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tgagneguam said:
I'm not so sure there are any words to avoid in dealing with car salesman. They [apparently] are under high pressure to make a sale, and I sense that many do what it takes to make the sale.

I have never enjoyed the car buying experience, and I'm not so sure I ever will. It's part of the reason why I don't buy cars more frequently; I absolutely abhor the process. I cannot stand the "let me go check with my sales manager" speech, the "what price are you looking to pay monthly" shenanigans (you can get an XLR for $100/month, you'll just be paying for it until the day you die), and the like.
I'm just the opposite. I wish I could go buy a car daily because I get so much entertainment from the typical dolts who sell cars for a living. It's not to say that every car salesman is that dumb (there are many who are intelligent human beings, I'm sure), it's just that I haven't run into too many. And many times a trip to a dealership is more entertaining than a trip to the movies or a couple of hours in front of the tube.
 
Hudson said:
I'm just the opposite. I wish I could go buy a car daily because I get so much entertainment from the typical dolts who sell cars for a living. It's not to say that every car salesman is that dumb (there are many who are intelligent human beings, I'm sure), it's just that I haven't run into too many. And many times a trip to a dealership is more entertaining than a trip to the movies or a couple of hours in front of the tube.
thanks for the clarification (there are many who are intelligent human beings, I'm sure),
 
Hudson said:
I'm just the opposite. I wish I could go buy a car daily because I get so much entertainment from the typical dolts who sell cars for a living. It's not to say that every car salesman is that dumb (there are many who are intelligent human beings, I'm sure), it's just that I haven't run into too many. And many times a trip to a dealership is more entertaining than a trip to the movies or a couple of hours in front of the tube.
Come see me. I'm sure you'd find that, in these terms, I'm as dull as a sack of potatoes. Or as neat as a sack of potatoes if you're Marge Simpson.

Dolts stay in business because people buy cars from them, and because buyers are all too frequently not willing to give the true consultants their financial due.

I don't know who should be killed first.
 
Hudson said:
"Dolts" sell cars because they're good salemen, which is to say they don't have to know much about cars.
It's very true that you don't have to know much about cars to be a good salesperson. It's also true that some of us who aren't particularly good salespeople have to get by knowing their product...
 
Well isnt this great !!! How to beat the Dealer. Heres one way to beat the dealer. Do your own research on the car. Goto GMBUYPOWER.COM I think it even shows you the invoice. It will also tell you where the cars are.
I work at a busy GM Dealership. The ideas and intellect on how to sell a car has been passed down many, many years. Every dealer works just about the same way. A customer walks onto the lot. You meet and Greet, (Shake Hands, make eye contact, remember names), you then take them over to your work desk and get out your worksheet. The worksheet is a legal form used by salespeople to figure out wants and needs. First questions of course are Name,Address,Phone Number and E-Mail address. Now you know who you are working with. Next thing to ask is what brought you here today to the dealership. Within the first 10 min of the visit you can kinda figure out what the customer is here for. So are you looking to replace your current vehicle, 9 times out of 10 if the customer didnt hear TRADE IN, they will tell you what they are driving. You can work an entire deal with a customer and spend 5 hours just to find out that they now have a trade in and guess what they owe $10,000 more than its worth. What happend to my 5 hours? Could I have sold to someone else in that time frame. I always ask what a customer is looking to spend on a vehicle and I always get a blank answer. Why dont you tell me? Uhhhh. This makes no sense. I need to know what your budget is before we go driving everything on my lot. Payments are all a matter of Simple Math. $20-25 per every $1,000 assuming you would go for a normal term of finance and at least pay taxes and registration. A Salesperson is looking for honest answers for you and are using what you say to build you a deal. You do have the choice to say NO. Price/Trade/Money Down/Payment those are my 4 questions to ask. What is soooo wrong with that. If you answer honestly and like the vehicle? I will gladly show you any book values you need to see. I hate when customers want to negotiate the price of the car and then negotiate the trade in. Its either you buy @ Retail and Retail or you Buy Wholesale and trade Wholesale.
 
