Presto

Issue: 1929 2215

January 12, 1929
PRESTO-TIMES
With January, 1929, we enter our 12th year of National Advertising of Gulbransen
Pianos. Here is a record of consistent monthly advertising, of unbroken mer-
chandising assistance to dealers, equaled by few institutions in any line.
BUILT INTO EVERY INSTRUMENT IS OUR WHOLE REPUTATION
The golden toned Gulbransen
Grands . . . nationally priced:
$650, $675, $850, $1175. Art
Grand (illustrated)
$775.
rnaster plejct;
l
GULBRANSEN
GRAND
HROUGH the Gulbransen Re-
search Laboratories, working
for perfection with every known
facility, A. G. Gulbransen, the piano
master, expresses true genius in his
Art Grand. Graceful in line, authen-
tic in design, golden in tone quality
—it is but one of 24 attractive
Gulbransen creations. Art, period
and standard models in a wide vari-
ety of finishes are represented. A. G.
Gulbransen offers them to you today
after 50 years of service to music.
T
Gulbransen grands $650 up. Also up-
rights; Registering (foot played);
Reproducing (electric) Pianos—all
playable by hand. AndthenewTriano
—playable all three ways.
Music helps children. Educators and |!
child authorities have found that
boys and girls who study piano have
the highest marks in arithmetic, geog-
r a p h y , a n d Other Studies. P a r e n t s
,
.

a r e invited tO Write US t o r t h e tacts.
TVT
i i • . •
J\O Obligation.
^ow we announce GulbransenRadio,backed by 50
years of experience in the music business. Stretch-
ing
out over endless miles, it brings you the best
i Q broadcasting, faithfully reproduced. Deep
toned Dynamic Speaker.
F R E E
B O O K
GULBRANSEN COMPANY
3230 W. Chicago Ave., Dept. 1, Chicago, 111.
Pleaso send me Mr. Gulbransen's new full color
catalog, also facts on child training. No obligation.
Have you a piano?
Radio?
Are you in the market for an exchange of your old
piano?
Name
Address
Look for the Baby Trade Mark
jj in the Dealer's Window
City
The National AssociationofPiano Tuners recommends
tuning at least two to four times each year. Keep the
fine tone of your piano with this care.
© 1929, G. Co.
Trade Mark Reg.
Cj U L D fvAN
"The
^
Instruments of Today" ^ ^
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/
MUSICAL
TIMES
PRESTO
Established
1881
Established
1884
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
10 Cents a Copy
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1929.
E. B. BARTLETT TALKS
ON SALES CONDITIONS
In an Enlightening Analysis of Conditions, Vice = President of W. W.
Kimball & Co., Chicago, Classifies the Dealers and Salesmen
and Comments on Selling Methods
E. R. Bartlett, vice-president of the W. W. Kim-
ball Co , Chicago, entertains no illusions about music
trade conditions and it is clear from his words that
he carries no disappointments as to the business of
his own house or other houses of the progressive
kind who have adapted to modern exactions the tried
and proven methods of good business. There is no
who spontaneously strive for business with love for
their work and pride in their achievements; salesmen
who accomplish sales when driven and salesmen who
merely go through the motions, of course without
results.
"But the 20 per cent proportion of music houses
that perform the biggest part of the music goods
$2 The Yeai
That kind accidentally find prospects. It is a hap-
pening the opposite of the circumstances of the live
wires who discover their prospects as the result of
persistent, well-planned search.
"And the other three-fifths?
In that proportion
you have the kind who would spell defeat for music
goods interests if their negative influences were not
nullified by the energies of the active and success-
ful body. Dealers in that important three-fifths in-
clude the business fatalists who believe "what is to
be will be" and who see no way to ameliorate the
occasional periods of dull business from one cause
or another. The dealers and salesmen composing
that three-fifths lack the initiative trait that creates
new ways to sales; that disregards the precedents
of a day when Opportunity knocked loudly at the
door and customers came to the store prompted by
the spontaneous urge to buy pianos and other musical
commodities."
The Bright View.
"But the pleasant side of that condition is that num-
bers of the dealers and salesmen composing the three-
fifths proportion could be included in the first and
second categories with the help of a little proper
direction and training. The tragedy in the music
or any other business is when the go-as-you-please,
haphazard methods become chronic. There is busi-
ness today for the music merchant, but he must go
after it and keep going after it."
Mr. Bartlett cites a case of a dealer not three
hundred miles from Chicago who was attacked with
the "lay-down fever" and soon his business slipped
away from him and he lost the initiative and the
ability to create new business. The agency in that
city was changed and Mr. Bartlett tried out his ideas
with the result that the agency was given to a man
who had developed into the 20 per cent class. Sales
began coming in and within the last sixty days an
excellent trade has come from that establishment.
More orders than had been received in that locality
for twelve months prior to the change.
CONVINCING PROOF
THAT BUSINESS EXISTS
How a Retail Salesman for the Baldwin Piano
Company's Cincinnati Store Built Up
Sales Is Inspiring.
The Cincinnati correspondent of Presto-Times
sends the following item:
As an example of what can be accomplished by a
piano sales ran who will organize his time properly
and build up contracts that will bring piano prospects,
the following gives the totals in the personal busi-
ness of one of the salesmen in the Baldwin Piano
Company Cincinnati retail store:
1924
$38,991
1927
58,729
1925
$49,214
1928
77,205
1926
57,844
This is strictly personal business and does not
include any sales initiated by "crew" men. It shows
the opportunities for piano selling are better than
ever for the man who will organize his time prop-
erly and work along the right lines.
J. C. HENDERSON IN SOUTHEAST
E. B. BARTL.KTT.
such thing as success without progress in the music
business today.
"New conditions in the music business continually
are effecting change, and it is the alert, observant
dealer, and salesman who keeps walking in the zone
of activities," said Mr. Bartlett this week. "The
inactive, slothful, unimaginative ones get what they
deserve; the alert, keenly observing men who see
victory in defeat and opportunity in changed con-
ditions, get the rewards.
The Classification.
"Music houses today may be divided into percent-
ages of fifths, and the first 20 per cent portion car-
ries the big load of the trade. Piano salesmen may
be classified in the same way. There are salesmen
selling job, of course make the big money. It is
only a just result. What music business is achieved
in the face of persistent and powerful competition
by other trades may be credited to that invulnerable
20 per cent of music dealers in the arena of busi-
ness today.
All Right—But.
"The next fifth or 20 per cent of the whole are
deserving folk who honestly strive for sales results.
But they lack the punch of new systems demanded
by new conditions; the pep born of enthusiasm and
the joy of striving. The half-hearted way in busi-
ness is the sign of the happy-go-lucky individual who
usually waits for Opportunity to call instead of jog-
ging over the highways and byways to locate it.
J. C. Henderson, piano department manager for
the eastern territory of Wurlitzer's, 132 West 42nd
street. New York, is making a southeastern trip this
week in the interest of that breat manufacturing
concern. He is making calls in Washington, D. C,
and in some of the important cities of Virginia. In
the meantime Miss Solomon, his secretary, is taking
care of his office on the mezzanine floor. Mr. Hen-
derson will be back at his desk on Monday and Tues-
day of next week, after which he will probably leave
for another trip.
WILL A. WATKIN CO. EXPANDS.
The Will A. Watkin Company, Dallas, Tex., has
increased its radio display space and has added to
its facilities for service. Twelve salesmen are now
engaged in the radio department and two floors and
a mezzanine floor have special rooms in which radio
demonstrations may be given. The sales department
is prepared to handle the needs of the public, and the
service department is equipped to handle the require-
ments quickly and rapidly.
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/

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 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.