Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 83 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
How Dealers Encourage Salesmen to
Increase Gash Payments
Fourth of a Series of Articles, Covering the Leading Cities of the Country, on the Ways and Means That
Retail Piano Merchants Successfully Use to Raise the Average of Cash Payments Made on
Instalment Sales—Making It Worth the While of the Salesman to Get the Cash
. n
NE of the vexing problems that every
piano house must deal with is that of
getting salesmen to co-operate to the end
lhat larger down payments and better terms are
secured on pianos sold. As one Toledo dealer
expressed it, salesmen do not sell the terms but
accept too little as the initial payment and grant
terms out of proportion to the volume of the
deal.
To be sure the prosperity of a community
has much to do with the size of down pay-
ments and the length of the terms. If work is
plentiful and wages high it is not difficult to
secure first payments of large proportions and
short terms. But if the economic situation is
the reverse of the above then small initial pay-
ments and terms extending over two or three
years are often accepted. However, it is when
conditions are normal or nearly so that piano
merchants are most concerned. Practically all
merchants agree that salesmen as a rule lack
the nerve to ask, for example, for $200 on sale
of $500 or $600 or for half down. They are
afraid to ask for a large payment because they
fear such a request will kill the deal and drive
the customer away. Ungrounded fears, for two
reasons. First, if the patron agrees to pay one-
half down then the equity in the piano usually
assures a finished deal with no comeback. Sec-
ond, if he balks at a $200 payment then the sales-
man can ask how much it is possible to pay
down or suggest a smaller amount—$150—$100.
The salesman with his own success and the
interests of his house at heart will quickly find
a way around most stumbling-blocks.
J. W. Greene Co.
The J. W. Greene Co. frequently runs con-
tests based upon large down payments and short
terms. Salesmen are instructed at all times to
strive for that result, but two or three times
a year cash prize contests arc inaugurated for
six or eight weeks at a time. Through this
method salesmen are kept on their mettle
for some time after the close of each contest.
Moreover, salesmen here are paid a salary and
commission. The salary is available each week
but the commission is paid at the end of the
month.- If it becomes necessary to repossess a
piano the salesman who made the sale must
make up the loss.
L. Goosman Piano Co.
The Goosman Piano Co. allows its salesmen
a drawing account and pays a commission on
sales. A portion of the commission is held
back, however, if the down payment is not suffi-
ciently large to give the customer a substantial
equity in the piano. Because of this plan of
recompense it is automatically to the benefit of
the salesman to secure a large down payment.
Inasmuch as down payments and terms are
closely allied with income it is essential to con-
sider the manner of paying salesmen in order
to obtain a better understanding of the workings
of the method.
Whitney-Blaine-Wildermuth Co.
The Whitney-Blaine-Wildermuth Co. allows
salesmen a commission and a salary. Here it is
regulated on a monthly basis. That is, salesmen
receive the commission on the net amount of
business for the month. Therefore, if a piano
is taken back the amount is deducted from his
sales for the month. In that way most argu-
ments are avoided and the sales force under-
stands that the sure way to avoid repossession
O
and petty fault-finding is to get a large down
payment and to shorten the terms, so that the
piano will be paid for as quickly as possible.
Certain stores have rigid rules regarding
terms which salesmen must live up to. For
instance, in one house if the cash price of a
piano is $200, the time payment price is $225
with $25 down and 12 months to pay the balance.
Terms in most piano houses for new pianos are
30 months. Few piano houses pay straight
salaries. The most successful plan here for
paying salesmen is a salary and commission
regulated to encourage large down payments
and short terms.
Seattle Dealers Do Not Believe in
Offering Inducements for More Cash
C EATTLE piano houses, as a whole, do not
believe in or subscribe to the practice of
offering any extra inducements whatever to
piano salesmen for securing unusually large
first payments and short-term contracts on the
sale of a piano. That such an achievement is
desirable they all feel, but the larger houses
state that they leave the striving for these large
payments to the pride in their salesmanship,
and standing as salesmen with their house,
rather than to the awarding of special prizes.
One manager stated that the inducements were
undesirable from the angle that the salesmen
worked so hard to receive the bonus, extra com-
mission, or what not, that they persuaded people
to invest in a piano who were not financially in
a position to do so. To people whose entire
income was already tied up with a number of
credit houses for a home, an automobile, a
washing machine, etc., the taking on of a piano
was often the last straw and resulted in numer-
ous reverts.
