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Effective-Business-Communication.com |
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Postage Stamps
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Last year [1910] fifteen billion letters
were handled by the post office--one hundred and fifty for every person.
Just as a thousand years ago practically all trade was cash, and now only
seven per cent involves currency, so nine-tenths of the business is done
today by letter while even a few decades ago it was by personal word. You
can get your prospect, turn him into a customer, sell him goods, settle
complaints, investigate credit standing, collect your money--ALL BY
LETTER. And often better than by word of mouth. For, when talking, you
speak to only one or two; by letter you can talk to a hundred thousand in a
sincere, personal way. So the letter is the MOST IMPORTANT TOOL in
modern business--good letter writing is the business man's FIRST
REQUIREMENT.
* * * * *
There is a firm in Chicago, with a most interesting bit of inside history.
It is not a large firm. Ten years ago it consisted of one man. Today there
are some three hundred employees, but it is still a one-man business. It has
never employed a salesman on the road; the head of the firm has never been
out to call on any of his customers.
But here is a singular thing: you may drop in to see a business man in
Syracuse or San Francisco, in Jacksonville or Walla Walla, and should you
casually mention this man's name, the chances are the other will reply: "Oh,
yes. I know him very well. That is, I've had several letters from him and I
feel as though I know him."
Sitting alone in his little office, this man was one of the first to
foresee, ten years ago, the real possibilities of the letter. He saw that if
he could write a man a thousand miles away the right kind of a letter he
could do business with him as well as he could with the man in the next
block.
So he began talking by mail to men whom he thought might buy his
goods--talking to them in sane, human, you-and-me English. Through those
letters he sold goods. Nor did he stop there. In the same human way he
collected the money for them. He adjusted any complaints that arose. He did
everything that any business man could do with customers. In five years he
was talking not to a thousand men but to a million. And today, though not
fifty men in the million have ever met him, this man's personality has swept
like a tidal wave across the country and left its impression in office,
store and factory--through letters--letters alone.
This instance is not cited because it marks the employment of a new medium,
but because it shows how the letter has become a universal implement of
trade; how a commonplace tool has been developed into a living
business-builder.
The letter is today the greatest potential creator and transactor of
business in the world. But wide as its use is, it still lies idle, an
undeveloped possibility, in many a business house where it might be playing
a powerful part.
The letter is a universal implement of business--that is what gives it such
great possibilities. It is the servant of every business, regardless of its
size or of its character. It matters not what department may command its
use--wherever there is a business in which men must communicate with each
other, the letter is found to be the first and most efficient medium.
Analyze for a moment the departments of your own business. See how many
points there are at which you could use right letters to good
advantage. See if you have not been overlooking some opportunities that the
letter, at a small cost, will help develop.
Do you sell goods? The letter is the greatest salesman known to modern
business. It will carry the story you have to tell wherever the mail goes.
It will create business and bring back orders a thousand miles to the very
hand it left. If you are a retailer, the letter will enable you to talk your
goods, your store, your service, to every family in your town, or it will go
further and build a counter across the continent for you.
If you are a manufacturer or wholesaler selling to the trade, the letter
will find prospects and win customers for you in remote towns that salesmen
cannot profitably reach.
But the letter is not only a direct salesman, it is a supporter of every
personal sales force. Judiciously centered upon a given territory, letters
pave the way for the salesman's coming; they serve as his introduction.
After his call, they keep reminding the prospect or customer of the house
and its goods.
Or, trained by the sales manager upon his men, letters keep them in touch
with the house and key up their loyalty. With regular and special letters,
the sales manager is able to extend his own enthusiasm to the farthest
limits of his territory.
So in every phase of selling, the letter makes it possible for you to keep
your finger constantly upon the pulse of trade.
If you are a wholesaler or manufacturer, letters enable you to keep your
dealers in line. If you are a retailer, they offer you a medium through
which to keep your customers in the proper mental attitude toward your
store, the subtle factor upon which retail credit so largely depends. If you
sell on installments, letters automatically follow up the accounts and
maintain the inward flow of payments at a fraction of what any other system
of collecting entails.
Do you have occasion to investigate the credit of your customers? The letter
will quietly and quickly secure the information. Knowing the possible
sources of the data you desire you can send forth half a dozen letters and a
few days later have upon your desk a comprehensive report upon the worth and
reliability of almost any concern or individual asking credit favors. And
the letter will get this information where a representative would often fail
because it comes full-fledged in the frankness and dignity of your house.
Does your business involve in any way the collecting of money? Letters today
bring in ten dollars for every one that collectors receive on their
monotonous round of homes and cashiers' cages. Without the collection letter
the whole credit system would be toppling about our ears.
* * * * *
The practical uses of the business
letter are almost infinite: selling goods, with distant customers,
developing the prestige of the house--there is handling men, adjusting
complaints, collecting money, keeping in touch scarcely an activity of
modern business that cannot be carried on by letter
* * * * *
Do you find it necessary to adjust the complaint of a client or a customer?
