Considering Becoming an Consultant!

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Discussion Overview

The thread centers around a participant, Becky, who is considering becoming a Pampered Chef consultant. She seeks information about the sign-up process, commission rates, and the necessity of having parties booked in advance. Other participants share their experiences and insights regarding the initial steps and challenges of starting as a consultant.

Discussion Character

  • Anecdotal
  • Opinion-based
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • One participant, identifying as a consultant, mentions that it is common for people to start as consultants part-time for extra income.
  • Another participant shares that having four parties booked before signing up is beneficial for a strong start.
  • Several users discuss the importance of having shows booked to maximize earnings and build momentum in the early stages.
  • One participant notes that commission starts at 20% and can increase based on sales volume.
  • Another participant expresses concern about their ability to book shows due to being a stay-at-home parent and having recently moved.
  • Some participants suggest that Becky could still use her hosting show as a starting point for her consulting business.
  • One participant describes a catalog show as a less stressful alternative for gathering orders without a large gathering.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Views differ on the necessity of having four parties booked before signing up, with some participants emphasizing its importance while others suggest flexibility depending on individual circumstances.

Contextual Notes

Participants share personal experiences and insights related to starting as a consultant, including the challenges of networking and booking shows, particularly for those new to the area.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals considering becoming Pampered Chef consultants, especially those looking for insights on the initial steps and potential challenges in starting their business.

Becky0216
Messages
720
Hi everyone,
My name is Becky and I am considering becoming a consultant. I am hosting a show this Saturday and thats when i think I am going to sign up.
I am not sure how this all works. My consultant is fairly new herself but will be answering questions for me Sat.
I am hoping to do this PT just for some time away and a bit of pocket change.
Anyone able to tell me whats invloved with signing up so I am ready for Sat? Someone told me I have to already have 4 parties booked. Is that true? Also how much commission will I make?
TIA for anyones help.
Looks like there are alot of smart people on here who are successful at this.
 
Becky0216 said:
Hi everyone,
My name is Becky and I am considering becoming a consultant. I am hosting a show this Saturday and thats when i think I am going to sign up.
I am not sure how this all works. My consultant is fairly new herself but will be answering questions for me Sat.
I am hoping to do this PT just for some time away and a bit of pocket change.
Anyone able to tell me whats invloved with signing up so I am ready for Sat? Someone told me I have to already have 4 parties booked. Is that true? Also how much commission will I make?
TIA for anyones help.
Looks like there are alot of smart people on here who are successful at this.

First, congratulations.
Second, don't worry about signing up under a new recruit, her director is responsible for training and SHOULD be available to help you.
Third, TONS of people do this for hobby or part time.
Fourth, not much to signing except SS# and kit payment ready. Your kit contains pretty much everything you need to start with products and paperwork.
Finally (for this round of answers), it REALLY helps to have those shows booked BEFORE you sign. If you take kit credit at your show, you have up to 6 months to use it and sign. By having shows booked and ready, you hit the ground running and maximize PC dollars (you earn this in your first 30/90 days) for yourself and make a difference on how your business is throughout the year. With a slow start, it is harder to build and may discourage you.
 
Oh, commission starts at 20%...it gets higher by the amount sold in a month or when you hit $15,000 in sales you get a 2% "raise".
 
  • Thread starter
  • #4
Thank you Janet. I am worried that I wont have enough people willing to book. I am a stay at home mom to 2 kiddos. So it is tough to really get out there and mingle. We recently moved about an hour from all my friends, so its all new to me.
The bummer is, my show I am hosting Saturday already has $500 in orders and I have 15 attending. I am looking at a $1,000 plus show. Had I decided earlier to become a consultant, I would have been able to dothis for myself right?
I hope I can do well enough to keep it going. How many shows are required to keep everything up to date?
 