Another manager stated that they covered
thk issue by finding out what financial condi-
tion their prospect was in and in absolutely
refusing to sell them a piano more expensive
than their budget allowed for. He argues that
a $150 piano well sold so that it will stick is
a better sale than a $500 instrument that will
come back in six months because of the way in
which terms were arranged.
Some of the smaller houses, but houses that
are just as sound and reputable in the business
world as are their larger competitors, report
that they favor special bonuses or commissions.
One reports that although they offer such a
bonus it has no effect, as their patronage is so
wedded to the possibility of securing a piano
for as little as $10 down and the balance in
three to five years that the salesman has r\6
chance to raise the payment. Another house
reports that they have found the following
schedule most successful. They offer a flat
commission on all sales, and add a commission
on all cash or first payment sales. This makes
the salesman try to boost the amount of his
first payment, and to shorten the time of the
contract, as the longer the contract the smaller
the commissions. For instance, he signs his
prospect up, gaining a 15 per cent commission
on a twenty-four-month contract, with a 1 per
cent reduction on each three months that the
contract runs over the twenty-four months. If the
contract runs over three years his commission
is cut automatically to 11 per cent. A 2 pet
cent additional commission on all cash sale$
has been found to increase cash sales enor-
mously for this house.
One Cincinnati Piano Dealer Givel
Salesmen 2 Per Cent Bonus for Cash
an inducement to bring in more cash
A S business,
one Cincinnati piano house gives
the salesman a bonus of two per cent for cash
sales. A cash sale is defined as one in which
payment is to be made in sixty days or less.
The salesmen work on a straight salary, it be-
ing understood that a certain quota is to be
sold. This plan is regarded as successful, be-
cause the cash sales have been increasing from
month'to month. Early in the year the monthly
credit sales were larger than the cash sales, but
now the cash sales are the larger of the two.
Besides this, the total sales are increasing each
month.
The head of another house explained that he
keeps his cash sales up by thesimple expedient
of sending his salesmen into districts where in-
stalment buying is the exception and not the
rule. "I send my men where the money is to
be had, as that is the only place to get it,"
this man explained. He pays the salesman a
commission on a credit sale the minute he ac-
cepts the order, he stated, saying: "I am the
credit man and I take all of the responsibility.
If my judgment should prove to be bad, there
is no reason why the salesman should suffer, for
he did the work of making the sale. I pick the
prospects, and if I-make a mistake it is my
fault."
Other heads of piano houses interviewed have
not as yet formed any concrete plan of in-
creasing their cash sales, but all are trying to
educate the;'r "salesmen to sell mjerchandise more
and easy terms less. Thjaj.-* is, : j they are trying
to educate; the salesmen: tV*keep the matter of
easy terms in the background and devote more
effort to selling the instrument! on the basis of
Us desirability. The* underlying thought in the
minds'-*'of some dealers is to induce the sales-
men to pay more attention to people who have
money, and less to the class of people who will
buy anything, provided the terms are "easy"
enough, with a very small "down" payment on
the sale.
(Continued next week)
Race Choir for Columbia
A most noteworthy addition was made to the
Columbia Phonograph Co.'s fold when the
Seven Day Adventist's Choir became exclusive.
Columbia artists. These talented Race singers
are from Atlanta, Ga., where their singing of
religious spirituals has won wifje acclaim.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
DECEMBER 25, 1926
Boykin Outlines the Piano Promotion Drive Before Chicago Club
(Continued from page 5)
is a somewhat recent addition to the ranks.
Properly handled, the piano-playing contest can
become an institution in any number of cities,
although forcing such a thing, in my opinion,
will eventually force it out of existence. It
has to be done in such a manner that it will
carry on from year to year.
"How much of a stimulant to sales the play-
ing contest is I don't believe we are really
capable of telling yet. 'One swallow does not
make a Summer.' But beyond a doubt a play-
ing contest creates a far greater amount of
public interest in the piano than would other-
wise be developed."
Mr. Boykin at this point emphasized the fact
that the publicity used in connection with the
piano should be thoroughly high-class and that
there was no place in the program for cheap,
tricky, attention-getting methods.
"The logical last question for you to ask is,
'What will the sales-promotion plan accom-
plish?'" he said. "There is every reason to
believe that the sales-promotion plan will do
precisely the task for which it was designed—
increase the sale of pianos. No industry seek-
ing to widen its market has better equipment
than has the piano industry in undertaking this
crucial work.
"Let me make this clear also. If this sales-
promotion plan did no more than bring the
industry together in a united attack on its pos-
sible markets it will have served its purpose.
The pledges of those who have underwritten
the sales-promotion plan are on a three-year
basis. Three years were put in the pledge be-
cause thirty-six months seemed to be the time
it takes to have an industry secure the full
benefits of such a move.
