and anyone can do it. Those of us who have been in Mary Kay (or have had friends and relatives in MK) know that the hard part of that theory is actually finding women to book the classes, then hoping that they actually have them. That’s a lot harder than it may sound to an outsider.

Clearly, the home party business model is outdated and no longer viable on a wide scale. Oh sure, you’ll occasionally find a woman or two who is dying to get her friends together for some girl time and decides a Mary Kay party would be fun. Virtual parties have been successful over the last year, but that’s no longer interesting or exciting. But Mary kay parties are less and less exciting to women, making the MK hustle harder.

If you can get over the hurdle of actually having a class hold and having more than one or two women there, then you get to the sales part. Kaybots will suggest that you’ll sell $150 to $200 per class even if you don’t know what you’re doing. And anyone who denies those numbers are true was just a bad sales person.

In my experience, the assumption that women will buy $50-$100 per person is not based in reality. Of course it happens sometimes. And occasionally you’ll have one class with really high sales because a couple of women go crazy. But on a regular basis, you’ll see one or two people buy a fair amount (in that $50-$100 range) and one or two people make a pity purchase (a lipstick or lip gloss). Those numbers aren’t so hot when you figure all the time you spend trying to get that one class to happen.

Ahhh… but then we get to the real reason we’re being pushed to hold two classes a week: recruiting. Yes, the whole Mary Kay con comes back around to recruiting.

And don’t forget… if you don’t succeed at Mary Kay, it’s only because you’re a loser and you didn’t do enough. No matter what you did, you will always be blamed for not doing “enough.”

Except we at Pink Truth know the real truth: That those who really succeed in Mary Kay work it 24/7 and have a good bit of luck (right time, right place) thrown in. Your results are not in line with your efforts, because MLMs don’t allow for that. The business model is set up in such a way that only a tiny percentage can actually succeed and turn a profit.

Enjoy this bit of inspiration from a Mary Kay national sales director:

It is my observation that every consultant can find the time to hold an average of 2 classes per week. Yes, even the consultant who has 1 1/2 jobs and family responsibilities. Rarely do you meet a person who does not spend 6-10 hours per week in front of the television, playing Bunko, or some other activity which has nothing to do with her job or her family. What could it mean to her to invest that time into preparing for, traveling to, and holding 2 classes per week?

Find 2 times per week that you would be willing to hold classes. Then, highlight those times in your datebook for an entire year. Then, get on the phone for and Hour of Power to schedule 2 appointments in each of those times. Don’t be afraid to double book – it doesn’t mean you’ll be holding 2 classes (that almost never happens). It does mean that when one of them postpones, you’ll still have a class to hold. Double booking is all about smart use of your time – it’s about dealing with the disappointment of postponements. (In the event that both hold, just do both classes at your home or at one of the hostess’ homes offering her an extra gift for pulling up 4 more chairs.)

Decrease postponements and increase sales by doing all the steps of hostess coaching (check you Career Essentials and Hostess Coaching on this website for coaching tips).

Now, what can the 2 classes do? Let’s say your first classes meet the national average for new untrained, unskilled consultants of $150 – $200 in sales. Two classes per week at $175 would give you $350 in sales. Your 40% paycheck (once you get your inventory built to profit taking leave) is $140. That’s $140 profit for 2 classes. Couldn’t you find 4-6 hours a week for $140?

Just think what will happen as your skills increase and you build just a small reorder business. It has been my observation that consultants who are consistently holding 2 classes per week will have their sales to $500 per week in just a few short weeks. These are averages, not guarantees.

$500 weeks = $2,000 months. Your 40% paycheck for a $2,000 month is $800 a month. 60% to replace what you sold in $1200 wholesale. $1200 wholesale every month is Emerald Star status every quarter. Being an Emerald Star each quarter puts you with in a few dollars of National Court of Sales.

What could an extra $800 a month mean to your family? Vacation, swimming pool, braces!

That’s not all. Let’s look at what 2 classes a week can do for recruiting. It has been my observation that there is at least one good recruit prospect at every class (a person who needs money, is already working 2 jobs, needs to get out of the house, is looking for a way to get back home). Company statistics teach us that ever new consultant can expect to recruit one out of every 5 prospects. So, if there is one prospect at every class and you make the effort to do some follow-up (give her a recruiting packet, book a class with her, invite her to weekly events, set up an interview with her), you should get a new recruit from every 4-5 classes. That’s 2 recruits per month. That’s a free car for anyone in 6 months. And, if each of them orders a minimum of $600 wholesale before the Seminar year ends, that mean you walk on stage at Seminar as a member of the Court of Recruiting.

