Presto

Issue: 1923 1928

PRESTO
July 7, 1923
CHRISTMAN
Grand
MEETING PROBLEM OF
THREATENED PRICE RAISE
Whether to Anticipate the Increase, or to
Wait and Meet the Conditions, Is the
Question.
It is Distinctly an Art Product and
Has no Superior among REPRO-
DUCING PIANOS.
Piano men who have been crying for still lower
prices may find food for thought in the following
which appeared in last Sunday's New York Times.
While no direct reference is made to pianos it has
been customary to look for increase in process of
pianos when other things are similarly affected. In
any event, pianos are now as low as they can be ex-
pected to go in a long time, and some of them have
passed down in price below anything in all the earlier
records of the industry.
While many are convinced that nothing can pre-
vent a rise in prices, there are those who insist that
this proceeding will have to be done with much dis-
crimination when it comes to the ultimate consumer,
lest he balk and refuse to play the game. There will
be some testing out to see how far sellers can go,
and this applies all along the line, beginning with the
raw materials which enter into manufactures.
And the question presents itself which of two plans
is the better policy. One of these is to start out with
the highest price the seller hopes to get, and, if re-
sponses are not ample, to come down from the
perch. The other is to have a moderate opening
price and subsequently advance it if the circum-
stances warrant.
Of the two, the last mentioned has more to com-
mend it. In the first instance, a drop in price is apt
to be followed by demoralization, the buyer feeling
never sure when the bottom will be touched and,
therefore, making him more than ever determined to
hold back his purchases to the last moment. On the
other hand, should initial advances be moderate, so as
to afford some chance that they may be absorbed in
a measure between producer and consumer, there
will be less reluctance to venture, and a trade may be
encouraged to grow to such an extent as to make
possible a gradual, if not too large, price advance.
It does not pay to try and drive the consumer.
Coaxing is, by far, the better and more effective plan
and, unless all signs fail, this is what will be at-
tempted.
CHRISTMAN
RIVALRY AMONG SALESMEN
MAKES SUCCESSFUL SALE
Studio Grand
Branch Store Force of United Music Co. Wins Hon-
ors in Connecticut House.
when embodied with
Responds Completely to the
MOST CRITICAL
A very interesting rivalry in selling was created
by the United Music Co., New London, Conn., dur-
ing the disposal recently of the stock of pianos and
playerpianos purchased from D. S. Marsh & Co. The
stock was an extensive one and provided opportuni-
ties for the sales staff in the main store and all the
branches of the United Music Co.
To the Willimantic store went the honors for
doing the most business, and William A. Roy and
George F. Noel were the successful sa 1 es closers who
secured the most business and brought the Willim-
antic store to the head of the honors list.
A special prize offered by Samuel Feldman, the
manager, to the salesman getting the largest net
amount of sales carrying the largest percentage of
cash and the shortest term contracts was won by
Mr. Roy. The creation of friendly rivalry among
the salesmen is a rule of the company always effec-
tive for the desired results.
A WONDERFUL SMALL GRAND
only five feet long which embodies all
the advantages of the larger grands
and possessing a tone volume and
range of expression surprisingly broad.
Musicians quickly recognize the
characteristic tone qualities of the
CHRISTMAN GRAND
SEEING IS BELIEVING
et
The First Touch Tells"
Reg. U S. Pat
Off.
Christ man Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
HENRY JOHNSON AIMS TO
BE SECOND HENRY FORD
Policy of Specializing in One Style Piano Being
Pushed by Vigorous Campaign.
The aim of making the new style Henry G. John-
son piano "the Ford of the piano industry," is being
pushed vigorously by the Henry G. Johnson Piano
Mfg. Co., of Bellevue, Iowa. Ever since the Johnson
organization determined, some months back, to con-
centrate its efforts on the one style small piano and
player piano, the campaign to put this "one style"
without.
This week, a circular letter is being sent out by
Dan Pagenta, vice-president of the firm, from the
Chicago office at 307 Great Northern Bldg. The
letter follows:
Specialization.—The secret of building a beautiful
playerpiano at a moderate price.
The Henry G. Johnson playerpiano is a playerpiano
that no one organization working alone has ever
matched in quality, tone or performance at so low a
price.
It remained for the Henry G. Johnson organization
to make a playerpiano that affords a definite assur-
ance of known dependability—a player of exception-
ally fine quality at an exceptional low price. It is a
remarkable achievement in specialized methods of
manufacture; a triumph of modern co-operative pro-
duction.
Specialization is your best assurance of fine work-
manship and consistent year-in and year-out depend-
ability. It is a dealer's best guarantee against the
high cost of up-keep expense.
Dealers say when they sell a Henry G. Johnson
playerpiano it stays sold; Have you seen the new
style C Playerpiano?
HOW MUCH OF AN ASSET
IS ITEM OF GOOD=WILL?
