Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportorial Staff:
B. BKITTAIN WILSON,
A. J. NiCKLiN,
CARLETON CHACK,
AUGUST J. TIMPE,
BOSTON O F F I C E :
JOHM H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Telephone, Main 6950
L. M. ROBINSON,
WM. B. WHITE,
GLAD HSNDMSOH,
L. E. BOWEKS.
CHICAGO O F F I C E :
- *• VAN HcARLINGE iJ'. Consumers' Building,
2
? 0 So. State Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
E
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate-
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., E. C.
NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED W E E K L Y BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN T H E LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA.
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York ' _. ''
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year;
Canada, $3.50; all other countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $3.50 per inch, single column, per insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts, a special discount is allowed. Advertising pages $110.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill.
PlaV0l*_PianA anil
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning, regu-
lating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
dealt with, will be found in another section o this
paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information cone rning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal.. .Charleston Exposition, 1908
Uiptomo
Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal
St. Louis Exposition, l»04
Gold Medal. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905.
DISTANCE TELEPHONES—
NUMBERS 5983—5983 MADISON 8Q.
Connecting 1 all Departments
Cable uddreM: "ElbiU, New York."
NEW YORK, NOVEMBER
IS, 1915
EDITORIAL
It must be admitted that advertising during
"Piano Week" was of a high-grade character.
We have had scores of papers mailed us by piano
merchants who have used considerable space in
their local papers during "Piano Week" and it
should be broadly understood that the quality of
advertising shows a distinct improvement over
that of years gone by. There has been an obvious
desire to use educational methods in the exploi-
tation of particular wares.
-
;
Then, again, it is certain, from communications which we have
received, that the idea of "Piano Week" has taken a deep hold of
the trade. It is going to be an annual feature, and some of the
men who previously have slowed up in their publicity methods have
been more than pleased with the results obtained, and in all proba-
bility "Piano Week" will stand as the first entering wedge in a
national plan of co-operative piano and player-piano publicity.
T
HK jewelry trade has been suffering particularly from stag-
nancy for the past two years, and The Jewelers' Circular-
Weekly, a trade publication of great prominence, has developed a
plan of publicity which is bringing the trade back to its own, so to
speak. A very interesting feature of this campaign has been the
preparation of feature articles of deep interest to the public which
have been supplied to papers of prominence.
i
The daily press has co-operated in this work in a very hearty
manner and the publicity received has been instrumental in reviving
interest in jewelry, and increasing th? demand for same.
I
The local newspapers have profited very materially by this
campaign, by securing from resident jewelers a goodly portion of
advertising which has made the campaign a success from every
viewpoint, and now behold in steps the American Newspaper Pub-
lishers' Association in opposition to just this work. This associa-
tion, it is said, is taking steps to prevent further publication of the
feature jewelry articles unless they are paid for at advertising spacQ
rates. It urges papers to sell space for cash and not give it away,
naming the jewelry publicity campaign of the trade publication
referred to.
We can hardly understand the motive which prompted the
American Newspaper Publishers' Association to take this stand.
If it is made through a misconception of the facts then correct
information should b- speedily secured, but if through a definite
policy it would seem to us that it is a very prejudicial one, even to
the interests of the newspapers theirselves.
Kvery newspaper is getting increased business on the strength
of this feature campaign, for it is only right to suppose that if the
periodicals throughout the country gave sufficient space to the sub-
ject of jewelry as they do wearing apparel, it follows as a natural
sequence that the retail jewelers will vastly increase their adver-
tising expenditures, and in that way the publishers of the various
papers will secure good returns for the presentation of purely
feature matter which is of interest to a fair percentage of their
readers.
When there is an obvious desire on the part of newspaper pub-
lishers to aid an educational campaign, it is to be regretted that an
association as important as the Publishers' should take a stand
counseling the papers not to do this.
Tt is hardly consistent to discourage any trade-promoting incli-
nation on the part of the daily papers. In the piano trade there
has always been an unwillingness to even mention the nanu of a
piano no matter how important the concert or the artist, but the
automobile or any other product can get a free notice. Just why
this discrimination is difficult to understand.
If The Review plan of co-operative publicity obtains some time
next year, as it promises to do, this is a question which will be a
live one in music trade circles, for presumably a publicity committee
would prepare educational matter on the piano or the player-piano
which could be handled as feature matter by th? various papers.
It is time for rule breaking in all lines, and it would seem to us
that when the daily papers are willing to extend a little more
courtesy to a single trade that it is suicidal for the publishers to
attempt to thwart the movement. The publicity reverts to the
advantage of the newspapers, and probably The Review co-operative
plan of publicity on the part of piano manufacturers would result
in an expenditure annually of more than a quarter of a million.
The daily papers should bo encouraged along broadened rather
than narrowed lines, particularly when business of larger propor-
tions will come to them through a progressive policy on the part of
advertisers.

AST month the advertisement of the Schumann Piano Co.
graced the front cover of The Review. It was attractive,
and President W. N. Van Mativ, of the Schumann Piano Co.,
wrote to the Bartlett Music Co., of Los Angeles, Cal... asking an
opinion of the advertisement.
This progressive mii-ic bouse of the Far West reproduced the
entire front cover, including the cover title of The Music Trade
Review in the Los Angeles Sunday Times, using the caption, "Here
Ts the Answer, Mr. Van Matre."
The advertisement attracted a great deal of comment in Cali-
fornia and was a decided Schumann hit in every way. It also
emphasized, in a pleasing degree the enterprise of the Bartlett
Music Co.
