Knocked Out In Direct Sales

LATimes.com:

Amid rising unemployment, more Americans are selling cosmetics, vitamins, kitchen knives and other goods to their friends and neighbors. Or trying to, anyway.

knockoutIndustry figures suggest that as the ranks of salespeople grow, the increased competition is making it harder for many to move merchandise. That has left people like Lisa Wilson stuck with closets full of unsold inventory.

“You get pity purchases from your family, who feel guilty if they say no or they want to support you in your new endeavor. So you think it’s easy,” said Wilson, a graphics designer and advertising saleswoman in Austin, Texas, who sold Mary Kay cosmetics for about a year. “But once that dries up, you go out and get a big slap in the face.”

The number of people selling for Mary Kay, Avon, Tupperware and other direct-sales companies swelled 47% this decade, many lured by the prospect of earning a good income at a time when regular jobs can be tough to find. ¶ But sales grew by just 21% over the same period, to $29.6 billion in 2008, according to the Direct Selling Assn. Last year, sales dropped by 4%, even as the industry grew slightly, to 15.1 million sellers.

Retailers of all stripes have been suffering from the economic slowdown, as consumers rein in spending. But the direct-sales business model poses additional hurdles, experts say.

Photo by NeoGaboX

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