You deserve the financial supplement 2 classes a week can mean, as well as the company prizes. Are you willing to discipline yourself to hold 2 classes per week?

IF IT IS TO BE, IT IS UP TO ME!

So what does it really take to move up? Have you been thinking that maybe you need to keep your job or get a regular hours job? Do you need to make more money with your MK business? Read on…

My heart yearns for you to truly understand this concept… You will get out of MK what you put into it!!! Bottom-line there is no short cut and there is no magic. It’s a real job that you can get paid nicely… If you do your job. If you worked at Wal-Mart, you would have to do something to get minimum wage. If you work your MK with half the hours but all the dedication, you could get a company car-the suit-nice commission checks!

If you hold appointments –you will sell product. If you follow-up with clients –you will sell products. If you ask for appointments- – you will book appointments. If you share the facts about the MK Opportunity — you will recruit. If you attend Career Conference, Weekly Trainings, Seminar and other events– you will get motivated, educated, inspired and trained.

I challenge you to prove me wrong!!! Work your MK business for 3 months like a part-time job. Determine the hours you will be “working”. Determine how much pay you would like. Then plan your work hours to support your paycheck. For example, if you want to work 9-2 while the kids are in school and one night for your weekly training and you want to make $200 a week…. then
you will need to sell $450 a week. Without reorders and recruiting, you will need to see about 5-9 women if you average only $50 in sales per person… that’s 5-9 individual makeovers or 2-5 if you have 2 at each appt or maybe just 1-2 parties. Increase your sales and then see less people or make more money!

Then plan… When will you make follow-up phone calls? If you need to make new contacts when will you network? Will you advertise your business-through the PCP or other means (company approved, of course)? When will you do your paperwork… taxes, enter clients in My Customers, place orders, bag reorders, put together face bags, etc…. or can you hire someone to do those things?

What gets me the most is when I hear that a Consultant is quitting because she’s not “making enough money” in MK for her family’s goals….. BUT she didn’t hold appts, she wouldn’t make the time to get to trainings, she wouldn’t spend a few dollars on a babysitter, she wouldn’t bother her friends and family to buy the products, etc…… YET she will go to a job and pay a babysitter and go to their trainings to learn that job, all the while her friends and family are buying makeup and skin care from someone. In Mary Kay you work to increase YOUR business and YOUR paycheck. You can work really hard at a job and get paid the same… heck, you could even get promoted to be paid less or fired because you make too much! In MK, you work hard and you will be compensated!!!!!!

Ok, so a few of you may be saying…. I tried and it didn’t work for me. Then I would have to evaluate your SKILL level. Did you really try or did you just go to a few training, talk to a few people and maybe hold a few appts? Did you call friends and say that you want them to book a party FOR you? Or did you call and tell them how much fun, how easy and how much she could get free? Did you hand out cards without a conversation to follow or did you meet people, talk and then offer her your business card and ask for her information? Did you just give them an order form to write down what they want or did you offer sets at the end of your appts then talk with them individually to pick their sets and payment options? Did you give her the option of two dates, Tuesday at 10 or Thursday 2… or did you just say,”whenever is good for you?”

Did she say that she is too busy and you believed her or did you give her some ideas of how she could work MK around her life? Did she say that she already uses brand x and you said thanks anyway or did you say that brand x is a great product and you would love her opinion of MK? Did you ask someone if she would like to maybe sell MK or did you say that you would love to share more about MK with her because you think she’d be great?

There are sooo many skills, even after 17 years, I am still learning scripts and skills to better my results.

So talk to your Director… she wants your success probably more than you want it for you. She will guide you and train you. And if you don’t have a Director that will then go to MKLearn on intouch or order some cd’s to self-teach or go to Career Conf or to another Director’s meeting. You are the Boss of YOU….get what you need so you can be a success!

So much belief in YOU and this incredible business that works when we work it!!!!!

