9 Used Car Sales Gimmicks That Need To Go Away
I’ve spent much of my career in the auto industry, including six years at a used car dealership where I witnessed the best and worst sides of the car business. I was fortunate in that my dealership was pretty respectable - they only engaged in one of the cheesy gimmicks listed below. Meanwhile, the upstart company across the street did everything they could to distract buyers from the disaster on wheels they were about to buy.
The internet has changed how people shop for everything, including cars. Many retail industries have evolved with the times, but I’m consistently amazed at how most car dealerships - especially the used car shops - still carry on as though buyers don’t have an ounce of grey matter in their skulls. If any such dealership representatives are reading this, take my advice and ditch these ridiculous gimmicks. Not only will you sell more cars, customers might actually come back and buy another one from you in the future.
1. Balloons on everything
My dealership tried this for awhile, and the only thing it did was give our guys extra cleanup work when the balloons deflated. That could’ve been solved if we just cut them loose like all the slimeball places did, but we didn’t want to anger our neighbours by filling their trees with coloured balloons and party streamers.
Nothing says class like pulling onto a car lot and seeing a 20-foot inflatable monkey, or my personal favourite, the wacky waving inflatable arm flailing tube men. Yeah, I’m sure to believe everything these guys say because, you know, monkey.
3. Gigantic “SALE” signs
Just in case the rows of neatly parked cars aren’t clear enough as to what’s going on, or balloons and the inflatables don’t get the message out, there’s always the flashy “SALE” sign fallback to make sure the place looks like a bargain discount outlet store selling crap tools. I’m particularly annoyed by the dealers who use individual SALE letters under the bonnets. Except when they put them in the wrong order to spell SLAE. That’s just hilarious.
4. “Guaranteed to win” mail promotions
Every week I get at least one spiffy postcard in the mail from a dealership telling me I’m guaranteed to win either a new car, a new TV, a $1000 shopping spree, or a “special” fourth prize. Of course I have to visit the dealership to see what I’ve won, where I’m grilled by a salesman for half an hour on everything from my current car to my underwear preference while they “find” my prize. Imagine my surprise when, after refusing to relinquish any personal information or answer their questions, I’m given the elusive prize number four: a self-adhesive “kick me” sign I’m obligated to stick on the back of the next person who walks through the door.
Is there some kind of secret dealership school for the obnoxious where people are taught how to be as sleazy and condescending as possible? Telling people in your monster truck voice that you have too many cars and it’s making you crazy enough to give out beans is, in a word, pathetic. Perhaps this was acceptable in the past, but in today’s world of Craigslist, internet sales and instant information, buyers have no interest in being spoken to like children.
6. Weekly payments
Sadly, some people still fall for this classic bait-and-switch scheme because they can’t afford a $300 monthly car payment, but somehow think $80 a week is doable. Here’s a hint: any business that bases their marketing plan on people’s inability to do basic math is not traditionally a reputable establishment. With so much information at our fingertips, there’s no reason to even give these places the time of day.
7. The “good cop/bad cop” routine
Once upon a time (as in before the internet) people weren’t often exposed to the typical car buying experience. But times have changed; buyers know all about the process, and by that I mean there is no process. It’s just another gimmick designed to make buyers feel bad for the hard-working sales rep, in the hopes they will pay more for the car. The jig is up - the sales rep gets a commission no matter what, so either accept the offer and get to business, or just say no. Either way, spare us the dog and pony show.
Today’s car shoppers are educated on what they want like never before, because they’re prepared for some crackpot sales dude to try and take advantage of them. And for the crackpot sales dudes out there reading this, it’s freaking 2015. Don’t be like our man Alex in the video above; nobody is impressed with a car that has power steering, power brakes and a boot big enough for a four-year old to play in. Whether you’re posting an ad online or trying to talk your way into a sale, bragging about features and options that have been standard issue for 30 years just makes you look stupid.
9. Ridiculously excessive fine print
It’s a given that not all deals will apply to every situation, and for legal reasons dealers should say that in their advertisements. That’s not such a big deal. If, however, an advertised deal requires paragraphs of fine print or a speed reader to cram it into a TV ad, it pretty much negates the advertised deal. I seriously can’t think of any other medium involving such expensive items where so much deception takes place. We’re in the information age - it’s time for prehistoric dealerships to get with the times.
Comments
Ive watched the no. 8 video before. And I was like, srsly. Do they really do that. Lol
When a dealer tell me the car has ABS, “Dual Zone” Climate Control, etc.
http://cdn.meme.am/instances/500x/49972351.jpg
Thats how i felt when a used car ad includes “am/fm radio” or “tiptronic steering wheel”. I didnt know there were cars out there without those things.
