THE STORY
BEHIND TESTED SELLING
B EFORE GIVING you the Wheeler
formulas, rules, and principles for devising word combinations that make people
buy, it may be interesting to you learn how this Wheeler Word Laboratory was
established and has become the first and only business wherein spoken words and
sales techniques are developed and tested.
When Mr. Wheeler was an
advertising solicitor some ten years ago on the Los Angeles Herald, and
then on the Rochester Journal, the Albany Times-Union, and the
Baltimore News-Post, he developed what to him was a fine sales
presentation for retail merchants.
He
would inform them, with considerable sincerity, and volumes of figures under his
arm, that his newspaper had the largest circulation in town, and therefore more
people who needed shirts, hosiery, umbrellas, needles and thread, and pots and
pans would read the merchants advertisements in his paper and be down to their
places of business the next day to buy.
A
convincing sales argument, he thought, but Mr. Merchant would always shrug his
shoulders and say, “So what?”
He would then point to the hundreds of people in the aisles of his store and inform Mr. Wheeler that perhaps he did represent a newspaper with plenty of circulation that brought people into his store – but people just didn’t buy. The merchant called them “shoppers,” “lookers,” and “walk-outs.”
This sales obstacle had Mr. Wheeler perplexed for many years, because as a newspaper representative his only job was to get the people into the stores. Then one day it occurred to him that maybe this wasn’t the end of his job – but really the beginning.
Therefore he set about making a careful analysis of the merchandise sold to the stores by the manufacturers. It was the right merchandise, sold at the right price and at the right season.
On going over the stores advertisements, he found that they were usually pretty effective. He then narrowed down the problem of why people came to the stores and purchased so little to the salespeople themselves behind their counters.
Here was the weak link in the setup of the retailer, the manufacturer, and the newspaper.
TWENTY REPORTERS
GET THE FACTS
To get the definite proof of this fact, Mr. Wheeler approached Erwin Huber, then director of advertising for the Baltimore News-Post. Together they selected twenty reporters and gave each of them five dollars with instructions to go to The May Company and buy as many of the men’s advertised dollar shirts as the $5.00 would purchase and the clerks would sell.
When the reporters returned from the store, fifteen of them hadn’t bought a single shirt, informing Mr. Wheeler that the clerks had made no attempt to sell them one. The five reporters who did purchase shirts purchased only one each, explaining that the clerks did not suggest a second, third, or fourth shirt.
It was evident, according to the reporters, that the clerks figured that after all a man wore only one shirt at a time, so if he bought one, why try to “load him up” with several?
IMPORTANT
SELLING EVIDENCE
Armed with this important evidence, Mr. Wheeler then approached Mr. Wilbur May, head of The May Company store in Baltimore at the time, explained what he had done, and produced his findings.
Mr. May was most interested. He realized that he had a million-dollar establishment, with a million dollars worth of merchandise on the shelves – yet the real control of his business was in the hands of his eight hundred salesgirls, whose only two worries (and we can’t blame them, either) were these:
1.
“When am I gonna get married and quit
working!”
2. “Gee, I wish it was 5:30 – my dogs are aching!”
Mr. May further realized that the most the manufacturer was doing was getting his goods up to the counters, the most the store was doing was teaching the clerks how to fill out checks properly and placing advertisements in the papers, and that the most the newspaper was doing was bringing the people in alive.
In the final analysis, the sales were consummated by the salespeople – and on what they say or do depends to a great degree just how much merchandise will be sold across American counters each day.
WHEELER WORD
LABORATORY IS FORMED
Upon hearing this story and seeing the facts, Mr. May suggested that Mr. Wheeler be commissioned by his newspaper to go behind the counters and really make a study of salespeople.
This study, which has now been going on for ten years, resulted in the formation of the Wheeler Word Laboratory. The purpose of this unique laboratory is to measure the relative selling effectiveness of words and their sales techniques, to determine with a great degree of accuracy what formulation of words and techniques makes the sale more accurate and faster.
Many stores and manufacturers have participated in supplying the Wheeler Word Laboratory with hundreds of selling sentences to be tested, and have opened their doors wide as a laboratory wherein Mr. Wheeler could get authentic tabulation of the scientific selling ability of words and techniques.
SALES GAINS
RECORDED EVERYWHERE
Wherever a salesperson is given a “Tested Selling Sentence” with its proper “Tested Technique” to replace a time worn statement, sales gains are noted. For instance, a single sentence increased sales of a manufacturer’s hand lotion at B. Altman’s on Fifth Avenue from 60 per week to 927.
Another tested combination of words made sales 78 percent of the times used at R. H. Macy & Company in selling their long-profit brand of coffee and tea.
On another occasion two “Tested Selling Sentences” completely sold Bloomingdales, Saks 34th Street, Abraham & Straus of Brooklyn, and William Taylor’s of Cleveland out of tooth brushes – a staple item – for the first time in the history of these important stores.
Stern Brothers, in New York, had “Tested Selling Sentences” tailor-made to reduce delivery costs, and according to William Riordan, president, the first six months’ use of the sentences showed a relative saving of close to $7,000 over the preceding year.
Ten years of study of salespeople – ten years trying out formulas, rules, and principles – casting them aside for others – have brought forth some sound, sensible methods of salesmanship, and Mr. Wheeler offers them to you in the following swift-moving pages.
Tested Selling Institute
New York City
The best-looking merchandise won’t sell itself;
and the prettiest dotted line won’t sign itself, without the intelligent
persuasion of somebody’s words.