Current location - Quotes Website - Excellent quotations - Mary Kay Ash is her philosophy.
Mary Kay Ash is her philosophy.
At the beginning of the company's establishment, Mary Kay took "enriching women's lives" as her own responsibility and devoted herself to creating "a career enjoyed by women all over the world". She hopes to provide opportunities that women don't have anywhere else: opportunities for unlimited development in income, career development opportunities and personal ambitions. While Mary Kay is committed to providing consumers with high-quality products, she has always realized the company's mission with positive values and the spirit of mutual care: to create more income opportunities for beauty consultants and help company employees experience career success.

Because Mary Kay has successfully created a good working atmosphere for women, Fortune magazine has repeatedly listed it as one of the top ten best companies for women to work in the United States, becoming the only cosmetics company in the list of "100 employees working in the United States". Therefore, the International Women's Forum praised Mary Kay Company for its special contribution to the equality and improvement of women's status.

Mary Kay Company believes in the golden rule of "Don't do to others what you don't want others to do to you" and advocates the life priority of "faith first, family second and career third". This idea was strongly advocated by Mary Kay, and quickly spread all over the world with her and her 500,000 beauty consultants. People commented that Mary Kay was selling her philosophy of work and life as well as her cosmetics.

In fact, Mary Kay's more important contribution is that her corporate culture has inspired thousands of Qian Qian women to become small business operators. Under her own management style, she promotes women's self-esteem and self-confidence with constant encouragement and material rewards. Some magazines marvel that Mary Kay liberated more women than Gloria Si Tong, the leader of American feminist movement. But Mary Kay doesn't like this comparison. She thinks that women's liberation is economic liberation, as simple as that.