Hallet & Davis House Organ Points to Fine Illus-
tration of How-to-do-it.
Stories have been told of salesmen who crossed
the street when they saw someone to whom they
had sold a piano. But, according to the "Hallet &
Davis Salesman," L. E. Cox, manager of Martin
Tiros. Piano Company, Springfield, Mo., thinks a
customer should be the best advertisement a house
can have.
Martin Bros, have a high-class man who does
nothing else but follow up a sale after it is made.
He goes to the home after the instrument is deliv-
ered and gives all the information he can regarding
the instrument. He shows how to best operate the
p'ayer (most people forget what has been shown
them in the warerooms), and if it is a piano gives a
short talk on its care. He also sees if the terms are
fully understood. His big point is to get prospects,
but incidentally he saves many a sale and helps
collections.
The best-known department store in the country
built up their business on the basis that the customer
was always right; that is, no effort was left unbent
to saisfy he customer, and we feel that Mr. Cox is
working along lines which build a great business.
SCHILLER GRAND WINNING
FINE CLASS OF TRADE
New Plans Meet with Marked Success and Addition
to Factory Is Considered.
The Schiller piano is making rapid strides in for-
eign fields. Following the shipment to Australia, the
industry at Oregon, 111., received a large order for
Manila, including uprights, players and grands. This
foreign business has come to the Schiller Piano Co.
without solicitation. Agents of large foreign buyers
have visited the factory to inspect the Schiller prod-
uct and have sent enhusiasic reports to their houses.
The Schiller Super-Grand wih the Bauer patented
construction attracted very general attention, as was
to have been expected. It is said at the Schiller of-
fices that the Super-Grand is already sold ahead to
September 15th, and the manufacturers are planning
on building an addition to the present plant in order
to give increased capacity to the grands. The, 1923
program of the Schi.ler company has won the ap-
proval of large and representative houses throughout
the United States who are enthusiastically featuring
the line.
The Schiller name has never been besmirched by
the so-called "tricks of the trade," and, aside from the
name value, the special features embodied in the new
line have brought it into recognition with some of the
best houses in the trade. The patented construction
of the grand makes it a distinctive piano with the
qualiy of tone that is winning its way in musical
circles.
• The Schiller Piano Co. has experienced no summer
dullness and the factory is very busy and Secretary-
Treasurer E. B. Jones said to a Presto representative
that he is looking for an unprecedented trade this
fall.
A LITTLE MORE POWER.
A good rule for piano salesmen to remember
when prone to lose patience with customers is that
politeness has won more victories than logic ever
has. The trade school that could succeed in teach-
ing politeness to its pupils would act as a stimulator
to thousands that are now woefully short of that
necessary trait of character. Politeness is an evi-
dence of suppressed power. It's a pity to say of
the man who failed in part as a salesman that he
seemed to be one of those men that—to employ an
apparent bluff—with a little more power would have
been much more powerful. That little more power
would have been found in civility—the kind that
closes sales..
A JAZZ SUBSTITUTE.
The old mouth organ is coming back. It is con-
sidered quite an innovation for the private apartment
party. And some of the parties carry their own or-
ganist to cafes. When the jazz band dies down, the
organist regales with his tunes.
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
PRESTO
IMPORTANCE OF
OUTSIDE SALESMAN
It Is Shown in the Attention Given by Leading
Piano Houses Throughout the Coun-
try to the Education of the
Force.
That salesmen are not born but made is a fact
modern business has shown.
Furthermore, their
systematic instruction has become a vital matter with
the progressive houses. The most successful piano
sales managers believe that a close supervision of
men with practical suggestions while they are on the
job is the modern road to sales excellence. They
realize that the problems of piano salesmanship are
many and frequent.
Why does one man sell successfully while another
in the same field, presenting the same instruments,
fails completely or gains only meager results? Scien-
tific study and application of principles are consid-
ered in giving the answer by the wise sales managers.
Personality, address, manners, all the items which
contribute to put the piano sales over, may be cata-
logued, studied and added to the intellectual equip-
ment of the salesman. All the possibilities of its
employes for improving the potency in sales are con-
sidered by the big piano houses which make periodic
meetings of its sales forces a rule.
Methods Vary.
The experiences related by salesmen at one of these
periodic gatherings may be similar, in certain ways,
to the experiences related in another; but there are
also points of distinction that make both more in-
teresting. The facts related at the meeting of sales-
men and managers of the Baker Music House, Al-
bany, N. Y., week before last, were no doubt differ-
ent from the sales facts told at a recent meeting of
the salesmen of the O. K. Houck Piano Co., Mem-
phis, Tenn.
In selling the goods in New York state and in
Tennessee the alert sales scouts on the outside for
the piano houses certainly observe the fundamentals.
