“I’ll tell you what,” Chris assured us, “You could buy a
Hoover, but you’d be better off taking the money and throwing it out that
window.”
At this point, Brian and I held our breaths and looked at each
other. I was trying to silently make
Brian laugh out loud and he was returning the favor. Chris (Brian will know his real name. He’s just some guy I vaguely remember) was
trying to sell us a vacuum cleaner.
Actually, that’s not true.
He was just telling us about how great the vacuum cleaner was. He was definitely not trying to sell it to
us. He swore. The last thing he wanted to do was sell a
vacuum cleaner. That was not his job. That was the vacuum cleaner’s job. Oh and by the way, it wasn’t a “vacuum
cleaner” he wasn’t trying to sell. It
was a Kirby!
Kirby is not just any old vacuum cleaner. And Chris was not just any old vacuum cleaner
salesman. It was his one and only true passion.
This was not one of those deals where the guy calls you up and offers to
vacuum your whole house for free. Neither
Brian nor I had a house. Or an
apartment. We each lived with our
respective parents. But the party was at
Brian’s house. Or rather, his parents’
house. Every night. That’s where all the kids hung out. There was a rotating group of roughly 10 of
us with the occasional visitor. You
never knew who was going to stop by. It
was like when Bob Hope used to just walk on to talk shows.
But tonight it was just Brian, Chris the not vacuum cleaner
not salesman, and me.
About 2 weeks before, Chris had been out of work. Then he answered an ad to be a Kirby salesman. His job was cold-calling people and volunteering
to vacuum their whole house.
But now, he was off the clock. My mom had a vacuum cleaner. I had no use for one as far as I knew. Brian was in roughly the same boat. I had a car.
The year was about 1982. My car
was a 1972 Chevy Nova. I had bought it
from my dad for $300 with money I had made working at Wendy’s.
“Do you have a car?” Chris had cleverly countered my
objection that I had no use for a vacuum cleaner.
“Yeah, but I don’t clean it or anything,” I lied.
Ignoring me, Chris persisted, not selling, mind you. Teaching.
Removing the beam from my eye, as it were, “Well if you’ve ever tried to
vacuum out your car with one of those shitty car wash vacuums, you know what a
pain it is. Plus, 25 cents for 3
minutes? No thanks.”
“How much are these Kirby’s, by the way?” I asked for the
third time. Remember, we were just
sitting around shooting the shit. Just
the regular evening chat.
“A hell of a lot cheaper than 25 cents for 3 minutes, I can
guarantee that,” Chris guaranteed.
Way way later on in the story, we did finally get to hear
the price of the Kirby Vacuum cleaner.
But I’m not sure anybody has the time to wait so I’ll just tell you now.
It was $1500. But there appeared
to be some wiggle room there. Or maybe
those were friend prices. I don’t recall.
So of course neither Brian nor I had any interest in any
vacuum cleaner of any kind. We were just
having fun pretending to take an interest.
That’s when Brian said, “I thought the best vacuum cleaners were made by
Hoover.”
Chris almost choked and did a spit take or whatever. “Hoover!
Are you kidding me? Those things
suck more than any vacuum cleaner ever made in the entire history of vacuum
cleaner making!”
Brian was extremely satisfied with this response. The spider had the fly. And with a lame old joke too. And while the spider carefully navigated the
web to bind the fly, it continued to try to sell the spider a vacuum cleaner,
because all analogies break down at some level.
“Are you going to sit here and tell me that Kirby’s don’t
suck?” Brian asked in all seriousness.
“Kirby is the only vacuum cleaner ever made that does not
suck,” replied Chris. Oblivious.
My turn, “You know, we have an old Kirby at Wendy’s. I have to use it when I’m on dining
room. I hate that heavy old thing. And oh yeah, it sucks pretty hard. Of course we only use it after close. During the day we just pull out the Bissell. I'll tell you what. That Bissell may be small and light, but it definitely doesn't suck. ”
At this point, Brian and I suddenly begin to panic. I might have gone too far on that one. The trick is to be as obvious as possible
without letting the fly know what’s happening.
Whoever gives the joke away loses.
“Listen Frank,” Chris says, “I don’t know anything about
your Kirby at work, but it probably just needs a little maintenance – and with
this price, the maintenance is free for life!”
Unbelievable. That
went completely by him. “No, it’s kept
maintained. In fact, this lady who’s
worked there since the place opened said the vacuum cleaner sucks as much now
as it did when it was new.”
Shit. I screwed that
wording up. Surely he’ll catch that one.
“Oh, I see what you guys are doing. Very funny.
Hardy har har,” I lose. I got too
cocky, I guess.
Ok here’s what’s going on.
I’ve been busy the last couple of days and have nothing to
say. Around here, when you’ve got
nothing to say, you talk about the weather.
But I hate talking about the weather.
Especially right now because the weather sucks so bad. We all know it sucks so why talk about it? That’s why I chose to talk about the Kirby vacuum
cleaner.
I am not a Kirby vacuum cleaner salesman. There is no such thing. I am more of a delivery driver. The Kirby sells itself. I merely stand there and humbly collect the paltry $2000 from the people who insist on throwing money at me for knocking on their door to let them know that their future is standing majestically on the porch. Its brilliant chrome base and handmade bluish plaid bag quietly waiting to take its place in your home. And your heart. Call me for an appointment.
4 comments:
At $0.25/3 mins, that's $5/hr. Therefore, if you ran that sucker (pun intended) for 300 straight hours, you'd save $1,500 over those 12.5 days. And therefore-er, you could have financed that dust trap at 28% and still have saved enough to pay it off and then some by the time the grace period ended. Heck, you'd be rollin in cash. Ha ha ha, you sucker.
Maybe Shim's next Honday Odyssey will have that built-in vacuum cleaner option. Too bad your '73 Nova didn't. Anyway, sucks (sorry) to be you, Mr. Not-Kirby-Salesman-for-Not-Vaccuum-cleaner, uh guy. But take heart, the reviewer says that the Honda's built in sucks pretty well.
To my dismay, I never bothered to work out the math. When Chris was trying to convince me that I couldn't afford not to buy a Kirby, I just laughed. It's this type of casual attitude that has certainly cost me dearly throughout the years.
So the other day at work some guys were telling me we should spend $20M+ to set up a distribution center 30 miles closer to a given destination to offset the additional cost to truck the material to its final destination. Based on the trucking cost differential I did some quick math on my iPhone and figured that the breakeven point was something like 200,000 truckloads. Then I asked them if they were willing to sign up for an additional 50,000 carloads (using a 4:1 conversion ratio). Then the room went quite as a Kirby.
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