FARMASIGLOBAL
BusinessFebruary 2026·7 min read

How I Earned £500 My First Month with Farmasi

A real Beauty Influencer shares exactly how she set up her Farmasi business, who her first customers were, and the simple strategy that worked.

When Sarah joined Farmasi in January 2026, she had no previous sales experience and a full-time job. By the end of her first month, she had earned £500 in retail profit and commissions. Here is exactly what she did — and how you can replicate it.

Starting Point: Zero Experience

Sarah had been a Farmasi customer for six months before deciding to join as a Beauty Influencer. The trigger? Realising how often her friends asked which foundation she was wearing. 'I thought — if they're asking anyway, I might as well get paid for the recommendation.'

Week 1: Setting Up

Sarah registered online (free, took 10 minutes), ordered a starter kit, and set up a simple Instagram account. She did not launch with a polished feed — just honest posts showing the products she already used. 'I was genuine about it from day one. I only shared products I actually loved.'

First Customers: Friends and Family

Her first five customers were people she already knew. She sent personal messages — not group broadcasts — describing specific products she thought each person would like. 'Generic sales messages get ignored. I recommended the Vitamin C Serum to my mum because her skin tone matched mine and I knew it worked. She bought it that evening.'

Week 2–3: Social Media Momentum

By week two, Instagram was starting to generate enquiries from people outside her immediate circle. She posted a foundation shade comparison video that reached 4,000 views — her biggest post yet. Three sales came directly from it. 'I used the AI Shade Finder on the FarmasiGlobal site to help people find their match. That made the conversations much easier.'

The Numbers

By end of month one: 14 customers, £1,250 in orders, £500 in combined retail profit and personal bonus (roughly 40% margin). Time invested: approximately 6–8 hours per week. 'I was shocked it worked so quickly. I was honestly expecting to earn maybe £100 and call it a win.'

What She Would Do Differently

Sarah says she would have started with a smaller, curated product selection instead of trying to promote the entire catalogue. 'Pick five to ten products you genuinely love and become the expert on those. That focus is what builds trust.'

Is It Right for You?

Sarah's results are not guaranteed — income depends on effort, audience, and consistency. But her story illustrates what is possible with a personal, authentic approach. If you are curious about starting, use the Business Simulator to model realistic earnings based on your own situation.