But in procedure the pursuit of the prospect and the
approach are different. Sales managers in both places
know the requirements for success in interesting the
customers and leading them up to the proper con-
clusion—the closing of sales.
Wanted One Kind.
In a Chicago piano wareroom this week a young
man of good appearance asked the manager for a
position as salesman. The manager said "If you
want an inside position, I must disappoint you. That
division of our staff is complete. But if you can go
out and find prospects, and close sales, I can sign
you up. That's the kind we are looking for."
The manager's words sum up the standing of the
outside man in the piano field. The floor salesman
usually handles the customers drawn to the store by
advertising.
Of course, there are inside salesmen
who have developed a following, and many of this
kind are encountered in the larger cities. Through
church affiliations, membership in fraternal organiza-
tions, through cultivating a big circle of friends, even
by activity in neighborhood politics, piano salesmen,
considered floormen, have built up a clientele indis-
putably their own.
Proving Ability.
The outside man must be able to-go out into any
territory, without a name for sales to work on, and
not only dig up prospects, but also close the deals, or
at least have enough influence to bring his prospects
within range of the inside force. The outside sales-
man is literally on the firing line and dependent on
his own natural acumen, reinforced by the instruc-
tion of his chief. To succeed he must be filled with
the enthusiasm of the sales combat. The prospect is
his antagonist; victory is getting the name on the
dotted line.
Of course, to succeed, the outside salesman must
have natural selling ability, must be thoroughly hon-
est, not in money matters alone but in the statements
he may make to his customers.
The live outside
salesman is, first of all, honest with himself, for he
knows that involves honesty to everybody concerned.
He knows that his future, depends upon results, and
that a waste of time or effort detracts from his value
to the house.
It is the experiences of the older men, related at the
periodic meetings, that are so beneficial to the young
salesmen.
A Salesman's Qualifications.
Any young man possessed of natural ability, in-
itiative and persistency can become a first-class piano
salesman—outside salesman. The ability to perform
well is not essential. The understanding of music is
not necessary—in the sense of either creative ability
of knowledge of counterpoint. The history of the
old masters will not help much, if at all. It is the
capacity to work, and then work some more; to
classify prospects; to obey orders where the customs
of the house are involved; to win the possible cus-
tomers by creating an atmosphere of confidence, and
to seem sincere and earnest in a way that really is
sincere and earnest that makes the successful piano
solicitor. Nothing else—save the right line of pianos.
Piano salesmen, especially young ones, too often
start out with the notion that, in order to close sales,
they must "meet competition." They mean that they
must be ready to sell cheaply as the cheapest. That
kind of a start will not get the salesman anywhere.
The piano salesman must be, in a sense, an educator
of public taste in things musical.
The cheap salesman, who represents his instru-
ments for just what they are, is all right. But the
worst piano salesman, on earth is the one who tells
his customer that there is "no difference in them,"
and that his pianos, even if cheap, are as good as the
best. He is a falsifier and can not last long. No
self-respecting house will have him around.
Salesmen Are Wanted.
To men qualified there is no business better than
that of a piano salesman. It is an open business.
It is a free lance profession. It possesses possibili-
ties of profit. It gets the young man somewhere
worth while. And just now there is a demand for
good piano salesmen. In whatsoever part of the
country, and in whichever city or town the young
man thinks he would like to locate and work there
are plenty of opportunities for the right kind.
SUCCESS WITH PLAYERS
IN BRIDGEPORT STORE
H. S. Piquette Piano Co. advertises Special Sale with
Big Results in Sales.
The H. S. Piquette Piano Co., Bridgeport, Conn.,
is one of the most active piano houses in that section,
and its widespread and persistent publicity keeps the
merits of a fine line of instruments constantly before
the public. Generous advertising is a rule with the
company. It believes a special sale requires particu-
lar efforts to impress its opportunities on prospective
buyers.
Two weeks ago the company announced a special
sale of five carloads of playerpianos and did so in a
manner lively enough to arouse interest. The favor
of customers for the higher priced instruments was
a feature of the special sale. The line of the com-
pany includes the Kurtzmann, Sterling, Weaver,
Huntington, Mathushek, Lester, York, Livingston
and others.
LOOK PLEASANT.
We cannot, of course, all be handsome,
And it's hard for us all to be good.
We are sure now and then to be lonely,
And we don't always do as we should.
To be patient is not always easy,
To be cheerful is much harder still,
But at least we can always be pleasant,
If we make up our minds that we will.
And it pays every time to be kindly,
Although you feel worried and blue;
If you smile at the world and look cheerful,
The world will soon smile back at you.
So try to brace up and look pleasant,
No matter how low you are down,
Good humor is alw r ays contagious,
But you banish your friends when you frown.
STEINWAY DEALER MOVES.
