A Note From A Leaf Salesman

My Nissan Leaf Forum

Help Support My Nissan Leaf Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
bbrowncods said:
CARMAX has a good model. No haggle sales and no haggle trade-in offer. I have used them twice and both times they gave me more for my trade-in than any other dealer, and the car I bought was cheaper than most other dealers.

The last time I used them I just sold them my vehicle and didn't buy from them. It was a great experience. I know that when they sold it they made 5000 over what they gave me. I have no problem with that. Talking to the salesman, she loved not having to "play the game" with customers. I don't know their compensation package.

I agree Thor, there are better models for selling cars. Especially with the information available to customers. Most do their homework!

Carmax won't lease. The best deal is at your dealer. Even third party leasing companies that promise "fleet prices" won't get you a $199/month or whatever the current "good deal" is.
 
First, to the original poster - thank you for this write up. Second, I agree in general with the comments that the system is far from ideal. Yes, it probably maximizes profit for the dealership owner, which is why it persists, but it isn't ideal for either you, the salesperson, or us the consumer.

I was made aware of the survey issue a number of years ago, and have found that it is now common practice across many different industries. So, when I get a dealer survey for either service or sales I will always mark all 10s unless there was a real problem. Once I marked a "5" to a question on a LEAF service survey and wrote in comments that the service staff was great, my problem was with Nissan not issuing a repair bulletin about a known problem (the failing heater on 2011/2012s). I received two calls from the dealer and one from Nissan corporate deeply concerned that my service had been bad. I explained on the phone how, no, the service guys were terrific my problem was with corporate. Even so, in my next service the guys gave me the red carpet treatment (I also told them verbally what had happened and apologized for the hassle they must have gotten).

I don't answer 10s for all surveys - for example, if United Airlines surveys I give them the answers they deserve. But if I get asked, for example, about the check-in experience at a hotel front desk I won't answer "9" thinking "they were really good, but I'll reserve a 10 for special days" because I know the clerk will get dinged.

It's also interesting to hear about how you deal with internet inquiries. I have long advocated on this forum using the internet for purchase. But I also a) avoid bulk emails - each dealer gets an email for them, b) provide cell phone for responses, c) am clear on exact options and dates needed. This seems to get the best responses. I found the phone can be in both parties interest. In one case a dealer called me immediately and offered a great deal. After a few hours of discussion involving other dealers (and further reductions in price) I settled on him and after signing was told that they needed to sell a LEAF that day to meet a quota. I doubt that would have happened in time only over email.
 
megger5963 said:
So we aren't even allowed to tryto make money is basically what you are saying? You are a free thinking human being, you can buy what you want. We don't need phone insurance, but we all pay the $10/mo. and forget about it just in case. Same principle.

By trying to sell people something they don't need at a ridiculously high markup that benefits the dealer at the customer of uneducated customers? And you wonder why people hate dealerships.


megger5963 said:
Any Nissan dealer is REQUIRED to record all incoming and outgoing phone calls with customers. Do I want you to come in? Absolutely. I can't sell you a car over the phone. And bait and switch gets me NOWHERE on the Leaf. You've got three offers in your back pocket for around the same price anyway. Leaf customers have the ultimate buying power. I'm more than happy to communicate over email and put everything I say in writing - after we have discussed it on the phone. It takes me all day to draft emails that ask you what color, features, packages, etc you want on your new Leaf when I could just ask you a few questions on the phone.

Welcome to the 21st century. People like email, text, etc. It is more convenient for the vast majority of customers. Salesmen who responded to my email requests for quotes (with the EXACT options I wanted) did not get any further consideration. Demand to talk on the phone? You're dead to me.

megger5963 said:
All we're trying to do is save you time. If something seems fishy, don't buy there. It's a free market. Pretty simple stuff. It would cost you just a few hundred dollars more to buy from a dealer a little farther away, even if you are remote and they have to transport the car to you. And save you a lot of headache.

There's loads of dealers within the LEAFs range to my house in the Atlanta area. Not everyone has that much choice, but it certainly wouldn't have cost me any more to go to a dealer 35 miles away instead of the one 5 miles away.

megger5963 said:
I love my job. I said that several times. I don't want to work for Tesla. Their business model demotivates salesman and leaves no room for growth. The "positive car buying experience" is a two-way street. We need your help to provide that.

So instead of a salesman motivated to screw me over I have to rely on a superior product to sway me? And that is bad why?


megger5963 said:
I agree with all of you. 90% of customers have done enough research to know more about the Leaf than I do. Do your homework before, when we ask what you want, just tell us, don't play shopping games. We will try our best to get you the deal you want. We know damn good and well what we are getting into when we sit down with a Leaf customer.

