Music Trade Review

Issue: 1942 Vol. 101 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, PIANOS ONLY, JANUARY, 1942
Making Stubborn
Customers Buy
HE ability to sense the temperament
of a prospect always proves invalu-
able to a salesman. Stubborn custo-
mers are perhaps most aggravating but
making them buy is usually an interesting
experience.
I heard of a clever piece of salesman-
ship recently which happened in the
piano department of a big department
store where several salesmen were stand-
ing about. A well dressed man came in
and immediately all the salesmen were
on the alert. In fact they must have made
it appear to the well dressed man that
they were too much so, because he turned
to one of them and said, "Can't a man
look around here without being fol-
lowed?" Immediately there was a retreat
on the part of the salesmen who let the
gentleman in question browse around
among the pianos on display:—all but
one. This salesman watched him and
when he disappeared into one of the
small rooms where grands were displayed
he quietly stood just outside the door
where he could not be observed by the
prospect. When the latter came out he
quietly said, "I thought I would stand
here and keep the other salesmen from
annoying you." Caught off his guard by
this expression of supposed service, the
gentleman immediately mellowed and a
general conversation ensued which after
a short time led to a $900 sale.
According to Dr. Daniel A. Laird, who
spoke last year at the convention in New
York, stubborn customers are apt to yield
when presented with just the opposite
ideas they may have in their minds. Said
he:
"Another very well-known type, the
stubborn customer, and we all are a little
bit stubborn at heart, some very much
more than others, and I am going to give
you an idea right from your own life. I
am going to call out one word, and I want
each person to shout the first word that
that word makes him think of. Up. Au-
dience; 'Down'. Dr. Laird: Hot. Audience:
'Cold'. Dr. Laird: Black. Audience: 'White'.
Dr. Laird: Business. Chairman Clark:
'Good'. Dr. Laird: That's the spirit, and he
wasn't coached on it, either.
T
"Now the first idea that occurs to
people, is usually the opposite idea, and
that makes some people who have that
sort of feeling ingrained in their natures
very obstinate as customers, and the best
way to get them not to buy something
is to try to force it onto them, try to high
pressure.
"I know one textile man in Utica. New
York, a millionaire, who was so stubborn
—this is the God's truth—that when a
salesman would call on him, he would
turn his back and say, 'all right, tell your
story', then only four -words would this
man say. Standing with his back to the
salesman, after the salesman got just a
good start in his story, the man would
say, 'How much?' And then, 'Too much',
and that ended the interview.
"Now, people who are slow in making
up their minds are oftentimes that way
because they are stubborn. Here is the
way to handle them. First, sell them by
quoting their own words. Say, 'As you
said/ not 'As I said.'
"The second point is to take the other
side, mildly. A tractor salesman at Green-
ville, Mississippi, sold $5,600 worth of
tractors on a Tuesday morning after 1
had given him this second point on a
Monday night, to an old planter who had
worlds of money, but wasn't going to
part with it and was still running his
plantation with mules. This man went out
the following morning and said, 'I'm
sorry, but after thinking it over, I don't
believe your plantation is big enough to
use tractors/
" % It isn't?'
"And in an hour the stubborn man had
sold himself $5,600 worth of machinery."
TESTS ON STUBBORN CUSTOMERS
"We were talking about stubborness,
which is all too prevalent; customers take
too many sales away. Here are two brief
tests to tell whether you are going to
make it difficult for the customer to get
around this stubbomess. One step is ask
him to lean over, look inside. When you
ask some people to do that, they stand
bolt upright and take just a fleeting
glance out of the corner of their eyes.
"If a person is a little frigid about
looking inside the mechanism or bending
over to try the action, then you are wise
in following this second rule, to make it
difficult for the customer to buy, just a
little bit difficult, by saying. This is the
last run we have; there are no more in
the warehouse/ or 'Somebody else was
ui earlier this afternoon and put sort of
an option on this, so we are not quite
sure whether you can have it or not/
and oh, how the person who won't look
down wants it then.