GM_SALES_REP said:
Well isnt this great !!! How to beat the Dealer. Heres one way to beat the dealer. Do your own research on the car. Goto GMBUYPOWER.COM I think it even shows you the invoice. It will also tell you where the cars are.
I work at a busy GM Dealership. The ideas and intellect on how to sell a car has been passed down many, many years. Every dealer works just about the same way. A customer walks onto the lot. You meet and Greet, (Shake Hands, make eye contact, remember names), you then take them over to your work desk and get out your worksheet. The worksheet is a legal form used by salespeople to figure out wants and needs. First questions of course are Name,Address,Phone Number and E-Mail address. Now you know who you are working with. Next thing to ask is what brought you here today to the dealership. Within the first 10 min of the visit you can kinda figure out what the customer is here for. So are you looking to replace your current vehicle, 9 times out of 10 if the customer didnt hear TRADE IN, they will tell you what they are driving. You can work an entire deal with a customer and spend 5 hours just to find out that they now have a trade in and guess what they owe $10,000 more than its worth. What happend to my 5 hours? Could I have sold to someone else in that time frame. I always ask what a customer is looking to spend on a vehicle and I always get a blank answer. Why dont you tell me? Uhhhh. This makes no sense. I need to know what your budget is before we go driving everything on my lot. Payments are all a matter of Simple Math. $20-25 per every $1,000 assuming you would go for a normal term of finance and at least pay taxes and registration. A Salesperson is looking for honest answers for you and are using what you say to build you a deal. You do have the choice to say NO. Price/Trade/Money Down/Payment those are my 4 questions to ask. What is soooo wrong with that. If you answer honestly and like the vehicle? I will gladly show you any book values you need to see. I hate when customers want to negotiate the price of the car and then negotiate the trade in. Its either you buy @ Retail and Retail or you Buy Wholesale and trade Wholesale.
One of three things has happened here:

1) You have only been selling cars for a short time and don't know how the customer thinks;

2) You can't believe that buyers aren't more guilible; or

3) You are actually a trust-worthy salesman in an untrust-worthy profession.

Why don't buyers say how much they want to spend? Because you'll meet that price. If I say I'm in the market for a $15,000-20,000 car, how much do you want to bet that the saleman will push me toward cars in the $19,000-25,000 range? Even if a $16,000 car is best for my needs.

A car salesman (in most cases) is NOT looking for honest answers. He/she is looking to make the most money with the least amount of effort and it doesn't matter if the car fits the buyers needs or is out of their true budget.

And you want to ridicule the buyer who wants to get the best possible deal but you want to find out how much money you can get out of them? C'mon...don't you see the hypocracy?

I sold cars...I know this business. I wouldn't trust a car salesman (even ones I know well) as far as I could throw them.

You know why I don't sell cars now? I was actually trust-worthy....not a good trait in that business....you'll never make any money.
 
Hudson said:
One of three things has happened here:

1) You have only been selling cars for a short time and don't know how the customer thinks;

2) You can't believe that buyers aren't more guilible; or

3) You are actually a trust-worthy salesman in an untrust-worthy profession.

Why don't buyers say how much they want to spend? Because you'll meet that price. If I say I'm in the market for a $15,000-20,000 car, how much do you want to bet that the saleman will push me toward cars in the $19,000-25,000 range? Even if a $16,000 car is best for my needs.

A car salesman (in most cases) is NOT looking for honest answers. He/she is looking to make the most money with the least amount of effort and it doesn't matter if the car fits the buyers needs or is out of their true budget.

And you want to ridicule the buyer who wants to get the best possible deal but you want to find out how much money you can get out of them? C'mon...don't you see the hypocracy?

I sold cars...I know this business. I wouldn't trust a car salesman (even ones I know well) as far as I could throw them.