27 COMMENTS

  1. Ya’ll IT IS Dual Marketing..
    Wanna know why? Marykay does really sell to the consultant. The consultant can’t sell that sh*t unless she gives it away. 😂😢

  2. Oh my

    “Did she say that she is too busy and you believed her..”

    You know it is bad what that is in a script.

  3. As an NSD, she could have afforded an assistant to proofread that for her since she couldn’t be bothered to do it herself.

    Ie “get on the phone for and Hour of Power”

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  4. “Rarely do you meet a person who does not spend 6-10 hours per week in front of the television, playing Bunko, or some other activity which has nothing to do with her job or her family. What could it mean to her to invest that time into preparing for, traveling to, and holding 2 classes per week?”

    Being in school full time and working full time, I can tell you I desperately need that 6-10 hours of just doing nothing. It’s not time I sit around wondering, “How could I cram some more work in these few hours of relaxation time?”

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    • It’s interesting how our culture often shames people, especially women, for every moment that’s not basically work. Actually, I WILL take a few hours a week to do something I just enjoy, Karen, and maybe I won’t wind up as bitter and burnt out as you are!

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      • I know so many women who have kept quiet about a craft hobby like knitting or sewing because other people expect them to knit a sweater or sew a child’s quilt without payment. And are shocked when they are asked to provide the raw materials. Use your time productively but don’t monetarise it. Or if you do, don’t charge too much for your time and effort.

        A friend of my husband’s retired early and spent part of his time building other men’s radio controlled planes. The flyer would pay a flat fee based on the size and complexity of the model. No-one ever suggested that he do it for free because he enjoyed messing around with planes several hours a day. No-one expected him to gift you a plane he had built. It wasn’t seen as a hobby he indulged himself in but a business.

        I spent around 4 hours this week-end colouring. I got a sense of calm and a stiff neck out of it. The only thing which wasn’t relaxing about it was my favourite colour kept snapping.

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        • I’m a knitter and can attest to that! I have a favorite sweater I wear a lot and always get compliments on it. When people find out I knit it, they immediately ask if I’d make one for them. I smile and tell them sure, but they’d need the buy the yarn – about $120 – and be willing to pay me $15 an hour for the 40 or so hours it would take me to knit it. Amazingly, none have taken me up on it after they learned I didn’t make it in a couple of hours for $20- LOL!

      • I’m reading this at 2:00 EST. I’m still wearing pajamas and watching likely my 300th episode of Forensic Files with a glass of Pinot Grigio. My #bossbabe skills are on FIRE.

    • The heck is Bunko? Also, you know what? I may actually watch TV for 6-10 hours a week. But it’s around 9:30 – 10:30 at night. I’m not going to do a “class” then!

    • Wait Kristin, you’re not a #BossBabe 24/7?? 😉

      (Note to Kaybots: real “#bossbabes” actually rest, sleep, binge-watch true crime shows, and unsuccessfully attempt to make fancy Pinterest cakes…all without posting filtered photos of such on IG/FB/whatever, because their down time is truly THEIR down time and not to be shared.)

  5. Wow, just wow! There’s a gaslighting saga if I’ve ever read one. Putting it all back on the consultant. Love the MK new math, too!

  6. Kaybots will not be happy until you have filled every waking moment of your life with Mary Kay. That’s not a “business”, that is a cult.

  7. 6-10 hours per week “wasted” on activities with family and friends or simply on self-care?Please.

    Let’s take a look at what it takes to book and hold ONE party a week:

    – Warm chatter/phone calls/texts to contact 10-12 women who might want to host a party

    – Follow up with each to try and confirm a booking

    – Send out hostess packets

    – Make reminder calls and pre-profile all guests

    – Pack supplies for a party

    – Pack product for a party

    – Travel sometimes great distances to hold a party

    – Set up for the party

    Conduct the party (which never starts on time, because you have to wait for the mother-in-law to show up)

    Take orders/give out product/break down all the setups and reload your car

    Deliver/mail any products you may not have had on hand

    Multiply all that work times two (for two parties) and you tell me how it’s only 6-10 hours of work!

    Absolutely ridiculous, as those of us who used to do it will tell you. It becomes all-consuming and leaves you with no time for yourself.

