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When 25-year-old Patrick Joseph Frawley Jr. went into the ball-point-pen business in 1949, he could not have picked a worse time. The market was flooded with pens; bankers warned against writing checks with them (forgers could literally pick up a transfer of a signature); schoolteachers banned them; and retailers were swamped with complaints. But Pat Frawley was full of confidence-and with good reason. At 16 he was a salesman for his father's export-import business in Nicaragua; at 18 he negotiated a $300,000 deal between Panama and U.S. Rubber...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Mighty Pen | 9/26/1955 | See Source »

While he ran his San Francisco business with one hand, Frawley began to sell ballpoint pens, made by a Los Angeles aircraft-parts manufacturer, with the other. Before long, the manufacturer could not keep up with sales of the inexpensive (97?) pen, which wrote well and did not leak. Frawley bought him out for $18,000, rented a factory for $450 a month and started manufacturing Paper-Mate pens. To solve the problem of fading and transferable ink, he used a new ink that a Hungarian chemist mixed in a makeshift home lab. Frawley's first selling coup...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Mighty Pen | 9/26/1955 | See Source »

...Frawley sold 4,000,000 pens and decided to invade the tough New York market. Twenty-two high-pressure salesmen visited 2,400 stores in six weeks. They wrote on retailers' shirts, promised a new $15 shirt if the ink did not wash out. His salesmen gave pens to school principals, won their approval and then advertised it. In the first year he spent $30,000 for advertising. This year PaperMate is spending $5,000,000. As a result, sales climbed from $360,000 to an estimated $26 million for 1955. In six years Frawley sold 51 million pens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Mighty Pen | 9/26/1955 | See Source »

...snatch the ball-point-pen leadership from Frawley Chemical & Engineering's Paper-Mate, Atlanta's Scripto, Inc. is bringing out a new, lighter and better-balanced model for $1. Though competition is still fierce, ball-point penmakers have recovered from their recent slump. Last year's ball-point sales: 45 million, v. a mere 28 million conventional fountain pens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: TIME CLOCK, Jun. 22, 1953 | 6/22/1953 | See Source »

Stars in the Air (Mon. 8 p.m., CBS). The Babe Ruth Story, with Ward Bond, William Frawley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RADIO: Program Preview, Jun. 30, 1952 | 6/30/1952 | See Source »

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