Venting Frustration at Work: Avon vs Pampered Chef Catalogs

Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

This thread features participants expressing their frustrations regarding interactions with others about product pricing, specifically comparing Avon and Pampered Chef catalogs. Participants share personal experiences and reactions to complaints about prices and discuss perceptions of value in relation to quality.

Discussion Character

  • Opinion-based
  • Anecdotal
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant shares their experience of giving a Pampered Chef catalog to a colleague who complained about prices, feeling it was rude.
  • Another participant notes that such complaints are common and expresses frustration with the perception of Pampered Chef products as overpriced.
  • Several users mention that quality often justifies higher prices, contrasting Pampered Chef with cheaper alternatives.
  • One participant, identifying as a consultant, discusses how they address misconceptions about pricing by comparing Pampered Chef to other brands like Williams-Sonoma.
  • Another participant reflects on their own experiences as a bargain hunter, acknowledging that sometimes cheaper products are acceptable depending on usage.
  • Some participants share humorous anecdotes and jokes related to the topic, lightening the mood amidst the frustrations expressed.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Views differ among participants regarding the appropriateness of complaints about pricing. While some express frustration and defend the quality of Pampered Chef products, others acknowledge that price sensitivity is a common issue in sales.

Contextual Notes

The discussion reflects a range of personal experiences and opinions from consultants about navigating customer perceptions of value and quality in relation to pricing.

Who May Find This Useful

Consultants who encounter similar pricing complaints or wish to understand different perspectives on product value may find this discussion relevant.

Miss Cori
Messages
251
:mad:
I am at work, and this girl just gave me two avon catalogs. So I gave her a new PC catalog. She hasnt stopped complaining about prices. I told her to host a party to get some off but she is like NO WAY. How Rude! Just thought I could vent here Thanks for listening
 
That was rude! I don't like when people do that...
 
Cori that is rude, but unfortunately there are people out there like that.:(
 
Just tell her your best friend is a Mary Kay consultant. Hehehehehehe!
 
  • Thread starter
  • #5
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
Just tell her your best friend is a Mary Kay consultant.

Hehehehehehe!


LMAO. Thats a good one.:D

The best part is she said she could get half of it at the dollar store. UGH
 
My sarcastic side would be....that stuff (in her brochure) is so cheap, it must not be any good!
But seriously, atleast she's looking at the catalog........and good for you for having catalogs on hand to give out to people!
 
Miss Cori said:
The best part is she said she could get half of it at the dollar store. UGH


Yeah, well, you get what you pay for. That crap will be broke in a week.
 
Wow
Miss Cori said:
:mad:
I am at work, and this girl just gave me two avon catalogs. So I gave her a new PC catalog. She hasnt stopped complaining about prices. I told her to host a party to get some off but she is like NO WAY. How Rude! Just thought I could vent here Thanks for listening

That is rude. How horrible and at work! I would definitely tell her that Avon and Pampered Chef are two totally different companies and if she complains about the prices in front of others I would be quick to speak up to defend my business. But that's just me.
I would be quick to tell her that she should see the prices of some well known brand name kitchen products. She would be blown away, compared to our prices. Our kitchen products are not junk, and you get what you pay for. Buy Walmart brand products and you will more than likely replace that tool two more times that year. Pampered Chef is for serious cooks who love to have quality products on hand when they are in the kitchen. It makes it easy for them to get in and out and clean up is a snap.
And yes I have had to say that to a few women at my shows and my own SIL! But now they know the difference.
In my opinion Avon is just a bunch of junk you can find at flea markets and dollar stores. The only time I purchased some Avon stuff was when my sister was trying to sell it for a hobby. Their prices aren't so cheap either for some things and not worth the price for other things.
Just my two cents! :p
Debbie :D
 
There's a reason a Yugo sold for less than a Lexus.Q: What do you call a Yugo with dual exhaust?
A: A wheelbarrow.A guy walks into a parts store and says, "I'd like a gas cap for a Yugo." The counter man thinks for a minute and says, "Sounds like a fair trade to me!"
 
