Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 57 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
He has the whole campaign carefully worked out on a copy-
right advertising plan, so that a scheduled amount of advertising
space is used in the local papers during the time when his sale is
scheduled.
Piano men are naturally interested in methods which insure
to them a maximum of business at a minimum selling expense.
Now, if plans can be inaugurated whereby a business may be ma-
terially increased without clogging up the trade machinery with a
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor lot of old exchanges taken in on high allowance, why, it would be
quite worth while investigating.
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
That there are inevitable changes in the music trade is admitted
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
by all who have given the business the closest study.
B BRITTAIN WILION,
CAKLETON CHACK,
L. M. ROBINSON,
GLAD HXNDEMON,
Some believe that the department stores, through their method-
A. J. NiCKLiN,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
WM. B. WHITE,
L. E. BOWEM.
BOSTON OFFICE:
CHICAGO
OFFICF?
p VA
ical
and
systematic work, and through ample capital employed will
JOHN H. WILSON, »2« Washington St.
£ -
» HAELINGEN, 87 South W»b*«h Ave.
_ . .
n, . -OKft
HENRY S. KINOWILL, Associtte.
be
the
dominating
factor in the retail piano output in the great
Telephone, Mam «860
Room 808. Telephone, Central 414.
PHILADELPHIA:
MINNEAPOLIS a n d ST. PAUL:
ST. LOUISt
cities
within
the
very
near future.
R. W. KAUFFMAN
ADOLF EDSTIN.
CLYDE JENNINGS,
We
do
not
believe,
however, that the day of the specialist has
SAN FRANCISCO: S. H. GRAY, 88 First St
DETROIT, MICH.: MORRIS J. WHITE.
CINCINNATI, O.: JACOB W. WALTERS.
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.: STANLEY H. SMITH.
gone
by,
but
the
day
of
the non-progressive specialist is rapidly
RALTIMORE, MO.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
MILWAUKEE. W I S . : L. E. MEYER.
going.
KANSAS CITY, MO.: E. P. ALLEN.
PITTSBURGH, PA^ GEORGE G. SNYDER.
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Uresham Buildings, Basinghall St., E. C.
There is no reason why a piano merchant should succumb to
outside competition when he can control avenues which will insure
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
him an increased output of instruments.
Entered at the JVew York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
The point is, that old and unprofitable methods must be dis-
SUBSCRIPTION, (including postage), United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year; Canada,
|8.60; all other countries, $4.00.
carded. There must be an clement of progressiveness infused into
ADVERTISEMENTS, $3.00 per inch, single column, per insertion. On quarterly or
the work of the piano man, and a man cannot expect to do business
yearly contracts, a special discount is allowed. Advertising Pages, $90.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
in small cities by confining his publicity to a sporadic advertising
Lyman Hill.
announcement, which may be presented in an unattractive form.
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
Player-Plane and
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning, regu-
The value of publicity depends largely upon its attractiveness,
1Whnitf*Jll I t o n a r f m P I l f c
lating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
• C l U U I C a i V e p a i lUIClllS. d e a ) t w j t h i w i u be found in another section of this
and
upon
its consecutive appearance.
paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning which
will be cheerfully given upon request.
It is said that one of the large department stores of New York
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
has a piano advertisement appearing every day in some of the New
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal.. .Charleston Exposition, 1902
York papers. This house never spends very much at any one time,
Diploma
Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1V0*
but it keeps continuously at it. It never ceases.
I.ONQ DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 5982—5983 MADISON SQ
Such work brings results, and that is the point The Review
Connecting- all Departments
Cable address: "Elblll, New Tort."
desires to impress upon its readers in every section of the country.
The methods of marketing are changing, and if the old plans
N E W Y O R K , D E C E M B E R 6, 1 9 1 3
have not proven successful, try new ones.
Get in touch with the modern trend of thought. Work out
special lines—interest the people.
EDITORIAL
There is plenty of good piano business to be secured in every
town.
Very frequently the trouble lies in imperfectly worked field—
A READER who has been interested in the various articles which
not
in
the fact that business cannot be secured, but in the fact that
xA. have appeared in these columns anent the problem of the
it
cannot
be secured by the old methods and old powers of non-
trade-ins writes: "I believe, with you, that it is a question that
attraction.
requires serious consideration, and when you say that Martin
An imperfectly worked territory is often dead territory, and
McCarrick has conducted co-operative sales throughout the trade
the
point
is to make it profitable.
and has sold millions of dollars worth of pianos and player-pianos
How
can it be done?
without having taken back a single second-hand piano in part pay-
By
the
infusion of new ideas, by the adoption of methods
ment, it becomes more interesting."
which
will
interest
the people in an unusual way, and by adhering
There is no question but that the trade-ins is one of the serious
to
sound
business
methods.
problems of the trade, and it is bound to grow in importance with
It is not necessary for a man to discard good business prin-
the growing dominancy of the player-piano.
ciples
to increase his business.
When an upright is traded in for a player-piano that means,
It
can be done along legitimate, methodical lines, which have
of course, that the upright taken in exchange has cut down the profit
been
proven
satisfactory in a variety of cases. The trade needs
on the player-piano, and it means necessarily that another sale must
vitalizing.
be made of the upright.
ffiWfflf
Now, what are trade-ins worth ?
Is there any standard by which their values can be measured?
Mr. McCarrick says that a man is fooling himself to take in a used
instrument as part payment on a new one. He bases his statement
upon an experience of years, during which time he has conducted
co-operative sales on a so-called club plan.. He disposes of from
350 to 450 pianos in a single sale, and these are sold on a perfect
system and on a fixed principle, and that anything which benefits
the buyer equally benefits the seller. The McCarrick plan has been
to sell a specified number of instruments at absolutely one price,
and to accept no exchanges in the way of used instruments. As
a matter of fact, Mr. McCarrick has disposed of millions of dollars
worth of pianos and player-pianos upon his club, or co-operative
plan. He has not taken in exchange a single instrument, nor has
he departed from rigidly fixed prices in his sales.
