Starting as a representative is exciting - and also where people waste time. If you spend your first month tweaking logos, overthinking posts, and waiting for confidence to arrive, you’ll stay stuck. The goal of your first 30 days is simple: get set up, make your first sales, and build a repeatable routine you can keep doing alongside real life.
Your job isn’t to be perfect; it’s to be clear. Set up a simple way for people to order, pay, and contact you. Decide how you’ll work: mostly online, mostly local, or a mix. Then pick three product categories you’re happy talking about (for example: skincare, fragrance, and everyday make-up).
You don’t need to memorise everything. Pick five ‘hero’ items you can explain without reading the label, and build your content around them for a month. Aim for one from each: skincare, fragrance, make-up, body care, and a giftable item. Use them yourself if you can, because real usage beats copy-and-paste claims.
People buy from reps they recognise. That doesn’t mean flooding Facebook groups. It means showing up consistently and making it easy for someone to message you. Post three times a week: one helpful tip, one product highlight, and one personal post that shows you’re a real human.
Use simple content formats: a ‘what’s in my bag’ post featuring a purse spray and lip balm; a quick before-and-after of a brow product; or a “winter skin rescue” routine. Keep it honest. If something isn’t for everyone, say so. Trust sells.
Your first sale is the start, not the finish. Follow up 5-7 days after delivery with one question: “How did you get on with it?” That’s it. You’re not pushing; you’re checking in. Then suggest one sensible add-on if it fits (for example, a matching lotion with a fragrance, or a gentle cleanser to support an active).
The reps who last are the ones who make it sustainable. Set two short time blocks each week: one for customer messages/orders, one for content/admin. If you’ve got kids or a day job, this matters more than “hustle”. Consistency beats intensity.
Treat this like a real business from day one. Keep records of income and expenses. Be clear about prices, delivery expectations, and any returns process. If you’re messaging customers, handle their data responsibly: don’t share details, don’t add people to lists without consent, and be careful with group chats. If you’re unsure about tax or self-employment, get proper advice early rather than guessing. Set aside a small percentage of each payout for tax so you’re not surprised later.
One of the easiest ways to give customers something to browse is to share the latest Avon brochure. It’s a natural conversation starter: “Anything you fancy this month?” Combine that with a shortlist of your personal picks, and you’ll get far more replies than a generic ‘new brochure out’ post.
Forget unrealistic targets. A good first month is: a handful of customers who actually reorder, a simple weekly routine you can keep, and a clearer sense of what sells in your circle. Build from there. The compounding effect is real: the second month is easier than the first, and the third is easier than the second - as long as you keep showing up.