Join Avon in Mottram in Longdendale.

Start your journey today and become an Avon Representative with our award-winning UK team. Build a lifestyle of your dreams, with unlimited earning potential, and even build your own Avon representative team with our trusted guidance.

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Start earning straight away.

As an Independent AVON Sales Representative you are the vital link between the company and the customer. You will be selling high quality, great value AVON products backed by a no quibble guarantee. AVON is a brand everyone knows so the hard sell is not necessary!

You can now join online and earn money from the first £1 you sell & earn upto 32% commission.

Your Business,
Your Way.

As an AVON representative you can work your business your way by using only the brochures, online only or a mixture of both to get the most out of your AVON business.

The earning potential is unlimited as you earn up to 32% commission on orders you collect in. You can now become an online only seller and be paid commission directly into your bank once a week!

Join your local Avon team in Mottram in Longdendale.

Why not become an Avon sales representative or sales leader in the Mottram in Longdendale area? We have many Avon representative and sales leadership opportunities in the Mottram in Longdendale area.

Mottram in Longdendale is a village in Tameside, Greater Manchester, England. Mottram occupies an elevated site straddling the A57 trunk road from the end of the M67 to the junction with the A628 trunk road. It is 10 miles (16 km) east of Manchester, on land between 150m to 250m above mean sea level. Mottram was active in the early stages of industrialisation, and there were significant cotton spinning mills in Wedneshough Green and the Treacle Street areas of Mottram Moor, and printing and dyeing works on the Etherow at Broadbottom which until recently was part of the parish.

The smaller early mills in Mottram became uneconomic and harder to run. Stalling industrialisation led to social conflict and hunger during 1812 Luddite riots that led to the smashing of labour-reducing machines. The Luddites secretly drilled on Wedneshough Green. In 1842 local Chartists met on the green, and planned the closure of Stalybridge factories in the Plug Riots. By 1860 the population had peaked. The 1844 railway passed through the valley with stops at Hattersley and Broadbottom in the parish but not at the Mottram township.

If you are interested in becoming a local area representative for a location in Mottram in Longdendale, please get in touch by clicking this button.


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