Mr. McCarrick affirms that exchanges have been a most un-
profitable factor in the piano business, and his carefully developed
plans show that it is possible to do business without taking ex-
changes.
T
HE surmounting of difficulties in business, as in everything else,
is a great test of character. The combatting of unfavorable
conditions arouses the very best there is in men—tests their capa-
bilities. It is when business slows up a bit that the mental equip-
ment of the man or men behind a business is best displayed, and
the policy adopted in this connection affords an index of the re-
sourcefulness of those "behind the guns." As a recent writer in
Printer's Ink put it: "When the first whisper of a business de-
pression begin to be heard there are always concerns that look
around for a soft place to curl up and lie down. They pull in their
lines, shorten their sales force and cut down their advertising.
"But there are also other concerns that see in identically the
same unfavorable conditions a reason why they should redouble
their efforts to get and increase business. That is why, when
there is talk of bad times, if you inquire among your friends, you
will hear very conflicting reports. Some are complaining of de-
creases in sales, while others are 'pointing with pride' to a record
of 25 per cent, increases."
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
SOME CHRISTMAS AND BUSINESS THOUGHTS.
{Continued from page 8.)
In brief, the total value of these eight staple crops this year is 6 per cent, greater than last year,
although their quantity is 22 per cent. less.
This Christmas should be reasonably merry for the fanner.
Surely with such a showing the farmers are not in need of sympathy, if the consumers are.
Therefore, the agricultural 1 districts of America should afford the best possibilities for the sale
of those home accessories which make life enjoyable, and, of course, no home is complete nowa-
days without a piano, and I believe that the dealers located in the great farming districts of America
will find that their holiday sales will loom up bigger than ever before.
The fundamentals are right, and only need careful treatment on the part of the dealers them-
selves, and there is no reason why the Christmas trade should not be pleasing in many sections of
the country.
Of course men cannot sit down and expect that sales will come to them without effort—that
is impossible; but there are opportunities for good Christmas business for active, hustling trade
representatives.
There is no doubt of that!
But if men get imbued with the idea of business sluggishness, and conduct their effairs accord-
ingly, they will find that it will be returned to them in kind.
Christmas trade can be developed along satisfactory lines, and constant efforts should be put
forth on the part of piano merchants everywhere in order to stimulate interest in the trade demand
for this holiday season.
Christmas is nearly here, with all its influences which tend to soften and to expand mankind
along gentler lines.
Breathes there a man among us with soul so dead that he does not often, when the Yuletide
season comes round, recall with boyish delight the good old days when he firmly believed in a real
Santa Claus, and, best of all, in the reindeer and sled piled high with the bulging pack.
Modern realism and the cut-and-dried spirit that has fallen upon the age has done few more
questionable things than to attempt to rob the old world of that ancient myth dearest of all to the
heart of childhood—our Santa Claus!
What pictures of childhood delight us more than those of the fat, rosy-cheeked old gentle-
man, soft and fur-coated, benevolence radiating from every portion of his anatomy? But even
more interesting than the man was the wonderful reindeer, with his bristling fantastic antlers, and
his own warm-looking coat that could well withstand the bitter cold of that polar country which
was supposed to be the home of dear old Santa.
Impressions of childhood come back to me as I write, and I am sure that my own boyhood
would have been robbed of some of its indescribable charm—its fancies and its wonderful pictures
—had I been told that there was no Santa Claus and no reindeer.
Christmas without Santa Claus for the young people is a very commonplace and tame affair.
I remember how I used to dress up as Santa Claus in order to delight my children, and I remem-
ber with what regret I realized that they were at last disillusioned.
Again the cold, destroying touch of realism.
The commercial importance of the holidays looms up larger than ever before, and everywhere
in this broad land of ours there is activity—there is an increased desire on the part of men engaged
in all lines of trade to place in the homes all of the wonderful products of the loom or factory.
They profit by the Christmas spirit, which is a buying spirit—a softening spirit, a spirit which
tends to scatter happiness everywhere.
Another Christmas is almost here, and another year, for we are on the last lap of 1913, and
shortly we will be reviewing the old year and making plans for the new.
There will be disappointments and discouragements for some—there will be joy and delight
for others.
Our discouragements grow sometimes out of the limitations of our own vision.
The progress of humanity cannot easily be measured by hours or years. Centuries only can
tell the story, and he who can scale some mountain peak of history where not years but centuries
stretch out before him finds himself exulting in the triumph of his cause.
Since the first Christmas was celebrated the world was compelled to acknowledge that there
was a new date from which it must number the years.
Away back in those distant days only here and there was a voice raised in the name of human
freedom and human rights, but to-day there is no civilized land where freedom has not unfurled
her banner, or where thousands of voices are not heard in defense of suffering humanity.
There is to-day a clearer recognition of the rights of men, a desire to do for others, a widen-
ing of human appreciation which sustains and inspires the heart.
The Christmas spirit is as evasive as the light—it can no more be quenched than can the sun
that burns above us. It is as resistless as the dawn—the clouds do not stay it—it comes on through
all the mists and shadows of the night!
Another Christmas and another year; and back of us stands Father Time, scythe in hand, bar-
ring our retreat, with the undeniable declaration that the past is gone and we cannot retrace our
steps, and forward we must move. There is no halting—the caravan
of life moves on—and the scenes are ever shifting.
Christmas! may the hearts of my readers be full of Christmas
cheer, and may the New Year be bright and gladsome.

Download Page 6: PDF File | Image

Download Page 7 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.