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  8. You know sometimes when I get home, I don’t WANT to do anything but CHILL!!!! I don’t want to think, I just want to watch tv and be MINDLESS and certainly not even think about MK!!!! I just want to RELAX!!!! and not be pressured to do MK crap!!!! It is all BS!!! And Mk has a stupid platitude for the polite answers when people say things like I am too busy, and they say dumb stuff like we find our busiest people are our best consultants, blah blah blah blah. They have tried to come up w/ an answer for something when people are politely trying to say NO!!!! I DON’T WANT TO BE AN IBC AND SELL MK!!! I have other things I would rather do w/my time and MK ain’t it!!!

    11
    • Same here! They told us how bad working for corporate America was and made us crave a fairytale life from MK so that we’d come home and make calls or hold appointments after a long day of work. I strove for something few attain and even fewer take home the money they said they did.

      It was over 10 years of pure hope and dreams and now absolutely NOTHING to show for it.

      • One fond memory I have of my years in my J.O.B.s was how my colleagues AND managers were excited about my vacations and sincerely wished me well. We worked our tails off every day, so when we took our (PAID) vacations, they were hard-earned…and nobody EVER gave us guilt trips for taking them! (Also, none of us ever begged our colleagues to pay for our drinks…looking at you, Chelsea and Jamie!)

        The millions of Kaybots could also experience this, if only they left MK and got actual JOBs.

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        1
  9. “So talk to your Director… she wants your success probably more than you want it for you. ”

    Well, gosh. I wonder why that could be?

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  10. I’m a registered nurse (common knowledge around here). Across the country, we are at crisis levels with the nursing shortage, meaning more patients and not enough nurses to take care of those patients. I’m in a salaried position, working on my doctorate, and spend over 40 hours a week at work. When I come home, I’m coming home to do not much (except some school work).

    “Couldn’t you find 4-6 hours a week for $140?”
    – No, not tempting enough, especially when I make $80/hour in overtime for picking up 4-6 hours extra.

    “It’s a real job that you can get paid nicely… If you do your job. If you worked at Wal-Mart, you would have to do something to get minimum wage.”
    – I already get paid nicely! And patient care techs START at $15/hour at my hospital, with paid time off, paid sick, 403(b), and more.

    13
    • And, as an RN, you can attest the non-stop hamster wheel, production-chasing, and no play are not healthy for anyone.

      I never admitted to watching TV when I was a Director. It may not have shown up on an IPA sheet, but I worked my business in some form 7 days a week. I thought about production and agreements when I was on vacation. I planned vacation around June 30 and other deadlines instead of taking it when I want now that I have PTO/ETO. I felt like I was t “leading by example” if I didn’t do what I taught my unit or asked of them, so I sacrificed Sunday nights for phone calls or interviews, all Saturdays for guest events or personal appointments, Sundays for business debuts, weeknights after work for calls, unit meetings, or personal appointments.

      It was exhausting and caused me so much unhealthy behavior. My health took a massive hit, and it hasn’t been the same since.

      15
    • Sadly, I think the majority of Kaybots wouldn’t be able to meet even the most basic education required for nursing careers (thank God…can you imagine some of these PT critics being in charge of your medical care? Eek!).

  11. Thank you! This an oldie but a goodie from as seen it in the early 1990’s from S. brothers. I remember asking WTH is bunko? So smooth when this is read aloud in the meetings – ugh. Couldn’t wait to drive home in the snow etc etc…..from them,

    • Was this really Suzanne Brothers? I was in her personal unit, although I rarely actually saw her. She just collected money from me, I guess. What a tool. Learn to spell and use correct grammar, Suzanne. But she’s already retired, living off the misery and tears of decades of manipulation. I guess writing correctly doesn’t matter anymore.

  12. I was taught to book 10 to hold 2… crazy. That doesn’t work. And, just because the class holds doesn’t mean anything about sales…

    • I was taught to book twice as many as I wanted to hold. Want to hold 2? Book 4.

      I quickly found out that was another lie.

      If I wanted to hold 2 classes, I had to book 6 to 8 in order to get the 2 to hold. And even at that, one or both of the 2 would end up being a facial or double facial, so the numbers weren’t even there.

  13. In “It is my observation that every consultant can find the time to hold an average of 2 classes per week. ” I bet the key word is “time.”

    Finding the *time* to hold the classes is one thing, finding the *people* to hold them is another…

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