Climbing a Ladder Made of Lipstick
Altagracia Valdez and other Latinas are changing the face of cosmetics giant Mary Kay. They want better looks and finances.
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LOS ANGELES (By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, LA
Times) January 15, 2008
Altagracia Valdez is dreaming of a perfect
pink Cadillac. All she has to do to win it,
according to her boss at Mary Kay Inc., is
expand her list of conocidos.
Those familiar connections, she says, can
adorn Valdez's 60-year-old hands with
diamond rings, pump up her bank account with
enough money to pay the bills, buy a house
and help her finally enjoy some middle-class
financial security.
If Valdez can recruit a sales force of 30
and sell at least $18,000 worth of cosmetics
in four months, she can win a free lease and
insurance for her first Mary Kay car not
the signature pink Cadillac emblazoned with
the Mary Kay logo, but maybe a Saturn Vue or
a Pontiac Vibe that she can trade in for a
Cadillac if she keeps meeting sales quotas.
If she falls short of winning the car, she
can still earn a promotion if her sales
total $16,000. And she can always try again.
The women Valdez is counting on to broaden
her direct-sales force are mostly
Spanish-speakers she meets knocking on doors
in Azusa, La Puente and West Covina,
immigrants with little spending money but a
burning desire to improve their looks and
finances.
In a land of opportunity, cosmetic direct
sales looks like a shortcut to the middle
class, a corporate ladder whose first rung
doesn't require a high school diploma or
even English skills. As Latina saleswomen
rise through the ranks, they are changing
the face of Mary Kay, long associated with
blond Texas founder Mary Kay Ash.
Mary Kay Inc. sees potential in the
immigrants' battered apartments and modest
tract homes. Both Mary Kay and rivals such
as Avon have recently seen sales swell among
Latino immigrants in California.
"Sometimes a woman can have an empty
stomach, but she has to have lipstick," said
Valdez's boss, Sandra Chamorro, a Nicaraguan
immigrant and single mother with a house in
San Gabriel and a new pale pink Cadillac
convertible, the Mary Kay reward for top
sellers.
"Maybe," Chamorro added, "you buy a little
less milk."
In November, in the dim living room of a
West Covina tract house, Valdez was making
that case as she gave a facial to Mary Lee
Mejia, 19, a striking Salvadoran with blond
highlights, blue-gray eyes and porcelain
skin.
"There are no limits a woman can work for
what she wants," Valdez promised in Spanish
as Mejia, who works in a recycling center,
lifted a pink hand mirror to admire the
results.
"And what about us?" asked Mejia's fiancι, a
Mexican mechanic who was smoothing on hand
lotion as his brother dabbed on face cream.
"Can we sell too?"
Sure, Valdez said, reassuring the man that
joining her sales team wouldn't interfere
with his home life.
Valdez pointed to her daughter Cindy, 20,
sitting beside her. Cindy is developmentally
disabled, nonverbal and shy. Valdez takes
her everywhere, even to her facial
appointments and Mary Kay meetings. At
first, Cindy hated the Mary Kay social
gatherings, but she has grown to love the
routine and the rewards. In the privacy of
their one-bedroom apartment, Cindy models
her mother's rhinestone crowns, prizes
Valdez earned for her recruiting.
This is a family business, Valdez told Mejia
and the men. "Mary Kay said first comes God,
then comes family, then business."
Then Valdez made her pitch: Which items did
Mejia and the others like best?
Silence.
They couldn't afford to buy anything. Mejia
sank into her fiancι's arms, whispering
about lotion. But they were saving for a
wedding, and the $22 lotion was too
expensive.
Valdez changed tactics maybe they could
sell for her. To start, she said, they would
each need $108 for a sample kit of
cosmetics. Once they began selling, they
could keep half of the selling price $11
for the $22 lotion, for instance, with the
remaining $11 divided among Valdez, her boss
and Mary Kay Inc. She passed out Mary Kay
catalogs. Give them to co-workers during
lunch breaks, she said. Show them the new
colors. Ask them what they like. Friends
become clients you can count on to pay.
Mejiawatched Valdez pull a gold satchel from
one of her makeup bags, unzip it and
withdraw pink sign-up forms.
They all signed. They would find the money.
Valdez guided Cindy back to her 2000 Ford
Focus, which had been acting up. She was
disappointed she didn't sell anything. But
the new recruits, the consultoras,
give her hope.
She was particularly pleased with Mejia, a
delicate girl she first spotted through the
window of a nearby apartment. La guera,
she called her later, "the white girl."
"Can you see that lady selling Mary Kay? She
is going to make money because everybody
wants to look like her."
Valdez's skin is caramel-colored, lined with
age and hard times that Mary Kay creams and
lotions can't smooth away. But she has
learned to use her grandmotherly looks to
entice customers. Immigrant women welcome
her into their homes like a relative, often
during the day, to buy cosmetics while their
husbands are away. They call her Alta,
"tall" in Spanish, an ironic nickname for a
diminutive woman who stands 5 feet 2, always
looking up to somebody, always listening.
"It is a vocation, talking to people,"
Valdez said as she drove to visit customers
on a chilly Sunday night. "Sometimes they
just need you there to listen, especially
women."
During their free facials, women vent to her
about marriages, children, jobs, the
stresses of life as some of this country's
most underpaid and underappreciated workers.
Valdez listens, gently reminding them
between peels that they deserve better a
job, say, where they can work on their own
schedule, spend time with their children and
end the day looking better than when they
started.
She highlights the reasons why she joined
Mary Kay two years ago: to support her
children, get out of the house, become
independent. She doesn't dwell on the darker
details how desperate she was after she
left her husband of 33 years, an illiterate
construction worker who threatened to kill
their children and once beat her so hard he
broke her jaw.
