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4
Tips To Saving A Bundle At Your Next Car
Auction |
by:
Chris
Fox |
Many of us have been at the car dealership
and have been drained by a salesperson during
price negotiations for the purchase of a
new car. Most people give in too easily
or do not negotiate at all to avoid the
dreadful act. This only means more money
in the car dealers' pocket, while you are
out of several thousand dollars! Yes, they
make that much in profit per car.
This article unveils the dealer's selling
tactics and how you can get around them.
But before we dive into the new car buying
tips, we need to understand what makes up
the dealer's profits.
In addition to the MSRP (manufacturer suggested
retail price), which is the dealer's cost
for the car plus an additional 20-25% profit,
a dealer also gets financial incentives
from the manufacturer when a new car is
sold. This is called Holdback.
Depending on the car, dealers can make hundreds
on each car through holdbacks. Dealers also
get additional incentives and bonuses on
selling a car before the end of the month
and/or quarter.
A shrewd dealer can make several thousand
on a new car even by selling it at invoice
price. This is how new car buying can become
tricky for the consumer.
Ready to learn how not to put a dent in
your wallet on your next car purchase? Here
are four tips to get you started. Each one
is a dealer tactic to watch out for.
1. The Guilt Trip
As you may have noticed, every desk in a
dealership has photos of the salesperson's
family, instead of photos of cars. Midway
in the negotiation, the sales person will
bring them up and make it look like his
little commission check can hardly pay for
his daughters college and little Bradley's
braces.
A seasoned salesperson will soon have you
feeling guilty for driving the price down
and hurting his commission. Watch out not
to fall for this tactic, since you already
know about holdbacks and incentive programs
from manufacturers.
2. Wearing You Down
Come prepared to spend half a day at the
dealership or pay whatever the dealer asks
for. Car Dealers are trained to delay and
tire you out to the point where you give
in and accept their price just to get out
of there.
After you make your offer, sales people
typically claim they would have to run it
by their manager. You may then have to re-start
negotiating with the manager, who is also
a seasoned salesperson. This dance goes
on for a while until you give in.
Remember, there are multiple dealerships
in a city, so they need you more than you
need them. Demand to speak to the manager
after a certain time period or threaten
to leave.
Because you are devoting a lot of time to
bargain with the dealer, they know you are
a serious buyer, so they will not let you
leave. The earlier you can speak with the
manager, the faster you can leave.
3. The Test Drive
We all enjoy a good test drive and look
forward to it. Although it is essential
to test drive a car before you buy it, remember
to not show your absolute love for the car
to the salesperson. Their goal is to get
you emotionally attached to the car, so
it becomes a must have for you. I have learned
it the hard way.
To hide your emotional tears from the salesperson,
mention the features of a competing car
in the same class, like the new shape, light,
leg room, resale value etc. This will make
the salesperson a little vulnerable.
4. Monthly Payments
This one is to confuse you. Dealers will
start talking about monthly payments rather
than the total price of the car. They will
start by asking how much you are willing
to pay per month and how much of a down
payment you are willing to pay. Since people
don't want to look like they cannot afford
a certain car, they will usually give a
higher number. Big Mistake!
You have left little room for negotiation
when this happens. Always steer the conversation
to the total price of the car and do NOT
mention any trade-ins at this point. Only
after the total price of the vehicle is
completely negotiated then talk about interest,
monthly payment and trade-ins.
General Rule;
As a general rule, remember to only focus
and negotiate on the Total Price of the
vehicle. Everything else is pretty much
the car dealer's trough.
If the above new car buying tips seem like
a lot of hassle, yet you still want to get
the best price in town, there are some websites
that do this for you. www.autoauctionbids.com
for example is a great website for this
because you can collect price quotes from
multiple local dealers for a particular
car as well as its competing car models
(like Honda Accord, Toyota Camry and Ford
Taurus) and compare them.
The website then allows you to send back
the lowest quotes received for each car
make to all participating dealers in your
area through the website itself.
Dealers view this price and continue to
submit new lower prices over a 3 day period.
By putting local car dealers in such a price
competition allows you to avoid the dreadful
face to face negotiation and yet gets you
the lowest price in town for up to 3 competing
car makes.
The best part about AutoAuctionBids.com
is that it is absolutely free for you and
there is no obligation to buy after the
new car auction is over.
About the author:
For more information on cars and car auction
visit http://cheap-car-auction-portal.com
Circulated by Bandoni
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