Automatic Age

Issue: 1938 February

125
AUTOMATIC AGE
February, 1938
O p e r a t in g a s a V o c a tio n
p R O M time to time we have been
fed with statistics showing how
short the life of the average business
is.
The reason advanced for this
short life have been many and varied.
Too many grocers, too many butchers,
too many bakers, and too many
candlestick makers; inefficiency, lack
of capital, poor management, poor lo­
cations, too big overhead, lack of co­
operation, etc. Each one of these by
itself is sufficient to cause a business
failure and yet if closely analyzed I
believe the m ain reason for so large
a percentage of loss is that the ma­
jority of people go into businesses of
which they have no knowledge what­
soever, relying m ainly on the fact
that some friend or friends appear to
be making money in some business or
other.
This has been particularly true of
the operating business in so fa r as it
pertains to amusement pin tables, etc.
Thousands of unemployed butchers,
bakers, candlestick makers, dentists,
architects, coal heavers, etc., have
suddenly decided to become operators,
purchased eight or ten tables and
placed them in stores on a commission
basis, ranging from 50 to 85 per cent
without any provision for repairs, re­
placements, obsolescence, or any of
the items that constitute overhead
and believed that all they would have
to do would be to make a call once
or twice a week and rake in the
dough.
For two years this has been going
on and now, as we look about us, we
discover that approximately 75 per
cent of the new operators of a year
ago have called it “quits.” Many of
them have left their equipment to
rot” on the locations and went back
to their old vocations. A few have
developed into real operators and
they, together w ith the old-timers, are
in the game up to their necks and
m aking a go of it.
Operating is a highly specialized vo­
cation requiring, besides genuine busi­
ness ability, a high degree of business
ethics and cooperation such as prob­
ably is necessary in no other line of
endeavor.
The national government today is
concerning itself as never before with
the idea of cooperation among men in
identical lines of business and its im ­
portance among operators is practic­
ally the very life of operating itself.
Established rates of commission,
non-interference of one operator with
the locations of the other and mem­
bership in a recognized operators’
association are essential factors nec­
essary in keeping this business on the
high plane it deserves to be. This is
what is meant by cooperation.
The successful operator has learned
also by experience that high class,
well manufactured equipment, built
to stand wear and tear, and at the
same time of a design pleasing and
attractive to the eye of the storekeeper
as well as to the general public, will
continue to net him handsome revenue
week in and week out long after the
first cost is forgotten.
,
The A u t o m a t i c A g e has for years
been advocating cooperation among
operators and month after month
their editorial columns have repeat­
edly advised the purchase of equip­
ment that will stand up and that will
not become obsolete over night.
FLAT-TIRE
OLLECTIOnS
LET DIVVY-DEND LOAD UP YOUR MONEY BAGS
★ Diw y-D end! W h a t is it? I t ’s a new invention that revives the
earning power of old games. Instead of $2 per week, up she goes to
$10 . . . even higher. Sounds good! I t is G O O D . Very good. So
good that one of America’s leading manufacturers is going to install a
Diwy-Dend unit in his next game. Actually makes new games newer!
■fa How does it work?
Y ou know what a step-up switch is? Sure.
Divvy-Dend is just that P L U S a clever system of contacts controlling
the payout unit or lite-up award. Gives 2 points every 20 plays— 4
points every 80 plays— and one large payout (amount is up to you)
every 400 games. Remember— Diwy-Dend is N O T a “mystery” payout.
You control it. Can’t repeat. You set the payoff. I t stays that way
until you change it. I f a winner comes at the same time a Diwy-Dend
award is due, the game pays out whichever is greater.
Diwy-Dend boosts play on any game, new or old, from twice to five-
times. Keeps ’em going. Operates on any novelty, payout, bowling or
shooting game, or on any console or phnograph having a power pack,
transformer or batteries. Easy to install. Foolproof. Cheatproof. In ­
terchangeable.
(Y ou can use the same Diwy-Dend in game after
game.) Pays for itself in first week or two.
O rder a Divvy-Dend on 2 weeks trial. Y our game must show
a substantial gain or you can send Diw y-Dend back and
we’11 refund every cent. Price? $9.90 for one . . . $9.00
each for five.
Send $1 for each Divvy-Dend you xvant. Pay balance on
delivery . Or pay in fu ll and we ship prepaid. Order
TODAY direct Jrom this ad or write for more dope.
GUARDIANWELECTRIC
1621 W. WALNUT STREET
© International Arcade Museum
CHICAGO
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
126
AUTOMATIC AGE
February, 1938
The “Safety Route” Is Key
To Operating Success
S
T A TISTICS, such as have been
compiled by the manufacturers’
associations together with data
from the largest jobbers throughout
the United States, show beyond ques­
tion that a great many men who be­
come operators in the coin machine
field fail in their first year of activity.
Another good size number drop out
in the second year. On the other
hand, a great many of the newcomers
become very good operators. They
continue to make a good profit and
good money regardless of conditions
or competition.
It is not human nature to be in­
