I’ve seen on several American TV shows Realtors ringing a bell in the office when they make a sale. Being British I’ve never heard of this phenomenon before. Is there some history or reason for why people do this and why it always seems to be people selling property that do it?
(Also take into account my experience of this is exclusively TV shows so I have no idea how much it actually happens or if it’s just a TV trope?)
When I bought my Saturn, they got everyone in the office to applaud me when I came to pick out the car. I would see them do it from time to time when I brought it in for maintenance.
It was to make the buyer more confident he made the right choice. Simple, but very effective.
Hmm I thought it was some kind of historical thing like a Barber’s pole.
Actually the only time a landlord in the pub rings a bell in the UK is to tell drinkers that it’s ‘last orders’… kind of sums up the different mindset between the UK and USA - in the USA it’s to celebrate and inspire and in the UK it’s to tell people to go home!
At a high tech startup I worked for the Sales Director and CEO would ring a cow bell when any major deal was signed. I’ve seen it in a few places beyond a real estate office.
I worked as a cook in a place where the bartenders would ring a bell for really good tips. It was effective too, people would really try to “earn” a bell ring from their bartenders.
Tips at Seacrets (a bar in Ocean City, MD) will inspire the bartender to ring a really cool Ship Bell. Loudly, with a rope.
Also… never seen it in person, but I’ve heard that the chefs at the China Moon restaurant high five each other when someone places an order for Kung Pao.
At my company they had a small but extremely annoying gong that the salesmen would bash every time they closed a deal. I guess it was for morale but it ended up just annoying everyone so they stopped.
Yes we do. We use a tambourine these days when we get a contract signed. When the deal closes we have to buy rounds of drinks for the office at the bar next door. We’re commerical-industrial (not residential) agents.