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I worked for LRE for a short while starting during their "last days".
Employed at Company store #54 in Milwaukee WI 1973 thru 1975. LRE opened this store as the first Wisconsin Company store in 1973. They had about six stores in the Chicago area for years. LRE epanded to two stores in Milwaukee before folding in the late 1970's. During our store's grand opening, I got to meet Abe Plettman (the CEO) and a few other LRE big-wigs like Harold Weinberg, their audio guru, creator of the "Criterion" speaker line. I also met Larry d'Amato, the leader of the ham/cb line. This was when LRE was spending bookoo bucks on expanding company stores all the way to the west coast. I think the expansion killed them. When I was managing the store, I remember calling Syosset Headquarters to check on backorders, we were plagued by import backorders. HQ's phone system was so antiquated, we had to call back numerous times after getting disconnected. Call forwarding was done with "switchhooking". Many of the people that I remember talking to were well up in years, a couple were deaf and we had to shout to them while calling. Looking back, LRE's massive expansion was doomed from the start. Imported CB radio's were continually backordered, angering the dedicated customer base that went elsewhere. The discount "warehouse" stereo stores undercut LRE as they rose to retail power at that time. It was really fun working for them at the time. We employees could buy things at actual cost. For instance, the premium CB radio Comstat 35 which retailed for about $200 cost me a mere $68.00. Talk about markup! LRE made a killing on their Jap imports. Employee buying was closely monitored as many employees were buying CB radio's at cost, then re-selling them to supplement their meager income. Salespeople were grossly underpaid compared to other stores at the time. You sell a 800 dollar stereo system and may only receive a commission of $3.00. Pretty poor. Just some ramblings from a former LRE employee. BTW, I was making an incredible sum of $200 per week in 1975 when I was promoted to store manager. That equated to about two bucks an hour considering all the "store hours" I worked! I left LRE probably two years before they folded. Gotta wonder where all the parts and inventory went! LRE kept a huge cache of "import parts" at Syosset. You could order an s-meter for a 20-year old CB radio if you wished. We kept the parts list on microfiche at the time. They probably had tens of thousands of individual parts for every CB, tuner, stereo that they sold. Incredible. "Smokey" wrote in message ... Does anyone know anything about the corporate structure of Lafayette? Is anyone out there a former employee, especially during the 1950s and 1960s? Who "absorbed" or bought Lafayette? Smokey |
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