Music Trade Review

Issue: 1923 Vol. 77 N. 12

4
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
(ReKi.tered in the U. S. Patent Office)
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President and Treasurer, C. L. Bill, 383 Madison Ave.
New York; Vice.President,
J. B. Spillane, 383 Madison Ave., New York; Second Vice.President, Raymond Bill, 383
Madison Ave., New York; Secretary, Edward Lyman Bill, 383 Madison Ave., New York;
Assistant Treasurer, Wm. A. Low.
of. B. SPILLANE. Editor
RAY BILL. B. B. WILSON, BRAID WHITE. Associate Editors
WM. H. McCLEARY. Managing Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
L. E. BOWERS, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staft
E. B. MUNCH. V. D. WALSH, EDWARD VAN HARLINGEN, LEE ROBINSON,
THOI. W. BUIJIAIIAK, E. J. NIIALY. C. R. TIGHE, FRIlDERICK B. DIEHL, A. J. NICKLIN
A. FREDERICK CARTER, FREDERICK G. SANDBLO ..
WESTERN DIVISION:
BOSTON OFFICE:
ARTHUR NIlALY, Representative
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Entered
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second-class matter Septembu 10, 1892, al the post offie. al New York, N. Y ..
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Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Pri............ Pari. Exposition, 1900
Silver Medal.. . Char1;ston Exposition, 1902
Diploma .. .. Pan-American Exposition, 1901
Gold Medal. .. .. St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold M eda~-Lewis-Clark Exposition. 1905
TELEPHONES-VANDEBBILT 2642-2648-26U-2646-2647-2648
(Jable Address: "Elblll, New York"
Vol. LXXVII
~HE
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 22, 1923
No. 12
NATIONAL PIANO STUDENTS' CONTEST
T
HROUGHOUT the Summer period the plan as suggested by
The Review of holding a national piano competition during the
convention in New York next year, entry being open to all students
of high and graded schools wherein credits are granted for music
study, has been gaining ground and winning the support of indi­
viduals in and out of the trade who realize that the idea is worth
considering from two important angles- -first, that it is likely to
develop some excellent propaganda in favor of piano study and,
secondly, that it will center increased interest on music ae; an art.
The music week idea and the general work of music advance­
ment have progressed to a point where they are well and perma­
nently established, and there is no question but that this growth
of music appreciation is calculated to help this trade of ours tre­
mendously, even though indirectly. The contest for young pianists,
however, would center interest not alone upon music but upon
piano music and also upon the desirability of having the younger
generation take up the study of piano playing seriously. If the
value of piano study can be impressed upon the public the benefits
to the trade are sure of realization.
MAKING SERVICE SELF-SUSTAINING
T
HE service question in relation to the proper handling of the
piano, and particularly the reproducing piano, after it is in­
stalled in the home of the customer is assuming steadily increasing
importance in trade circles due to the interest being aroused in the
problem by the manufacturers and the strong support given to
their efforts toward solving the service problem by the National
Association of Piano Tuners as well as tuners and repairmen n01
affiliated with that organization.
The discussion has developed a new angle of direct import to the retailer who, through the proper handling of his service de­
partment, cannot only keep his customers satisfied with their pur­
chases but can realize a profit On the work sufficient to make it
worth while. The main thought is that after the first installation
and the :adj ustment of such troubles as may sometimes develop
through faults in manufacture, service should not be considered
REVIEW
SEPTEMBER
22, 1923
as a free offering to the customer or ;:IS something to be given at
cost.
It is suggested, and properly, that as numerous concerns make
definite annual tuning contracts with their customers to take care of
their instruments at a fixed charge, so should the dealer in reproduc­
ing pianos make a contract with his customers to render service on a
yearly basis, adjustments to be made for the definite and fixed
charge and extensive repairs and replacement of parts to be charged
for just as the automobile repairman charges for new piston rings,
his gears or a new rear end.
The individual who pays $1,000 or more,mostly more, for a
reproducing piano is not likely to be the sort to argue about a
fair charge made for keeping that instrument in proper working
condition provided it is mechanically perfect when he receives
it and that fact is demonstrated. \iVith the manufacturers, dealers
and tuners co-operating much can be accomplished to take service
out of the free class and make it self-sustaining if not actually
profit producing.
ATTACK THE SOURCE OF THE EVIL
N Ohio music merchant some time ago saw a new p~odu('t ac~­
vertised in one of the trade papers, not The ReView, be It
said, and upon the strength of the announcement visited :-J tvv York
and bought a couple of thousands dollars' worth of the new goods
to be sold to his establishment. He found that the advertised
article did not work and was unsalable. The result was that he
lost his money.
