Sales pitch

Farrell mfarrel2 at tampabay.rr.com
Sat Feb 3 17:50:00 MST 2007


 
When a customer wants to buy a $!,000 piano and not a $2,500 much better piano, I tell the customer as follows: A piano is not like a car, which you buy, use for a few years, and then get rid of. 

"Yes, but I'm not sure Suzie will stick with it, so I don't want to spend that much."

A piano is a lifetime investment. Now, if you spend $1,500 more for the better piano and have it for the next
50 years, which is very likely, it means that you'll be spending only $30 per year to have a fine instrument for the rest of your life 

Well......., yeah......., but I'm not so sure you'll find that many $2,500 instruments that will be fine instruments for the rest of someone's life. Is your store in a retirement community?

Also, when a customer wants to settle for a piano that's falling apart because, "Johnny is just a beginner, he doesn't need a really good piano," I ask the mother how she would feel when Johnny grows up and is ready for his first driving lesson, and the instructor pulls up in an old, beat up car. Wouldn't she want to see, instead,  a nice, modern vehicle that looks and drives like a real car, instead of an old piece of garbage?

"Yeah, but that's the instructors car - I don't have to pay for it!" "An old hand-me-down will be fine for Johnny's first car."

Actually, I agree with much of what you say. However, I've also heard the comments above more times than I've cared to.

Terry Farrell
  ----- Original Message ----- 


  When a customer wants to buy a $!,000 piano and not a $2,500 much better piano, I tell the customer as follows: A piano is not like a car, which you buy, use for a few years, and then get rid of. 
  A piano is a lifetime investment. Now, if you spend $1,500 more for the better piano and have it for the next
  50 years, which is very likely, it means that you'll be spending only $30 per year to have a fine instrument for the rest of your life instead of having to settle for a piece of junk. Isn't it worth it? Also, when a customer wants to settle for a piano that's falling apart because, "Johnny is just a beginner, he doesn't need a really good piano," I ask the mother how she would feel when Johnny grows up and is ready for his first driving lesson, and the instructor pulls up in an old, beat up car. Wouldn't she want to see, instead,  a nice, modern vehicle that looks and drives like a real car, instead of an old piece of garbage? 

  Jesse Gitnik   NYC
  Since 1980
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