Dreams can come true … if you are a Natasha dealer
by Celia Pascual, SERDEF Media BureauThe direct selling  industry is highly competitive and dominated by multinationals (Think  Avon, Amway, Tupperware).  Natasha stands out in that it is home-grown  and owned, 100 per cent, utilizing local materials and local  craftsmanship.
Over the years since  it began in 1993,  Natasha has survived  the tight competition, the  Asian financial crisis and two historical upheavals and has grown  steadily to reach people all over the country through a network of  42  distribution centers and 150,000 direct dealers all over the country  from Aparri to Tawi-tawi.
Credit its  sustainability and growth to the survival instincts and enterprising  ability of is owner and CEO, Victoria “Vicky” Bello-Jardiolin.
Vicky obtained her  bachelor’s and master’s degrees in business administration from the  University of the Philippines, Diliman. In the 1980s, she taught  marketing in the same school, where she also researched on  entrepreneurship, small and medium industries, and cooperatives. She  also worked as consultant at Sycip, Gorres & Velayo.
First  business attempts
Vicky wasn’t an  instant business success. She started many ventures that did not exactly  flourish. On hindsight, she saw these experiences as critical  preparation for her later, bigger and more successful projects.
She started a  garment business in the late 1960s with a co-professor, but it didn’t  last because of other priorities that took up her attention. Then she  put up a snack mobile store called “Some Like it Hot” which made good  enough profit, but was tedious to maintain, with the daily routine of  loading the vans each morning. One day, one snack van caught fire.
When she went to  Germany on a scholarship grant, Vicky asked her mother take over the  snack mobile business.
When  Confetti came, it poured
Back home in 1984,  her sister Yolanda Bello Pajaro, who owns the upscale Via Venetto  shoe  company, offered Vicky half of the 200-sq m store space she got at the  original Greenbelt Mall in Makati. “I know my business and I will teach  it to you,” Yoly assured Vicky.
Vicky called the new  shoe boutique Confetti – and it  didn’t take long to be successful and  expand to 15 branches.
Vicky knows very  little about making shoes and does not try hard to understand the  production side. What she did was to provide samples or pictures of  shoes to Marikina shoemakers who would  manufacture these for the  Confetti boutiques.
Confetti  has thus  become the link between the customers and the manufacturers.
“We used man-made  materials designed to be worn by class B people. We had to teach  Marikina shoe makers  to treat the materials with respect and make  fashionable shoes out of them. Our ideas for shoes were drawn from   fashion magazines, visits to trade fairs, and visits to fashionable  boutiques in fashion centers abroad. So, Confetti shoes were trendy but  unbelievably affordable.”
Though she stayed  clear of production, Vicky brought into the business her international  exposure and academic discipline of continuing product research,  customer surveys, and marketing.
Natasha, the direct  selling company, came after the success of Confetti, the boutique chain.
Entrepreneurship can  be a lonely calling, Vicky muses. “Ikaw na ang bos, ikaw pa ang  busabos.” But being en entrepreneur  allows you to help others make  a living.
This is true of  Confetti. But doubly true for Natasha.
Natasha: for  people with dreams
Encouraged by  Confetti’s success, and wanting to cater to the C and D crowd, Vicky  put up a new retail store she named Natasha. To get near her  targeted customers, she located the store at a mall along a main  thoroughfare. The expected crowds didn’t turn up, however. This was in  1994, the time of the power crisis of six to eight hours duration at a  time. People were not going to the dimly lighted malls for fear of  safety.
Vicky did the best  out of a bad situation by converting Natasha into a wholesale company.  If the buyers can't come to the shops, we will let the shops go to them,  she must have thought.  By wholesaling, it would sell to dealers who  would then resell the products to their end users. At first, she gave a  few dealers about a dozen pairs of shoes to start their respective  business with.  That was how Natasha’s networking marketing strategy  began.
Vicky’s  children pitched in to develop the networking system. Vicky would  herself personally sell shoes to her friends and acquaintances. A son  worked on developing the dealer network. A daughter took charge of  selecting the merchandise, while a son took pictures of the products .  The first Natasha catalogues were done by members of the family.
Soon, Natasha was  selling, through its network of dealers,  not just shoes but also  T-shirts, pants, wallets and bags, and, lately, cosmetics and  fragrances.
Natasha’s product  marketing follows the classic direct selling scheme – basically the same  being used  by Tupperware,  Amway, and  Avon.
Natasha dealers go  from person to person  in commercial and residential areas with a  catalogue of shoes, bags, clothes, accessories, and personal care  products. The customer chooses from the catalogue and then pays on  installment, locally known as “cry-cry.”
The dealer network  has expanded rapidly as dealer recruits new dealers. But one does not  have to wait to be recruited but rather can apply at any of the Natasha branches  all over the country. (Click  here for a partial directory of branches.)
The direct-selling  strategy  has become very convenient for those who have no time to shop  or are not eligible for usual credit facilities, or are too far away  from shopping malls, as in Batanes and Basilan.
Small wonder,  Natasha’s first slogan was “Let shopping come to you.”  When some OFWs  became  Natasha dealers in the foreign countries where they are  deployed, the slogan became “Kung  saan may Pinoy, may Natasha.”
Best of all for  country’s economic well-being, the  Natasha way of doing business  unlocked income-earning opportunities for low-salary employees and  under-employed people.
In the direct  selling system, needless to say, dealers earn not only from what they  sell but also from what their recruited dealers make.
Everyone dreams of  becoming rich. The company promises to help make such dreams come true.  But this transformation from dream to reality is rooted in sipag  at tiyaga and will not come easily and certainly not to  everyone who engages in direct selling Natasha -- or Avon, Amway,  Tupperware, for that matter. If one is very patient and hardworking and  very, very focused, there is little reason not to make in network  selling.
Dreams have come  true for some Natasha dealers, as the video testimonials of  Natasha Top Dealers indicate: higher education for themselves and  their children, houses, lots, vehicles, their own dealership business, a  sense of fulfillment, and other Pinoy aspirations.
 
  













 
  
  
  
  
 

 
  
 