It happened that the advertisers in this case were interested
chiefly in selling stock in the new venture, and did not develop it
to a point where they had any standing in the trade. The dealer
believed, and rightly, that the trade paper in question should have
investigated the concern before publishing the advertisement and
thus placing its endorsement in a sense on the company's product
by carrying the publicity;
It might be said in this connection that The Review has made
a persistent and consistent effort for years to investigat~ new
ventures seeking to reach the music trade through advertisements
in its columns and to see that the products advertised are as repre­
sented. The policy has cost a good many dollars offered by COI1­
cerns of doubtful standing, who were seeking to float stock on the
basis of misstatements or who had a prorluct to offer that was
obviously not in accord with the claims made for it
The readers of a tmde publication, or for that matter any
other publication, are entitled to all the protection that the publisher
ca:1 give them in seeing that the products advertised and those
advertising them are bona-fide_ It sometimes happens, of course,
that indications are satisfactory and investigation fails to reveal
fraucls that later develop, but for a publisher to present to his
clientele knowingly a scheme that is obviously unsound is ancl should
be calculated to shake confidence in the publication.
Those trade papers, and there ;ue some in the music trade
field, that value the clollar more than they do the confidence of
their subscribers deserve the condemnation which has been directed
towards them, but in ccndemning that class of publication the
attack should not spread to include those who obviously are work­
ing in the dealers' interest as well as for their own fmancial gain.
A
REPLACEMENT VALUES THE PROPER GUIDE
D
IRECT interviews with a number of piano merchants in the
East and Middle West within the past week or two indicate
that the majority of them have comparatively limited stocks of
instruments with which to meet even a normal Fall demand, and
that, in the case of pianos and reproducing pianos of the higher
grades, there has already developed a shortage of popular styles
that has caused alarm in certain quarters.
The main point to be considered is that an impending short­
age of various lines of pianos is distinctly in evidence and that
retailers should govern themselves accordingly in getting for the
instruments now on hand, or such as will be available later, prices
and terms that will represent a definite and worth-v\hile profit on
each transaction, rather than depending upon the possibilities of a
quantity turnover to offset profit cutting at this time. The situation
has developed to a point, in fact, where replacement values of pianos
are to be taken into consideration in armnging present selling prices
and terms.
THE
SEPTEMBER 22, 1923
MUSIC TRADE
5
REVIEW
Making Direct Advertising Profitable
The Third of a Series of Seven Articles by Robert E. Ramsey, Covering Every Side of the Music Merchant's
Direct Publicity- First Step() in. Writing Copy for Direct Advertising-Table of Forms That May Be
Used- The Essential Personal Appeal- Enclosures With the Letters
Sufferi ng from a slight nau sea, we wi ll say,
you wa lk into th e near-by drug store, and, unless
th e co ndition is a chronic one with you, yo u
will probably gaz e at it br ill iant array of bottles,
packages, car tons, boxe s, tubes and other con­
taine ..s . Despite the inroads of mcdern mer­
c!nndis:ng you will probably have passed a
's c;-ics o f ai·tistic glass jars of var io u s sha pes
fillcd with colo. ed wa ters of varied hu es-a t
I: a s t, in thcse Volsteadian days I suppo se t hey
are filled with wa ter!
Then you wa lk back to th e prescrip ti on cou n­
ler and in your layman's lan gua ge try to diag­
no se what ai ls yo u. If th e prescription clerk
senses that your trouble is not a very serio us
one he may recommen d some homely medicine,
otherw ise he will say: "Now So-and -so mig ht
be goo d for you, but if yo u a re ill you b etter
~,ee a doctor a nd get a prescription."
The dru ggis t is a di spe nser of dr u gs-h e is
I;Ot a man trained to analyze a patient's ·illness
and presc r ibe a cure. These thr ee paragraphs
's ho uld make clear th e necessity of analys is for
yo ur direct advertising problems before a spe­
cia li st can write t he prescription.
The Two Forms of Dire'c t Advertising
The first step in writin g th e prescription, the
problem having already been ana lyzed, is to
know the materia medica-the "drugs" w hi ch
'a :'e avai lable for use. T he purpose of this art icle
is to ass ist in making clear the writ ing of the
prescription for dire ct adver ti s in g-to set forth
bri efl y an d luc idly the materia medica whi~ h
ma y be u se d by direct-ad ver tising dea lers in
the musica l instrument field.