There are a great variety of stubborn
customers but most of them are licked
when they are told that the article they
want to buy cannot be purchased. I have
seen this work in several instances. While
talking with a retail piano salesman re-
cently he told me of an experience he had
had just before the 10% excise tax went
into effect last October.
BACK TO THE FIRST ONE
A woman had come into the wareroom
in the Spring and had looked at a piano.
At that time she was just in the "looking
around class". She tried to explain to the
salesman the particular type of style she
was looking for, which the salesman ex-
plained would be very hard to get, and
he proceeded to show her some models
which were as near to what she wanted
as he could imagine from the description
she gave him. In respect to tone, size
and finish one model seemed to suit her
fancy, but she demurred and -went away.
A short time afterward she came in again
and went all over the procedure without
deciding. The Fall was coming on and
she was looking around again. The sales-
man thought he would remind her that
installment sales would be restricted to
10% down and 18 months after September
1st, but this did not move her.
Finally a new model piano came from
the factory which was even nearer to the
one which she had suggested than the
one she had previously looked at. The
salesman immediately got in touch with
her and asked her to come in and look
at it. When she came in she looked it
over, liked the style, but still demurred.
Finally the announcement of the excise
tax was made and she was notified that
if she wanted the piano at the price 1
quoted on her previous visits she would
have to purchase it before October 1st.
On September 29th she appeared, made
a few remarks about never being able to
find just what she wanted, went over to
the piano and said, "I'll take this one."
It was the first one she had looked at
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, PIANOS ONLY, JANUARY, 19A2
1941 a year
to remember
Signified the absolute revival of the piano
in all phases of American Life
1
AST year—1941—will long be remem-
bered as the year in which the
piano became firmly established
again as a necessity in the American
home, one in which sales were the largest
in months -which are usually dull and
vise versa, one in which installment sell-
ing was put on a basis equitable for all
music merchants by government decree
and one in which the piano industry as a
whole came into its own again after a
terrific struggle for a decade only to be
faced with a greater crisis owing to the
present war emergency.
In spite of the present conditions sur-
rounding the industry production steadily
increased throughout the year until it
reached an all time high since 1929. Dur-
ing the year several reorganizations in
manufacturing units took place and a new
factor for this industry entered into the
field with several musical merchandise
manufacturers who either becoming fac-
tors for piano manufacturers or purchas-
ing plants outright.
Several hundred dealers are in busi-
ness to-day who had not taken on pianos
at this time last year. There was also more
moving of stores and renovating of old
stores than has been witnessed in a
decade. On the whole the industry is now
in a better position to withstand the
critical period which it faces than it
would have been three years ago and it
has the will and the stamina to come
through in the same manner it has in the
past. Among the highlights of happenings
during the past year were:
Sons, New York, announce their retire-
ment.
Board of Control of the National Associa-
tion of Music Merchants meet in New
York and decide on Convention dates
for July 29th to August 1st inclusive.
National Piano Manufacturers Association
executive committee meets in New York
and discusses Piano Foundation.
National Piano Travelers Association ex-
ecutive committee meets and decides to
hold Jamboree during convention.
W. S. Bond, president of the Weaver
Piano Co., York, Pa. tendered a dinner
by employees in honor of his fifty years
of association with the company.
Frank P. Whitmore retires as secretary of
W. W. Kimball Co., Chicago and Ben F.
Duvall is elected to that position.
P. J. Cuningham, head of the Cunningham
Piano Co., Philadelphia, passes away at
76.
Alfred Bleckwin, office manager of Stein-
way & Sons. New York, passes away at
age of 71.
Executive Committee of the Music Mer-
chants Association of Ohio decides on
convention in June.
FEBRUARY
First of the 1941 Sales Clinic held in St.
Louis on Feb. 10th.
