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How to conduct a small mail order business

Chapter 19: Not Good Criterion.
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About This Book

A practical guide to operating a small mail-order enterprise, covering product choice, pricing, advertising, and fulfillment. It compares staple versus novelty lines, highlights lightweight, low-cost specialties that travel well by post, and emphasizes truthful descriptions and decent, lawful promotion. The text advises using printed catalogs and circulars with shipments, maintaining careful correspondence with customers, and employing advertising agents and appropriate periodicals. It also addresses postage and packing concerns, warns against deceptive or obscene schemes, and recommends studying competitors’ methods while retaining originality to build repeat business.

Not Good Criterion.

The so-called “cost and result” schedules are usually only valuable to the advertiser who prepares them as a result of his own experience. To all others who consider them, they are a delusion and a snare. Suppose an advertisement of an inch is placed in a list of publications by a watch dealer, a picture dealer, a medical advertiser, a novelty man and an agents’ supply house. There will be quite a striking difference in the ratio of results in each instance. A paper that pays one may not pay the other. We have seen this demonstrated so many times that we know whereof we speak.