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Dealer's Tricks - bait & switch, etc.
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When the sleazy dealership has ripped-off everyone in the area, then they will be in trouble.
Right?
Now - if you want to talk policy and management - go to the Ask the Hosts discussion. Otherwise, we're talking Dealer's Tricks in here.
You can have your maintenance done anywhere. Any competent shop should be able to do it. Make sure you go to someone you trust as there are many unscrupulous shops (IMHO).
You had a bad experience buying the car, I'd never give them my business again. Shop around. If you don't know anyone who can make a recommendation, find a shop that is convenient to you in the yellow pages then check them out with your local better Business Buruea, start at www.bbb.org
Good luck.....
Seriously, and I don't know if this violates the rules of the site, but I found it cool that I can relate advice I learned on Edmund's to real life! Regarding negotiating techniques--I just realized a prominent politician in the news now has perfected a technique commonly known to quell objections. I think Burke Leon detailed this one in his advice on car negotiating: The "yes, but" technique. Keep an eye out for it on your TV's, you will see it. It occurs when one first agrees with their opponent ( or the car buyer), inserts a "but" or "however", then carries on with their own argument. Of course, if over-used, it can be spotted, and consequently can be rendered less effective.
;-)
We all negotiate on a regular basis, we just don't always realize it.
But back to things with tires
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kirstie_h
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In my view, it's a typical dealer crap ad.
Another interesting one (I have seen it a few times in a local Minneapolis paper). New Chrysler T&C, price not specified, $149 per month only, not a lease! Small print: payment for first year only, it will go up for subsequent years?
I wonder what kind of lending institution would underwrite a loan where there seems to be so much negative amortization in a car loan...
so now they are supposed to buy a whole other page just for used cars? you cant advertise new and used on the same page?
I'd say that fits the definition of "dealer tricks".
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do you have any idea how much it costs for an extra 1/2 page ad in a daily paper????
Stuff like that is why car dealer's get bad reputations...
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...funny, if they didn't put that it's a used car and you called and found out it was a demo/used vehicle, you would be moaning that they DIDN'T put it was used....
If people wouldn't patronize the dealers who use these deceptive, screamer ads they would stop!
Ask Drift he lives there and knows what I mean !
The general rule applies here, If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
It's legal because it CAN be done, and they're still in business because idiots who actually believe all this junk flock to them in droves.
The firm I consult for has looked at these people several times, and I've had many contacts with dealership personnel and potential and past customers.....they're sneaky enough to not get busted, but strong enough to keep these lemmings cruising through the doors looking for 48k for their trade, complete payoff, the first 2-3 payments free, and or no credit check, at all...
The $12k Chevy Tracker ad I wrote about looked like this:
- 19,995 selling price
- 4,500 factory rebate
- 1,500 GM finance allowance
- 500 SD county residents
- 1,500 value certificate
---------------------------
- 11,995 net cost
1 available: #XYZ (previously owned).
So no mention of MSRP, my bad, but factory rebate and GMAC cash is there. Nothing about sprinting seniors
There was another picture ad for a non-new car in that section and it said "dealer demo."
Bowke, I hear your argument about saving advertising dollars and I have to completely disagree (keeping in mind that you are in the business and I am not.) If that were the motivation, I believe the ad would have ended up with other "pre-owned" ads that don't have pictures, take up less space on the page and presumably cost less. Anybody know about state laws that determine what must be disclosed in an ad like this? I assume, perhaps mistakenly, that without some statute, the words like "pre-owned" or "dealer demo" would not have been in this ad.
BTW, when I asked whether people on this board thought an ad like this was a trick, I was seriously interested. I think this is in a gray area. And if people are not attentive enough to read all the not-so-small print on a deal that looks too good to be true, it is really their problem.
Personally, though I think what the dealer is doing is completely legal (obviously) and possibly ethical, I would avoid a dealer that puts out ads like this. If people think they can get the best price at a place like this (and the price is not everything), more power to them.
Long post...
So if a dealer has a very deceptive advertisement, it doesn't bother me at all. I would be happy to buy a car there.
On the other hand, I definitely have compassion for people who don't know much about car-buying and don't understand how to manage their money. I don't think it is nice to prey on those people.
So I am not sure how I feel about this whole discussion. Maybe I should stroll across the Mall and ask W what his opinion is.
If you buy a car like Bobst, he's educated on the vehicle, pricing, and other fees, and he makes an offer, and buys the car, and that's great.
So many people don't or won't take the time to do one minute's worth of research, then they jump into a dealership with only a payment figure in their head, not understanding what it takes to get there - all they seem to know is that the dealer hits their "magic number" (or a little higher), they'll pull the trigger.
