Built to Rebuild
From the moment he discovered direct selling, Armand Puyolt knew he had found his future—even if he hadn’t yet discovered just how fulfilling that future would be.
As a teenager, he drove his mother to a home meeting, sitting quietly as people gathered around products and possibility. What caught his attention wasn’t just the business—it was the urgency, the belief and the willingness of people to stretch beyond their circumstances.

That passion pulled Armand into direct selling as a distributor, where he quickly immersed himself in the mechanics of the profession. He started with a crystal company, then moved into telecommunications, where he gained a deeper understanding of residual income and organizational growth. With strong mentorship early on, Armand’s rise was rapid.
By 18, he had bought his mother her first home. By 20, he was earning seven figures annually. Within a decade, he was generating tens of millions of dollars a year.
From the outside, it looked like a story of massive, early success. But what would ultimately define Armand’s leadership was not how quickly he grew—it was how often he had to rebuild.
Learning to Rebuild
Before he ever became a company owner, Armand’s career was shaped by disruption. His first major business was affected by deregulation in telecommunications. Another collapsed when a key product category was removed from the market. Each time, he was forced to start over.
That repetition became its own kind of training.
“I got pretty good at rebuilding organizations really quickly,” Armand remembered.
Those experiences formed the foundation of his leadership philosophy. Success—in his view—is not just about growth, it’s also about resilience. The ability to adapt when conditions change, when systems break or when momentum disappears.

They also shaped his perspective on how direct selling should operate. While the channel evolved and many companies shifted toward recruitment-driven models, Armand remained committed to a product-first approach rooted in real demand.
“One of the biggest challenges that I’ve had with the network marketing space is the ideology of changing the original network market. What I was trained to do first and foremost was sell products.”
That conviction would later become central to the company he built.
A Defining Turning Point
In 2010, Armand faced a challenge that went far beyond business. He was diagnosed with stage four gastric cancer.
At the time, he was also managing diabetes, high blood pressure and significant weight challenges, all while raising two young children as a single father. The diagnosis forced him to confront not just his health but his future.

“How was I going to leave my kids so young with nothing but debt in their hands? So, to me, that was important. What was I going to do?”
That question pushed him to consider options he had previously dismissed. By his own account, he had never been drawn to natural health or wellness products. But faced with limited alternatives, he began exploring them.
Over time, he saw changes—not just in weight, but in his overall health. By 2015, he said doctors confirmed he was cancer-free, no longer diabetic and had lost 150 pounds.
“It made such a life-changing difference for me,” he said. “I thought if we can put these products out to the world, I think we can do a lot of good for a lot of people.”
That realization became the foundation for Vida Divina.
Building Vida Divina
In 2016, Armand made the decision to launch his own company. Drawing on years of experience in both the field and manufacturing, he moved quickly—developing products, building infrastructure and preparing for launch in a matter of months.

The response was immediate.
More than 40,000 people enrolled within the first weekend, pushing systems beyond capacity and creating operational challenges almost overnight. The company generated more than $20 million in its early months, establishing itself as one of the fastest-growing organizations in the channel.
But rapid growth brought new lessons.
Armand had to transition from field leader to CEO, a shift that required a different kind of discipline. Early missteps—particularly around compliance and regulation—resulted in costly setbacks, including product losses and financial disruptions tied to payment processing.
Those challenges forced the company to strengthen its infrastructure quickly. Over time, they became part of the foundation that allowed Vida Divina to stabilize and scale.
Leading with Conviction
Today, Armand’s leadership is grounded in the principles that shaped his early career: product-driven growth, simplicity and consistency.
He remains firm in his belief that sustainable organizations are built on real demand—not forced purchasing or recruitment alone. That philosophy is reflected in Vida Divina’s structure, including its decision to operate without auto ship and its emphasis on strong retail incentives.
For Armand, the goal is to create a system that works for the average participant—not just top performers.
Innovation plays a role in that effort, but not in the way it is often defined. At Vida Divina, innovation is as much about usability and structure as it is about product formulation. The company has invested in tools, compensation strategies and systems designed to simplify the business and make it easier to duplicate.

The objective is not complexity—it is clarity.
An Industry Advocate
Beyond his own company, Armand has become an advocate for the broader direct selling industry. He views the success of individual companies as interconnected, believing that the strength of the channel depends on collective progress.
“I’m a fan of direct selling. I want all the companies in the channel to be successful.”
That perspective has shaped his approach to leadership, emphasizing collaboration, mentorship and a long-term view of the industry’s future.
A Legacy Beyond Numbers
For Armand, success is not defined by revenue or rank. It is defined by impact.
“I don’t want my story to be about how much money I made. I want my legacy to be about how many millions of people we’ve helped along the way.”

That measure—lives changed rather than dollars earned—remains the throughline of his career.
From a teenager driving his mother to a home meeting; to a field leader rebuilding after setbacks; to a Founder and CEO boldly shaping his own company, Armand’s journey reflects a consistent belief in what the industry can offer when done the right way.
Leadership, in his case, has been forged not just through success, but through adversity—and the decision to keep building. That belief—and the impact it continues to create—is what the Bravo Leadership Award was designed to recognize.
From the May/June 2026 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.
The post Bravo Leadership Award | Armand Puyolt first appeared on Direct Selling News.