Valdez doesn't tell them that many of the
1,000 other mostly Latina sales consultants
in her local network earn significantly less
than their boss, who is one of 500 national
sales directors. Talented new consultoras
earn about $2,000 a month without
benefits. By comparison, Chamorro, their
boss, earns a six-figure annual income and
is eligible for group health insurance.
Valdez has been promoted higher than a
regular consultora she's a "super
estrella," or superstar. But she still
needs one more promotion, to director, to
make her eligible for health insurance.
Valdez doesn't tell her new recruits how
torn she feels trying to move up the
corporate ladder, to manage business and
family, help her consultoras and
please her boss.
Chamorro's top sellers gather by rank for
their monthly meetings at a small office in
Alhambra. The veterans sit up front,
flaunting their $300 purple suits, black
pumps and real diamond and gold pins. Then
come the new recruits, recent immigrants,
hair tied back, clutching pictures of their
dream cars as they slip in late and sit on
folding chairs at the back. There's Maria
Sanchez, Carmen Torrez, Lorena Ramirez,
Rosario Molina, Rita Villareal and Reynata
Arradondo about 40 women, almost all
mothers, some grandmothers.
If Valdez reaches her sales goal, she'll be
sitting up front with the veterans, too.
At the November meeting, Chamorro assumed
her seat at a pink table at the front,
flanked by portraits of the late Mary Kay
Ash, who once invited her to tea at her
famous pink Mary Kay mansion in Dallas.
What was your dream when you came to the
U.S.? Chamorro asked her top sellers in
Spanish. A ranch house in the hills? A pool?
A car? All you need to achieve those dreams,
she said, is to sell.
Your children will bug you for rides. Your
husband may not respect your work. Don't
listen, she said. Stay focused on that
dream.
Family is Valdez's weakness.
She has seven children. When her oldest
daughter, a public school administrator,
needs a baby-sitter, Valdez cancels facials.
When her recently separated son has trouble
with his kids, Valdez stops by instead of
calling potential customers. When Cindy, her
baby, gets sick, Valdez stays home.
"When it comes to the family, I just can't
say no," she said.
Many of her consultoras and customers
have the same problem.
At one stop, a tract house with cars packed
onto the narrow driveway, Valdez was greeted
by a pregnant woman, an undocumented
immigrant. She wanted cream to treat the
spots on her face, but her husband insists
that she save for the baby. The woman gave
Valdez $70 to buy her a crib instead, a
favor her trusted superstar consultora
agreed to in the hopes of future sales.
Sometimes, Valdez cuts corners to recruit
poor consultoras. She helps them
cover their start-up costs. She gives some
of them free makeup kits until they earn
enough to pay her back. She supplies others
with a few items to sell. Instead of paying
them in cosmetics and pocketing the
difference, the way some Mary Kay managers
do, Valdez lets the women keep half the
selling price.
Her generosity binds consultoras to
her and helps her feel better about using
them to achieve her goal.
"She's really very good. Have you heard her
on the phone?" said new recruit Esperanza
Garcia, 21. Valdez was signing her up at
Garcia's office, a West Covina payday loan
store where neon signs in the window
announce: "We Buy & Sell Pesos."
It was Nov. 30, Valdez's last day to meet
her $18,000 sales goal, and it was pouring
rain.
Customers were canceling facials. Garcia,
whose first name means "hope," was the final
recruit Valdez needed to meet her goal. The
new consultora had $3,000 in sales
lined up, but prospective sales
didn't count toward Valdez's goal. She was
about $2,000 short.
So Valdez slipped on her gold suit and
climbed back into the car with Cindy, next
to a pile of handouts her boss had made for
her sales force.
"This is a decisive month for Altagracia
Valdez to arrive at her goal," the handouts
said in Spanish, urging consultoras
to sell at least $200 worth of makeup.
"Remember, to give is to receive."
In the rain, Valdez approached locked
apartment courtyards on Dora Guzman Avenue
in La Puente, calling to children in Spanish
to let her in. Inside, it smelled of Mexico
cheap laundry detergent mingling with the
sweet scent of simmering corn tortillas.
Valdez made her way through mud puddles,
past garden Nativity scenes and apartments
with pictures of the Virgin of Guadalupe
taped to the windows, to a rickety stone
staircase. Cindy climbed ahead. Valdez,
loaded down with pink Mary Kay cosmetics
bags, sped up behind her on JC Penney pumps.
Just as she reached the top, she slipped and
fell.
Almost instantly, Valdez was up again and
smiling, reassuring Cindy that she was OK.
She knocked on the door of a consultora,
a pregnant woman who had promised to recruit
customers. The windows were dark. Neighbors
didn't know where the woman was.
Valdez tried a few other apartments,
plodding with Cindy through the cold and
damp. No luck.
Still, she didn't lose hope. To win a car,
she said, "we have to put our hearts into
this and pay the price."
Later that night, Valdez and one of
Chamorro's deputies calculated her final
sales tally. Huddled over a pocket
calculator on Valdez's kitchen counter, they
did the math to see if she had won the car.
In the end, she was $2,200 short.
There was some good news. Valdez was only
$200 shy of her promotion. The deputy
promised to make up the difference. Valdez
will be crowned again with rhinestones, join
the weekly managers' meeting in a new black
uniform and become eligible for health
insurance. Most important, she said, she
will double her commission on her
consultoras' sales, from 13% to 26%.
As for the Cadillac, she said, she will just
have to go back to her conocidos and
try again.






