In 1946, inventor Earl Tupper introduced line of plastic containers the Wonderlier Bowl and Bell Tumbler. Traditional food storage containers were chiefly made of glass or were heavy crocks. Tupperware soon became coined as a "miracle" product. Tupperware kept food fresh much longer and made kitchens more organized and neat.
Earl Tupper introduced the airtight seal of the plastic container world in 1946, after studying how the rim of a paint can kept the paint from drying out. This new airtight storage product was not jumping off the shelves at first because it was hard to explain how the product actually worked. People needed to see how the product actually worked via demonstrations, which started the phenomenon of "The Tupperware Party" in 1948.
Tupperware parties quickly became the most effective way to relay to customers all of the benefits of the Tupperware products. In 1951, the Tupperware company made the decision to remove all of their products from stores, and sell them exclusively through Tupperware parties. At a Tupperware party, a Tupperware representative demonstrates how the products work and how durable the products are.
A Tupperware demonstrator or representative, could be anyone from your next door neighbor to a lady at church. Anyone who would like to become a Tupperware demonstrator should talk to another demonstrator to learn how they can. Tupperware demonstrators usually hold parties at the home of a hostess who gets incentives for having the party such as free or discounted merchandise.
I personally grew up attending Tupperware parties, and I still love to attend them. By having and attending Tupperware parties you were able to see exactly how the products work. As a child, I often asked my mother to buy certain Tupperware products so that I could use them for my own purposes. Even though they are primarily made for kitchen use, I believed that I could store toys or other items in them.
Tupperware products continue to be a highly trusted brand of plastic storage containers. Though I have not been to a Tupperware party in years, I love their products. Several of my family members and I own Tupperware products that we have had for well over a decade, and the products still look and work like new. I would recommend Tupperware products over any other plastic storage container brand.
Published by Laura Fleenor
I am a divorced mother of 4 children (one in heaven), college graduate, and a webmaster. I was born and raised in Southern Indiana, and have also lived in the Tampa, Florida area. View profile
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- In 1946, inventor Earl Tupper introduced line of plastic containers the Wonderlier Bowl and Bell Tum
- In 1951, the Tupperware company made the decision to remove all of their products from stores.
- A Tupperware demonstrator or representative, could be anyone from your next door neighbor to a lady
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