1 - get her into the sound of the system (even if you have to listen to horrid eighties music).
2 - make small changes on a regular basis - and ask her to give her opinion of the changes they make.
3 - choose a part of your system that you can roll over on a regular basis without changing the basic sound or spending much money at all ... then swap that part out just for the sake of change as often as possible.
4 - be open and honest about the costs involved in 2 & 3.
5 - make your major changes after she supports the small changes ... don't treat big changes any different than the small ones.
This strategy has worked for me very well as of late. One year ago my system was monitors on wooden milk crate with electronics not nearly as resolving as I would have liked. In the past week my wife has signed for the deliveries of my Hales Rev 3s and Classe CAP-150. She's actually on my case to get the CAP into the system so she can hear how it sounds!
2 - make small changes on a regular basis - and ask her to give her opinion of the changes they make.
3 - choose a part of your system that you can roll over on a regular basis without changing the basic sound or spending much money at all ... then swap that part out just for the sake of change as often as possible.
4 - be open and honest about the costs involved in 2 & 3.
5 - make your major changes after she supports the small changes ... don't treat big changes any different than the small ones.
This strategy has worked for me very well as of late. One year ago my system was monitors on wooden milk crate with electronics not nearly as resolving as I would have liked. In the past week my wife has signed for the deliveries of my Hales Rev 3s and Classe CAP-150. She's actually on my case to get the CAP into the system so she can hear how it sounds!