gipp
Been here awhile...
This is just a personal observation. paying a dealer from 1% to 11% markup for a full walk-around presentation, vehicle wash and detail, full tank of gas, full delivery including demonstration of features and training on how to work the knobs and buttons, a contact (a real person) they can call if they have a problem, etc...PLUS the product.
I have never seen a salesman that provided a full tank of gas and a full demonstration of features and a contact for future problems. When I bought my wife a Lexus RX for her birthday I asked the salesman if he could put a ribbon on the car. I even supplied the ribbon. I told him we would be stopping at 7:30pm to pick up the car after a bithday dinner down the street. This salesman was very quick to give me his CSI card and ask for a perfect score. Well, you know what happened. When I brought my wife to the Lexus dealer for her big suprise the car was not even at the dealership, it was still at the storage lot. Not washed, not detailed and of course without the big red ribbon. The girl at the front desk felt so bad she got one of the mechanics to go get it and wash it up. The salesman comes up with a big smile and says he got the date wrong but would I be interested in an LS460h for myself so that we could drive home together in new cars.
I relay this story because I believe that we are willing to pay for premium service but have been conditioned over time not to expect it. Car buying has sadly gone from the fun, exciting family event into an ugly commodity transaction. Professional sales personel are rare. Most know nothing about the car except what they read in the brochure between customer visits. In New Jersey, it is rare to even get a sales person who will bother taking a test drive with you. They will say something like-"Well you seem to have done your research so I'll let you enjoy the test drive by yourself". Here are the keys to that blue one over there". You will note that the blue one isn't the same configuration or package level and they just shrug and say that is the one they have available. This happens at Lexus, Mercedes, Audi, VW, etc... At normal dealers you are lucky to get a sales person who speaks English. The only dealers in NJ that seem to care at all are Infiniti.
So guess what happens. We research, find the car we want. Test drive it to make sure it is what we want. And then we start the buying process. We go to the internet, we get four or five price quotes over the phone and then we go the dealership closet to our house and waste 4 or 5 hours haggling to get them to match the lowest price we already have from another dealer.
We then know that we will be subjected to different looks and verbal abuses from the business manager because we don't want to buy 12 year anti gerbal protection for the interior glove box for $2342. Window stenciling is also "dealership policy" for $385 . We can order the exact same kit on the interent any day for $19.95. We indicate that we live next to the Motor Vechile department but are told that it "policy" that we can not register the vehicle ourselves. They then charge you a $225 service fee to have you drive back to thier dealership for your plates 3 weeks later. Then they tell you to a make an appointment to have the license plates "installed" by the service department. When they put the plates on the car they will not bother to clean off the adhesive left from the temporary plate and but will ask if you have reconsidered the anti hamster protection and by the way since you now have a couple hundred of miles on the car you will be a total idiot if you don't let us put the special oil conditioning additive into the crankcase for $69 to ease the break in period.
This is why we haggle and distance ourselves. We know we will be ripped off for whatever and whenever possible for several hundred if not thousands after the sale before we can escape the clutches of the delaership. We know that the second we write the check we will be disrepected, probably verbally abused and definately not valued.
I am sure there are still professional sales people and dealerships that operate with integrity in the USA. I apologise in advance to those who do not condone or practice such tactics. But the fact is majority rules and the public will do what it needs to for the protection of thier family and assets.
I have my own business and I would not survive a week if I treated my customers with the institutional fake smiles and legendary lies and promises that hallmark the auto industry and the car purchase process.