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Salesmen’s Don’ts
by
Don’t fall on prices!
The man who does this will not gain the confidence of the man to whom he shows his goods. Without this he cannot sell a merchant successfully. A hat man once told me of an experience.
“When I first started on the road,” said he, “I learned one thing–not to break on prices when a merchant asked me to come down. I was in Dubuque. It was about my fourth trip to the town. I had been selling one man there but his business hadn’t been as much as it should, and I kept on the lookout for another customer. Besides, the town was big enough to stand two, anyway. I had been working hard on one of the largest clothing merchants, who carried my line, in the town. Finally I got him over to my sample room. I showed him my line but he said tome, ‘Your styles are all right but your prices are too high. Vy, here is a hat you ask me twelf tollars for. Vy, I buy ’em from my olt house for eleven feefty. You cannot expect me to buy goods from you ven you ask me more than odders.’
“I had just received a letter from the house about cutting, and they had given it to me so hard that I thought I would ask the prices they wanted for their goods, and if I couldn’t sell them that way, I wouldn’t sell them at all. I hadn’t learned to be honest then for its own sake; honesty is a matter of education, anyway. So I told my customer, ‘No; the first price I made you was the bottom price. I’ll not vary it for you. I’d be a nice fellow to ask you one price and then come down to another. If I did anything like that I couldn’t walk into your store with a clear conscience and shake you by the hand. I’ve simply made you my lowest price in the beginning and I hope you can use the goods at these figures, but if you can’t, I cannot take an order from you.’ Well, he bought the goods at my prices, paying me $12 for what he said he could get for $11.50.
“A few days after that I met a fellow salesman who was selling clothing. He said to me, ‘By Jove, my boy, you’re going to get a good account over there in Dubuque, do you know that? The man you sold there told me he liked the way you did business. He said he tried his hardest to beat you down on prices but that you wouldn’t stand for it, and that he had confidence in you.’
“And, sure enough, I sold that man lots of goods for many years, and I thus learned early in my career not to fall on prices. If a man is going to do any cutting, the time to do it is at the beginning of his trip when he marks his samples. He should do this in plain figures and he should in no way vary from his original price. If he does, he should be man enough to send a rebate to those from whom he has obtained higher prices. If a man will follow out this method he will surely succeed.”
Don’t give away things!
This same hat man told me another experience he met with on that same trip. Said he, “I went in to see a man in eastern Nebraska. He was the one man on that trip who told me when I first mentioned business that he wanted some hats and that he would buy mine if they suited him. This looked to me like a push-over. Purely out of ignorance and good- heartedness, when he came to my sample room (I was a new man on the road), because he had been the first man who said he wanted some goods, I offered him a fine hat and do you know, he not only would not take the hat from me but he did not buy a bill. I learned from another one of the boys that he turned me down because I offered to make him a present. This is a rule which is not strictly adhered to, but if I were running a wholesale house I should let nothing be given to a customer. He will think a great deal more of the salesman if that salesman makes him pay for what he gets.”