Avon Chi Hair Color I love my AVON CHI Essentials hair color!! I haven’t had to color for over a month! I love the way it makes my hair look, feel and smell. I love that they include trial sizes of the CHI hair products: shampoo, conditioner and serum. Thank you Avon! Don’t forget to try root touch up, too.
. bottle of color, 2 fl. oz . Developer, 2.5 fl oz . CHI Essential Shampoo, 1 fl oz . CHI Essential Conditioner 1 fl oz. . CHI Essential Serum, .5 fl oz . Pair of gloves . Shower cap . Instructions
• Luxurious, rich color provides 100% gray coverage • Has a non-drippy, liquid-gel formula for easy application • Comes with a TSA-friendly shampoo, conditioner and serum • Paraben-free, PABA-free and phthalate-free (just the good stuff for gorgeous, healthy hair!) • Ammonia-free, gluten-free
• Aloe – with vitamins and essential nutrients to help nourish every strand • Silk – a natural protein that helps strengthen hair • Olive oil – infuses hair with replenishing moisture
Professional CHI advice is JUST a call away! A team of professional stylists are ready to answer all of your questions – they’ll help you unbox your color kit and guide you through the process of coloring your hair.
Farouk Systems Professional Technical Advice Line: 1-800-237-9175 (English and Spanish)
I want YOU to be able to TRUST the products that are going on and in YOUR body as well as your FAMILY’s, too. That’s WHY I trust Avon products for my small business TillettvilleBeauty.
This channel has Avon products info and my Avon current book will be highlighted every campaign for you. I will also have traveling videos as a dream for me is to one day for my husband Johnny Tillett and I to hit the road in our own RV and travel the nation. We can take Tillettville Beauty on the road with us.
I recently purchased and read Brendon Burchard’s High Performance Habits. I’ve been trying to make it on my own in the MLM world with just listening to, watching and mimicking top performing sellers in my market (Avon) and for the most part of two years it was working “ok” for me. I have now come to the conclusion that I WANT MORE than what I thought I did when I first started my journey with Avon,.
I have a small team of 48 reps, three generation tier and two leaders. Out of all of the 48 reps I have a total of 8-10 off and on. More off then on…that put in orders. I am a very driven person and once my mind is made up to get something I go get it! I always want that for every one else but you can’t WANT for anyone else. So I decided if I wanted change then I first have to change myself.
So thanks to Brendon offering his book for free all I had to do was pay shipping of $7, I jumped on it. Listed below is what I am starting to practice with my life and my Avon business.
I will list the six key habits then I will list afterward what they mean per Brendon. Then below I will list them again below with a little more explanation. I hope you get some help from this blog. If so, please like, subscribe with your email and leave me feedback.
Six key habits:
Seek Clarity: know who YOU are, how you want to interact with others, what you want to achieve. Be intentional about your thoughts and actions.
Generate energy: build up significant reserves of energy so that you can maintain effort and focus for sustained periods of time. Care for your mental and physical well-being, and bring positive emotions to your work.
Raise necessity: tap into the reasons why you absolutely must perform well, both internal (identity, values, standards of excellence) and external (obligations, dependents, public commitments, deadlines).
Increase productivity: focus on the highest leverage actions within what Brendon calls your “prolific quality output” (PQO), the area where you can drive the greatest impact. Forget about all other distractions.
Develop influence: connect with others to influence them to support your efforts and projects. Build trust with others to enable strong collaboration towards join goal.
Demonstrate courage: advocate for your ideas, take bold actions, stand up for yourself and for others.
Seek clarity
The first habit is about seeking clarity for who you are and what you want. Brendon calls these the future four: self, social, skills, and service. “High performers are clear on their intentions for themselves, their social world, their skills and their service to other’s” Bruchard says.
Self
Brendon says that he advises us to “Be more intentional about who you want to become. Have vision beyond your current circumstances. Imagine your best future self, and start acting like that person today.” (my note: The Bible says call those things that be not as though they already were. To me that is this practice. Act and talk like the person you want to become. TNT)
Ask questions to yourself ambitious words that describe your future self. What do you to become in the future?
Social
Bruchard says that “high performers have clear intentions about how they want to treat other people. They know who they want to be and how they want to interact with others.”
So, Ask yourself these questions, “How can I be a good person or leader in this upcoming situation?” or What kind of tone or mood do I want to set?” or “What does the other person need?”