There are two general forms of all direct
advertising from th e standpoint of their physica l
differences and variatio n s. One gcnera l class
is co nvcntional, and, practically speaking, s tand­
a . cLzed, wh ile the othe r genera l class is auto­
contained, o r unconventional.
The fellowing t'a ble shows the subdivi sions
of th ese two main classes:
Auto-co nta ined
Unconventional
Letter.;*
{
Pe rsonal'
Fonn *
P'
nnte d* .
Cards'
Mai lin g ) Stips'
Nove l*
Blotters'
Enclosttres*
Co upon s
Package Inserts
Broadsides
Poste r Stamps
Folde r s
Photographic reproductions
Novel t ies of a lt kinds print·
Regular
Catalogs { Loose· leaf
. Mini atl1re
nook le ts·
Bu lletins"
Portfolios
A lm anacs
House orga ns
(S tor e papers)*
l "Pieces·
ed and including
sampl~s*
Of all of these form s tho se starr ed (*) are
the forms most of ten used by retail m usic deal­
ers, first, because of the more ge neral applica­
tion of such form s and, seco nd, because of their
comparative ly lesser costs. Whil e some of t h e
large r retailing establishments can get out ca ta­
logs, for examp le, in th e main thi s form is not
lls ed by retailers. The one possible exception is
th e use of a form of syndicated cata log, sold at
mode rat e prices in sma ll lot.s.
The Perwnal Appeal
Of a ll th ese physical fo r ms th e most effec'tive
one is peculiarl y fitted to help the d ea le r in
hi s direct advertising prob lem and th e smaller
t he es tablishment the more effec t ive he can
make th e appea l-w e refe r to letters, an'd more
especially the pcrsona l letters. Any form of
direct advert ising reache s an in crea s ing degree
of effcctiveness as it more nearly approaches
the persona l appeal. The weakness of many
na tional direct advertising campa igns is their
utter lack of this personal appea l.
Of all possible users of dir ec t advertising,
therefore, the dealer is in t h e peculiarly strate­
~1I111111111t11t11I1ItIllI IlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII III :I:"'11 111111111Illttlllttlltlltlltll llltllllllllllllllllllllll lllllltllll l ll tttllllllll tlltlltllllllllll lll!!;
~
~
§
Robert E. Ramsey, author of this series of
articles, is widely known as one of the most
m£lhoritative write'rs on this subject. [-1 e
has ' ;ctured on this in the universities of
New York, Chicago, Missouri and Toledo,
he is the a~tlhor of two of the best bo oks
dealing with lhe sttbject, he is editor of
"Postage," the direct advertis1ng magazine,
and he is past president of the Direct Mail
Adve·rtising Association.-EoITOR.
gic pos ition of mak in g hi s appeals the more
personal and hen ce the more effect ive in de­
creasing proportion to th e size of his es tablish­
ment. John Wanamaker, for ins tance, probab ly
know s very few of his customers even by name,
while Fred Mann, of Devil's Lake, N. D.,
dubbed the "John Wa namaker of th e North­
west," probably knows every customer at least
by name, possibly by sight, and mayhap a large
numb er of t he ir chi ldren. ~at ur any, F red Mann
can write, or has written, more personal ap­
peal s th an Wanamaker.
Before You Write Your Letter
Now for a few instances of wr iting our "pre­
scr ipti on for direct adve rtisin g":
Lett ers. As just stated, this is the primary
form of direct ad ve rti sin g. The mo re nearly
you approach a personal letter the more effec­
tive yo ur appeal, without except ion . Whi le
ther e are fo ur sub-classifications of let ters, the
one we need to consider mo s t important is the
perso na l letter . Next comes the form letter­
multi g raph ed or mimeographed.
What sho uld lette rs be used for? To se ll
goods. How? By spec ific offers. Forty-seve n
dozen of suc h an incon sequential item as tooth­
bru s hes we :'c sold to 337 near-by prospects, for
instanc e. How? By merely ta lking in the form
letter about "six months' supp ly," rather than
trying to se ll an individual article.
Naturally, every application m ust b e read­
justed to thc needs of th e dea ler us in g it. Let
us, the:eforc, tak ~ what is pe rhap s th e simp lest
possible form of appeal on w hat is, without
doubt, the ha rd cs t thing to se ll , life insurance.
