| By Michelle Loeb | ||||
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[April 2007 - Page 1] | ||||
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You look out your window and see the new Guitar Center that just moved in next door. You look down at the beginner packs in the new Wal-Mart ad that appeared on your doorstep. And then you look at your finances and see the margins just aren’t where you need them to be. What do you do? Do you throw in the towel now before you go the way of Brook Mays and The Woodwind and Brasswind? Or do you take a hard look at your product and service mix to create a recipe for keeping your guitar shop in business? Here’s how to be one of the strong who survive.
It also can be helpful to work with the manufacturers to create exclusives for your store, which Joe Gallenberger said work better than house brands because they allow you to build on existing brand equity rather than start out with an unknown entity. “You can’t abandon the product levels that they sell,” Meader added, “but you sure can exploit the stuff they don’t do.”
“If you want to stand out from a superstore, the best way to do that is to realize that the first impression you make comes down to the first person who your new customer runs in to,” said Gallenberger. “It’s not just how well they are trained. What do they know about guitars? Do they present themselves well? Are they polite? Your employee has to be happy and has to want to be there,” he continued. “All the marketing money you spend is lost if your customer doesn’t feel like they’re welcomed and like this is a good place to come back to.”
“I still believe that knowledge and real care for the customer on a retailer level is the goal, and is the one thing that can set you apart from your competitors,” said Peter Wolf, PRS Guitars’ director of
sales and marketing. “Essentially, [you’re] not really ultimately selling a product to [your customer]. You’re actually selling yourself or your services to him first.”
Technical Terms The role of the salesperson has not dissipated in the wake of the Internet, where unlimited information is at any potential customer’s fingertips. “Customers approach retailers more informed than ever before,” said John Grabowski, Sweetwater’s director of purchasing, “but there is no substitute for the knowledge and guidance of a skilled salesperson. In this day of Wal-Mart and a self-service mentality, it’s easy to lose sight of this, but when exposed to it, customers appreciate true service and a relationship with an expert more than ever before.” The need for knowledgeable salespeople becomes especially important in the face of new technology in guitars—even though guitar players are known to be some of the least adventurous of the bunch. “What kills me about musicians is they go out of their way to be different. They have different hair. They have piercings and tattoos. And then when they open a guitar case, lo and behold it’s their grandfather’s guitar. A dichotomy in the extreme,” mused Peavey.
“Guitar players tend to be kind of stodgy,” added Meader. “The rule we apply a lot of times if we’re looking at a new line is it either needs to do something completely different from anything else that’s out there…or it needs to do something someone else has already done but do it better and/or for less money.” But there’s still an influx of new products that test the limits of these “stodgy” guitarists and also give your staff a new way to sell to the customer and create a need to buy.
“I think the retailer plays a crucial role in informing and mentoring musicians. This is a strength of retail that I remember valuing a lot when I was starting out,” said Marcus Ryle, co-founder and senior vice president of research and development for Line 6. “Besides providing a great service for the customer, there’s a great economic benefit as well. If a musician doesn’t know that there are new music tools, if no one explains how these tools can expand their creativity, then a sales opportunity is lost. A customer can’t ask for what they don’t know exists.” |