Becky you will love it, I have been with Pampered Chef for 3 years and enjoy it even more as time passes. I have 115 shows and my goal is to double that "this year". Your consultant will walk you through everything on Saturday, she also has a team that she can get help from (because she is new), you will find a lot of support from your cluster (team), head office, the website that you will have access to when you sign up. Monthly news and weekly emails. There is also a ton of help here to as you have noticed.
Yes you need to have 4 booking dates when you sign up on Saturday, so as you are reminding your guests of Saturdays party ask them if they would be willing to help you out in your new business by booking a show. Really try to book the 4 shows in close, 2 one week and 2 the next. When you first start out if they are spread too far apart then each one seems like the first all over again. Also it gives you a strong start and the best part, free goodies from Pampered Chef. They are a very generous company when it comes to perks.
As for the commission because I am in Canada I don't want to lead you astray with the wrong information but your consultant or someone on here will be able to answer this question. I am very happy with what Pampered Chef gives as a commission. I sure hope I have helped some.
Lorna
 
Becky0216 said:
Thank you Janet. I am worried that I wont have enough people willing to book. I am a stay at home mom to 2 kiddos. So it is tough to really get out there and mingle. We recently moved about an hour from all my friends, so its all new to me.
The bummer is, my show I am hosting Saturday already has $500 in orders and I have 15 attending. I am looking at a $1,000 plus show. Had I decided earlier to become a consultant, I would have been able to dothis for myself right?
I hope I can do well enough to keep it going. How many shows are required to keep everything up to date?

With a crowd like that have the consultant verbalize that you WANT to do this and get started and see who will book a show. Another thing is you CAN still do that show for yourself - talk to the consultant and see if she'll let you do the show. You can sign that night and submit the show a few days later if the kit credit as a host isn't something you care about.

That and your announcement to 15 people should hopefully get you what you need to get started. The rest will start to come from there as you get out and meet people.
 
...and if your guests are worried about booking close:1. Sell the February host special - get them all booked in February if you can!
2. Remind them that they can do catalog shows too.
3. If they think they are inviting the same people, remind them to invite people from work, neighbors, people from church, kids functions, hair dresser, receptionist at the doctor's office, the list goes on...EVERYONE has to eat!You will never have another "kick-off" or first show so use the enthusiasm!!!!
 
  • Thread starter
  • #8
I wouldn't think my Cons. would want me to take over her show. She will be makin good commission from that show. I think I have 3 interested in booking. Just not sure how soon they are willing.
Also, what exactly is entailed in a catalog show?
 
Perhaps you can ask your consultant if you could take any bookings from the show you're hosting to get your business started. I've no idea if this is realistic, but it might be a thought...
 
Becky0216 said:
I wouldn't think my Cons. would want me to take over her show. She will be makin good commission from that show. I think I have 3 interested in booking. Just not sure how soon they are willing.
Also, what exactly is entailed in a catalog show?

I'd talk to her before you assume...I personally would trade the commission any day to get my recruit off to a good start.

It's not a matter of taking - it is your show - you are hosting. ...and becoming a consultant is about you, not your recruiter. Getting you off to a proper start will help her more in the long run!
 
With a catalog show they just hand out books and gather orders for you, so there is no one big group at anyones house. Sometimes that is less stressful for people. The show requirements are a little different, but that is all on the back page of the catalog.
As far as having the 4 shows booked ahead, take it from someone who started slow thinking things would take over and everyone would wait in line to book a show. It does require work, and the more shows you have at first, the better it is. Don't be afraid to ask people! And, congratulations! :D
 
  • Thread starter
  • #12
I dont understand how the recruit works. How will that help her more?
And We already discussed me taking the bookings because I am the one who called them and got them on board.
 
It's more worthwhile to let someone sign and have their show be their first show. It gives you practice to do the show yourself plus you get the credit for the show.

My director will always give a show up if it means someone will sign. See if your consultant has a director above her that you can talk to if she's confused on this part.

Most consultants will also give a new consultant any of the bookings from their show. So make sure to ask about that too. That way your first few shows are with people you know.
 
