Using Peer Pressure and Guilt

Written by Marcy

After my stint in Mary Kay and two other MLMs, I have come to the conclusion that many people stay because of two factors: peer pressure and guilt.

We come into this new “business opportunity” all excited about a new venture with limitless possibilities. This new endeavor will give us a chance to stay at home and have more family time. Plus, we will be helping others to develop a business of their own. It gives us a good feeling that we are doing something positive with our time and energy.

Our uplines are there to help us and the company seems rock solid (after all, it’s been around for more than 50 years), so we believe we have made a wise investment for the future. We are welcomed so sincerely, and we start making friends with others who have the same dream and goal.

However, as we get down the road, whether we are a consultant or a director, we start to encounter some bumps in the road. We had been warned by our upline that this might happen and not to be discouraged. After all, we are told that God would never lead us into this opportunity unless He planned to use us. As a result, we keep plugging along even though the money is not coming in the way we had been told it would. After all, everyone else around us appears to be happy and prosperous. Little do we know (because no one is allowed to talk about it… that would be negative) that others are running into the same problems.

By attending the countless meetings, conferences and national conventions, we continue the indoctrination process. We see and hear so many heart wrenching stories about how women overcame terrible circumstances to reach the top, so we tell ourselves that if they can do it we can too. In addition, there is abundant recognition at each of these events and when our name is called to stand or receive our $2.50 bracelet for spending over $2400 of our hard earned dollars, we feel good inside as we hear the applause from our peers.

As doubts continue to mount in relation to the indebtedness and lack of success we are meeting, we call our upline as we have been encouraged to do. We express these concerns and are told to just keep working because it will turn around. After all, Mary Kay (or…you fill in the MLM name), is a numbers game. You just have to keep meeting new people all the time.

Since the person above us has been successful, we believe she knows what she is talking about. Therefore, we dismiss our concerns and keep trying to be a winner not a whiner. On unit or area conference calls we hear the same message and are asked to be a “team” player. If we let the team down, our unit or area will pay a heavy price. But what about us? Our credit cards are getting loaded, we have no family time, and we haven’t made any serious money yet!

The peer pressure is there to conform and the guilt keeps us locked into a scam that parades itself as a legitimate business opportunity. We don’t want to leave in some cases because we have led others into this company. What would they think? How can we abandon them? We also don’t want to let others down when we promised that we would be a leader. Haven’t we been told that the only losers are the ones that quit?

Mary Kay and MLMs in general have been likened to cults and other mind bending groups because they work on the basis of peer pressure and guilt. We are constantly being told at events what books to read, videos to watch, and scripts to follow. We are also told who to hang around with. If anyone is negative or if they have left the group, we are not to spend time with them. I witnessed this firsthand when I left MK. Even those I thought were friends would not have contact with me. No one called me, wrote to me or responded after I sent them a note.

Many of us stay because we think, “Where else can I go? What other skills do I have to offer?” We have believed the press that we don’t think for ourselves any longer.

I have a suggestion. It is time to declare our independence from guilt trips and from peer pressure. We need to take back faith in our abilities and our own good judgment. If our bank account is in the red, we do not need an accountant to tell us it is time to close up shop and move on. We need to make an executive decision to face reality and quit worrying about what other people think or will say. So what!!!!???

They do not pay our bills, care for our family, or live where we live.

When I made my decision to leave, there were those who tried to convince me to stay and those who made me feel like I was letting others down. However, I knew it was the right move. I had been allowing my life to be controlled by what others thought and my own need for recognition. Since that time, I have come to know the real joy in being my own person again. Now it’s your turn. What is holding you back? Guilt? Peer pressure? Take your life back and with it your money as well. There is no pot at the end of an MLM.

1 COMMENTS

  1. Thank you Marcy. Now if only there were a consice way to express the freedom one feels after disentangling from these MLMs. The weight that is lifted and the personal time regained. The guilt is a tough one if you’ve roped others in below you, as you feel responsible for fooling others the way you were fooled. But a well crafted message just might shake some of them loose as well.

    I don’t have an rich emotional vocabulary, but something like this…

    “After taking stock of all the time and money I’ve devoted to this ‘business’, I’ve come to the realization that it simply can’t work the way it is pitched. I have come to understand that I can’t make money without others in my own downline losing money.

    If I had known this going in, I would not have joined. Now that I know this, I can’t in good conscience stay in. I apologize to those I recruited…I honestly did not know all of this at the time. Please forgive me.

    I am now enjoying the freedom that came from shedding the shackles of Mary Kay. No more recruiting under false pretenses. No more sales meetings that have no value. No more awkward warm chatting in social situations. No more sacrificing precious family time for a potential recruit. And no more ordering product I can’t afford and am unable to sell.

    I feel so free, now, and I wish the same for all of you I have misled. There are so many other opportunities out there for folks like us that provide real money without all the debt and time pressure. You just have to look, and boy will you be surprised! Even a part time job during the school day. When you come home from work, you are OFF! No more late night, weekend or end of month phone calls begging for orders! Evenings and weekends you can be fully available to your family…yea!

    It is my hope our friendship can transcend our involvement in Mary Kay.”

    Okay, not so concise. But hopefully you get the idea.

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