โJun-21-2014 05:34 AM
โJun-30-2014 06:27 AM
โJun-28-2014 07:47 AM
Majja13 wrote:
Just wondering if only towing twice a year why not just rent a 3/4 or one ton and keep the Tahoe?
โJun-27-2014 09:55 PM
โJun-27-2014 08:05 PM
โJun-27-2014 06:27 PM
JALLEN4 wrote:monkey44 wrote:
ALLEN4 wrote:
As soon as the retail customer starts paying MSRP for the vehicle, puts what they will take for the trade on the windshield, and hands the salesman a credit app when they arrive will be when you will know the real price of the vehicle without asking.
End Quote
That's makes no sense -- the dealer has no use for my credit app because I bring a check - and not everyone finances with the seller.
I tell him exactly what I will take for my trade as soon as I arrive, and carry a KBB (or whatever appraisal service) printout with me ... The ONLY thing I don't know when I get there is the dealers price. And if manufacturers (or the dealer) would put the price ON the vehicle instead of a phantom MSRP sticker, and every dealer sold every vehicle for that price, we'd have less hassle, and less "wasted time" both for dealers, salesmen, AND buyers.
Hiding the price is the single most time-wasting event in truck selling. PERIOD.
Like I said, if a salesman would tell us the price he's willing (or required) to sell the truck sitting right there in front of me for when I ask it, we'd not need to have this forum discussion at all. The easiest question we ask, and the most elusive answer is always PRICE OF THIS TRUCK, this one, right sitting on these tires and on your lot.
AND, for a $30k-$40k purchase, it's even MORE important than it is a can of peas to know the price of what you're buying. It always seems 'tricky or crooked' or even unethical when any seller of any product refuses to disclose a price at any time the buyer asks - it simply reeks of manipulation.
When we were looking at a Ford, I'd been emailing and phone-talking to the salesman about a week or so (three of four times, total). He absolutely refused to give a price on the truck ... He kept asking me, "Are you going to buy it?" and I kept asking him the price. He never gave us a price, even sitting in his office after taking a test drive -- and we finally walked out and tried another dealer. Ended up with the Chevy ...
First, there is a legitimate price on every truck that you are free to inspect. It is legitimate and is the manufacturers suggested retail price. Because you refuse to accept its validity or because in most instances you can buy for less makes it no less a real price. What price would you rather have posted and would you pay that price without question? Of course not. Even Saturn with their "one price" system negotiated and ultimately failed. Only a fool would put one price on the vehicle and watch the customer walk because he wanted the vehicle for ten dollars less. With that, where does it stop. There are 20,000 new car dealers in this country and not a single one of them has a price on every vehicle they own that they would never go below. Pricing is too complicated and there are too many variables that can change daily.
Second, there are dozens of on-line sources that will tell you what your used vehicle is worth and not one of them will buy it sight unseen for that price. Had there been, I would not have had to pay a used car manager six figures yearly to appraise my trades as I could have simply hired a high school kid who could read. As an experiment, I have watched ten professional managers from ten different stores appraise the same car at the same time and come up with numbers that varied as much as two thousand dollars. At the end of the day, the owner of that car would have argued that all ten were wrong anyway as he once saw one advertised three- thousand miles away for more. Another reason the dealer does not have a fixed price.
Third, by far, the majority of people do not carry a check book to buy their car. Unfortunately, your several million dollar investment in a dealership is not run for the less than 10% of people who actually might pay cash. You run it based on the vast majority of people who buy and expect the dealer to arrange financing. Those with better credit will eventually get an overall better deal and those with lesser credit pay more because their past performance shows they are a higher risk.
Fourth, everyone says to never tell the dealer what kind of payment you want. In reality, 99% of the people buy based on a payment whether they finance or pay cash which is one payment. Most everyone has a limit they cannot exceed but you would be amazed how many people cannot grasp what payments should be. I have watched thousands of consumers look at fifty-thousand dollar vehicles knowing they have a thousand dollars down and can't possibly pay more than $350 per month.
Car and truck prices have been negotiated for more than a hundred years and most likely will be negotiated for the next hundred. Get over it! You aren't ever going to walk into a dealership where the lowest possibwindshields posted on the windsheild. One that you can't beat anywhere. Just ain't gonna happen!
โJun-27-2014 04:49 PM
โJun-27-2014 02:32 PM
monkey44 wrote:
ALLEN4 wrote:
As soon as the retail customer starts paying MSRP for the vehicle, puts what they will take for the trade on the windshield, and hands the salesman a credit app when they arrive will be when you will know the real price of the vehicle without asking.
End Quote
That's makes no sense -- the dealer has no use for my credit app because I bring a check - and not everyone finances with the seller.