If you are signing right away then you might want to consider keeping the $500 in outside orders you've already got and submitting them as your first show. Afterall, YOU got those on your own. Let the consultant have your upcoming show and close it that night. Any additional outside orders can be another show too. Tell everyone at your show that you are signing as a consultant and that they can help you by booking a show of their own and introducing you to their friends.
 
Oh, one other thing. For your show that your consultant is doing. Have your mom or someone else you are close to be a co-host. The reason I'm saying that is that once you sign as a consultant you cannot take advantage of the booking benefit from all of your friends that offer to have a show for you. But, if you have a co-host, 'they' can ;) . KWIM?!
 
pamperedlinda said:
If you are signing right away then you might want to consider keeping the $500 in outside orders you've already got and submitting them as your first show. Afterall, YOU got those on your own. Let the consultant have your upcoming show and close it that night. Any additional outside orders can be another show too. Tell everyone at your show that you are signing as a consultant and that they can help you by booking a show of their own and introducing you to their friends.

This is an excellent idea! Have talked with the consultant about any of this yet? That would be the first step.
 
wadesgirl said:
This is an excellent idea! Have talked with the consultant about any of this yet? That would be the first step.
I heard this on one of the tapes I got from supply.....I think it might have been Jillian Eisenberg....maybe?
 
pamperedlinda said:
I heard this on one of the tapes I got from supply.....I think it might have been Jillian Eisenberg....maybe?

I've heard of people doing that before, still gives the original consultant some benefits while getting the new consultant's first booking out of the way.
 
wadesgirl said:
I've heard of people doing that before, still gives the original consultant some benefits while getting the new consultant's first booking out of the way.
Yes, and it also shows that you are supporting them and helping them off to a good start. A really good motivator I think.
 
pamperedlinda said:
Yes, and it also shows that you are supporting them and helping them off to a good start. A really good motivator I think.

My director has always taught us that it's worth more for the new consultant to do their first show than for them to take the Kit Credit. Most consultants would rather give up a show to a new consultant to get them off to a great start.
 
Call the consultant you are working with, I'm sure she would much rather you sign BEFORE your show. AND I bet she would be willing to come to help you with your "kickoff"

I have a host from Saturday that is taking her kit credit option AND I told her to keep ALL of her additional $300+ in outside orders to submit as her first 2 shows. Janet is correct, your recruiter should want you to have a strong start. We can always make up lost commission;) ;)

Good luck to you - you are already off to a great start!:D
 
wadesgirl said:
My director has always taught us that it's worth more for the new consultant to do their first show than for them to take the Kit Credit. Most consultants would rather give up a show to a new consultant to get them off to a great start.

Yes, it doesn't financially benefit them at this point, but someday long, long down the road will. It keeps the relationship better and I think ethically would be a good thing to do.

Linda's idea is GREAT about the outside orders...you did do the work, you deserve the benefit of those.

If your recruiter doesn't give up the cooking show, she can take those orders and you can sign and submit the $500 worth as your first show as a catalog show.
 
wickednoodle said:
Perhaps you can ask your consultant if you could take any bookings from the show you're hosting to get your business started. I've no idea if this is realistic, but it might be a thought...

Actually, this is the correct thing for the consultant to do. She should give you the bookings from your show. And I definately would keep the outside orders and put them in as catalog shows! You can split them up and have your first 3 shows done!!!:) :)

I recommend that my new consultants get 4 catalog shows even before they sign their agreement, then they can sign and submit their first 4 shows within their first week! It takes the pressure off of them and they get $100 PC dollars for the 4 shows...and of course if the 4 shows are $1250 or more than they get another $100 PC dollars!!! So ideally my consultants all get $200 PC dollars in their first week as a consultant~!:D
 
  • Thread starter
  • #24
What is the difference between catalog and cooking show? I know the main difference, but as far as the orders i already have. can't I just count them as 2 shows so I am already half way through my 4 show start? Also is there an incentive to getting 4 shows done quickly?

