Play Meter

Issue: 1976 March - Vol 2 Num 3

the shopping center.
PLA Y METER: Is it only t he younger people or do
you get any of the older people?
YOOLIN: We get mothers, fathers. We get
mothers now that will go hopping and they will
pecifically say to their children, "I will meet you
here in several hours because I know you will play
and have fun, but stay here because I know you are
alright here. " We have got to have a relationship
with people .
PLAY METER: Have you had comments where
people will ay, "I am happy if the kids stay here
while I'm out hopping .
YOOLIN: Ye and this is omething we've worked
on.
PLA Y METER: Do you think that the other
tennants in the shopping center are aware of the
fact t hat be ide having a money -making busine ,
you are providing a e rvice?
YOOLIN: Absolutely.
PLA Y METER: Because we still have malls that
are re i tant to arcade and yet, you are in essence
providing a ervice for them .
YOOLIN: There you have where it' the old thing of
trying to live down t he thing that's always been
attached to us that we're either an underworld
fi gure or whatever. I'm a family man with five
children and I want my kid to look up to me.
PLA Y METER: In North hore shopping center,
you had been in and out of t he mall physically for 17
year . Because you ran the outdoor amusement
center, you knew by a traffic count, by counting on
your fing r , by t he eat of your pant, whatever,
that it had to be a heck of a pot. You knew that you
had to be ucces ful t here, but, what was your
crystal ball that you could look at Billerica mall and
ay , "I can do w II here?"
YOOLIN: Well, t he normal type of inve tigating i
fine, but I pent many hour driving around the
town and t he ite and when I saw nothin g but
homes, school and t h clo e proximity of all these
thin g -- t hen I di covered that Billerica, which is
nowh e re the ize of Lowell, had 12,000 chool
childre n again t Lowell, which ha a greater
population, but had only 15,OOO--I aid thi i the
time for me to jump in a nd get my feet wet and
tart number two.
PLA Y METER: Billerica i like a bed room
community, no heavy indu t ry?
YOOLIN: ot a great deal of heavy industry, but
it' al 0 a tow n where unfortunate ly, t her e' not too
much goi ng on for the you ng r eleme nt.
PLAY METER: Did yo u vi it t he town father , t he
police chie f, or a nyone e l e in the community to get
a feel before you made a n agree m nt with t he
landlord to put your name on t he dotted line?
YOOLIN: No, I did not do thi . I already kn ew that
kid today really don't have anything that's really
geared toward them, a place where they can go in a
mall.
PLA Y METER: Did you know you were going to
get a licen e before you igned a lea e? How were
you going to protect yourself?
PlAt'M£JER
YO OLIN : I know first of all that I had an excellent
record; I never had any difficulty and I'm open to
investigation. In fact the Billerica police did
investigate me, they did come up and speak with
people and they also spoke with the chief of police in
Northshore and he in turn had a letter issued to the
Billerica police stating that in no way was there any
que tion about my integrity or my business.
PLA Y METER: One chief of police, actually wrote
to another chief of police, telling about the
character of the man that was going to go into their
community?
YOOLIN: Right and I say this with great humility,
but I'm proud that I've never had any difficulty.
PLAY METER: I should think you would be. I've
never heard of this happening before.
Now that you've got these two arcades under
your belt, if you don 't go for this chain, do you feel
that when you're looking for another solo location,
t he two chiefs of the communities will give you the
impetu for your third location? Is it going to get
easier?
YOOLIN: It should get easier because I now have
t he two pots operating and we cooperate through
t he fact that if they find they have a problem within
the mall , and if they want us to close a little bit
earlier or open later, we do. As a fact, we open later
t han mo t other stores because we do not want
children kipping school deliberately to come play
with u .
We've made it a point if a kid comes in and he
does not look old enough, we ourselves question
him and if we don't feel that he belongs here at this
particular time, we ask him to leave . We don't want
every dollar in every way that we can get it, we
want it the proper way and we want good
relationships with the people that we are doing
bu iness with .
PLAY METER: How did you equip yourself,
changing the subject a little bit, and how did you
get to the point where you could service
equipment? How do you keep you r eq uipment run -
ning t he day?
YOOLIN : First of all, I do have somebody that
come in and helps out on his spare time . At the
same ti me he teaches, I ask questions. I find that if I
have a proble m I will call the distributors' work
force and peak with them on the phone and many
time t hey are able to give me an indication over
the phone what to do. If I can't do it and the odds
are against having my moonlighter come in, they
will come out them elves and take care of the
problem.
PLA Y METER: How do you feel about television
games? What have they done for your business in
terms of total gross and what do you feel the roll of
televi ion games i going to be in your arcade two
yea rs down the line .
YOOLIN: I feel that in a few years, they may be the
only thing operating in there because of all the
t hings t hey may be albe to do with them, other than
my pins.
1.'>('(' 11(' .1' 1 {}(J!J(' 1
55
ICtm l i1l11l'll j r mn prl'Vifil/S puy e I
I have a comp laint. I feel the indu try is
overcharging all operator . I feel that the man -
