The rags-to-riches story behind May Kay cosmetics…
Journalist Mary Lisa Gavenas’ new e-book particulars cosmetics titan Mary Kay’s rags-to-riches story.
Born in Hot Wells, Tex., Mary Kay Ash overcame early hardship to construct a billion-dollar empire.
Her company, Beauty by Mary Kay, went public in 1968, a first for a woman-chaired firm on NYSE.
A new biography of Mary Kay — the big-haired, bleach-blonde and perpetually pink-clad cosmetics titan — reads more like a juicy Judith Krantz novel.
In “Selling Opportunity” (Viking), journalist Mary Lisa Gavenas tells her rags-to-riches story.
With Dolly Parton’s hyper-feminine pluck and the glitzy showmanship of Liberace — a good friend of hers — she created one of the most important direct-selling firms in the world.
“It’s a Texan tall tale of second chances and self-invention,” Gavenas writes.
A new e-book tells the rags-to-riches story of cosmetics mogul Mary Kay.
Born in 1918 in Hot Wells, Tex., Mary Kay Ash was the fourth and closing youngster born of Alexander Wagner and Lula Hastings, poor itinerant farmers who had lived and labored all over the Lone Star State.
The household finally settled in Houston. Lula ran a greasy spoon. Alexander suffered from tuberculosis and couldn’t work.
As a youngster, Mary cared for her sick father, dashing home from faculty noon to put together his lunch before working back to her lessons. She did all the home tasks, too, since Lula was at the diner 16 hours a day because, as Mary would later put it, “she couldn’t make as much money as a man.”
Mary Kay launches her own cosmetics company with a few thousand {dollars} and a handful of merchandise. Now, it’s value billions and bought around the world. Mary Kay
Despite her tasks at home, Mary was a top scholar recognized for being a crackerjack debater. Most of her household didn’t make it past eighth grade, but Mary acquired straight-As and completed high faculty at 16.
Six weeks later, she eloped with a local musician she thought was the “Elvis of Texas.” Sadly, he was not, and she soon discovered herself working the waffle iron at her mother’s restaurant — with a deadbeat husband and a youngster on the way in which. It was the Depression, and jobs, significantly for girls, had been arduous to come by.
Eventually, Mary started promoting cleansing Stanley Home Products door-to-door to other housewives. Direct promoting had its drawbacks, mainly no wage and no security, but Mary had a knack for it. Plus, it was one of the only decently paying jobs out there for girls at the time — even if only males acquired promoted to supervisor. She ditched the musician husband and married her boss’ boss. He purchased her a big home in Dallas. Right before their first anniversary, when Mary was just 29, he had a coronary heart assault and died.
At that level, she had three youngsters to assist and a home that she might no longer afford. She bought more durable, leaving Stanley for the new World Gift, where her promoting events generated double the gross sales of anyone else’s.
Meanwhile, a good friend set her up with a lowlife brother — another union that would end in divorce.
Mary Kay was recognized for her hyper-feminine pluck, her glitzy showmanship and her pink Cadillac. Alamy Stock Photo
By her mid-40s, Mary was sick of seeing males with no gross sales expertise promoted to management over her. She had procured a new husband — a fellow salesman — and the 2 deliberate on beginning a magnificence company together. But then, a month after their marriage, he had a coronary heart assault “mid-monologue” as the 2 sat at the breakfast desk anddied immediately.
As she buried yet another husband, she agonized over what to do about money. Her three youngsters — now adults with youngsters of their own — satisfied her to launch her own magnificence model. Her oldest, Richard, turned her business associate.
In 1963, they launched Beauty by Mary Kay with just $5,000. The company initially bought wigs and skincare merchandise that had been tweaked from a method that Mary purchased from a former consumer.
Her first “beauty show” netted a paltry $2. But she signed on eight girls as consultants to promote her wares and — crucially — recruit other consultants to be a part of the staff. By the end of the first 12 months, Mary Kay had ditched the wigs and the staff had made $198,514 in gross sales. Two years in, gross sales reached almost $1 million. In 1968, it went public — the first company chaired by a lady to be on the New York Stock Exchange.
At first, Mary Kay focused gals like her: hard-working Texans who “weren’t being paid what they were worth.” Some had faculty diplomas, others had been weather-beaten farm wives and Mexican immigrants who spoke little English. They all had in common an ambition.
Mary Kay was the first company chaired by a lady on the NYSE. Courtesy of GLABARRE.COMâGeorge H. LaBarre Galleries, Inc.
Mary Kay gave them 40 to 50% commission, beneficiant promotions and showered them with lavish presents, from diamond bracelets to luscious minks to the enduring pink Cadillacs.
Aside from a downturn in the Eighties, when the household purchased out the company and took it personal, the company’s success has been ongoing over the many years.
The company is now one of the largest direct sellers of skincare and cosmetics, with 3.5 million reps around the world. According to Forbes, it’s bought in 40 markets and has some 5,000 workers. The company stays personal without publicly disclosed financials, but it’s estimated to be value a number of billion.
Mary Kay, ever the optimist, discovered love again. In 1966, she married a supportive man named Mel Ash. They lived fortunately together in a $5 million, 30-room pink Dallas mansion, full with chandeliers and a Grecian pool, until he died of lung cancer in 1980.
Mary Kay handed away in 2001 at age 83. ZUMAPRESS.com
Mary Kay suffered a stroke in 1996, yet still continued to make appearances at company conferences despite shedding her capacity to converse. She died in 2001, at age 83, of natural causes, with an estimated internet value close to $100 million.
She once said, “You can have anything in this world you want—if you want it badly enough and you’re willing to pay the price.”
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