Presto

Issue: 1939 2290

THE SALESMAN'S CORNER
What A Salesman Should Knotv
About The Inside of A Piano
President, Charles Frederick Stein Piano Company, Chicago
Charles Frederick Stein
From the people I have handled in the selling of pianos, I
have found out how little a salesman knows about the piano
he is selling and how ready he is to say something" about his
competitors' pianos. All pianos are good. Any piano is
better than none. If you learn something about that piano
it will be easy for you to sell it. There is very little difference
in the basic principles of pianos. The main difference is that
a high grade manufacturer uses finer materials and work-
manship. Cheaper material and workmanship make a cheaper
piano.
Salesmen today have the finest opportunity to learn some-
thing about a piano. Piano building used to be quite a secret.
Today it is different. Every piano manufacturer is glad to
have competitors' salesmen go through his factory and learn
something about his pianos. Every salesman should be able
to answer his customers' questions. If salesmen knew more
about pianos and would advise the manufacturers, we would
all get better pianos. In the action and keys alone there are
about 6,000 parts not figuring turning pins, strings, sound-
ing board, bridge plate, etc.
A piano is a work of art and the salesman should love it.
You can get a lot of prospects, but they don't know what to
buy because they have heard so many pianos. Every customer
who has bought a piano in our factory knows enough about
that piano to sell another one. You will have satisfied cus-
tomers if they really get to know something about the pianos
they buy.
SALESMAN WANTED!
PIANO SALESMEN!! READ THIS
Largest piano house in Southwest will employ A No. 1
piano salesman for inside and outside work. Must be good
closer. State age and experience. Drawing account and com-
mission basis. This should interest any man who wants to
make $100.00 per week. Address Presto Music Times.
[ P A G E
INCREASE REPAIRING PROFITS
with the New
Selmer BAND INSTRUMENT
f^m
REPAIRING MANUAL
Partial List of Subjects;
Keywork; Body Work;
Regulating; Soldering,
Cleaning;
Polishing,
Clarinet, Saxophone, Dou-
ble Reed and Valve In-
strument Work, Mouth-
piece Refaclng; Plating
and Tool Hardening. 150
pages printed on special
paper. Bound in durable
cloth covers.
Let [Mant Superintendent
Erick D. Brand show you im-
proved Selmer repairing meth-
ods that can give you increased
repair shop volume and larger
net profits. This new book
explains every job step by step.
Illustrated with 126 pictures of
operations plus pictures of
every important tool. Whether
you do one job a week or a
hundred, the manual will be
constantly referred to for time-
saving methods and formulas.
Retail price $5. leas your us al rieale
iscount. Order today befo
SELMER, D.pt. P10. Elkhart, Ind.
SALESMAN IVANTED! FOR SMALL
GOODS AND ACCORDION
Fine opening for good combination man to take charge of
Small Goods and Accordion Department. Excellent chance
for one who knows this part of the music business. Good
earnings assured. Largest dealer in Southwest. State ag<
and experience. Address Presto Music Times.
We Have The
MASTER KEY
to School Business
TARG & DINNER Inc.
"The Wholesale Music Center
425 S.WABASH AVE. . . .CHICAGO
T W E N T Y - E I G H T ]
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/
STYLE AND SELLING
HOW SALESMEN
CAN CAPITALIZE
ON STYLE
Christine Holbrook, Associate Editor and Home
Decorations Director, Better Homes and Gardens.
Mrs. Holbrook is one of the Country's leading
authorities on style and home furnishings.
"NO NEW HOME IS COMPLETELY
FURNISHED WITHOUT A PIANO"
To be practical, may I suggest a few sales helps? Do you
ask your woman customer at once what period her furnish-
ings are and what wood predominates in her room? She will
be deeply interested to find there is a piano in whatever wood
will best fit into her room setting.
An influence that might well be brought to bear on your
sales of pianos is to make the architect conscious of the piano
as a necessary furnishing of the living room. That he was
conscious of this in former days, those not any further back
than our grandmothers, is shown in the wall space always
allowed for the grand piano, or a setting in the smaller living
room for the upright. Why not let your local architects have
the measurements of your piano, particularly the new styles
that take no more room than a desk. Campaign with this
thought in mind: "No new home is completely furnished
without a piano." Have your friends take up the matter of wall
space for the piano with their architect in the very beginning.
Then there is the matter of more than one piano in a house
to be brought to your customer's attention. Any average-
sized home today has a play room as well as the living room.
Both rooms need a piano. An ideal situation where there are
children who practice! I have known of families who, since
the invention of the small piano, lacking a playroom, have
bought them for the children's bedrooms. After all, they
take no more space than a dresser or chest of drawers.
When you are closing your sale why not suggest that the
day the piano goes out to the home you will accompany it
to help in the placing of it to the best advantage. If you feel
your sale is slipping because of the confusion of piano models
suggest that you visit the home and help select the style that
would be best.
I feel that all advertising of pianos should be inspirational.
A desire should be created. You should appeal to the im-
agination. Paint a picture of what a piano means to the
beauty and enjoyment of the home.
The piano manufacturers have done a magnificent job in
their styling during the last few years. They have met the
demands of changing living conditions in every way. The
only part they need to stress more is advertising to bring
the public to your door. It is all up to you to sell the public ;
a public growing every day more home and style conscious ;
a public, more alert to the true meaning of the word home
in which music is becoming a more vital factor.
CHICAGO FESTIVAL
OF ANCIENT
MUSIC
A unique recital was given at the Goodman Theatre, Chi-
cago, November 1, under the direction of Philip Manuel and
Gavin Williamson. Old instruments and old music dating
back to the sixteenth century were featured. The piano
played by John Field in Paris in 1802, on which he rendered
one of his own compositions, was used at this recital. In
this concert in 1802, Field was accompanied by his teacher,
Clementi, and probably also played a sonata written by Cle-
menti for two keyboard instruments.
TOP YOUR LINE
with this
Musically Great Piano
THE
CONOVER
Always.. everywhere.. th< name Conover has been
associated with brilliant performance, distinctive
and remarkable tone. It is the beloved instrument
of thousands who value beauty and quality of tone
as the first requisite of a truly great piano. Today,
pianos of established and traditional leadership are
few - the Conover is one of them! That dealer who
wants to make selling easier - profits greater- bus-
iness better, will top his line wilh this outstanding
performer- this piano of distinction - the Conover!
Patented "CROWNSTAY"
Sounding Board and Frame Construction
An ingenious feature of the Conover is a
simple but effective device consisting of
a curved bracing member built into the
frame This construction is designed to
maintain at all times the proper crown
of the sounding hoard, and thereby pre-
serve the original tonal beauty of the in-
strument. The possibility of damage, due
to changing atmospheric conditions, is
practically eliminated by this unique
arrangement.
Write Jtoday for full information regarding the Conover Franchise
Cable Division
SCHILLER-CABLE PIANO MFG. CO,
OREGON, ILL.
[ P A G E
T W E N T Y
- N I N E ]
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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