I have not talked to my cons. about giving up the show, however, I don't think she would be interested. I can ask her though. She didn't seem too happy about me deciding to join to begin with. I guess because I am taking away 3 instant bookings that I got commitments to already. Not sure.

She is aware of the outside orders and never offered for me to use them for myself. Is that common?
Thanks to everyone for so much support and help. This is going to be tough for me and I hope to make it work. I am sure I will be better off just being a part of this community.
 
  • Thread starter
  • #25
are you saying each show needs to total 1250? I am sure one show I will be having will bring in atleast 5-600 but not 1250.
 
The only difference between a cooking show and a catalog show is the demo itself! And the host gets an extra $15 for a cooking show to reimburse for ingredients!

Like I said in my post before I would actually split them into 3 shows! And as you can see in my last post, when you do your first 4 shows in your first 30 days you get $100 PC dollars to spend on any products, catalogs etc. that you want! This is for every 4 shows and every $1250 in sales!!!:)
 
Becky0216 said:
are you saying each show needs to total 1250? I am sure one show I will be having will bring in atleast 5-600 but not 1250.

No the total of all 4 shows added together = $1250

Sorry for the confusion!
 
  • Thread starter
  • #28
ok, I see what you mean now. Thanks for clarifying. So then I just need 1 more show to get the ball rolling and I already have a commitment for that.
So I am not looked down on or earn less for having the first 3 shows done as catalog shows?
 
Becky0216 said:
.......She didn't seem too happy about me deciding to join to begin with. I guess because I am taking away 3 instant bookings that I got commitments to already. Not sure.
......
You know, you don't have to sign under her. If you are starting out with some animosity it might get worse - or it could be a non-issue. Just because she is the one you are currently working with doesn't mean that she is the only one you have to work with. You are starting your own business. If I were you - I'd interview your prospective director and if you aren't happy with what you hear then interview another one. Once you sign as a consultant you won't be able to change your director so find someone you like working with now. It will make all the difference in your outlook.

I hope that makes sense?
 
Becky0216 said:
I have not talked to my cons. about giving up the show, however, I don't think she would be interested. I can ask her though. She didn't seem too happy about me deciding to join to begin with. I guess because I am taking away 3 instant bookings that I got commitments to already. Not sure.

Maybe you should ask her if she would like you to sign under her Director if she is not interrested in recruiting. Sounds like she is worried that you will be taking all of her business...we all go through that! But I do have consultants on my team who do not want to sign someone, so when someone wants to join, they have them call me. Just a thought!
 

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the benefits of becoming a Pampered Chef consultant?

Becoming a Pampered Chef consultant offers several benefits, including flexible working hours, the ability to set your own schedule, and the opportunity to earn extra income. You also gain access to high-quality kitchen products at a discount, training and support from the company, and the chance to build a community with other consultants and customers.

How much does it cost to start as a Pampered Chef consultant?

The initial investment to become a Pampered Chef consultant typically includes a starter kit, which contains a selection of products and materials to help you get started. The cost of the starter kit can vary, but it is generally affordable and provides you with valuable tools to launch your business.

Do I need prior sales experience to become a consultant?

No prior sales experience is required to become a Pampered Chef consultant. The company provides training and resources to help you learn effective selling techniques and product knowledge. Many successful consultants come from diverse backgrounds and have found success through passion and dedication.

How do I earn money as a Pampered Chef consultant?

As a Pampered Chef consultant, you earn money through commissions on sales, which can range from 20% to 30% depending on your sales volume. Additionally, you can earn bonuses for recruiting new consultants and achieving sales milestones. Hosting cooking shows and online parties can also boost your income.

What support does Pampered Chef provide to new consultants?

Pampered Chef offers extensive support for new consultants, including training resources, online webinars, and access to a community of experienced consultants. You will receive guidance on how to host cooking shows, manage your business, and utilize social media for marketing. The company is committed to helping you succeed.

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