How could you make a form lette r personal to
a list of nam es with whose life you were fa­
mi li a r ? The first paragrap h te lls th e story:
"A man of - - - - - years in good health is
supposed to have a fair chance to live - - - ­
years, or ul1til he ~s - - - - - years of age."
F illin g in the age of th e person addressed
does the trick!
Enter the Store Paper
Letters can also be used to accompa ny en­
closures or bulletins fu rni shed to dealers b y
manufacturers or other national adve r tisers. In­
stead of letting a package of elegant enc losures
collect dirt in the rear of a store w h y not send
o ut a persona l or personalized form letter, re~
fe rri ng to the enclosure, and sell the goods in­
volved
'
Printed letters lack personal appeals, as a
rule, and are not recommended for genera l use.
Novel letters often are so clever as to detract
from Ihe sa les mes sage and sho uld be u sed with
caution.
Booklets must, as a general rule, be manu­
facturers' booklets, for few d ealers, excep t the
very la rgest ones, have a li st sufficiently large
to j us tify the cost of a booklet. The same
app li es to bulletins .
Hou se organs, or "store papers, " h owever, a re
a ve ry effective way of direct-advertisin g a
sto re. The most effec t ive st0re pape r is, in
t:ffec t, a n ews letter abo ut the customers of the
slore and the things .t o be ha d from t hat estab­
lishm ent.
Such a publication may even be
mimeographed and, if it is full of news, will re­
ceive a tt ention . The news need not be exclu­
sive ly personal items, but news items about re­
cen t s tocks received, o ri gin of certain products,
etc. The one req uisite of the s uccessful re­
tailer's paper is the reg ul ar p ubli cation date­
an d stick to it. With th e store paper special
enclosures of your own , or from manufacturers,
may often be mailed without any ex tra charge
in postage cost, and with an increase in inter­
est. Our province here is to merely point out
the possibilities, th'e writing of an effective store
paper is wort hy of a careful study in itself.
The Poor, Overworked Blotter
Mai ling cards, s lips and pieces are for special
announcement, such as opening of a n ew depart ­
ment, special sales and the like, w h ere the swing
to the impersonal appea l may act ually increase
the effectiveness of the message . Let us eluci­
da te: If you wr ite a persona l let ter to a large
list saying yo u have opened an i1J1Porta nt n ew
department the average recipient subconsciously
reasons: "It co uld not be very important whe n
anno un ced in this style." The same words
prin ted on a good-sized mailing card makes the
prospect think: "Thi s must be reall y impor­
tant."
Blotters are overworked, as a r ule, and, unle ss
you have a real new idea, be tter think twi ce
before u si n g th em. They are to be use d purely
for good-will purposes, as a ru le.
Enclosures come from your source of supply
and should be used to supp lant your own direct
a d ve rtising.
Finally, though writing t h e prescription for
direct advertising for the reta il music d ea ler,
like visitin g th e drug store when yo u h ave a
pa in , may require that you visit a sp ecialist (the
physician in our simi le) and ge t a written pre ­
scrip tion , we hop e many of our readers will real·
ize that the most effective form of direct adver­
ti sing, the letter, is .lyin g a t hand read y for li se.
WHITESIDE OPENS IN REDLANDS
RED~ANIDS, CAL., Scptember l4.---A branch store
of the vVhites idc Music Co., of San Bernardino,
was opened her e recent ly a t Orange str eet and
Cent l'al avenue. E. H. Whiteside, propri eto r of
the company, has secure d the agency for the
Knabe piano and the Victor line. A stock ro om
has been ar ranged for 35,000 reco rds and s ix
demonstration booths ha ve bee n built in . Sheet
music wi ll also be carried. The Redlands store
'will be in cha rge of E. H. Roy, who has been
associa ted .wit h Mr. vVhiteside in San Bernar­
dino for the past five yea rs.
DOW IN TEMPORARY STORE
ENGLEWOOO, ILL., September 17.-Until the com­
pletion of a lterations o n his new store a t the
former locat ion George B. Dow, th e well-known
piano merchant, has taken office space in the
Cozy Music Shop, 359 West Sixty-third street.
M r. Dow has been in the pia no business for
seventeen years.
JOHN L. STOWERS IN NEW YORK
John L. Stowers, pres ident of the Howard­
Stowers Co., Inc., New York, spent a few day s
vis itin g the factory during th e past week, before
departing fo~ Cuba. Mr. Stowers and his wife
took th e famous bath treatment a t Mt. Clemens,
Mich., during A u gust and are re turning to
Havana much invigorated.

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