Waterloo Region Record

Direct sales have grown up since the Tupperware days

Sales can involve everything from tea, jewelry, clothing, makeup, purses and kitchen products

- Aleksandra Sagan The Canadian Press

About three years ago, Diana Eves signed up to sell loose leaf tea and recruit salespeopl­e for an Ancaster-based company called Steeped Tea on her mother’s insistence.

The Calgarian says she now rakes in about $1,300 monthly from commission on her sales and those of some of her recruits. Within the next two years, she plans to leave her retail job.

“Being your own boss is a huge benefit,” she says, rattling off a list of other advantages of her gig including flexible work hours and the camaraderi­e among her team.

This business model referred to as multi-level marketing or direct selling is often associated with the heyday of Tupperware parties. It has since ballooned to include folks peddling jewelry, handbags, kitchen gadgets, makeup, leggings and more for companies often touting a profitable side hustle, along with empowermen­t to mostly female recruits.

In Canada, nearly 800,000 people attempt to make money this way, according to the Direct Sellers Associatio­n of Canada. In the U.S., 20.2 million worked as consultant­s last year, according to the Direct Selling Associatio­n, a jump of 11 per cent from the prior year.

But some say consultant­s don’t stand to profit much and the arrangemen­t can create pressure to supplement a loved one’s income.

Multi-level marketing structures are prone to operate as illegal pyramid schemes, said William W. Keep, dean of the College of New Jersey School of Business, who studies these types of business models.

Some of these companies require consultant­s to purchase a minimum amount of products monthly and can’t show sufficient public demand for their goods, he said. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission recently ordered one of them, Herbalife, to restructur­e its American operations, including ensuring that at least 80 per cent of its product sales come from retail customers.

However, many of these companies maintain they are not pyramid schemes. They can operate legally in Canada, according to the Canadian Consumer Handbook, so long as they abide by the Competitio­n Act, which includes not selling onerous amounts of inventory to consultant­s.

Eves said she doesn’t stock up on Steeped Tea goods, and the company is not a pyramid scheme because it promotes a product and gives all recruits the same opportunit­y to succeed. She stressed she is not a Steeped Tea employee, so her views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of the company.

Steeped Tea, which has its corporate offices in Ancaster, did not make anyone available for an interview or answer questions via email prior to publicatio­n.

But just because the companies follow the letter of the law doesn’t mean making money is easy.

At Scentsy, a fragrance company, consultant­s fall into nine tiers, according to a company document posted on their website that shows average annual earnings as of December 2014.

Nearly 65 per cent of its consultant­s — more than 66,000 — sit on the second tier, where the average worker made US$463.34 in a year.

Top-level directors, of which there are fewer than 200, earned an average of US$113,363.98. The highest earner made nearly US$1 million, while its least profitable director took home just more than US$6,000.

Scentsy also did not make anyone available for an interview or answer questions via email.

The probabilit­y of success, Keep said, is not encouragin­g based on the limited earnings informatio­n available from multilevel marketing companies.

People looking for “significan­t financial gain” rather than social benefits shouldn’t sign up, said Ela Veresiu, assistant professor of marketing at York University’s Schulich School of Business in Toronto.

“For the fun aspect of it, for the free products, to keep busy — sure,” said Veresiu.

Eves says the amount of income one can earn boils down to one thing.

“The bottom line is the same: it’s your motivation,” she said. “If there’s six people on your block that sell Steeped Tea, I guess you’re just going to have to try a little harder.”

But “unintended negative consequenc­es” of this sales model, said Veresiu, include straining social relationsh­ips through sales efforts.

U.S. humour writer Rachael Pavlik captured this sentiment in a satirical rant published last November on Scary Mommy, an online parenting publicatio­n, about why she’s no longer shelling out dollars for products her friends sell.

In an interview, Pavlik said at one point, she would receive a couple of invitation­s a week to attend sales parties. She bought several things before she stopped going.

“A good way to lose friends is to push people into something that they don’t want to do so that you can make money.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Diana Eves, a seller for Steeped Tea, pours tea during a home tasting party in Chestermer­e, Alta.
JEFF MCINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS Diana Eves, a seller for Steeped Tea, pours tea during a home tasting party in Chestermer­e, Alta.

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