Asking yourself these questions helps you become more intentional about how you want to interact with others, and helps you to avoid being entirely reactive or defensive in high-stakes or stressful situations.
Skills
Over time, you will develop the expertise necessary to an excellent performer. By identifying your primary field of interest and the skills required to excel, you can then be intentional about learning, practicing, and reflecting on those skills. Know what skills and experiences you need to develop in order to be more successful in the future.
Service
“What will provide the most value to those you serve? This is a question high performers obsess about.” Brendon says.
High performers care deeply about the positive impact they will make for others, and for their broader community. They seek to clarify whom they are serving and what those people need, in order to deliver their contributions “with heart and elegance.”
Bruchard advises us to think about high performance in service as a search for relevance, differentiation, and excellence.
“Relevance has to do with eliminating things that don’t matter…They ask, “What matters now and how can I deliver it?”
“Differentiation allows high performers to look at their industry, their career, and even their relationships for what makes them unique. They want to stand out for why they are and to add more value than others do.”
“Excellence comes from an internal standard that asks, “How can I deliver beyone what’s expected?”
He notes that under-performers tend to focus more on self over service. They are more concerned with their own needs and desires, rather than on what those whom they serve want.
2. Generate energy:
Before we jump into areas where we can drive our energy upward, what are some costs to having low energy and not having systems in place to increase our levels?
-Lower overall happiness
-Lower enthusiasm for taking on challenges
-Lower perception of your own success versus your peers’ success
-Lower confidence in the face of adversity
-Lower degree of influence you’ll have with others
-Lower likelihood that you’ll eat well or exercise
“The power plant does not have energy, it generates it.” -Brendon Burchard
So, it goes without saying, if you increase your energy-you improve all of the above factors. It is said that high lever CEO’s and Senior Executives have energy levels equal to that of professional athletes.
The more energy someone has, the more likely they are to be happy and rise to the highest levels of their field.
Make sure to get 7-9 hours a night of good sleep. In a dark room, comfortable temperature with no screens in your room (tv, cell phones, etc.). Have a consistent schedule of sleep.
Drink LOTS of water. Half your weight in ounce a day is a normal goal of water intake.
Set an alarm on your phone during the day to get up from your desk and stretch, take a short walk, jump in place…etc. Something to get your energy level back up.
3. Raise Necessity
You won’t be motivated to push yourself to perform well if you don’t believe it is absolutely necessary. Brendon therefore advises us to consider four factors in creating performance necessity: identity, obsession, duty, and urgency. The first two factors are internal forces, and the second two are external forces.
Factors that drive performance necessity (source: High Performance Habits by Brendon Burchard)
Identity (personal standards of excellence)
“The quality of a person’s life is in direct proportion to their commitment to excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor.” — Vince Lombardi
High performers hold themselves to a high standard, and monitor their own behavior and performance goals often. They ask themselves questions like, “Did I perform with excellence today? Did I live up to my values and expectations for giving my best and doing a good job?” They tie their identity to doing a good job, and they set challenging goals for themselves.
Obsession with understanding and mastering a topic
“To have long-term success as a coach or in any position of leadership, you have to be obsessed in some way.” — Pat Riley
The first internal force to raising necessity is around identity, developing an internal standard for excellence. The second force is around obsession.
“High performers are deeply curious people. In fact, their curiosity for understanding and mastering their primary field of interest is one of the hallmarks of their success… They feel a high internal drive to focus on their field of interest over the long term and build deep competence… People who become world-class at anything focus longer and harder on their craft.”
Social duty, obligation, and purpose
In addition to the internal forces that raise necessity, there are two external ones as well. The first of these is social duty, obligation, and purpose.
“High performers often feel the necessity to perform well out of a sense of duty to someone or something beyond themselves. Someone is counting on them, or they’re trying to fulfill a promise or responsibility.”
“When you feel the drive to serve others, you sustain solid performance longer.”
High performers often ask themselves, “Who needs me right now?” It could be your family, your teammates, your customers. These high performers double down on their efforts to help others out of a sense of duty, which leads to the excellent performance. As an example, often when soldiers are asked why they performed heroic acts of bravery, they say it was because their comrades were depending on them and they did not want to let them down.
Real deadlines
High performers have a sense of urgency. They use real deadlines as a motivational tool for themselves to increase their performance.