Personally, I did this when I was younger. Now, I see people following this trend like lemmings, then whining and crying that they got ripped off.
I figured out this process without the internet when I was 22-23 years old. With all the available resources, you can't help but fall into invoice pricing on a vehicle - it takes 5 minutes.
I have absolutely NO sympathy for these self-appointed "victims" and wish at times that I was fell-strong back in the car business and could do my weekly allocation of head-ripping deals as a closer/F&I guy...
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
im starting to like bobst more and more every day!
;-)
Back to the topic, I don't see anything wrong with the screamer ads that try to draw people into the dealers. There are no more misleading than the commercials we see on TV.
However, it is sad how our society encourages people to live beyand their means. Some of us can resist the temptation to spend much more than we can easily afford, but others can't, and it ends up putting them under financial pressure and makes them unhappy.
Of course, this problem has been around for a long time. Didn't even Jesus criticize money lenders who charged too much interest?
What would Jesus Test-Drive and how would his dealership experience be ??
Jesus would not only criticize the dealership for not getting him the "best" interest rate but also criticize them for not giving him top dollar on his trade. The dealership would then counter his criticism by throwing in some free Cocoa mats and a free oil change to close the deal.
But what type vehicle would Jesus be interested in ?
We all know that Jesus wouldn't buy an expensive SUV because it pollutes and is a menace to other cars. I suspect that Jesus would choose instead to negotiate hard on a late model used domestic and drive it until the wheels fell off. By buying a late model domestic used car he therefore would be living well within his means and wouldn't have to stress too hard about making those payments. Jesus isn't into the impress people you hardly know or the keep-up-with-the-Abrahams. So he doesn't require the latest ride for image or status.
Sorry, I apologize in advance but when I saw this post I couldn't resist.....;)
Let's move back on to tricks 'n traps.
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There's no doubt about it, Identity theft is a HUGE and "exploding" business and EVERYONE needs to become aware of it and take some serious steps to avert it ... but I think the author needs to spend a little time on the streets and find out whats really going on before printing: "dealers are among the most common sites" because thats not true .. perhaps this guy should talk with some investigators, or folks that actually spend time like the FBI agents that are running some of these investigations, because I have ...
As you have probably read in the last 2/3 weeks there is a major identity scam with "online" banking, National City Bank, Charter and a few others up north have had "replicators" send email to 400,000/500,000 some customers "asking" for them to re-up their customer base information .. the pages look *identical* to their companies web pages, they ask for the S/S numbers, addresses, phone numbers, acct numbers, business #'s, etc, etc.com .. the bad part is, they are catching 3 out of 10 of the folks that have been getting the email.
One of the worst sources of identity theft is one simple entity: Kids - yep, the 10 year old that lives two streets over, or the 12 year old that plays soccer with your son or it's just maybe the 17 year old that just dropped your Sunday paper off .. right now these scammers are paying "kids" in the neiborhood to ramble through that little thing in your backyard called a "garbage can" - and they have been downright succesfull at it.
They can get 10/20 bundles a day and after they pick out the "real deal" info like credit card, property tax info, "payroll stubs", the insurance renewal from 2 days ago, the hospital bill you just paid and lets not forget that new registration from the vehicle you just bought, they can find a lot in a short time - thats why God made paper shredders - invest in one, the credit you save could be your own ... and yes, you can find a dishonest employee at a car dealership, Hewlett-Packard, the Burdines that you just bought that new Polo shirt from, or the Applebee's down the street from you ..
I think Tara Baukus Mello needs to spend a little more time doing some real research and then he will be helping more people than just giving a Teresa Heinz Kerry summary of what he thinks.!
I hope you don't pay this guy for this stuff.
Terry.
I have seen one used car dealer (here locally) run like heck with money from loan payoffs...
The son ruined his dad's 45 year outstanding reputation in business with a week's worth of time. Now, dad is bankrupt, and the son's in prison.
Nobody can mess you over like family can mess you over.
I think the author of that book just used the old 6:00 news rating system, saying something shocking to add attraction to the story.
Truthfuly, I'm upset with what Edmunds seeming endorsement of this person's story says about their bunches of loyal car biz folks who post here.
I agree that these scammers come at you from all directions . Anywhere that you give out credit information , and a car dealership is certainly one. Dealerships are not the biggest sourse of the problem but certainly one.
There are dishonest people in this world and some may even work at a car dealership, but saying the dealership is one of the most common places that this occurs is unfounded. I just want to thank the editors for giving me something else that I have to explain to my customers who are already thinking that we are stealing, lying, and cheating. I guess I'll need to come up with a new story to overcome this one.
And of course you can keep discussing the article here as well.