A diplomatic letter at the first intimation of dissatisfaction will save
many an order from cancellation. It will soothe ruffled feelings, wipe out
imagined grievances and even lay the basis for firmer relations in the
future.
So you may run the gamut of your own business or any other. At every point
that marks a transaction between concerns or individuals, you will find some
way in which the letter rightly used, can play a profitable part.
There is a romance about the postage stamp as fascinating as any story--not
the romance contained in sweet scented notes, but the romance of big things
accomplished; organizations developed, businesses built, great commercial
houses founded.
In 1902 a couple of men secured the agency for a firm manufacturing extracts
and toilet preparations. They organized an agency force through letters and
within a year the manufacturers were swamped with business, unable to fill
the orders.
Then the men added one or two other lines, still operating from one small
office. Soon a storage room was added; then a packing and shipping room was
necessary and additional warehouse facilities were needed. Space was rented
in the next building; a couple of rooms were secured across the street, and
one department was located over the river--wherever rooms could be found.
Next the management decided to issue a regular mail-order catalogue and move
to larger quarters where the business could be centered under one roof. A
floor in a new building was rented--a whole floor. The employees thought it
was extravagance; the managers were dubious, for when the business was
gathered in from seven different parts of the city, there was still much
vacant floor space.
One year later it was again necessary to rent outside space. The management
then decided to erect a permanent home and today the business occupies two
large buildings and the firm is known all over the country as one of the big
factors of mail-order merchandising.
It has all been done by postage stamps.
When the financial world suddenly tightened up in 1907 a wholesale dry goods
house found itself hard pressed for ready money. The credit manager wrote to
the customers and begged them to pay up at once. But the retailers were
scared and doggedly held onto their cash. Even the merchants who were well
rated and whose bills were due, played for time.
The house could not borrow the money it needed and almost in despair the
president sat down and wrote a letter to his customers; it was no routine
collection letter, but a heart-to-heart talk, telling them that if they did
not come to his rescue the business that he had spent thirty years in
building would be wiped out and he would be left penniless because he could
not collect his money. He had the bookkeepers go through every
important account and they found that there was hardly a customer who had
not, for one reason or another, at some time asked for an extension of
credit. And to each customer the president dictated a personal paragraph,
reminding him of the time accommodation had been asked and granted. Then the
appeal was made straight from the heart: "Now, when I need help, not merely
to tide me over a few weeks but to save me from ruin, will you not strain a
point, put forth some special effort to help me out, just as I helped you at
such and such a time?"
"If we can collect $20,000," he had assured his associates, "I know we can
borrow $20,000, and that will probably pull us through."
The third day after his letters went out several checks came in; the fourth
day the cashier banked over $22,000; within ten days $68,000 had come in,
several merchants paying up accounts that were not yet due; a few even
offered to "help out the firm."
The business was saved--by postage stamps.
Formality to the winds; stereotyped phrases were forgotten; traditional
appeals were discarded and a plain talk, man-to-man, just as if the two were
closeted together in an office brought hundreds of customers rushing to the
assistance of the house with which they had been dealing.
Sixty-eight thousand dollars collected within two weeks when money was
almost invisible--and by letter. Truly there is romance in the postage
stamp.
Twenty-five years ago a station agent wrote to other agents along the line
about a watch that he could sell them at a low price. When an order came in
he bought a watch, sent it to the customer and used his profit to buy stamps
for more letters. After a while he put in each letter a folder advertising
charms, fobs and chains; then rings, cuff buttons and a general line of
jewelry was added. It soon became necessary to give up his position on the
railroad and devote all his time to the business and one line after another
was added to the stock he carried.
Today the house that started in this way has customers in the farthermost
parts of civilization; it sells every conceivable product from toothpicks to
automobiles and knockdown houses. Two thousand people do nothing but handle
mail; over 22,000 orders are received and filled every day; 36,000 men and
women are on the payroll.
It has all been done by mail. Postage stamps bring to the house every year
business in excess of $65,000,000.
One day the head correspondent in an old established wholesale house in the
east had occasion to go through some files of ten and twelve years before.
He was at once struck with the number of names with which he was not
familiar--former customers who were no longer buying from the house. He put
a couple of girls at work making a list of these old customers and checking
them up in the mercantile directories to see how many were still in
business.
Then he sat down and wrote to them, asking as a personal favor that they
write and tell him why they no longer bought of the house; whether its goods
or service had not been satisfactory, whether some complaint had not been
adjusted. There must be a reason, would they not tell him personally just
what it was?
Eighty per cent of the men addressed replied to this personal appeal; many
had complaints that were straightened out; others had drifted to other
houses for no special reason. The majority were worked back into the
"customer" files. Three years later the accounting department checked up the
orders received from these re-found customers. The gross was over a million
dollars. The business all sprung from one letter.
Yes, there is romance in the postage stamp; there is a latent power in it
that few men realize--a power that will remove commercial mountains and
erect industrial pyramids.