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Straw
Hats Sales
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Authors
wish to remain anonymous.
Special
sales during dog-day weather should be particularly studied.
For trade languishes under warm weather influence, and the
best antidote for summer business debility is strong doses
of special sales and special ads.
A
glance over the advertising columns of almost any daily publication
shows clothing, and furnishing goods advertising of an order
liable to extreme criticism. The principal criticism is this:
Why do retailers insist upon advertising the staple articles
of wear—such as regular suits, boys' clothing, white shirts,
soft hats, etc., when there is but little demand for them-when
the demand for clothing is in the direction of such summer
needs as light-weight coats and vests, crash suits, straw
hats, outing shirts, etc.? Why not give up the whole or part
of the ad to such needs?
The
other day the writer noticed the ad of a New York clothier,
which was almost altogether given to regular summer suits.
A short paragraph at the bottom spoke of straw hats. A visit
to the store showed every department deserted except the ones
given to the easy, comfortable things for summer wear, such
as straw hats, Oxford shoes, negligee shirts, crash suits,
etc.
This
is harvest-time for such goods. The dealer need not expect
to do much in suits of worsted, cheviot, clays or mixtures
at present. They are likely to lie on his counters until the
cool weather of waning summer suggests their use. But the
manager should give a whole lot of attention towards the pushing
of light-weight clothing—he should give the bulk of advertising
space to a right representation of these goods.
Summer
advertising should be crisp, animated and vigorous. The text
should be cleverly written—not too heavy, but rather light
and summery—each sentence suggestive of summer comfort in
wearing togs. Cuts are great helpers to the ads; they should
also be cleverly drawn, and apply with strong suggestiveness
to the use of the garment advertised.
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Alfonso Vega & Vega |
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Get
up one day a special sale of straw hats. Keep your straw hat
ad running for a week or so with change of copy every day.
Don't forget to change your copy daily, and inject life, crispness
and point into every ad you pen. Change your cuts frequently.
The great charm of advertising is its variety -when the bloom
of freshness wears off it becomes like the antiquated summer
girl, "slightly passe."
After
your straw hat excitement, get up a furor on crash suits and
light coats and vests. Handle this as you did your straw hat
affair. Give some consideration to your outing shirts, lawn
ties, low-cut shoes, light-weight hosiery and underwear. Get
up a special sale on each of these. It would not be a half
bad idea to come out strong with a half-page ad on all the
above goods, and give the entire ad a summer flavor. This,
can be done by a suitable general heading and a suitable cut
to accompany same.
Before
you write an ad give a few minutes' hard consideration to
your subject. Don't sit down and pen the first thing that
comes uppermost in your brain. Advertising is nothing more
nor less than an intelligent exposition of your store news
and demands just as much hard, sensible thought as you would
apply to the purchase of a lot of suits or worsteds.
Lots
of merchants "just jot down" an ad because they fancy that
they have not the time to give the ad the consideration it
deserves. This is a very grievous error—one that switches
many good dollars from the pockets of store proprietors. When
you are preparing advertising, prepare it right. Advertising
is to-day to business what fuel is to a boiler—it keeps the
steam up and the wheels working.
As
to Summer Schemes.—I have seen the worth of a ten per cent,
distribution, and in point of a great success never saw anything
like it. This, in brief, is how it was worked:
With
every sale of clothing and furnishings a ticket good for ten
per cent. of the sale was given the purchaser. This ticket
was good for its face value in any department. Thus: If a
ten dollar suit was sold a ticket good for one dollar was
given, which ticket could get a dollar's worth of groceries,
a dollar's worth of dress goods, a dollar's worth of small
wares or a dollar's worth of anything in the store.
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