  • Thread starter
  • #10
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
There's a reason a Yugo sold for less than a Lexus.

Q: What do you call a Yugo with dual exhaust?
A: A wheelbarrow.

A guy walks into a parts store and says, "I'd like a gas cap for a Yugo." The counter man thinks for a minute and says, "Sounds like a fair trade to me!"


OMG Stop Im gonna get caught laughing
 
I recently had such a discussion with a guy who is a serious cook. He doesn't know it yet, but he's on my suspect list to be a consultant - based on his immediate reaction to learning that I am a consultant. "My problem has always been that TPC has quality items but they're so overpriced."I shrugged and said, "That's a common misperception. If you compare TPC to Wally World, yes, we're expensive but that's an apples to oranges comparison. If you compare us to Williams-Sonoma, you'll find TPC is very, very competitive in the same level of the marketplace."He had no comeback for that, because he knows it's true. Right after our roasting pan came out, I went to Williams-Sonoma to try to find something comparable. They had a nearly identical pan except it was made from a light guage aluminum, non-stick inside only and it had thinner handles. The pan deflected when the handles were twisted and the bottom of the pan bottom oil-canned. It was also $25.00 higher in price than ours.In an apples to apples comparison, we often, but not always, win price comparisons. We almost always win warranty comparisons. In an apples to oranges comparison, we win in quality and warranties but we will always, always lose in price. Frankly, I'm glad we do. I don't want customers who buy on price only comparisons. I want clients who are educated consumers.
 
Miss Cori said:
OMG Stop Im gonna get caught laughing
My ex-wife ran off with my old neighbor. I kinda miss him.
 
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
I shrugged and said, "That's a common misperception. If you compare TPC to Wally World, yes, we're expensive but that's an apples to oranges comparison. If you compare us to Williams-Sonoma, you'll find TPC is very, very competitive in the same level of the marketplace."

Thanks for that concept! I don't often get the complaint (or am I just good at ignoring it?) that our stuff is too expensive but I know now what I'll say the next time I hear such comment.
 
Steal the line out of my sig line, too. Maybe Darby should put that on a button?I have a pair of Allen-Edmonds shoes that I bought in 1987, and even though I bought them at the factory outlet, they were still $129, which, in 1987, was a lot of money for a pair of shoes. (A comparable model sells for $275 today, at the outlet, for comparison.) I had them re-crafted a few years ago for another $100.Now, I probably could have gone to the Shoe Whorehouse and bought something that looked similar, for 20 bucks. Of course, I'd need to buy another pair the next year and the next year and the next year...next year's model at SW won't look the same, nor will they fit as well or be as comfortable, and every year they'll go up at least five bucks in price. But for simpicity's sake, 20 years, 20 bucks a year, well, you can do the math.Let the cheapies go to the dollar store. They get exactly what they deserve.
 
Last edited:
Also, check out Ann's stats on the catalog - print a list of everything under $10 for her!!!! :)
 
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
Steal the line out of my sig line, too. Maybe Darby should put that on a button?

Good idea!
 
I am from a long line of wally-world shoppers, and BELIEVE ME, I am a bargain hunter! I don't pay full price for ANYTHING (thus I'm a consultant!) But one of the gifts I've gotten from PC is the ability to recognize that oftentimes, you get what you pay for!

I also learned that when I bought a pair of dress shoes last minute for $80. I didn't have time to screw around with Target and all that jazz and went to Carson's. They're the most comfy heels I've ever owned (if that makes any sense!)

Sometimes it's okay to buy the cheap stuff. You don't use it often or you don't require good performance out of things, then it's okay. When I buy cheap stuff, I half expect it to break before I'm done using it!
 
