Car Finance / Internet Prices on the Showroom Floor![]() This In-Person Internet Strategy Saves Time and MoneyRecently I tried a car-buying experiment: I walked onto a car lot, asked for a salesman from the Internet department and in less than an hour, bought a minivan for $1,000 less than if I had been shopping the conventional way. It can't be that easy, you might say. I assure you that it is. Instead of following the usual car-shopping method of walking onto a car lot and being approached by a salesman, I went into a Toyota dealership in Santa Monica, California, dodged several conventional car salesmen and asked the receptionist for a salesperson from the dealership's Internet department. Her expression told me that this might be a first; why wasn't I using the Internet? But she went along. And so I met courtly, no-pressure Mark. I told him I wanted to buy a 2011 Toyota Sienna SE. He escorted me outside and offered to let me test-drive the minivan. I declined (I'd already driven a Sienna) and asked him to give me a price. Mark led me into his office, which was across a busy street from the dealership as though to isolate it from the usual selling atmosphere. He turned his computer screen toward me, pointing out the Sienna's MSRP, the invoice price and all the options. He then said he could sell it to me for $500 over invoice. I pulled up the vehicle on my iPhone on the Edmunds.com mobile phone car-buying app. It listed the True Market Value® price as $1,037 over invoice. This meant that Mark's offer of $500 over invoice was well below the average price other people were paying for the car. So I did the deal. I gave him a check as a deposit and arranged to have the minivan delivered to my office the following week. I left the dealership an hour after I had arrived. The next week, Mark arrived with the Sienna and the paperwork. I asked what the price would have been if I had gone to the regular salespeople instead of the Internet department. He said it would have been $1,000 more, "at least." The "at least" was probably because he was thinking that a conventional sale would have been completed in the finance and insurance office, where the dealership would have tried to push additional products and services on me. When you're buying a car, your first plan of attack should always be to handle it online as completely as possible. But if you're in the market for a new or used car and like some in-person aspects of buying, you might try out this Internet-in-the-showroom approach. Here are a few tips. Schedule a test-drive by calling the dealership and asking for the Internet manager. Say up front that you won't be buying the same day. Check TMV® before visiting the car lot so you can spot a good deal when you see one. You also can get Edmunds' mobile new-car buying app and refer to it during the deal-making process. If you started the in-person Internet buying process with an e-mail or phone call, get the contact's name and continue dealing with him or her when you are on the car lot. If you're coming onto the lot cold, ask the receptionist to get you a salesperson from the Internet department. Before agreeing to any deal, ask for a list of all the fees you'll have to pay. You should only be charged for the purchase price of the car, local sales tax and registry fees. Request that the document preparation be handled by the Internet person rather than the finance and insurance manager. In the end, you might be able to cut through the complicated knot of the dealership buying process and get the same quick action and good price that come to Internet shoppers. |
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![]() Inexpensive portable navigation systems and even cheaper smartphone nav applications are making the pricey in-dash systems offered by automakers less attractive to many consumers. But some people prefer in-dash systems because of their larger screens and because they offer more features. Plus, you never have to worry about forgetting an in-dash system at home. Finally, prices for in-dash systems are starting to drop. ![]() Bluetooth is a wireless technology that allows two compatible devices to communicate. In the car, it lets you operate a mobile phone "hands-free," meaning you don't have to hold the device while making or taking a call or performing such functions as accessing the phone's address book. (Of course, you have to use your hands to operate certain Bluetooth features via the vehicle's controls.) ![]() Automotive sound systems are more complex now that portable media players, hard-disk drives and smartphones are along for the ride. But the basic radio/speaker setup hasn't drastically changed, even though more speakers and more amplifier power have been added over the years.
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![]() Sales of Ford vehicles increased 13.3 percent in June compared to the same month last year, and the gain was largely spurred by a strong showing by the carmaker’s Super Duty pickup trucks. ![]() Responsible consumers tend to have all their affairs in order – a steady income, plenty of savings and perhaps even an investment or two on the side. While these things are all positive, they ultimately won't get you approved for an auto loan – for that, you need credit.
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![]() Getting the Best Rates on Your Car Loan ![]() Identifying Your Target Cars & Arranging Financing ![]() There are certain people who seem to have X-ray vision, who can look at a business and see things that are invisible to other people. I bring this up because I have a friend who spotted something about used cars that I have never heard addressed by anyone else.
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