Dove Chocolate Discoveries: A Sweet Opportunity!

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Ranked #306 in Work At Home, #52,914 overall

Imagine Your Life in Chocolate

Working from home is a great opportunity for ambitious moms & dads with entrepreneurial spirit who would like to make extra money while staying at home with their children.

Here is a business opportunity for chocolate lovers!

With DOVE CHOCOLATE DISCOVERIES, you can turn your passion for chocolate into a career. Dove Chocolate Discoveries is the latest direct selling company that combines the global romance with premium chocolate and the growing trend of home entertaining. Whether you host a party or demonstrate the latest indulgence as a Chocolatier, you'll discover all the many sweet rewards.

For more information, please visit Dove Chocolate Discoveries.

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DOVE CHOCOLATE DISCOVERIES in the NEWS 

NEW YORK POST

HOME SHOPPING NETWORK: DIRECT SALES HELP WOMEN HELP THEMSELVES

By MARINA VATAJ
April 21, 2009

WHEN it comes to staying financially afloat, opportunity sometimes knocks.
Literally.

Remember Avon ladies going door to door selling eyeliner and lipstick?
Well, they're back. Only nowadays, direct selling doesn't stop with makeup. Women are offering everything from kitchenware to Dove chocolate, too. (...)

Heather Adamik, 26, from Long Island started hosting Dove Discoveries chocolate parties when her full-time day-care business began to lose customers.

"This economy is really affecting everything, and I was worried because I have a private day-care business, so I started hosting chocolate

parties to make extra money," she says.

As a "chocolatier," she's responsible for selling a variety of Dove Discoveries chocolate products, including cake mixes, bars, martini mixes, coffee beans and truffles. She, like De Jesus, uses a client's kitchen to bake cakes, mix martinis and display other Dove edibles, so you can decide which products you want to buy. Adamik averages $350 commission per party.

"Women love any excuse to get together and they love chocolate, so I make extra money by hanging out and eating sweets," she says.

Lisa Pagano, a 44-year-old from New Jersey who became a chocolatier because she was worried her husband could lose his job, says she's made up to $1,000 in commission money.

"Everyone is suffering somehow right now, so it was a good time for me to become a chocolatier," says the stay-at-home mom. "My goal is to take my family on a trip to Mexico all paid for by my Dove money. I'm close."

Chocolate-Covered Trends 

Chocolate is hot, and we're not just talking about the kind you sip from a mug with marshmallows!

Some of the latest chocolate-related trends-to-watch include:
- The premiumization of chocolate, with chocolate becoming more and more akin to the wine of the confectionary world.
- New chocolate taste sensations, with chocolate consumers opening their minds and mouths to more exotic flavors, from passion fruit and cranberries to chai and Aztec spice.
- Chocolate-infiltrated savory fares, such as chocolate soups, cheeses and marinades.
- Continued interest in cocoa sustainability, a holistic, proactive set of activities designed to ensure future supplies of cocoa, and a responsible approach to its production, so that the community and environment in which it is produced can thrive.

Some interesting direct selling facts:
- According to the Direct Selling Association, the U.S. direct selling industry generated $30.8 billion in retail sales in 2007.
- About 74 percent of Americans have purchased goods or services through direct sales.
- More than 15 million people worked in the direct sales industry in 2007, up from 13.3 million in 2003.
- Of these 15 million direct sellers, more than 85 percent are women.
- There are more women millionaires in direct selling than in any other profession in the world, according to Grace Lee, co-founder of the Direct Selling Women's Alliance.

New Photos 

Choco-centric stuff directly from Dove Chocolate Discoveries.

curated content from Flickr

NEW Videos 

Want to become a Chocolatier?

Tips and tricks from Dove Chocolate Discoveries Chocolatiers.

A Sweet Success Story from Dove Chocolate Discoveries

curated content from YouTube

Love chocolate? Hate chocolate? Interested in hosting a party or becoming a Chocolatier? 

Let us know!

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Taste of Success? Chocolate! 

Chocolatier Story

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This Easter, surprise your family and friends with a homemade Mousse Caterpillar! 

Simple Dessert Recipe

PREPARATION:

This happy little caterpillar is a snap to make! Fill DOVE Chocolate Discoveries%u2122 (DCD) Chocolate dessert cups with our mousse, and add DCD Cinnamon Dusted Almonds for his "feet". Store bought frosting adds the finishing touches. Each cup makes a perfect dessert serving.

Store-bought frosting and sprinkles add the finishing festive touch. The best part is that each cup makes a perfect dessert serving!

For more recipes, check out Dove Chocolate Discoveries.

ChocoPOLL 

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MOMS JOBS in the NEWS 

Hard Times Send 'Economoms' Back to the Job Market.

When you're eight months pregnant, it's hard to find a good interview suit. But a burgeoning belly didn't stop Nicole Young, 33, from hitting the job circuit this fall. Her husband, who works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, has seen his income shrink along with the Dow. And the consulting projects she has been doing from their home on Long Island in New York are not bringing in enough money to make up the difference. So Young, who left her full-time marketing job in 2005 when she was pregnant with their first child, buffed up her résumé and started conducting phone interviews to try to line up a job that would begin after her second child was born in December. She contacted five recruiters, hoping to find something in corporate communications or general management. Could she start right away? Not exactly. No job offers ensued.

Now, with a 3-month-old and a 3-year-old, Young is reviving her job hunt: full time, part time, any time will do. With the employment outlook turning bleaker by the day, she and many other white collar moms who opted out of the workforce to focus on their kids are scrambling to get back in. Meet the economommies. (See the best and worst moms of all time.)

Of course, for much of the U.S., working is not optional. But with men making up 82% of the recession's job losses, women are flocking to mom-centric job and career-consulting sites, where they learn how to translate their maternal skills (negotiation, time management) into corporate argot. Mom Corps, a staffing company that pairs women with white collar jobs that have flexible hours, in February surveyed its 500 most recent registrants: 63% said the economy was driving their decision to look for work. Five percent said they joined because their spouse was laid off.

At Mom Corps, businesses pay to list job openings and gain access to tens of thousands of women who have registered for free; the agency, like rival service 10 til 2, also does actual matchmaking for companies. It's definitely a buyer's market. In early March, Mom Corps had 34,000 job hunters and 54 jobs; 10 til 2 reported a similarly scary ratio. How quickly employees are synched with employers - Mom Corps says most of its openings are filled within two weeks - hinges on factors like location and skill set. Think Excel is just a verb? Next in line, please.

Since Mom Corps opened shop in 2005, it has matched nearly 1,000 women with manager-level positions at small firms as well as Fortune 500 ones. Though the number of listings fell in recent months, founder Allison O'Kelly says, things are picking up as hiring freezes make project-based, benefits-free workers the only kind companies can afford.

"This is not a good time for many businesses, but this is a good time for our business," says iRelaunch co-founder Carol Fishman Cohen. Her firm, along with sites like YourOnRamp and 2Hats Network, offers crash courses in networking as well as tips on how to finesse gaps in résumés (don't organize chronologically) and what to wear to an interview (shoulder pads are for linebackers).

What's New in Chocolate Business? 

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by DCD_Sweetie

Hi! My name is Kelly and I am the official brand ambassador for Dove Chocolate Discoveries - the first direct selling company in the US that recruits... (more)

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