โOct-07-2015 09:40 AM
โOct-23-2015 01:13 PM
JALLEN4 wrote:rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
You state you bought the second truck for $5,000 less than your local dealer could sell it for but also state you never went to the local dealer on the second purchase. How does that work?
โOct-21-2015 11:05 AM
transferred wrote:IdaD wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:
I have heard the story dozens of times where people claim to have saved $5,000 or more on any variety of domestic vehicles by buying somewhere else. I have never seen it to be true when all the facts are known. Generally they bought a vehicle with less equipment they felt they didn't need, bought a demo or other used vehicle, or they are calculating their savings from list price that people don't pay anyway.
.
This is a very odd and inaccurate paragraph. Price varies hugely by dealer for the EXACT SAME product. You must be a salesman's dream.
โOct-21-2015 11:00 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:Skid Row Joe wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:Pretty simple, actually.....rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
You state you bought the second truck for $5,000 less than your local dealer could sell it for but also state you never went to the local dealer on the second purchase. How does that work?
When you learn your local dealer won't budge, it's easy to calculate after the first purchase As an example, I stopped by the Cadillac/Chevrolet dealer I bought my 1st new Cadillac from to enquire whether they would deal on a new Corvette. Their answer was simply that they're not in business to sell on price, and, no, they wouldn't discount a new Corvette - no how, no way. So, when I find the Chevrolet dealer that I want to do business with to save thousands, I can then calculate how stubborn the dealer I gave an opportunity to sell me a new Corvette - is overpriced. Some dealers just don't want to sell their units.
Think you for proving my point. Comparing the dealer's pricing policy on a new truck would have little to do with the pricing on a Corvette. Corvette's are allocated to the dealer based on his previous Corvette sales. When they are "hot", as they are now, those dealers who do not sell Corvettes in volume receive very few of them and can usually sell them for sticker if they are willing to wait. Volume Corvette dealers will receive more allocation and can be more amenable to discount them.
Since you previously purchased a Cadillac from this dealership, I would think a man of your experience received a competitive price on that vehicle. Using your two examples from the same dealer, I fail to see the logic of being able to save $5,000-$7,500 by buying a truck from some other dealer without asking them for a price on that product.
I have heard the story dozens of times where people claim to have saved $5,000 or more on any variety of domestic vehicles by buying somewhere else. I have never seen it to be true when all the facts are known. Generally they bought a vehicle with less equipment they felt they didn't need, bought a demo or other used vehicle, or they are calculating their savings from list price that people don't pay anyway.
โOct-19-2015 05:18 AM
The Texan wrote:
Actually for those that don't know, JALLEN4 is a dealer and was the president of the Florida Auto Dealers Association. He may still be the association president, for all I know. He is ANTI anyone, who shops, compares and makes a good deal, other than MSRP on any vehicle.
โOct-18-2015 02:13 PM
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
โOct-18-2015 02:00 PM
IdaD wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:
I have heard the story dozens of times where people claim to have saved $5,000 or more on any variety of domestic vehicles by buying somewhere else. I have never seen it to be true when all the facts are known. Generally they bought a vehicle with less equipment they felt they didn't need, bought a demo or other used vehicle, or they are calculating their savings from list price that people don't pay anyway.
.
โOct-18-2015 09:09 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:Skid Row Joe wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:Pretty simple, actually.....rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
You state you bought the second truck for $5,000 less than your local dealer could sell it for but also state you never went to the local dealer on the second purchase. How does that work?
When you learn your local dealer won't budge, it's easy to calculate after the first purchase As an example, I stopped by the Cadillac/Chevrolet dealer I bought my 1st new Cadillac from to enquire whether they would deal on a new Corvette. Their answer was simply that they're not in business to sell on price, and, no, they wouldn't discount a new Corvette - no how, no way. So, when I find the Chevrolet dealer that I want to do business with to save thousands, I can then calculate how stubborn the dealer I gave an opportunity to sell me a new Corvette - is overpriced. Some dealers just don't want to sell their units.
Think you for proving my point. Comparing the dealer's pricing policy on a new truck would have little to do with the pricing on a Corvette. Corvette's are allocated to the dealer based on his previous Corvette sales. When they are "hot", as they are now, those dealers who do not sell Corvettes in volume receive very few of them and can usually sell them for sticker if they are willing to wait. Volume Corvette dealers will receive more allocation and can be more amenable to discount them.
Since you previously purchased a Cadillac from this dealership, I would think a man of your experience received a competitive price on that vehicle. Using your two examples from the same dealer, I fail to see the logic of being able to save $5,000-$7,500 by buying a truck from some other dealer without asking them for a price on that product.
I have heard the story dozens of times where people claim to have saved $5,000 or more on any variety of domestic vehicles by buying somewhere else. I have never seen it to be true when all the facts are known. Generally they bought a vehicle with less equipment they felt they didn't need, bought a demo or other used vehicle, or they are calculating their savings from list price that people don't pay anyway.
โOct-18-2015 07:12 AM
Skid Row Joe wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:Pretty simple, actually.....rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
You state you bought the second truck for $5,000 less than your local dealer could sell it for but also state you never went to the local dealer on the second purchase. How does that work?
When you learn your local dealer won't budge, it's easy to calculate after the first purchase As an example, I stopped by the Cadillac/Chevrolet dealer I bought my 1st new Cadillac from to enquire whether they would deal on a new Corvette. Their answer was simply that they're not in business to sell on price, and, no, they wouldn't discount a new Corvette - no how, no way. So, when I find the Chevrolet dealer that I want to do business with to save thousands, I can then calculate how stubborn the dealer I gave an opportunity to sell me a new Corvette - is overpriced. Some dealers just don't want to sell their units.
โOct-17-2015 09:51 PM
JALLEN4 wrote:Pretty simple, actually.....rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
You state you bought the second truck for $5,000 less than your local dealer could sell it for but also state you never went to the local dealer on the second purchase. How does that work?
โOct-16-2015 09:42 AM
โOct-16-2015 09:14 AM
โOct-16-2015 07:42 AM
rebelopie wrote:
I have purchased two vehicles from Dave Smith. The first time, I took DS's price to my local dealer and asked if they would meet somewhere in the middle between their price and the DS price. They weren't willing to budge at all, so I bought from DS. For the second vehicle, I went straight to DS without messing with the stubborn local dealers. Both purchases were thousands less than what the local dealer could do. The first purchase was about $7500 less. Second was about $5000. The real trick is to catch the rebates at the right time.
A word of advice is to check the options list carefully before agreeing to purchase. My father made an order from DS and his vehicle didn't come with the entertainment package, even though he had requested it. Upon looking at the options on the order sheet he signed off on, it wasn't listed. While my dad was at fault for not checking the sheet closely enough, DS made it right and had the package installed.
โOct-15-2015 02:38 PM
โOct-15-2015 10:43 AM