L
VERY once in so often there is received at this office a letter
from a subscriber, or at least a. reader, of The- Review, call-
ing attention to some local advertising or some action of a com-
petitor that he believes should be condemned. With very few
exceptions the complainant neglects to sign his name to the letter,
but is satisfied with such non do plumes a; "Reader," "Old Sub-
scriber," "Piano Dealer." itc. One kind-hearted correspondent
went so far as to send to us the newspaper reports of the case of a
competing dealer who was arrested for wife beating.
Attention has been called repeatedly in these columns to the
fact that we pay no attention to communications unless they are
signed by the writer. The Review is willing and anxious to
champion the right in piano advertising and sales methods, above
board and in the open. The reader, or subscriber, whose sensibili-
ties are. hurt by some action of a competitor should at least have
E
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
CONTRIBUTING FACTORS TO BUSINESS SUCCESS.
(Continued from Page 3.)
thought it would be a good joke to pass him along to Mr. Brown, who met him with his usual urbanity
and politeness. Mr. Brown treated him just as if he were a merchant prince. He took him upstairs
and showed him three or four Chickering grand pianos, and when he came down, to the amazement
of the onlooking salesmen, the man whom they looked upon as some sort of a crank species quickly
lifted from the cavernous depth of his pocket an enormous roll of bills, and counted out something
less than a couple of thousand dollars in payment of a grand which he desired sent up the following
day to his daughter's residence.
The actual facts were he was a rich contractor, and had not a man been present who had sufficient
tact to extend courtesy, the sale would have been lost and perhaps other good trade turned away from
the house, for I understood that this same man was the immediate cause
of the making of three subsequent sales.
The jumping powers of a frog may not always be determined by his
size, neither can the buying powers of a man be correctly estimated by the
clothes which he wears.
It Pays Dealers to Emphasize Piano Quality
W
HILE price may always influence a certain percentage of
buyers, yet it may be safely asserted that the American
people are becoming better educated and are not so easily won over
by price baiting arguments in piano buying as they were a few
years ago.
The mail order houses have put forth tempting baits at inter-
vals to induce piano buyers in country places and in small hamlets
to make their purchases from them, and yet, notwithstanding these
unusual inducements, it must be admitted that the piano mail order
business has not developed.
Why is this?
As we interpret it, it means nothing more nor less than that
the piano purchasers realize that instruments of reliability cannot
be purchased at absurdly low prices. They are not won over by
the ridiculously extravagant allegations made in flamboyant meth-
ods of publicity, and the people realize that it takes money to build
a reliable piano product, just the same as it does any product in
other lines, and some of the statements put forth by the mail order
houses constitute an insult to the intelligence of prospective piano
buyers.
This statement applies equally well to any piano house, because
it is an impossibility to sell a product of reliable quality at a price
which is inconsistent with high-grade values.
Now that th? era of cheap piano baiting is subsiding, people
are realizing more and more that the sheet anchor of the trade is
the instruments of standard grade which insure to every purchaser
satisfaction through a quality standard.
The reputation of the piano should be carefully considered,
because the piano, ot all other products, should embody quality
work, for it is not purchased for a few months, but for many
years, and every purchaser, no matter where located, is entitled to a
full equivalent for every dollar invested, and that is what they do
not get in the baiting offers which have been made in various
sections of the countrv.
the moral courage to sign his name to his complaint, even with the
request that it will not be used.
There is nothing less worthy of serious attention than an
anonymous letter. If the writer hasn't enough backbone to stand
up for his own case in a letter to a newspaper, he should hardly
expect that newspaper to fight his ca^e in its columns. There is a
generous sized waste-basket beside the editor's desk in The Review
office, where all anonymous communications find their way speedily
and without delay.
of the observer en that one particular "make of goods. The pro-
spective buyer has an opportunity of seeing the article in action and
the results obtainable. He reads the descriptions in his own lan-
guage and can judge for himself if the article is needful to him.
After the hardpan of an uncultivated ground has been broken with
the dynamite of an industrial moving picture, the salesman or rep-
resentative can sow the seed of a profitable business. Industrial
films of the manufacture and use of American goods are at the
present time being made with just this aim in view by the wide-
awake, keen business men, who realize that Argentines are also
"from Missouri, and have to be shown."
l ; catalogs are useless and personal representatives too expensive,
why not send to all Latin American countries an animated
catalog? A moving picture of the production and uses of any
article. This is the very pertinent question put by American Indus-
trie; and we gladly re-echo the question. "Why not?" W r ith titles
in correct Spanish, or Portuguese for Brazil, the moving pic-
ture will introduce any manufactured product more effectively and
to more people than a single salesman. The films., shown in motion
picture houses, in chambers of commerce, in trade meetings, or in
the private office of a buyer for twenty minutes, rivet the attention
I
T is a mighty easy thing for a manufacturer to sit back and ask:
"Why don't you association men do so and so?" Probably
with your help the association could put over some-of the things
that you think they ought to. Association work takes some of the
time that you would otherwise give to your business, but the time
that you put into association work is time spent in looking at your
business from some other angle than your own. This is well worth
considering.
I
WRIGHT METAL PLAYER ACTION
ADDRESS
ALL
CORRESPONDENCE
TO
George H. Beverly
Sole Distributor
Easily 100% in advance of any action ever offered. Simple—Responsive—Durable
—Beautiful. Contains the Wright "Ideal" bellows.
Being made of metal (the logical material for player actions) it cannot be affected
by dampness or any climatic conditions. Its exclusive features save many dollars
in repair work and make many sales in competition.
KNABE BUILDING
437 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
M s
WRIGHT CO.
WORCESTER, MASS

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