We actually get complaints like that around here - Cheeseheads are notoriously cheap. Not frugal, which is different, but cheap. Milwaukee has traditionally been a test market for many new products - if the cheapskates around here will pony up to buy something, everyone else will, too.The first go-round of McDonald's pressed meat sandwich masquarading as bar-b-que ribs was rolled out here, and it worked, so it was sold elsewhere. However, if you can show someone value for the bucks you're asking, you can make the sale. Sometimes, though, you're just going to get someone who makes Humberto Cruz look like a spendthrift. There's not much you can do with them.
 
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
We actually get complaints like that around here - Cheeseheads are notoriously cheap. Not frugal, which is different, but cheap. Milwaukee has traditionally been a test market for many new products - if the cheapskates around here will pony up to buy something, everyone else will, too.

The first go-round of McDonald's pressed meat sandwich masquarading as bar-b-que ribs was rolled out here, and it worked, so it was sold elsewhere.

However, if you can show someone value for the bucks you're asking, you can make the sale. Sometimes, though, you're just going to get someone who makes Humberto Cruz look like a spendthrift. There's not much you can do with them.

Ah, forgot about the McRib trial... :) LOL! That's been a few years (...and I'm not that old, well at least not as old as you!)... ;)
 
The McRib is a sandwich from McDonald's made from boneless pork and barbecue sauce on a bun, with onions and pickles added. It was developed at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln.[citation needed] The sandwich test-marketed very well in Nebraska and other Midwestern markets and was added to the restaurant's permanent menu throughout the United States in 1981.[citation needed] Sales were mediocre, and it was removed after several years, only to be brought back on a temporary basis every year since. Numerous inconclusive explanations based on pork prices and even conspiracy theories have been suggested to explain the McRib's periodic reappearances.

McRib
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
And, of course, if it's on the Internet, it must be true, right?:DI wonder who wrote that entry?
 
McNasty.










Nuff said.
 
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
And, of course, if it's on the Internet, it must be true, right?

:D

I wonder who wrote that entry?

Hmm... :)

I do remember when it came out because Milwaukee and Racine were test markets and then when it "recame out". I worked at McD's in 1989 (for a whole 3 months mind you...if it was any more I would have lost my mind) and it was "seasonal" at that time.
 
Hey KG - check out the "finally changed the outlet thread"...I had a timely KG style joke and everyone missed it... :(
 
thechefofnorthbend said:
McNasty.










Nuff said.


Agreed - tried it once - and ONLY once in its 26 year life span as a sandwich!
 
Remember the McDLT? That was about as brilliant a marketing effort as New Coke but Ronald was able to bail out quickly enough that no one noticed.
 
The_Kitchen_Guy said:
Remember the McDLT? That was about as brilliant a marketing effort as New Coke but Ronald was able to bail out quickly enough that no one noticed.

Yes, and the double cartons...the hot stays hot and the cold stays cold...
 
  • Thread starter
  • #28
Wow I worked at McDonalds for 2 years and have no clue what you all are talking about. Thats sad
 
Miss Cori said:
Wow I worked at McDonalds for 2 years and have no clue what you all are talking about. Thats sad

Funny...they were mainly 80's trends... ...the McDLT is kind of the Big N' Tasty now...
 
Funny...to me, NOTHING is Big N Tasty at McD's. Used to like their fries, now even those are icky.
 

Similar Pampered Chef Threads

  • vanscootin
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
2
Replies
33
Views
6K
sherri lynn
Replies
5
Views
2K
pampered1224
  • jesusluvsu2005
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
Replies
11
Views
2K
Intrepid_Chef
  • Intrepid_Chef
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
Replies
13
Views
2K
pampered1224
  • wadesgirl
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
Replies
23
Views
3K
babywings76
  • thecougchef
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
2
Replies
44
Views
4K
Hathery
Replies
2
Views
2K
sharalam
  • milkangel
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
Replies
4
Views
2K
milkangel
  • wadesgirl
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
2
Replies
51
Views
4K
wadesgirl
  • kam
  • General Pampered Chef Chat
Replies
6
Views
5K
The_Kitchen_Guy
Back
Top