Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
BPW-young-careerist-business
Full Text:
business / library
2/12
with photo
Ann LoBosco Named BPW Young Careerist
Ann LoBosco (left) has been named the Newtown Business & Professional Women's
Club's 1999 Young Careerist. She was presented with the award by Ginger
Humeston, the organization's co-president. -Bee Photo, Valenta
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Ann LoBosco has been named the Newtown Business & Professional Women's 1999
Young Careerist. The annual award recognizes young successful professional
women who live or work in Newtown and is part of a statewide competition.
A graduate of the University of Connecticut at Storrs with a degree in
business management, Ann LoBosco is an independent beauty consultant for Mary
Kay cosmetics and has a keen interest in child care legislation.
"I've been very lucky when it comes to child care, but that hasn't been the
case for a lot of my friends who work," she said. "The stress level of knowing
they have to be at the day care center at 5:30 to get their children can be
incredible. Women have a difficult time achieving their full potential when
they are stressed about day care."
After graduating from college, Ann LoBosco worked as the office manager of an
executive search firm in Stamford. In 1988 she married Charles LoBosco, now
director of sales for a White Plains, N.Y., company that provides maintenance
contracts for commercial office buildings.
"Our son, Charlie, was born in 1990," Mrs LoBosco said. "We were living in a
condo in Stamford and wanted to buy a house so we started to look around. I
came to Newtown to visit a friend and fell in love with the little town, the
General Store. We bought a house on Possum Ridge Road and moved to Newtown
when our son was two years old."
Ann was able to cut her work schedule back to four days a week and continued
to commute to her job in Stamford for another year and a half until her second
son, Michael, who is now 4, was born. Then she quit her job in Stamford and
stayed home with the children.
"I guess I was home for a year when I started finding that I needed to do
something else," she said. "I got a job at the mall, at Gap Kids, a couple
nights a week. I loved it, but my husband's schedule got busy and he wasn't
able to always get home by 6 pm."
That's when she began to decide that she needed a flexible job, one that she
could do from her home, setting her own schedule.
"I have been a Mary Kay customer for 12 years and was very familiar with the
company and the product," she said. "It is a very easy business to get
started. Seventy-one percent of the consultants work other jobs so I knew it
was possible to do with young children on a part-time basis. There are so many
different kinds of women in Mary Kay, all ages, all races, from such different
backgrounds."
Mary Kay has about 500,000 consultants in 27 countries, she said. The company
has been the top-selling brand in the United States for the past five years
with ten percent of the market. But while some consultants are satisfied with
just selling the product, many, like Ann LoBosco, also see an executive career
path, an avenue which is encouraged by the company.
"Mary Kay calls it team building," she said. "My group meets once a week in
Bethel. My director is in New Mexico but I have a local mentor, a sort of
adopted director, so I have the best of both worlds."
Mrs LoBosco attends training classes frequently, traveling locally or as far
as Dallas, Tex., for an annual four-day seminar in late summer. "The training
is there, almost every month, reasonable or free," she said.
Mary Kay also is known for its incentives. A team manager of 12 consultants
gets jewelry and the use of a red Pontiac Grand Am. Move up in the company and
you'll get a Grand Prix, a GMC Jimmy, or finally the trademark pink Cadillac,
a reward for directors who have 30 consultants and achieve a specific level of
performance.
"You get a new car every two years and they pay for your insurance. There are
a lot of incentives, like wonderful expense-paid trips. There are many
`million-dollar' women in Mary Kay," Ann LoBosco said. "Of course it's not
easy. You and your 12 consultants have to produce $4,000 worth of wholesale
sales per month for four months before you can get the first car."
All that is required to become a Mary Kay consultant was an investment of $100
for a showcase of products. But Ann LoBosco decided to get a business loan to
purchase an inventory of products.
"Customer service is the key to success. If I can sell a product and give it
to the customer immediately, that is much better than taking an order," she
said. "I treat my work like a business, which it is."
Ann LoBosco will attend the BPW District II Young Careerist speakoff in March.
Representatives from the Newtown, Bethel and Litchfield clubs will compete for
a chance to represent the district in the statewide competition. Last year,
Kathy Beals, a resident of Sandy Hook and member of Newtown BPW, was named
Connecticut's Young Careerist for 1998.
Newtown BPW meets at 6 pm on the first Monday of the month at local
restaurants for a dinner meeting and program. For more information, call
membership chairman Barbara Shohet at 270-8456.