You know why I don't sell cars now? I was actually trust-worthy....not a good trait in that business....you'll never make any money.
Thats funny.

Yes I can see why both the customer and salesman wants the best deal, and I can see why the salesman and the customer don't want to waste 5 hours to find out that there is no possible way to sell/buy what the customer is looking for.

So why not just cut to the chase from both aspects? I sell in a small town and there is no way I could survive by grabbing the most money for the least vehicle, a happy customer is going to talk to 10 people about his/her purchase and 3 of those people will buy something in the next 12 months.

The customer looking for a full size truck to tow thier trailer, only to find the 1 they just bought is under powered. How many people will he tell?

No you cannot steriosytpe all salemen this way, there are fewer and fewer in it for the quick $$$, they cannot survive, it is close to a 15% chance of a new salesmen making it throught thier first year.

Now to say that salesmen are liers, lets have a look at customers with lines like ABC motors said I would pay XXXX much, no theres nothing wrong with my trade,and my favourite " I like that, I'll talk to my wife and call you tomorrow" Honesty on both sides makes the dealings so much more pleasant.
 
Hudson said:
One of three things has happened here:

Why don't buyers say how much they want to spend? Because you'll meet that price. .
Isn't that what you want? If you want to spend $20k then showing you an Impala SS is a waste of both of our time.

Hudson said:
If I say I'm in the market for a $15,000-20,000 car, how much do you want to bet that the saleman will push me toward cars in the $19,000-25,000 range? Even if a $16,000 car is best for my needs..
Wrong. The differance between selling a $16k car and a $25k car is about $40 in commission. It's not worth the extra time it would take, and the fact that you will not have a happy customer in the long run. I don't care if someone is buying an Aveo or Suburban, as long as it gets me 1 unit closer to my 20 unit bonus.

Hudson said:
A car salesman (in most cases) is NOT looking for honest answers. He/she is looking to make the most money with the least amount of effort and it doesn't matter if the car fits the buyers needs or is out of their true budget.
When I ask a customer a question I expect the truth. I can't help someone who will not let me help them. I don't play games, and I will not tolerate a customer who does.
Hudson said:
And you want to ridicule the buyer who wants to get the best possible deal but you want to find out how much money you can get out of them? C'mon...don't you see the hypocracy?
We want to know how much money they are looking to spend so that we can show them the right vehicle. Ghrankenstein was referring to the fact that people who only want the best price are also the people who are the biggest pain after the sale, and give the worst CSI scores. They are not worth having as a customer.

Hudson said:
I sold cars...I know this business. I wouldn't trust a car salesman (even ones I know well) as far as I could throw them.

You know why I don't sell cars now? I was actually trust-worthy....not a good trait in that business....you'll never make any money.
Dealers who advertise price the most tend to have the highest prices. People who don't trust others typically are not trust worthy.

I'm guessing one of three things.

1) You sucked at selling cars, and now want an excuse as to why.

2) You were the crook (probably even lied to yourself to make yourself think that you were the honest one).

3) You worked at a really bad dealership.

I have sold cars for nearly 5 years now. I am proud of what I do, and I'm proud to be associated with the group that I work with.
 
Thank you Scrapinby !!! The hardest thing for a salesman is getting to the true objection of why you will not buy a car from me today. Some people may really like the vehicle that I am showing and we havent even talked price. but in their mind its just not the right color. When I originally talked to the customer upon meet and greet color was un-important. When asking if they need this or that. "Dont worry about that just show me what you got". Ok, so I show them what I got and it may not be what they are looking for and now I get "ok, well I'll think about it". Why not just look me straight in the eyes and say NO! It's not gonna hurt me to hear that you dont want what I am showing. This is actually a good thing to hear. Now I know that I am selling you the wrong vehicle. Now if you did say NO and had to think about it. In my head I think that you are interested but have to check a few things at home first. So I give you a call the next day, you look at caller ID and ignore the call. I then call 2 or 3 days in a row only to get no response. Now I have my Manager looking over my shoulder wanting to know what I did wrong. Profit is a great thing, but it doesnt happen every time for a salesman. Could be an older unit that needed to leave at a low low price or maybe the dealer bought the car at a higher premium than another dealer.
Just like Scrapinby said, It doesnt matter what I sell or what I make per unit as long as at the end of the month I can keep my job.
 