I tell him exactly what I will take for my trade as soon as I arrive, and carry a KBB (or whatever appraisal service) printout with me ... The ONLY thing I don't know when I get there is the dealers price. And if manufacturers (or the dealer) would put the price ON the vehicle instead of a phantom MSRP sticker, and every dealer sold every vehicle for that price, we'd have less hassle, and less "wasted time" both for dealers, salesmen, AND buyers.
Hiding the price is the single most time-wasting event in truck selling. PERIOD.
Like I said, if a salesman would tell us the price he's willing (or required) to sell the truck sitting right there in front of me for when I ask it, we'd not need to have this forum discussion at all. The easiest question we ask, and the most elusive answer is always PRICE OF THIS TRUCK, this one, right sitting on these tires and on your lot.
AND, for a $30k-$40k purchase, it's even MORE important than it is a can of peas to know the price of what you're buying. It always seems 'tricky or crooked' or even unethical when any seller of any product refuses to disclose a price at any time the buyer asks - it simply reeks of manipulation.
When we were looking at a Ford, I'd been emailing and phone-talking to the salesman about a week or so (three of four times, total). He absolutely refused to give a price on the truck ... He kept asking me, "Are you going to buy it?" and I kept asking him the price. He never gave us a price, even sitting in his office after taking a test drive -- and we finally walked out and tried another dealer. Ended up with the Chevy ...
โJun-26-2014 09:58 AM
When we were looking at a Ford, I'd been emailing and phone-talking to the salesman about a week or so (three of four times, total). He absolutely refused to give a price on the truck ... He kept asking me, "Are you going to buy it?" and I kept asking him the price. He never gave us a price, even sitting in his office after taking a test drive -- and we finally walked out and tried another dealer. Ended up with the Chevy ...
โJun-26-2014 08:59 AM
โJun-26-2014 08:33 AM
BigToe wrote:
Many people who sell cars do so as a last resort. Their situation is already desperate. They cannot afford a single one of the cars or trucks that you know so much about. They may be struggling through a career transition, when their manufacturing job got outsourced overseas. They may have returned home from 10 years as a combat soldier, without a college degree or any work experience in a civilian trade. They may have earned a doctorate degree in the Ukraine, and are here to escape the conflict. They may have raised a family as a stay at home parent, and through a sudden divorce after the kids are grown, find themselves needing to earn a living in a world that passed them by while they were attending to their children. They may speak 5 languages. They may have traveled the world. They have have done anything. Or nothing. But they are human beings.
โJun-26-2014 08:01 AM
BigToe wrote:
Their dealership may have the policy of whoever greets the customer first gets the customer, and therefor gets the commission (or part of it) if the customer buys.
โJun-26-2014 07:15 AM
โJun-26-2014 07:05 AM
โJun-26-2014 06:15 AM
BigToe wrote:"Do unto others as you would have them do unto you"
Consider the sales person's point of view...
Their dealership may have the policy of whoever greets the customer first gets the customer, and therefor gets the commission (or part of it) if the customer buys.
Hence the "pouncing" as soon as you arrive. Their haste to help you might be because they are literally competing with every other salesman on that lot in the first few seconds of your arrival. They are not racing toward you for how attractive you are. They are racing each other for the opportunity to earn a tiny token to help feed their family that night.
So after you tell them you are just looking, they still stick around. Why? Because their sales manager decreed that if they DON"T stick with you, then you are fair game for another sales person to take over, and they lose out, even though they were the first to greet you. So they follow you, and even when you ask them to leave you to "think" or to talk it over with your spouse in private, they move a certain distance away, but they still hover. They HAVE to, because either they will lose their commission, or lose their job. Often times both.
Imagine if you had to work under those circumstances?
Do you think they grew up dreaming of being a car salesman? Do you think they harbored career aspirations to cater to online expert know it alls who act like jerks to them? Do you think they can't wait for another day to play brake light reverse light games with insensitive adults, training their children to be just as insensitive, who feel free to fart around on the private property of an employer who demands that every customer who enters the lot be catered to?
Many people who sell cars do so as a last resort. Their situation is already desperate. They cannot afford a single one of the cars or trucks that you know so much about. They may be struggling through a career transition, when their manufacturing job got outsourced overseas. They may have returned home from 10 years as a combat soldier, without a college degree or any work experience in a civilian trade. They may have earned a doctorate degree in the Ukraine, and are here to escape the conflict. They may have raised a family as a stay at home parent, and through a sudden divorce after the kids are grown, find themselves needing to earn a living in a world that passed them by while they were attending to their children. They may speak 5 languages. They may have traveled the world. They have have done anything. Or nothing. But they are human beings.
Treat them like it. They might surprise you, and treat you like a human being also.
Treat them like "idiots", and, well, you might already have experienced what to expect.