“Nothing motivates action like a hard deadline… What is a ‘real’ deadline? It’s a date that matters because, if it isn’t met, real negative consequences happen.”
Real deadlines can come from a number of things — internal or external events, public commitments, and contractual obligations can all create real deadlines. High performers often use commitments — to their teams, to their managers, to their customers — as a lever to create real deadlines. In high-stakes negotiations, the presence of a deadline for a response from the counter-party creates urgency and motivates action.
Demonstrate courage
The final habit that I will discuss in this post is about demonstrating courage. Why is courage important for high performance? Because it motivates you to take bold action in the face or risk or even fear. And that bold action is often what drives great impact and high performance.
“Progress occurs when courageous, skillful leaders seize the opportunity to change things for the better.” — Harry S. Truman
What do we mean by courage?
“Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear.” — Mark Twain
As Brendon writes:
“Courage is not fearlessness; it is taking action and persisting despite that fear… The more actions you take facing fear, expressing yourself, and helping others, the easier and less stressful these actions become… I think of courage as taking determined action to serve an authentic, noble, or life-enhancing goal, in the face of risk, fear, adversity, or opposition.”
In order to demonstrate courage, Brendon advises us to do a few things.
Honor the struggle. Don’t get frustrated or overwhelmed by opposition, inertia, or challenges that make you struggle. Meet those struggles with poise, dignity, and determination. “No one who achieved greatness avoided struggle. They met it, engaged with it. They knew that it was necessary, because they knew that real challenge and hardship pushed them, extended their capabilities, made them rise… [Tell yourself:] The struggle I’m now facing is necessary, and it’s summoning me to show up, be strong, and use it to forge a better future for myself and my loved ones.”
Share your truth and your ambitions. Each day, reveal to others what you’re really thinking and what you really want in life. You will start believing more in yourself by repeating your objective, deepening your own resolve to overcome obstacles in the pursuit of your goal. In the process, you may also find kindred spirits and collaborative supporters who share your dreams and goals.
Find someone to fight for. Remember who depends on you, and you will find the will and the courage to fight for them. “We will do more for others than for ourselves. And in doing something for others, we find our reason for courage, and our cause for focus and excellence.”
In High Performing Habits, author Brendon Burchard synthesizes academic and original research in psychology and performance in order to develop the HP6 model. To recap, the HP6 model consists of six habits — three personal and three social:
Seek clarity: know who you are, what you want, and whom you serve.
Generate energy: build up your reservoirs of energy to maintain focus and effort.
Raise necessity: focus on the reasons why high performance is absolutely essential.
Increase productivity: perform the highest-leverage actions and ignore distractions.
Develop influence: build trust and influence with others to gain their support.
Demonstrate courage: advocate for your ideas, take bold actions, and stand up for yourself and others.
In this post, I have gone deeper into three of the habits: seek clarity, raise necessity, and demonstrate courage. Seeking clarity involves exploring the 4 S’s (self, social, skills, service) to become intentional about what you want, how you want to act towards others, and how to be the most valuable to those whom you serve. Raising necessity requires you to focus on identity (what are your values and standards of excellence), obsession, duty, and deadlines. And finally, demonstrating courage involves honoring the struggle, sharing your truth and ambitions, and finding someone to fight for.
One common thread that I noticed throughout the book is the idea of serving others, feeling a sense of duty towards others, and fighting for others. The highest performers are much more others-focused than self-focused. Brendon observed that most people are willing to do more for others than they are willing to do even for themselves. By focusing on others, high performers find the motivation to dream, the strength to persevere, and the courage to act.
clarity- I have written (actually written) down my goals for 1,5 10 and 20 years from now. I broke it down into all categories and sub categories. This really is something that awakens a sleeping motivated giant inside of you!! Wow!!
energy-I’ve been working on taking hourly breaks, scheduled lunches, drinking more water.
necessity– I journaled what is VERY important to me and I make sure to remind myself every day of these.
productivity- I ignore interruptions and schedule time away from my work regularly.
develop influence– I am connecting with others to influence them to support my efforts and projects. Building trust with them to enable strong collaboration towards my goal.
courage– I have gotten BOLD about what I want and set my mind to get those goals. I stand up for myself and others.
What are you going to do starting today to become a High Perfomance Person?
