I've always been a little skeptical of these MLM sales schemes (Avon, Mary Kay, Tupperware, etc.) aimed at women. On the one hand it keeps their focus on the home where they belong, and on the other hand it provides them with a source of income to spend on frivolous things that is not under control of the man of the house.
If women were really interested in business they would have joined Junior Achievement some time during their upbringing, but such is not the case. Consider that during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression women were largely responsible for putting a nigra ACORN community organizer in charge at the White House, and as typical one who has an inbred aversion to real work and jobs.
Decades before "Women's" magazines and the internet, these women focused MLM marketing schemes provided "networking" amongst women and sowed the seeds of our modern malaise and discontent - leading to the dramatic rise in divorce rates, lezbeanism, and socialism.
Do we really know what goes on at those Tupperware "parties", or just what happens when that iconic doorbell rings announcing "Avon calling"? Avon is a particular suspect because they have been at it the longest. Here is a picture of Avon's "role model" dating from 1886 - a Mrs. P.F.E. Albee.