Texatdurango
Member
So, the big day has arrived, we have six shiny new fountain pens on display in our booth, several snazzy colored bottles of ink, some nice writing papers to write on, a small container of water for cleaning nibs, a nice box with an assortment of different sized nibs and a few extra "upgrade" gold nibs... and up walks Sarah!
Sarah knows just enough about fountain pens to make her interested in buying one and she likes that nice Statesman fountain pen on display and wants to try it out, so what do you do?
Do you take the new pen with it's brand new nib, dip it in a bottle of ink and let her try it?
Do you install a rubber cartridge or a converter and suck up a little ink and let her try it?
Do you pull out your "inked demo pen", which is "similar" to what she wants and let her try it?
What if they try one out and don't buy, do you clean it up and place it back on display as "new"?
In short, what is the "proper" way of trying out fountain pens in a booth, or if not proper, what works best for you?
Hopefully, conversation will lead into part two of Sarah's story
Sarah knows just enough about fountain pens to make her interested in buying one and she likes that nice Statesman fountain pen on display and wants to try it out, so what do you do?
Do you take the new pen with it's brand new nib, dip it in a bottle of ink and let her try it?
Do you install a rubber cartridge or a converter and suck up a little ink and let her try it?
Do you pull out your "inked demo pen", which is "similar" to what she wants and let her try it?
What if they try one out and don't buy, do you clean it up and place it back on display as "new"?
In short, what is the "proper" way of trying out fountain pens in a booth, or if not proper, what works best for you?
Hopefully, conversation will lead into part two of Sarah's story
