Mary Kay Ash: (Cosmetic)
Mary Kay Ash left the traditional
workplace after watching yet another man whom she had trained get promoted over
her. She started her own cosmetics company, using incentive programs and other
strategies to give her employees the chance to benefit from their achievements.
Mary Kay's marketing skills and people get soon led her company to enormous
success.
Business leader, entrepreneur Ash was a pioneer for women in business, building a substantial cosmetics empire. Ash became as a salesperson for Stanley Home Products, hosting parties to encourage people to buy household items. She was so good at making the sale that she was hired away by another company, World Gifts. Ash spent a little more than a decade at the company, but she quit in protest after watching yet another man that she had trained get promoted above her and earn a much higher salary than hers.
After her bad experiences in the
traditional workplace, Ash set out to create her own business at the age of 45.
She started with an initial investment of $5,000. She purchased the formulas
for skin lotions from the family of a tanner who created the products while he
worked on hides. With her son, Richard Rogers, she opened a small store in
Dallas and had nine salespeople working for her. Today there are more than 1.6
million salespeople working for Mary Kay Inc. around the world. The company
turned a profit in its first year and sold close to $1 million in products by
the end of its second year driven by Ash's business acumen and philosophy. The
basic premise was much like the products she sold earlier in her career. Her
cosmetics were sold through at-home parties and other events. But Ash strove to
make her business different by employing incentive programs and not having sales
territories for her representatives. She believed in the golden rule - treat
others as you want to be treated - and operated by the motto: God first, family
second, and career third. Ash wanted everyone in the organization to have the
opportunity to benefit from their successes. Sales representatives - Ash called
them consultants - bought the products from May Kay at wholesale prices and
then sold them at retail price to their customers. They could also earn
commissions from new consultants that they had recruited.
Commercial success All of her
marketing skills and people savvy helped make Mary Kay Cosmetics a very profitable
business. The company was bought back by Ash and her family when the stock
price took a hit. The business itself remained successful and now annual sales
exceed $2.2 billion, according to the company's website. At the heart of this
profitable organization was Ash's enthusiastic personality. She was known for
her love of the color pink and it could be found everywhere, from the product
packaging to the Cadillac’s she gave away to top-earning consultants each year.
She seemed to sincerely value her consultants, and once said "People are a
company's greatest asset.”Her approach to business attracted a lot of interest.
She was admired for her strategies and the results they achieved. She wrote
several books about her experiences, including Mary Kay: The Success Story of
America's Most Dynamic Businesswoman, Mary Kay on People Management and Mary
Kay: You Can Have It All.
While she stepped down from her
position as CEO of the company Ash remained an active part of the business. She
established the Mary Kay Charitable Foundation. The foundation supports cancer
research and efforts to end domestic violence. She was named the most
outstanding woman in business in the 20th century by Lifetime Television. The
company she created had become a worldwide enterprise with representatives in
more than 30 markets. She will be best remembered for building a profitable
business from scratch that created new opportunities for women to achieve
financial success.
