One company is sending 12,700 salespeople to Thailand on a tour that continues until next week.
The Infinitus herbal supplement company has outfitted the sales reps with uniforms, the same luggage and even the same umbrellas.
Earlier this month, a medicinal products group sent 6,000 of its representatives to France where they set a world record by massing the most people to spell out a phrase that included their own firm's name.
"We have taken 86 flights, stayed in 26 hotels," he said. "Our group's attendees have spent USD 10,000 each this visit."
The tours are at the intersection of several trends in a country with a predilection for package trips: an explosion in overseas travel, surging national pride and the phenomenal growth in the past decade of direct sales companies.
The companies are splashing cash and seeking publicity following a period in which they were banned as pyramid schemes.
Some see the tours as tacky ploys by the quasi-evangelical companies to entice new sales representatives to expand earnings.
China's direct sales market began with the entry of Avon in the 1990s. But the industry plunged into chaos with rampant pyramid schemes, prompting the government to ban the industry altogether in 1998. The ban was lifted in 2005.
Direct selling cuts out shops to sell products or services directly to consumers, using teams of sales personnel who typically get most of their income from a cut of the sales.
China's direct sales market is likely the world's third or fourth biggest behind the United States, Japan and possibly South Korea, said Hu Yuanjiang, executive director for direct selling at China Health Care Association.
