Music Trade Review

Issue: 1931 Vol. 90 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
HER PLAN
BRINGS LIVE
PROSPECTS
By FLORENCE I. HARLEY
Teacher canvassers in Des Moines gather fine
MRS. FLORENCE G. ATWOOD
I
crop of prospects for musical instrument sales
T has been emphasized very strongly and on many occa-
sions that under existing conditions the problem of the
piano retailer is primarily one of developing a constant
flow of new prospects upon which his salesmen may work.
In short, it is necessary to have an increasing number of con-
tacts so that the proportion of actual sales made will prove
worth while. A close study of the situation has shown that
approximately seventy per cent of piano sales are made within
thirty days after the prospect has been listed and seventy-
eight per cent within sixty days. The fact that only fifteen
per cent of sales are made after the ninety-day period indi-
cates that it is a costly procedure to waste effort on pros-
pects who have been on the cards over three months, and
this means that they must be put aside in favor of new and
more promising names.
This question of getting new prospects who are worth while
and getting them economically is a rather serious one for the
music merchant. In the first place while he has many chan-
nels open, such as telephone and city directories, tax lists, etc>
the cost of breaking down and weeding out such lists to a
point where the names remaining may be considered those
of live prospects, is often prohibitive.
Of all the plans that have been tried for developing active
prospect lists probably the most successful are those which
are carried on through the medium of, or in co-operation
with, music teachers, for their pupils, and prospective pupils
are naturally interested in music and in most cases are almost
certain to buy some type of instrument. Where teachers and
dealers work together the results are generally satisfactory to
all concerned, and this fact has been well demonstrated
through a campaign recently carried on in Des Moines, Iowa,
by Mrs. Florence G. Atwood. It calls" for personal canvass
but on a basis that has proven both economical and effective.
Mrs. Atwood, herself a teacher of piano, knew the prob-
lems of music teachers in building up classes of pupils for in-
dividual instruction and especially in these times of so much
competition. She made an arrangement with several dealers
in Des Moines whereby she was to receive a commission on
sales made from these prospect lists. Then Mrs. Atwood
interviewed some thirty-five teachers of various musical in-
struments, presented her plan for building classes for them.
She found the teachers very enthusiastic about her plan. The
teachers were to give free of charge to prospective pupils pre-
senting a coupon signed by Mrs. Atwood and her representa-
tive five free lessons. It worked out that teachers were able
to keep 50 per cent or better of these pupils on at her regu-
lar lesson rate. And while the teacher lost the time on the
demonstration lessons she was put in touch with pupils which
in all probability she would not have had any contact.
Mrs. Atwood organized a groupi of six women who can-
vassed the city, calling house to house, presenting the coupon
for five lessons for $1.25. It was made clear that there was
no obligation to take more lessons with the teacher but if a
pupil wished to continue after the five lessons were finished
the rate would be whatever that particular teacher charged.
Choice of teacher was allowed. The response to this was
surprisingly good. The canvasser received $1 from each
sale thus made and the remaining 25 cents was turned in to
Mrs. Atwood.
The canvassers kept an accurate list of the names of per-
sons thus secured with addresses and of all others who were
prospective buyers of any sort of musical instrument. These
were turned in to Mrs. Atwood who, in turn, gave them
to the dealers interested in each prospect. Later several danc-
ing teachers were added to the list and prospects were gained
through building up the dancing classes.
The arrangement proved to be satisfactory from at least
four standpoints, dealer, teacher, organizer and canvasser.
And that does not include the good results of connecting
teacher and pupils.
The canvassers were assigned districts to cover. The
women were shifted from time to time over the city.
Mrs. Atwood has found the plan so satisfactory that she
sent a large crew out again this year during the fall months
when pupils were returning to school and lessons, and in need
of instruments. She finds this time of year, too, a good time
to locate prospects for radio sales both for the best radio
season of the year and for the holiday season.