Eastern Pennsylvania Chapter of the
National Association of Music Mer-
chants formed in Philadelphia, Pa., with
Luke Moore as chairman.
Pratt Read & Co., Ivoryton, Conn., an-
nounce a new type - action for spinet
pianos.
Steve Reed second son of Joe Reed,
JANUARY
head of Paragon Foundries. Oregon,
B. F. Miessner patents electronic orchestra
111. joins that business.
control. .
MARCH
National Piano Manufacturers Association
Carl Fischer Musical Instrument Co., Inc.,
joins the National Music Council.
New York becomes national distributor
William R. Steinway makes extensive
for the Janssen Piano Co., Brooklyn,
goodwill trip visiting Steinway dealers
N. Y.
throughout the country.
Legislation embodying changes in the Chicago Musical Instrument Co., Chicago,
HI., becomes national distributor for the
New York Installment law suggested by
Cable and Conover pianos made by the
National Piano Manufacturers Associa-
Schiller-Cable Piano Mfg. Co., Oregon,
tion.
EL John H. Parnham becomes produc-
Rudolph Wurlitzer Co. advises employees
tion manager of Schiller-Cable plant.
called to colors that insurance will be
Cable Piano Co., Chicago moves into
maintained by the company.
new retail quarters in Chicago.
Ben M. Strub resigns as estem repre-
sentative of the Mathushek Piano Mfg. Master Piano Corp formed in New York.
Baltimore Chapter of the National Asso-
Co., New York.
ciation of Music Merchants formed in
Frederick Reidemeister, treasurer, Her-
Baltimore, Md.
mann Irion, general manager and Al-
bert Sturcke, historian of Steinway 6» Ava W. Poole for many years president of
the Poole Piano C, Cambridge, Mass.,
passes away at 49.
William Strich former partner of Strich &
Zeidler passes away at Larchmont, N. Y.
APRIL
Julius Breckwoldt, president of Julius
Breckwoldt & Son, Dolgeville, N. Y. and
dean of the supply industry passes
away after a short illness in his Florida
home at the age of 85.
Mid South Chapter of NAMM formed in
Memphis Term.
Lyon <& Healy, Inc., Chicago opens new
store on Michigan Ave.
Wm. Knabe & Co., New York open radio
phonograph department announcing
the Musaphonic manufactured by the
General Electric Co.
J. W. Dawson, head of the Dawson Music
Co., Phoenix, Arizona, dies at the age
of 74.
MAY
10' "<• Federal excise tax proposed for
musical instruments is protested by
manufacturers and dealers.
Jerome F. Murphy, president of M. Stein-
ert & Sons Co., Boston, and Dudley P.
Felt elected directors of Steinway &
Sons, New York, Stuart B. Miller is ap-
pointed comptroller. Paul H. Schmidt,
director retires.
Western Pennsylvanian Chapter of the
NAMM formed in Hershey, Pa.
Gulbransen Co., Chicago, 111., announces
Magnatone Organ with pedal board.
Floyd E. Grove becomes travelling repre-
sentative for the Estey Piano Co., Bluff-
ton, Ind.
Grinell Bros., Detroit, Mich, takes on the
Winter & Co., Musette.
R. B. Jones becomes a travelling repre-
sentative for Steinway & Sons, New
York.
JUNE
The American Society of Piano Tuners-
Technicians hold joint session with the
Piano Tuners Association of Illinois in
Chicago.
E. M. Boothe well known piano man
passes away in Port Chester, N. Y.
Rudolph Wurlitzer Co., announces new
35,000 sq. ft. addition to De Kalb piano
plant.
Ray Erlandson, Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.,
elected president of the Music Mer-
chants Association of Ohio.
National Piano Manufacturers Association
re-elect officers with R. C. Rolfing as
President.
Ignace Pedewreski former premier of

Download Page 8: PDF File | Image

Download Page 9 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.