You can sign up to become an Avon representative for FREE for a limited time. The free Avon sign up is just one of three different options you can choose when you decide to join Avon. Here are the different ways to outline how you can sign up to sell Avon:
Sign up for FREE and build the kit of your choosing with your first order
Make a donation to the American Cancer Society in the amount of your choice (starts at $5). Build the kit of your choice with your first order.
Your free Avon sign up comes with an online store that is 100% free. There are no fees, no order requirements, no hidden costs and no mandatory quotas. You will not be charged a fee if you don’t sell a certain amount. Your account is 100% free and you can choose the way you want to run your business.
Maybe you don’t want to run a business and want to buy amazing luxury products like Belif, VDL, and The Face Shop at a discounted price. That is a GREAT strategy if you are like me and enjoy high end products but don’t want to pay full price. When you sign up for Avon free, you can use your account just like you an Avon membership. Except for a limited time, there won’t be a membership fee. You can join for FREE!!!
National Team Beauty would love to welcome you as a member to our Facebook group. Where you can learn more tips and tricks of the trade if you choose to sell to others.
It’s FREE and simple to become an Independent Avon Sales Representative.
I want to help you build a TRULY reputable Avon business that people will WANT to purchase from or sign up under you so you can form an Avon team. I have reps all over the United States under me. From Texas to Tennessee. Only a limited time left to sign up for FREE.
https://bit.ly/repsignupTNT use code: TNallTillett “Side gig or full time business. It’s up to you. It’s free to get started and make extra money on the side while you are building your business.” free online store.
Tammy Nall Tillett was born on June 8th 1965. She was welcomed by a brother who was 17 and sister who had just turned 15 the day before.
Needless to say I was welcomed with open arms and carried around like a baby doll. Showed off like I was the class prize. Then at three I was all alone. Raised as an only child pretty much. My Mom went to work 3-11pm. My Daddy retired from Ft. Knox and we became best buds. I was his fishing partner and he taught me how to run a business from home as he ran a small engine repair from his garage in his spare time on top of his retirement check. This man knew how to hustle and always have money. I learned most of my skills from him. I married at 17, way TOO young. Two years later I had handsome little Christopher almost three years after him I had twin baby boys Jon and Justin. All have all grown up now and given me some handsome and beautiful grand children. My favorite job in the whole world is spoiling my grand children as much as possible. That’s what us grannies do, right?
I worked in customer service postitions for most of my adult life. I went to college late in my life and studied business management. So I have experience in teaching and leading you to becoming the best you want to be as an Avon representative.
Why did I become an Avon Independent Sales Repreresentative?
One and mostly because my elderly mother moved in with my husband Johnny Tillett and I. She has a tendency to fall so I had to be home with her.
Two I wanted us to be able to still take summer vacations to the lake like We had been doing since getting married.
Three, I love a good challenge and I am my biggest challenger.
Before I knew it I had people signing up under me and I became a leader. Was I ready for that challenge? You better believe it. I had already made an Avon Team page for my future team members. I had already filled it with the info they would need to know to start their own Avon adventure. I thought I would have about 5 team members and we’d be a happy little team. BOOM!!! I have grown with three generations now. Two leaders under me and a full team of 48 and we are growing every single day.
National Team Beauty
Started out being Team Prosperous, then it changed to Team Prosperous Beauty, then to Team Prosperous Beauties and Beasts. I changed it to Team Beauty and was certain that was it. Never say never. lol We went national over a weekend. So for the last change we are NOW, National Team Beauty.
We have business cards, yard signs, fliers, mini flyers, book labels and t-shirts with that team name so that is the last and final name change. We all love it.
I made President’s Recognition Program ($10,000 sales- I made over $12,000) my very first year and I’ve made it every since then as well. My goal this year is to get Honor Society which is $20, 000 in sales in a year. I will do it too. I am determined.
My team level currently is Silver Ambassador. My future goal is Bronze Executive but current level I want to achieve is Bronze Leader. I will get that by the end of this year. 2020
I am a firm believer in setting high goals and reaching and working as hard as you can to MAKE them happen,. My BIGGEST downfall is wanting the same for everyone but I also realize not everyone wants the same in life. Some just want to get by in life and although that saddens me for them. I have come to grips with it.
That being said if you want to start your own Avon business and grow up big with sales and a large team. Then I can help you with that. Let’s grow together. We got this!! I can hardly wait for you to join me and the others on National Team Beauty. Remember it’s free for a limited time only. God bless.