For the last six months we've been looking at buying a Genesis. We've driven several and they are very nice cars. A lot of features for the price point.
But that's the point. If they want to be a Lexus/BMW/Benz killer they have to behave like dealers in that orbit.
We've visited seven Hyundai dealers in the SW over the last six months and of those we would only do business with one. Even that one failed in a critical sales area.
Here are some issues we've found:
The salesmen are so blatant in their lies that it's laughable. Just this week we visited a Hyundai dealer and asked as soon as we arrived when the 2010 Genesis would be available. Of course he had to "ask the sales manager" and they said in six months. I guess they're going to hold them in Long Beach for five months? Then we asked if we ordered a 2010 model when we could expect it to arrive. The answer was just one month. Guess those must arrive by time warp?
How about the price lies. Every dealer we visited had some really outrageous prices posted on the window. For a V8 tech package we saw from 46K to 48K on the window. Even though the list price was always 42K from Hyundai they had various terms for additional dealer profit usually something along the lines of "Market Adjustment". In all cases when the dealer saw we would walk instead of even discuss that price the price immediately dropped to 42K. We could have stayed to haggle for a few hours and arrived at the real price of 39-40K.
But that's the next point. If you want to play with Lexus/BMW/Benz then you cannot insult your customer. Hyundai should know that data is ubiquitous since Korea is one of the most internet connected countries in the world. The days of hide and seek are over in car sales.
The Hyundai sales people are untrained bordering on out right rude. Except for one dealer they did not even have the common courtesy to hold a door for a lady. That may sound petty but that's a basic tenant of behavior. Except for one dealer the sales people thought they could bully us into a negotiating position that was some script they had been taught by the sales manager. The old let's get the price, trade in and financing rolled into one big ball we can confuse you on. That unfortunately still works on most of the customers Hyundai sees. But if they want to get to the Lexus/BMW/Benz customers then that's a totally different ball of wax.
So we were faced with six dealers we could not trust to deal with any problems we may have had once we purchased a Genesis. If they treated us like a rube when we walked onto the lot then what could we expect once they had our money and we had their car?
How did the seventh dealer fail in a critical sales area? They did not have in stock the exterior/interior color combination we wanted. They said they would find a car with those and call us back. They did not call us back. Even if they called back to say they could not find one it would be better than no call at all.
So we gave up on Hyundai. Customer service upfront is indicative of customer service on the back end.
We only posted this because we would really like to see Hyundai break through that "luxury brand" barrier. My wife is from Korea and we even lived in Osan for awhile. But Hyundai is making a huge mistake in not rebranding like Toyota did for Lexus. They cannot expect to reform the current Hyundai dealers into anything approaching a Lexus/BMW/Benz dealer.
Toyota is now squeezing the gap between Toyota and Lexus. That means a Lexus killer like Genesis not only has to keep up with Lexus but also stay ahead of Toyota. When you can get 90% of a Genesis for 18K less than a Genesis but with 120% of the customer/dealer experience then the Genesis is in trouble.
Like we said the Genesis is a really nice car. But there have been a lot of really nice cars that have failed.
But that's the point. If they want to be a Lexus/BMW/Benz killer they have to behave like dealers in that orbit.
We've visited seven Hyundai dealers in the SW over the last six months and of those we would only do business with one. Even that one failed in a critical sales area.
Here are some issues we've found:
The salesmen are so blatant in their lies that it's laughable. Just this week we visited a Hyundai dealer and asked as soon as we arrived when the 2010 Genesis would be available. Of course he had to "ask the sales manager" and they said in six months. I guess they're going to hold them in Long Beach for five months? Then we asked if we ordered a 2010 model when we could expect it to arrive. The answer was just one month. Guess those must arrive by time warp?
How about the price lies. Every dealer we visited had some really outrageous prices posted on the window. For a V8 tech package we saw from 46K to 48K on the window. Even though the list price was always 42K from Hyundai they had various terms for additional dealer profit usually something along the lines of "Market Adjustment". In all cases when the dealer saw we would walk instead of even discuss that price the price immediately dropped to 42K. We could have stayed to haggle for a few hours and arrived at the real price of 39-40K.
But that's the next point. If you want to play with Lexus/BMW/Benz then you cannot insult your customer. Hyundai should know that data is ubiquitous since Korea is one of the most internet connected countries in the world. The days of hide and seek are over in car sales.
The Hyundai sales people are untrained bordering on out right rude. Except for one dealer they did not even have the common courtesy to hold a door for a lady. That may sound petty but that's a basic tenant of behavior. Except for one dealer the sales people thought they could bully us into a negotiating position that was some script they had been taught by the sales manager. The old let's get the price, trade in and financing rolled into one big ball we can confuse you on. That unfortunately still works on most of the customers Hyundai sees. But if they want to get to the Lexus/BMW/Benz customers then that's a totally different ball of wax.
So we were faced with six dealers we could not trust to deal with any problems we may have had once we purchased a Genesis. If they treated us like a rube when we walked onto the lot then what could we expect once they had our money and we had their car?
How did the seventh dealer fail in a critical sales area? They did not have in stock the exterior/interior color combination we wanted. They said they would find a car with those and call us back. They did not call us back. Even if they called back to say they could not find one it would be better than no call at all.
So we gave up on Hyundai. Customer service upfront is indicative of customer service on the back end.
We only posted this because we would really like to see Hyundai break through that "luxury brand" barrier. My wife is from Korea and we even lived in Osan for awhile. But Hyundai is making a huge mistake in not rebranding like Toyota did for Lexus. They cannot expect to reform the current Hyundai dealers into anything approaching a Lexus/BMW/Benz dealer.
Toyota is now squeezing the gap between Toyota and Lexus. That means a Lexus killer like Genesis not only has to keep up with Lexus but also stay ahead of Toyota. When you can get 90% of a Genesis for 18K less than a Genesis but with 120% of the customer/dealer experience then the Genesis is in trouble.
Like we said the Genesis is a really nice car. But there have been a lot of really nice cars that have failed.