"But, gentlemen, this thing should be made
permanent. It should not be for three years
or five years, but it should be regarded as a
fixture in your industry. My impression is
that the piano has been a little too modest in
presenting its claims, that it has more or less
felt that it should be precisely the opposite
of self-seeking. The law of averages always
works in favor of a man who asks a lot of
th'ngs. He gets a certain percentage of them.
In other words, your return is in a certain
proportion to the amount of asking. I do not
believe that the piano has done enough asking
for itself in the past few years of its mer-
chandising work.
"This sales-promotion plan is a job of good,
hard work. It gets bigger every day. You
will very soon have visual evidence of the fact
that it is functioning. I haven't discussed
everything that we are going to do, because
I don't believe that any man or any industry
should tell everything that it plans to do. I
have talked somewhat in generalities, I realize,
but I ask you to watch. I believe you will be
satisfied that your $200,000 a year is being spent
profitably."
Alfred Fox Piano Co. Opens Handsome
New Piano Warerooms in Bridgeport, Ct.
cellent Victrola and radio departments, its fine
Ampico studio and Ampico roll department
arc all arranged for the greatest convenience
of their large following of customers and for
the greatest efficiency in handling the business
of this well-known house. A beautiful color
scheme and fine furnishings make the ware-
rooms attractive, giving them an atmosphere
which proves a fine setting for the instruments
which they offer.
The Alfred Fox Piano Co. has been agent
for the Knabe and Fischer pianos for many
years. The company also handles the Franklin,
Foster, Armstrong and Brewster pianos as a
Foster-Armstrong line and the Ampico.
children, more people, to play the piano than
are now learning.
"It so happens that I am one of about twelve
people in the United States who do not own
an automobile of some kind. Two weeks ago
a salesman from one of the large automobile
manufacturers came to my home and urged me
to buy. I told him that I didn't even know
how to drive an automobile. He parried at
once with 'We'll teach you to drive, we'll give
you five lessons free.' That gave me an idea
which may or may not be worth a darn. Sup-
pose, in the United States, we had a piano
teacher attached to the sales force of every
piano dealer. Suppose we had a teacher-
salesman or saleswoman, who called on Mr.
Jones and not only offered to sell a piano but
offered to teach her little Anna to play in the
bargain.
"And so I come back to group instruction.
It is a big weapon. It isn't something that
can be tampered with. You have in your in-
dustry, or associated with it, several exponents
of group instruction systems that I understand
are first-class. These agencies must be har-
nessed to work for the piano industry."
Mr. Boykin then described some of the plans
being developed in connection with group
piano instruction.
"There can be no doubt now as to the bene-
ficial influence of such a thing as the piano-
playing contest," he went on, "even though it
Left: Center aisle main floor
T. L. Lutkins, Jr., Reports
Contacts Made Abroad
Vice-President of Prominent Piano Leather
House Returns With Father From Extended
European Trip—Comments on Conditions
T. L. Lutkins, Jr., vice-president of T. L. Lut-
kins, Inc., New York, who returned recently
from Europe with his father on the S.S. "Paris,"
stated this week that they had a most successful
trip and established several new contacts in
England, France and Germany. This house,
which has been supplying the player-piano and
organ trades with pouch and bellows leathers
for more than half a century, has always im-
ported the greater part of its lamb skins from
England. Finding it impossible to obtain the
quantities of suitable skins there, the Lutkins
house will buy extensively from the Continent
in the future as well as in Great Britain.
Mr. Lutkins stated that business conditions
were not what they should be in England and
France, but that Germany seemed to be forging
ahead in an industrial way. He added that while
conditions abroad are forcing prices for leathers
of all kinds, it was not likely that it would be
necessary to advance prices to the consumer in
this country.
Above: Grand Display Room second
floor. Right: Piano Department,
rear of main floor
Fox Piano Co., one of the oldest
T HE and Alfred
best-known piano houses in Connecti-
cut, is being congratulated by its many friends
throughout the trade and in local merchandis-
ing circles on the opening of its fine new
Bridgeport building in the principal shopping
street and retail center of thai city.
Careful study of the problem of a well-
arranged piano store has resulted in one of the
best-equipped and most convenient establish-
ments of its kind. Special rooms for the
display of grand and upright pianos, its ex-
New quarters on South Adams street, Cam-
den, Ark., have been taken by Bensberg Music
Shop and will be formally opened in a few
weeks. The Camden store serves as headquar-
ters for three branches in this part of the State.

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