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#429659 - 08/16/08 07:06 AM
Re: Speaking of car dealers
[Re: ABoater]
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Nautical Alchemy
Admiral
Registered: 01/14/03
Posts: 11541
Loc: Battle Creek/Grand Haven, MI
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As you know, most dealerships have an "up" system of some sort
Which means its a game to them. So when a savvy customer comes in and counters you in the game - you cannot complain that they are wasting your time, because the UP system wastes customer's time; its all part of the game. Your game is UP; my game is purposeful indecision. If buyers would just stamp a dollar sign on their forehead, it would make the selling game (see above) much more profitable! LOL As long as salesmen would wear a commensurate sign on their forehead. I don't have a problem with a dealer making a profit, but we've heard too many horror stories to trust many dealers. Maybe its perception, maybe its some of your fellow dealers need to clean up their act for stinking the waters for everyone else, I dunno, but stuff like mandatory binding arbitration, purposeful messing with credit ratings, and other stuff puts a bad taste in most folks mouths. If you think not, answer these questions: 1. how many free dinners have you actually given out for someone that "bird-dogs" for you? 2. how many "free vacations" have you given out to folks buying your cars? 3. how many real contests do salesmen have? and how many times will this sale put them over the top? (my personal favorite). 4. how many times have you run a credit check without permission; after obtaining their driver's license for other presumed reasons? 5. how many times have you used my favorite line "put some money down so the manager knows you are serious"? 6. and if they did, how many times did you actually take their deal for consideration or just go to the bathroom? 7. and my second-best personal favorite. two people just came in here looking for the very same car you are wanting to trade in. shall I go on? These are all deceptive at the least, and dishonest at best. And when I become the recipient for any of these by merely walking onto the lot - the dealer starts the BS, right off the bat. So, I counter-attack, as a good game requires. So be a good little salesman and get me a Coke.... and one for the miss'es if you please. My favorite "I am in a contest for a vacation and your sale will put me over the top". I usually counter, "well don't pack your bags yet - I don't think you are going to make a sale today". I am just returning BS for BS. Its the salesman's job to be in control, to prey on my good nature - which in the first place, ratchets my disdain factor up; so then its now my job to keep him off balance. Maybe this kind of stuff doesn't happen in your area, but this practice is still alive and well in the midwest. And you may be honest, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. But car dealers have 50 years history of deceptive and sometimes downright illegal shenanigans to overcome.
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"Yesterday's Dreams"1995 Carver 325 Aft Cabin  Posts are amateur opinion only. You assume all responsibility for any action you take as a result of reading my posts.
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#429660 - 08/16/08 07:36 AM
Re: Speaking of car dealers
[Re: Al]
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Admiral
Registered: 11/10/06
Posts: 3428
Loc: San Diego
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Man, Al, maybe you should buy cars in California.
1)Bird dog fees are totally illegal here
2) Running credit check without authorized signature, or explicit phone permission, $2500 fine. Besides, you need more info to run it than you can get off of a Ca drivers license
3)I haven't seen an "up" system in a dealership since 1989.
4) I haven't taken any money from a customer (earnest money) before the deal was completed since 1985. BTW, this practice was started by the real estate industry which still does it.
5)In California, you cannot give away ANYTHING free with the sale of a car. You can give away free stuff for test drives, but that just brings in the worst customers you can imagine so very few dealers do it.
They still throw your keys on the roof where you live too?
Seriously, the stuff you're talking about happened in the 60's, at a few of the dishonest dealers that were well publicized.
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#429661 - 08/16/08 07:42 AM
Re: Speaking of car dealers
[Re: trooplewis]
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Nautical Alchemy
Admiral
Registered: 01/14/03
Posts: 11541
Loc: Battle Creek/Grand Haven, MI
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It still happens here, at least in 2001 - when I bought my last new car. Except for the keys on the roof. Went to one dealer, got Up'ped in about 15 minutes. Another dealer wanted my driver's license to take a test drive - for insurance purposes.
The finance guy at a dealer in '97 insisted that I finance the car through him. I told him that I already arranged my own financing, so that would not be necessary. After about 10 minutes of him badgering me; he made the comment "why won't you let me make a living here". That was it. I told him he was wasting my time, and it was not my job for him to make a living - I could care less. Either finish the deal or I walk.
A few years before that, mid 90's, we bought a used car from a dealer for my wife. Saw that it had some overspray. Asked if it had been in a wreck - and their stock answer; no, no, it was in the garage next to a car they were working on - we'll get that taken off.
Bought the car - then happened to look in the trunk and found where the fender had been replaced. Found a lawyer, got advice, went back to the dealership, started yelling at the manager (I am fairly meek, so out of character for me), forced the dealer to take the car back.
My dad bought a new car in '1998, 2 years before he died. My dad was of the age where a person's word was their word. He told the dealer, in no uncertain terms that the sale was contingent on getting life insurance. My dad was old and feeble, and the car dealer should have told him that there was no way he could get that insurance, but he had $$ signs in his eyes (I wish I would have been with him). Anyway, he died, the insurance company did not honor the claim. Since the insurance was out of state - it would have cost a lot of money for my mom to do anything. But to make it worse, the insurance company pro-rated their refund until the day he died.
Sure, he should not have gotten insurance, and my mom recalls that the dealer just did a lot of "sign this" stuff, without them reading any of it. Yea, they should have, but they were old, and the dealer certainly had his own profit in mind rather than knowingly doing the right thing.
The dealer simply should have told them that there was no way they could get insurance from them or any other dealership, so it was a risk they would have to take.
As it turned out, my mom got a lawyer, and was going to sue. But the dealer then became quite belligerent and they would have had a fight on their hands. My mom was still in pain due to my dad's death, and didn't want to go through a long battle, so she ended up selling the car for about what it was worth, and went on with her life.
This was not in the '60s. It was in the late '90s. So this stuff is not as ancient as you would like to think - at least in the midwest.
But on the other hand, we have had a very nice relationship with the dealer for the last car we bought. So nice in fact, that if we decide to keep that brand of car, and become repeat customers, we'll deal directly with the owners of the business, and not the salesmen. But I still keep a jar of anti-snake venom nearby...
_________________________
"Yesterday's Dreams"1995 Carver 325 Aft Cabin  Posts are amateur opinion only. You assume all responsibility for any action you take as a result of reading my posts.
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