The vast majority of car salesman I have met are usually wrong about some aspect of the car. I was told recently the 2.8HF Turbo was going in the G6 GTP for instance. Lots of other examples, most correct answers are printed in the brochure.

Here's how I buy a car - and I'm sorry if it will infuriate some of you who sell cars. I go test drive the cars from a random dealer. I try not to waste too much time, I go during off times, don't ask a lot of questions. I get the GM price off the web, and figure out what options and colors I want.

I send out a fax to all the dealers within a 100-200 mile radius, listing the features, and then asking for a quote below GM employee price. I sell my cars on my own. I've done this a few times, once got $1K below, another $1250 below. I'll never buy cars any other way. If I buy something other than GM someday, I'll just list a ceiling for offers, 1K under invoice or something like that.
 
That is a crazy way to buy a vehicle. Kind of disrespectful if you ask me. Just playing a game with me is not very fair and you wonder why we play back. I was taught from the very begining when I started selling cars that the customer is lying to you more than 80% of the time. By Lying I also mean not disclosing key information needed to make a deal. Credit Plays a huge roll in the negotiating process. A $200 payment for one person could be a $300 payment for the next on the same car at the same price. faxing is a thing of the past. Get on track here most dealers have an internet department, who at least at my dealership does not get a commission. They are salary paid and any leads get transferred to sales staff. The Honest Salespeople are the ones that are product knowledge experts. But not one single person can know everything about all makes and models, we have to research vehicles just like the customer, we just have more resources.
 
1) First, figure out what you need. Be open to things you may not have considered before.

2) Research what you want before setting foot in a dealership, and know the invoice prices. This is easy with Edmunds.com, Kelly Blue book, and so forth.

3) My biggest mistake has not been taking long enough test drives. Either take many drives at different dealers, get a dealer to let you drive the vehicle 100 or more miles on the kinds of roads you normally drive on, or rent one for a day. Auto shows are also nice, as the salesmen breathing down your neck asking "What can I do to earn your business today?" and other such nonsense are not present.

4) Once you decide what you want, contact the fleet / internet departments at several dealers and ask for their best offer on exactly want you want (no more, no less) - list the vehicle model, options and colors. Order the car if they do not have or can not get what you want.

5) Pay cash. Never finance a car. Do not buy more than you can afford. You will be far wealthier and happier if you do not allow lenders to make you their slave.
 
FStephenMasek said:
1) First, figure out what you need. Be open to things you may not have considered before.

2) Research what you want before setting foot in a dealership, and know the invoice prices. This is easy with Edmunds.com, Kelly Blue book, and so forth.

3) My biggest mistake has not been taking long enough test drives. Either take many drives at different dealers, get a dealer to let you drive the vehicle 100 or more miles on the kinds of roads you normally drive on, or rent one for a day. Auto shows are also nice, as the salesmen breathing down your neck asking "What can I do to earn your business today?" and other such nonsense are not present.

4) Once you decide what you want, contact the fleet / internet departments at several dealers and ask for their best offer on exactly want you want (no more, no less) - list the vehicle model, options and colors. Order the car if they do not have or can not get what you want.

5) Pay cash. Never finance a car. Do not buy more than you can afford. You will be far wealthier and happier if you do not allow lenders to make you their slave.

I agree with everything you said, even paying cash (Dave Ramsey style). The only thing I disagree with is looking for invoice prices on the net. They are not very accurate.
 
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