some customers would walk because we were $1300-$2500 (more expensive tractors have higher buydowns) higher than the guy selling at cash price and they didn't listen carefully enough to hear the discount part of the sales pitch.
As a customer, a sales pitch of any kind will make me walk faster than anything else. When I visit a dealership, I want to know the bottom dollar price before I hear anything else. No BS of any kind, or I'll leave so fast that the salesman won't know what hit him. When I bought my truck, many salesmen learned this fact the hard way.
Define "bottom dollar price". Customers want options, and all manufacturers have financing options. So is the "bottom dollar price" the cash price? And if the options are explained, is that a BS sales pitch?
I ask these questions sincerely. As dealers we know you don't want smoke and mirrors, but since you don't have a label on your forehead saying "I'm a cash buyer", or "I only care about the monthly", or "I only buy with zero percent" we have the challenge of answering your pricing questions simply, yet explaining options.
Any input, not just from Massey WV is appreciated. I suspect it is a lot about the attitude of the salesman and the salesman having an honest approach.
Hey Dave, As I see it, Don't call it 0% because it's not if you can get a cash discount. Calculate it out and be upfront what the real percent is. :2cents:...Any input...
Hey Dave, As I see it, Don't call it 0% because it's not if you can get a cash discount. Calculate it out and be upfront what the real percent is. :2cents:
Good input. It is nice to see what customers think is fair. We have to balance simplicity, by customers wanting options. Ironically, simplicity is perceived by many as fair and honest, where a complex set of options, even if clearly defined, are seen by some as a sales pitch.
I guess we could say "this is 0%, but when you calculate the loss of discounts, it actually comes to 2.79%, even though the contract wiill show 0%". I just made up the 2.79% number, but you get the drift. Seems reasonable, and I sort of like the idea. But then they ask, "what if I pay it off early" and that opens another discussion, since if you lose all discounts up front, you can't gain any of them back by paying off a 0% loan early.
Keep up the input if you all don't mind. I need to learn how to better sell ya'll tractors.
:laughing: I found the site *after* I bought... otherwise, I might not have bought the tractor I ended up with. I went to 4 places, the first one was the highest price but asked me to let them "beat" the other dealers but I never went back to let them try. Ironically, that's the dealer I buy all my supplies from and conciser them my "adopted" dealer....Most people on these forums are not, in my opinion, "typical" buyers, so we as a group do alot more research than probably most.....
JD is a horse of another color. They hold a pretty tight grip on the price because they can, much like Sthil. Some of the "other" tractor brands have to compete partially on price....installments as JD calls them...
Ram4x4, I am interested in your response, as I have debated with dealers the best way to handle the buydown aspect of the 0%. For you, maybe it would have been more palatable if the dealer had all his prices at 0%, then just mentioned that there was deep discounts for cash? I mean, if you are planning to go with 0%, that sure sounds better than getting the cash price and having to buy up. Same deal, different angle.
Surely we know that 0% is not free, someone pays for the free interest. (I know there are occasional examples where 0% is offered without a cash discount option, but that is very rare). What is the best manner for a dealer to approach this? This is a serious question. There are 3 basic prices on each model. Cash or standard rate (largest discounts/rebates), reduced rate such as 4.25% (no discounts given, no buydowns needed) and 0% (buydowns needed). So when a customer says, "how much for a 5035", a dealer must either interogate the customer to find out how he wants to buy, or throw out a price and then upsell/rebate from there. It's not easy.
I used to question the buyer before giving a price, but I hate that personally. So we decided the true price is what a buyer will hand to a seller in the equivalent of $100 bills. That is the price. If you want 0%, you pay more, exactly the amount it will cost me.
Generally buying the 0%, if you do not pay it off early, is a little better deal than buying at standard or reduced rate. But since you have paid the "interest" up front, it only pencils out against the other rates had you ran all loans to full term. If you are going to pay it off early, take the discounts up front and use standard rate.
Always interested in feedback. Its how we learn.
For me I would have been pleased as can be if I were told here is our 0% price and here is the cash or self financing price. It would have taken all the angst out of my purchase. I just finished the refi of the Mahinra loan that was closed 3/19, so I am back at my 2.99 and everything is great.
The 0% buydown on the Mahindra is on a sliding scale, since it doesn't cost nearly as much to provide 0% on a $15k rig as it does on a $40k rig. I believe the 0% buydown (dealer lingo for what we have to pay to go from 4.25% to 0%) is about $1375 on a Max series. None of the model buydowns are $4000. Dealers can set prices however they want and I guess they could charge more for the zero than it costs them, but that does not seem smart.
I just mention this as I don't want others to think there is a $4k price tag on 0% for 60 months. $1375 isn't bad for 5 years of financing a $15-20K rig. $23/month is what that cost. I spend more than that in coffee....
4000$ did seem like a stretch to me! But even so, 1375$ is something- and this discussion of financing buydown never came into play with either of my tractor purchases. I negotiated a price (no talk of cash or financing), and when I thought it was a price I was willing to pay, I agreed and asked for 0%financing. There is no buydown in my case- built into the package price? yeah certainly, but it's my opinion that comes from their end (dealer/manufacturer).
Ya'll have got me smiling. I am a Mahindra dealer and I have voiced my opinion about this tactic.......
You really can't get something for nothing.
In 2005 I went with the 0% loan from Agricredit. I had to pay a $225.00 administrative fee in order to get it. It felt like a bee sting that took a long time to go away.![]()
I was quoted $25,000 for a 5035 HST with FEL cash price. If the 0% interest deal would have been a $225 "administrative fee" on top of that it would have been a no brainer, but when I state I am interested in the advertised 0% deal and then get told the price of the tractor for that deal is now $29,000, it doesn't sit well with me.
Mahindra is just being up front about the whole thing, it isn't any different than the competition offering 0% or a rebate.