terested in the man who is a failure
but everybody is interested in why a
man is a success. There must be a
good reason why some operators can
continue in business while others fail.
The main reason a great many fail
during the first two years is due not
so much to their method of opera­
tion as to the type of operation which
they endeavor to promote. Every
man who enters this business should,
immediately, invest his money in sub­
stantial, permanent, income machines.
It is meant by this statement that
the successful operator does not build
his hopes around one class of m a­
chine entirely. The man who does
this usually fails.
A great many operators today are
on the lookout for the “big money­
m aking” machines. They are looking
for the coin machine that will get
them rich quick or will make them
a lot of money with little effort. After
operating these particular machines
for three or four months, they make
the startling discovery that they have
bought a “flash in the pan” and dur­
ing the few weeks of operation, the
money they obtained came so easily
that it never occurred to them that
it wouldn’t continue to come easily.
D uring this period of so-called
easy money, this particular operator
became what is commonly known as
a “big shot.” He became very much
impressed with his own success and
spent his money accordingly. Then,
when his machines failed to produce
accordingly, he was broke with no
reserve for new machines and he,
himself, became a “flash in the pan.”
A great many operators do not like
to operate scales. There is no big
money in scale operation. The idea
of collecting a few dollars in pennies
does not appeal to them. This same
rule applies to peanut and gum ven­
ders, in fact, almost any type of
penny venders. The operator is so
blinded by the so-called “big money
machines” that he forgets the impor­
tance of these consistent money­
makers.
The successful operator has some­
thing to rely upon at all times. And
he always operates, what may be
termed, a safety route. On this safety
route he has scales and penny ven­
ders of all types and descriptions.
These penny venders and scales are
built with such perfection today that
they require little or no attention for
repair service. They will operate day
in and day out and the pennies they
take in will run into many dollars.
However, the most peculiar and most
pleasing feature of this safety route
operation is the amazing fact that
the income from these machines can
be banked upon to be about the same
amount week in and week out. The
operator who has such a route can
tell just about how much money he
is going to receive the coming week.
W ith a safety route, such as this, the
operator has a safety valve on his
income and he always has a good
living and can figure his expenses in
accordance w ith his income, with
safety.
It should be the aim of every oper­
ator, also any man who enters the
business, to immediately build himself
one of these safety routes and at all
times try to keep that route as his
nest egg. It is surprising the feeling
of confidence such a safety route will
give the operator. W ith a safe, de­
pendable income in the vest pocket
it is then possible to use the “big
money machines” with absolute safe­
ty. Then the income derived from
the machines which die in the course
of a few weeks will be a pleasant
source of profit and at the same time
not interfere with the efficient opera­
tion of the safety route.
© International Arcade Museum
Marble games were unquestionably
“big money-makers,” but the operator
who puts all his money in one type
of marble game is making a serious
mistake and sooner or later will find
himself in a serious financial hole
w ith nothing to depend upon for a
permanent income.
The success of any business enter­
prise depends upon a safe, permanent
and absolutely dependable source of
income. Even though the importance
of this safety route operation is
forcibly brought to the operator’s at­
tention, he would indeed make a
serious mistake if he tried to devote
all his time to its operation. The
operating field today is wide and
varied.
Competition is also keen.
There is always another operator
ready to put a newer machine than
yours in your location. This other
operator is going to use every known
method to get your good locations
from you and no matter how well or
efficiently you operate your route you
are bound to lose locations from time
to time. When a location is lost to
another operator because his machine
was newer and better than yours that
is when the safety route is most im ­
portant.
One of the most efficient safety
route operations is the handling of
carded merchandise such as razor
blades, fast moving drugs, pencils,
pocket combs, sun glasses, penny
candy bars, small candy punchboard
operation, etc.
When the operator places his ma­
chine in a drug store or a similar
location, if he will take a look around
on the counter, he will see all types
of carded merchandise being sold.
The proprietor is always more than
w illing to cooperate with the opera­
tor by letting him place this merchan­
dise on his counter for sale. I t is
surprising the number of twenty-five-
cent, fifty-cent, and dollar sales that
will be picked up by this carded mer­
chandise and every sale is a profit
to the operator. The operator is abso­
lutely safe in placing this merchandise
on consignment w ith the proprietor
because there is usually more than
enough money in his coin machine
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

Download Page 121: PDF File | Image

Download Page 122 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.