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working from home >
The Balanced Direct Sales Mom
If you're already in direct sales, you know that it's not always easy
to keep the priorities straight. Particularly when your business is just
starting, but also when you get things going at a good clip in your
business, direct sales can take on a life of its own and quickly cross
the boundaries of happy home life. Here are 10 quick tips for helping to
keep the Mom part of your life at the forefront while still running a
successful Direct Sales business.
1. Plan - Sit down with your calendar and write out everything
non-direct sales business related first. Decide which of those things
are non-negotiable no matter how many people want to do parties on that
day. And then keep them non-negotiable! Write in kids events, date
nights with hubby, vacations, birthdays and birthday parties and plain
old "just because" family time.
2. Power Hour - One of my favorite speakers in the direct sales field is
Belinda Ellsworth. Her power hour is a tremendous way to manage your
business life. It's simple too! Here's the quick rundown: Take 4 manila
folders. Mark 1 as recruiting, 1 as booking, 1 as customer service and 1
as downline management. Decide on an hour in your day when you are going
to work the phones for your business. Take your folders, set a timer and
work each folder for 15 minutes only. When the 15 minutes is up, move to
the next folder. As you interact with customers, recruits and downline
put the information in these folders until the next time you sit down
for your power hour. You will be amazed at how much work you can really
accomplish when you are focused for that hour of time.
3. Office door - Use it! After you are done with your power hour or
email time or whatever, walk out of the room and CLOSE the door! Or if
you're working with the laptop (see below) turn it off and close the
laptop.
4. Get a laptop. A laptop with wireless Internet is a great tool for
moms. You can get them pretty inexpensively now too. While the kids are
doing their homework, pop open the laptop, sit WITH them and do your
emails then. When they're done with the homework, close the laptop and
be done with your work as well.
5. Freedom Friday - Decide on one day in each week where you will be
"off". This can be Friday or any day, but decide on it and then actually
do it. Commit to it with your kids, put it on your calendar and enjoy
it. You'll love it and the emails can wait! Once your customers and downline understand that this is your day off, they will respect it.
6. Use the "open date card "concept.
Determine which days of the weeks
you'll be doing parties and write those down on a separate booking
calendar or individual party date cards. When you are at your parties
and getting future bookings only book parties on the dates that you set
in advance on that calendar or on the cards. If someone needs a
different date than you have available, find her another consultant
(preferable in your downline!) to take the party.
7. Automate - Use the tools of the Internet to automate as much of your
business as you can. Use an auto-responder for your recruit email
packets and your downline training. Have a voicemail message available
with a 10-minute presentation on your business that potential recruits
can call before they call you with questions. Do conference calls with
your downline so that you can address issues with the whole group rather
than one on one with each of them, etc.
8. Involve your kids - Make your direct sales business a family affair.
Employ your children to help with putting labels on catalogs, filing
your paperwork, packing up your supplies for your parties, making the
bank deposits, etc. As they get older their work responsibilities can
increase too. You can even pay them tax-free and write it off as a
legitimate business expense. Talk to your accountant about this great
home business benefit.
9. Hire a maid. If your business is really on a roll and you need to
spend more time on business, don't take that time away from your family,
take it away from other parts of your life, like the housecleaning
instead. Hire a maid to do the big housecleaning jobs and use the time
you'd normally be doing that to hang with the kids. It'll be worth every
penny.
10. Have fun - remember that your kids are only young once. They need
you to be mommy FIRST and businesswoman second, even if your family does
need the extra money your Direct Sales business brings in. Work smarter,
not harder and enjoy your kids while you can.
Annette Yen is a successful direct sales consultant and mom to two
lovely daughters. Find more details about the ideas above at her
website:
www.directsalestools.com .
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