ufacturer hould be albe to, in tead of continually
increasing the co t of every magnificent piece they
put out, hold the line a little bit better, because
where can we go to increase our cost? I don't want
any 50-cent piece if I can mechanically avoid it.
PLAY METER: I most everything 25-cent and
two for a quarter?
YODLIN: I've taken things like tank, and when I
received it well over a year ago, a year and a half
ago, I immediately changed it from 50 -cent to
25-cent and felt that let the two player-- who are a
forced issue at this time becau e t hey must play
together- -Iet them each put in a quarter and get
two game . You're open 12 hours a day. I feel sure
that if I wa back in the other type of bu ines
which was only seasonal, I only bad a four month
pot, I might not think this way, but we're in a 12
month busines a nd I do see the same people day in
and day out sometimes . I'd rather have them get
more for their money.
PLA Y METER: Then you relate your co t and the
price you charge Ie
t han your high volume
ea onal park -beach ar cade operation?
How about the reliability of your television
game ? What i your down time today?
YODLIN: It' nowhere near what it wa when I
first started a year and a half ago.
PLAY METER: I it because you're smarter or
becau e game are marter.
YODLIN: I th ink the manufacturer are really
making an effort to put out more trouble-free
pieces. But, again, I must come to thi , that once
t he manufacturer does put it out and gives it to the
di t ributor , it's the distributor w ho really goes to
work. He may ay t hi i no good and really must
change it. I think the distributor play a very
important part in how he ervices what he
di tributes .
PLA Y METER: How many hour ·a week are you
working now?
YODLIN: Well that depend. When I had the first
pot, I was almost there daily and nightly. It was a
great concern to me that the business succeed.
Naturally, I realized when I opened number two
that I cou ldn 't b in two plac at onc . But I felt
t hat by being in both places regularly and actually
working in them, I kept that feel for the business,
the feel for what the customer wanted and didn't
want. I like the idea of working in the place; it gives
me a better per pective.
PLAY METER: But how are you spreading your
time?
YODLIN: Instead of spending six days at one place,
I'm two day at each and two day on the road
inve tigating, looking for pot, eeing how other
people operate their busines es, wanting to learn.
PLA Y METER: Many arcades today are in tailing
ophi ticated cash controls, double metering and so
forth on their machine. You ay you have working
partners who have a ca h investment in your
business with you ; do you concern your elf wi t h
ca h controls?
56
YODLIN: I have never done thi . I have found it i
om thing I don't like. Maybe it' omething wrong
with me, but I believe in tru t. Becau e one per on
may burn m , I do not condemn t he next per on .
That' the ame relation hip I have with kid .
PLAY METER: But don't you feel that a you plan
to open a new tring of arcades, your problems will
multiply and you're going to have to go to ome kind
of control y tem to keep honest people honest?
YODLIN: Thi may be 0; it may not be 0 becau e
fir t of all, I don't believe in slave labor. I believe
that whether a per on i a partner, a working
manager or whatever, that he be paid ub tantially
for hi end avor . I find that mo t people, if treated
fairly, will in turn give you fairnes .
PLAY METER: But there' an awful temptation
when you ee a cashbox full of quarter.
YODLIN: Ab olutely . But temptation mu t have
e nt red the e people ' live before. I'm not
a ociating my e lf with per ons of criminal ten -
dencie . They're basically good sound people like
my elf.
PLA Y METER: If your partners participate on an
qual ba i with you, how do you handle tandoff
in which you have an ab olute di agreement that
you ju t can't olve? Who ha the final hand?
YODLIN: Well, thi i the agreement I have with
mo t of the people a sociated with me: I don't want
any mor from them than they receive from me.
But I've made it plain that if there i an impas e, I
will take th final deci ion and re pon ibility upon
my elf, be it good or bad.
PLA Y METER: Had your partners been old
a ociate of your before you tarted?
YODLIN: One of my partner i a man who had a
tremendou background of hi own in the busine
and I knew him for many years, though I never had
any bu ine s dealing with him. He' a little bit
older than my elf and po ibly a lot wi er. He has
helped guide me, but he ha allowed me to go out
and do the buying, trading and selling and allowed
me to learn and expand within myself.
My other partner i a man I grew up with. I've
known him for clo e to 40 year . He had never been
in the bu ine before and took to it like a duck to
water.
PLAY METER: What i your philosophy concern -
ing decor, concerning fixing up an empty tore?
YODLIN: Fir t, I want it clean, I want it attractive
and I don't do any place the arne . I don't want to
become tereotyped. I decorate some edately,
other more li vely . The cost depend on what you
do and I do my own decorating.
PLAY METER: What kind of change-making
facilitie do you have in your arcade?
YODLIN: At each place, we have a nice, wide booth
manned u ually by either a partner or another
adu lt. J n ve r run an arcade without two adu lt
pre e nt. I don't like th e idea of walking around with
an apron. I don't want to look lik a bach area. I
want to look like what we are --a ophisticated,
well -run, well -behaved type of amusement estab-
Ii hment.
PLAY METER: What happen when the kids come

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