ainokea
Pre-takeoff checklist
I got Dealer 3 to match Dealer 2 with the Costco price. Both of them said factory rebates/incentives will be applied when the car arrives. Now let's see if any of them will budge to give me a better price.
Isn't that essentially Tesla?I cannot wait until Amazon starts selling cars.
I cannot wait until Amazon starts selling cars.
That's good and bad... Bezos doesn't care at all about net revenue, and yet the market keeps propping up his stock irrationally.I cannot wait until Amazon starts selling cars.
Every dealer knows how to order a vehicle. What they want to sell are vehicles on their lot - so they give you a song and dance about their not 'knowig' how to do.
You ask to speak to the new car sales manager - you say:
"I want to special order a vehicle the exact way I want it. I will buy one if you have it that way. I will not have you 'get' the car from another dealer. Otherwise we have a chance to special order what I want. Will you do it - yes or no. Don't waste my time - I won't waste yours."
If he says no - you say thank you and walk away.
if he says yes - then the next step of the painful procedure begins. Usually the problem in the car is color. Not option packages - and make sure you don't overpay buying less vehicle than you can get for less money since many packages have tremendous discounts off retail - if you spec-order options it may make sense to special order a higher levvel so it costs less money.
What if Amazon shipped cars through dealers? In other words - order online pick up at the dealer. Would that work?That will require overcoming the dealer lobby in 49 states.
What if Amazon shipped cars through dealers? In other words - order online pick up at the dealer. Would that work?
What if Amazon shipped cars through dealers? In other words - order online pick up at the dealer. Would that work?
I wish we could just buy vehicles direct from the manufacturer. The only value a dealership adds is somewhere local to go if there's a problem, they're certainly not any more knowledgable about the cars than someone who's done a little internet research.
This qualifies as the most ridiculous post of the week.
That is certainly correct for the new car buying process. I find car dealership sales reps to be utterly useless. Sure, the service people know the cars and where to look up stuff, the sales drones don't.
This qualifies as the most ridiculous post of the week.
Your n/1 study.........
What's so ridiculous about it?
Dealers rarely seem to know much about what they're selling.
Not sure when or where your experience comes from, but it is far from normal....FAR from normal.
The service centers are the only thing there that's useful and that's only when the vehicle is still in warranty when you probably aren't going to need them anyway.
This is pretty accurate, most manufacturers are building solid vehicles today.
Out of warranty I wouldn't got to a dealership service center.
Times they are a'changing, it wont be very long before you will. Independent shops are closing at a pretty good rate because they simply cannot afford the technology to work on newer vehicles, I see it everyday. You wont be able to do it yourself, you will go to the dealer because they will be the only place capable.
So you think I have bought one new car in my life ?
New car dealers are a terribly inefficient method to distribute a complex and capital intensive product. The real estate, the capital tied up in inventory, all the personnel involved etc. It's an antiquated retail model. I should be able to configure, order from the mfgr and get the thing delivered to my home. Pulling off the foil covers, checking the oil and loading the car on a rollback doesnt require a retail location and garish advertising in all the local outlets.
The only problem I see with this model is the test drive. I wonder how many people would be comfortable buying a car they've never driven?So you think I have bought one new car in my life ?
New car dealers are a terribly inefficient method to distribute a complex and capital intensive product. The real estate, the capital tied up in inventory, all the personnel involved etc. It's an antiquated retail model. I should be able to configure, order from the mfgr and get the thing delivered to my home. Pulling off the foil covers, checking the oil and loading the car on a rollback doesnt require a retail location and garish advertising in all the local outlets.
I would, and I think lots of people would, once they get used to this distribution model.The only problem I see with this model is the test drive. I wonder how many people would be comfortable buying a car they've never driven?
The only problem I see with this model is the test drive. I wonder how many people would be comfortable buying a car they've never driven?
I agree the dealer process sucks the way it is now, but I still think most consumers want the test drive.I don't test wash a washing machine either. It's a car, push one pedal it goes faster, another one it goes slower.
I am not saying that we don't need car dealers. I am sure there are people who feel that they need the dog and pony show, the 'manager', the 'managers manager', the meeting with the 'finance guy', the upsell on the special protection plan for the windshield etc. I am saying that dealers are worthless to me.
I agree the dealer process sucks the way it is now, but I still think most consumers want the test drive.
Your experience is neither vast nor mainstream. There are many reasons your idea wont work, many reasons why dealerships are essential
If you are using Tesla as your argument, you already lost.
The fact remains, investors are fairly astute, and massive numbers of them, on the whole, say Tesla doesn't need conventional dealers to be a more valuable company than GM or Ford. That is a powerful argument that conventional dealers are not essential, contrary to your claim.