The method has the advantage of cutting down the cost of
securing prospects for the reason that each prospect obtained
is available to both the teachers and the dealers and there-
fore the expense is not confined to any one concern or in-
dividual. Where the dealer or the teacher makes a similar
survey independently the cost of each live prospect secured,
after the dead material has been eliminated, is often found
to be so high as to be prohibitive.
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
November, 1931
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
SOME TESTED RECIPES
FOR
Bigger and Better
HOLIDAY
BUSINESS
By R. G. KING
T
HE holiday season is the one period of the year when
music dealers look forward with confidence to a sub-
stantial volume of business, which may fluctuate accord-
ing to conditions but nevertheless represents the high
spot of the year. To paraphrase the Salvation Army slogan,
"Santa Claus may be down, but he is never out." As a result,
holiday business usually shows up well.
The question for the retail dealer, however, is how to stim-
ulate and increase the normal holiday demand with the view
to getting the largest volume out of his market. It can be
done, as retailers have proven in the past, and T H E REVIEW
takes the opportunity of presenting in the following para-
graphs some methods that have proven successful in boosting
sales and should succeed again.
CAROLS HELP IN UTAH
Christmas carols and Yuletide melodies of all kinds,
played continually throughout the days of the holiday sea-
son last year, instilled the Christmas radio-buying spirit into
many passers-by and boosted trade considerably, W. C. Carnes,
manager of the Carnes Music Co., Ogden, Utah, reports.
"The Christmas records were played by means of a com-
bination phonograph and radio set with the loud speaker in
front of the store," explained Mr. Carnes. "Our radio shop
became knowns as 'The Christmas Carol Store,' and attracted
customers from every walk of life. Of course, after stopping
outside to listen to the carols, many of them came into the
store.
"We reminded the listeners that the same Christmas carol
melodies would be played over the local station on Christmas
Day, and as a result many radios were sold to persons who
might not otherwise have bought. 'Hear these Christmas
carols on radio sets of your own,' was the popular slogan.
BLIND ADS BRING RESULTS
A unique way of getting piano prospects is in force at the
Jenkins Music Co., Fort Smith, Ark. This is a small "blind"
want ad, which the firm inserts in county papers in its trade
territory.
"We simply announce that we have a piano for sale in that
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
November,
1931
vicinity which, if we fail to sell, we will let someone use for
storage, rather than ship," explained G. L. Bumpers, member
of the sales force of the company. "This has brought us
some of our best prospects.
"Of course it takes salesmanship, courtesy, tact and infinite
patience to close on most of these deals. But we have been
getting it across. And resuks are what count."
TALK OF TUNEFUL CHRISTMAS
A cleverly modernistic drawing, with the signature of the
artist, Melisse, which showed a Christmas party in progress
at a private home, with radio and piano as important adjuncts
of the entertainment, headed a successful 1929 advertisement
of the radio and piano salon of Loeser's, in Brooklyn, N. Y.
The title read, appropriately, "To the Tune of a Joyful
Christmas."
"You can't hang pianos on trees, nor can you stuff radios
into Christmas stockings, but don't let this deter you from
giving a piano or radio for Christmas," urged the advertising
copy.
FREE LESSONS AID SALES
Free music lessons are one of the best Christmas promotion
methods ever devised, in the opinion of leading music dealers.
There are, however, almost as many different ways of devel-
oping the idea of free lessons as there are music stores. If
you would like to try the idea out this year, you will prob-
ably find among the following plans one which is particularly
suited to your organization.
"The Melody Way has proved a great holiday piano stim-
ulant," said George Glen, manager of Glen Brothers Music
Co., Ogden, Utah. "This is something we have devised our-
selves. When begun just twelve weeks before Christmas, it
works out splendidly.
"Here's how it operates. Offer twelve piano lessons free,
provided prospective students buy a $2 Melody Way lesson
book and come to the store to take piano lessons. At the
end of this free lesson period, pupils are urged to buy a piano
and continue with their musical career.
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