gearheadmb said:
If you're planning on buying from a dealership, it's not just the car you are trying out, it's the dealership themselves. Are they patient and helpful, or pushy and dont care about whether they make you happy. Our family dealt with the same salesman for decades until he retired. We could show up look around and not see what we wanted, tell him our specific wants and needs, and leave. We would usually get a call a few months from him saying he got a trade in that was just what we were looking for, and he was usually right. Sometimes he would just drop a car off at our house and say try it a few days. I miss that guy.
So much truth in this. The psychology of vehicle sales is to get you to move quickly and make a hasty decision. They'll say "I have three other people waiting for this car," or "It won't be here tomorrow," and "what will it take to put you in this car today?" We used to call it Meet, greet, and get em on the sheet. The faster we could move to negotiations and put numbers in front of them, the sooner we can dash their hopes of a good deal and get them to open a wallet when we make an offer that lines our pockets.
There are some salespeople/buyers who have established a relationship and the salesperson knew that you would eventually buy from them, so they focus on trust and patience, but for a new customer... they want to move fast.
Pick a budget, stick to it, and be patient. Nothing makes them negotiate a better deal like patience. It's like hooking a big fish. They'll reel in hard until they realize you're not coming without a fight. They'll eventually start giving you extra line and using gentle tension so they don't break the line and let you swim away. If you really want to help things along, open the calculator app on your phone and set it on the desk in front of you so they can see it. They hate that. They will bring you preposterous numbers to start with, like $900/mo for 72 months and you'd be surprised how many people just sign. People with calculators realize that means you'll end up paying $65,000 over 6 years. They tend to start with a lower number if you have a calculator. Stronger position to start with.
You can also case the dealership. Watch the employee parking early in the mornings. When you see it full and the whole staff is there at 8am, chances are that is the weekly sales meeting. This means two things: 1) whatever day it is... probably monday or tuesday... its likely that their sales week ended a couple days prior. End of the sales week (usually Saturday) is when the results are tallied and we would meet on Monday or Tuesday to review the numbers and get a pep talk. 2) the day of the sales meeting is when the rookies are usually fired up to make deals happen.
So, shopping at the end of the week can net better deals sometimes. If they have sold 29 cars that week and have a healthy profit margin, they will sometimes sell one or more cars for less (or no) profit at the end of the week... more cars sold, more goals met, still a profitable average. One of the two cars I bought was a rare-at-the-time brand new Impala SS. I put a deposit on it when it came in on Tuesday (also the day of the sales meeting), then went in on Friday to negotiate. I threatened to take my deposit back and gave them one more day. Saturday I finished negotiating and got it for $200 over invoice. I was also offered a sales job which I accepted.