Then i bought an mx-5. And its steering column doesnt adjust at all. Guess it proved me wrong
I did internet work / car sales for two years with two big car dealers in NE Ohio, and I was always impressed with some of the horror stories I heard from talking with people. I liked my job a lot at first, thinking I was gonna change the world, but in reality my bosses just wanted the bottom dollar.
Also, I was doing some car shopping with my father, who hadn’t gotten a new car since the mid 80’s. He had finally found something he was interested in, we take it for a test drive, kick the tires, just make sure he gets the full picture. Meanwhile the sales guy we had hadn’t shut his mouth, spewing every tech fact he could about said car (2015 Jeep Cherokee Trailhawk), and generally just being annoying. My father likes the car, we sit down with the sales guy who proceeds to lowball the hell out of my dads car. He then starts talking about additional warranties, protection package this, insurance package that, while we’re giving this guy the look of he had just grown a second head. My father says no thanks, and askes for his keys back. So the salesman calls over his boss. He then sits down with my dad, and asks him what’s wrong with the deal. My dad can’t agree to the value of his car being so low and the crap he was being fed. Bossman ups his offer a extra 1k for his car (still 5-6 too low) and askes if that’s better. Still not happy with the deal my dad askes for his keys back and the bossman refuses. My dad has a temper, and the sales guy and now this bossdude have reached it. They enter a screaming match on a quiet Sunday morning, the bossman saying he’ll never sell my dad a car and how he has the best deals.. After about 35 seconds of them yelling, the sales guy, now white in the face hands me his keys back and apologizes.. Needless to say, we haven’t gone back to that dealership since.
Had the key thing happen to me once. Pulled out my phone and called local PD… had a conversation with dispatch for all of ten seconds telling them my car is being stolen by a car dealer… before my keys suddenly appeared.
It’s one of the shhttsts tactics and and that just has me gone.
Early last year I went to get a car. I saw a cool looking Mazda 3 that had some after market stuff done to it that didn’t look tacky. I go to get the car, only to find out it was already sold (probably a bait car that never really existed). So the sales man says “Well I have a Mazda 6 with 85k miles. We are asking for 12k for it”. I’m thinking “Ha! I won’t get approved for that much, not with out a down payment which I don’t have. The car isn’t even worth 12k. For trying to screw me over, I’ll let him see what he can do”. So I told him to see what he could do.
I had a 97 Nissan 200sx, that I still owed 800 on. They took that as trade in value of 500, so I’m already -300 towards this car. This is going great! The dealer ends up haggling with the finance company. While they are doing that, I look the car up. They are asking 6,995 dollars on their website. The sales guy wanted to sell it to me for 12k. The finance wasn’t allowing it with -300 down. They haggled, and in the end I got the car…. for just over 6,700 dollars (including trade it) before TT&L, and finance interest. I even got a free lifetime warranty on engine and trans, on an 8 year old Mazda that I got at a Dodge dealership.
Even though they tried to screw me over, I’ll go back to that dealership for my next car just because they give a lifetime warranty on engine/trans on every car they sell. That warranty has already saved my ass. Once when the original engine started knocking, and 4 more times because the engines weren’t put together correctly. The bearing caps kept coming loose.
You played yourself really, you traded in an s chassis for a Mazda.
Also, life time warranty on an 8 year old (I’m assuming petrol) Japanese car isn’t anything special
Why on earth would you trade your 200SX on a Mazda 3 or 6?
#4 - I once checked one of those out. All I got was 2 scratch off tickets and left. They salesman started talking sh!t about my recently bought car trying to convince to get a Dodge Avenger. Lol
Someone showed me American used car adverts before, and I honestly thought it was a YouTube parody channel. He’d tried to convince me that it wasn’t a parody but I didn’t buy it - then I actually went to America and, well, the Hotel TV does not lie. To say I was horrified was an understatement.
Its a massive culture shock from the UK to say the least. Used car TV adverts are actually rather rare over here - you’ll mostly find them on the Radio - but when you do see a used car advert here its mostly harmless. For Example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=systJmaxB5M
Actually, this reminded me of a series of adverts from Enterprise Rent-A-Car in the UK, and they actually make fun of the overly obnoxious American style of advertisement! I think you’ll get a kick out of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX5y4PPk1Zk
Oh they are so real. I still watch them in horrified fascination.
Here in australia the adverts are fairly similar to yours. Harmless. The yank ones just go nuts to try and make a quick buck. I’ve always believed sharp and simple is better than the flashy blunt force approach that american car ads do.
Go ahead and watch this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owMFZdzv-24
read #8
How can anyone say no to Wacky waving inflatable arm flailing tube man??
Am I the only one who realised its says doge instead of dodge on the mail promotion?
I’m laughing more to the fact that a dealer that sells Dodge, can’t even spell the brand name correctly.
I’d love to walk in and ask for a ‘Doge’ haha!
Wow!