The Matthews Music House, Ltd., Calgary, Alta.,
Canada, last week moved to new and larger quarters
at 334 Eighth avenue, West, where important remod-
eling changes had been made. ' Handsome display
rooms have been provided for the Steinway piano
and the piano and playerpiano display arrangements
generally are very effective and helpful to sales. The
piano department is on the ground floor. The offices
are on the same floor and the second floor is devoted
to the phonograph department and the repair shops.
INDUSTRIAL MOTION PICTURES.
Eighty different industrial motion picture films,
valued at nearly $200,000, are now in the possession
of the United States Bureau of Mines. These films
were produced at small cost to the Government, prac-
tically the entire cost being borne by the various in-
dustries filmed, among them being the piano, talking
machine and band instrument industries.
DOWNSTATER IN CHICAGO.
C. M. Buchanan, piano dealer of Cairo, 111., visited
The Cable Co.'s offices in Chicago last week. Mr.
Buchanan is local representative for The Cable Co.'s
line of pianos.
July 7, 1923
W. C. HEPPERLA WANTS
RADIO FANS' OPINIONS
President of Premier Grand Piano Corpora-
tion, New York, Desirous of Hearing Re-
ports on WDT Programs.
W D T is the identifying mark of what is fast be-
coming one of the most popular radio broadcasting
services in the eastern part of the country. Radio
Broadcasting Station WDT, at the Premier Grand
Piano Corporation, 510-532 West 23rd street, New
York, and operated by the Radio Ship Owners' Ser-
vice, Inc., is rendering unusually high class, diversified
programs each day, and the vocal and instrumental
music and other features listed in these programs, are
being heard by thousands of radio fans in stations
and homes.
The character of the W D T station (405 meter
length) programs may be judged from the list of
artists, among whom are Ted Barron, the song
writer, and a company of Broadway stars, Aldo Ricci,
Italian violinist, Charles Purcell, of Swanee River
company, Marion Doran and Ernest Priest, Cana-
dian basso.
A special program for the Fourth was given under
the auspices of the American Legion through the
courtesy of Colonel Simmons. Besides band music
were included songs by Arthur Belvor, baritone of
the Chicago Civic Opera Company; William Gibbons,
baritone, and Phil Baker, star of the Passing Show.
Other features were songs by Sidney Silvers and Abe
Olman.
Piano merchants and their patrons are cordially
invited to write to Broadcasting Station W D T at
Premier Grand Piano Corporation, 510-532 West 23rd
St., New York, expressing their opinions of the vari-
ous programs, as Walter C. Hepperla, president of the
Premier Grand Piano Corporation, is anxious to hear
how the great variety of offerings via radio is appeal-
ing to the trade and the public the country over.
Mr. Hepperla reports that one night recently, im-
mediately after the conclusion of the radio concert,
twenty-five physicians phoned in, from various parts
of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Dela-
ware, expressing their great pleasure at the concert.
This, evidently, demonstrates the fact that physicians
are very much interested in listening in at the radio,
especially after the stress and exactions of their pro-
fessional duties.
VARIETY IN ENJOYMENTS
AT PIANO CLUB LUNCHEON
Earl L. Hadley, Advertising Manager for The Cable
Company, Was Guest of Honor.
A. B. Cornell was program chairman of the day
for the weekly luncheon of the Piano Club of Chi-
cago on Monday of this week, and provided two de-
lightful numbers: Miss Rose Fallon, coloratura so-
prano, in a group of songs, and Miss Marguerite
Cheval, dramatic reader, in impersonations with cos-
tume.
Earl L. Hadley, advertising manager of The Cable
Company, was the guest of honor of the day, in rec-
ognition of the victory of The Cable Company in the
Better Advertising Contest, held under the auspices
of the Better Business Bureau of the Music Indus-
tries Chamber of Commerce.
The regular monthly meeting of the Board of
Governors was held after the luncheon.
The winning Deep Stuff was a gem by Matt J.
Kennedy: "You can get them from the country, but
you can't get the country out of them."
BRANCH STORE SUCCESS.
.
The Fairbanks Piano Co., 521 Washington street,
Boston, Mass., recently opened a branch store in At-
tleboro, Mass., which is already called highly success-
ful by Almon J. Fairbanks, president of the com-
pany. Since the opening Mr. Fairbanks has taken
special charge of the branch and a very satisfactory
number of sales have been made through his personal
efforts. His musical abilities have been a strong
factor in influencing prospective buyers and his high
business aims are made clear in the large number of
grand pianos already sold in the branch store.
A USED PIANO DEPARTMENT.
The completion of remodeling plans in the Oak-
land store of Kohler & Chase, San Francisco, provides
the company with very important additional facilities.
Not the least is the bargain basement devoted to used
pianos and players. This department is spacious,
airy and well lighted, and the arrangements generally
are very conducive to sales. Every instrument shown
goes through the repair department and is in first
class shape.
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/

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