If you have a bad experience, SHOP ELSEWHERE. We respect that. Trust me, we know when we f**k up.

Customers only play games because you force them to. A customer tells you what they want and you make them wait 15 minutes after every question so you can go to your manager and "beg" them to approve your dealer. Then you come back with not quite what the customer wanted but something you think they'll like (aka something you think you can screw them over with) and the whole process gets repeated. Some of your points in your OP seemed genuine, but now you are just sounding like the same old same old car salesman that the world doesn't need anymore.
 
Much appreciate the perspective from a Leaf salesperson. My Dad was a truck salesman many years ago when I was young and I certainly knew first-hand how much effort went into coming home with such a small paycheck each month.

Having said that, I owned a software development company that wrote software for the retail automotive sector and I can say from personal experience in working behind the scenes at dozens of dealerships that many are liars, cheaters, and thieves. This is not opinion, it is fact.

Specifically, the F&I office is one of the biggest culprits (that's the finance and insurance office, or business office); I have personal experience in being asked to develop software that would show a column of numbers on the screen and a "total" on the bottom that was not the sum of the above numbers. Also a "hotkey" that when pressed would "flash" a value in the corner of the screen so the F&I manager could see their current floor for profit.

In general, my experience is that dealerships themselves don't make much profit on the sale of a given vehicle, and the vast majority comes from gross incentives (from overall dealership sales targets), from your used car trade-in (generally more profit is made on your trade-in than on the new car you are buying), and the most profit generally comes from financing and add-ons which can include: extended warranties, insurance products, undercoating, clear coating (aka DiamondKote), cloth protection (aka scotchguard), specialty trim and protective films, etc..etc.. These are provided by 3rd party companies and pay very good margins to the dealership and it is "cream" over and above the cost of the car.

From the perspective of someone who has purchased 8 new cars in my lifetime:
1. Pontiac Fiero
2. Nissan Pathfinder #1
3. Nissan Pathfinder #2
4. Nissan Altima
5. Hyundai Santa Fe #1
6. Hyundai Santa Fe #2
7. Hyundai Santa Fe #3
and just now
8. Nissan Leaf

... the experience on pretty much every one (except the Leaf) has been a painful back-and-forth with the "Sales Dance" where you give an offer to the salesperson who "can't take it to the business manager unless you give a deposit to show you are serious", then you sit in the chair for 10 minutes while the salesman "argues your case to the sales manager" - actually they are usually leaning against the wall comparing sports teams -- remember I worked behind the scenes for a decade writing their software.. I personally have seen this time and time again.. then salesman comes out with the haggle-price that they just can't go below, and you rinse-and-repeat until you are pretty much played out and frustrated. Finally you agree on a price $$$.

This price means really nothing then.. because you wait another 1/2 hour to go into the F&I office where you get all kinds of fees added to the negotiated price (some are valid like the destination/delivery fee or freight if they did a locate, etc.), but regardless you can often end up with another $2,000 on the bill with extra fees, over and above what you "negotiated".. again, you fight until you play out, like a fish on a line.

Then comes the "rust and dust" (from when the most common add-ons were undercoating, rustproofing, and clear coat/diamondKote), but now is more commonly accessories, various insurance product add-ons, and finance charges if you are not paying cash.

Financing through a dealership can be a whole nuther nightmare.. often the conversation starts with "how much were you looking for your payments to be each month", and you hum and haw and mumble "about $300-350", so the business manager says "ok, well I'll just enter $400 to start, just to see our options", and this is where the numbers on the screen start to not add up because you are going to end up paying that $400 as a minimum... so you agree either to a purchase price with all the junk added, or the finance charges, and then you get "ok, so we add the taxes"... because all this has been tax-out... and up goes the price out-of-pocket yet again..

This plays out over and over; and I appreciate any particular dealership or salesperson or business manager may want to argue that they don't do it that way, and that is fine--some are better than others-- but 100% of the dealerships I had direct contact with had most of this going on behind those closed office doors.

So.. long post.. but back to the original post of how salespeople selling Leafs get screwed.. one of the reasons consumers like myself seem to be such a PITA is because, from our perspective, we have to go through this dog-and-pony show over and over and over and we feel like we need to take a totally defensive posture when entering a dealership.

As for this Leaf I just bought.. I asked for an internet quote, the Nissan salesman got back to me later that day with price and availability of color choice, and I went down that day and handed them a full-retail check (because the couple thousand I could have haggled out is not worth my health and stress anymore). He did a good job, although really there wasn't any pre-sale work to be done as I had done all the research; but I can appreciate there is a lot of post-sale work to do.

Just my personal experience. YMMV.
 
CmdrThor said:
megger5963 said:
So we aren't even allowed to tryto make money is basically what you are saying? You are a free thinking human being, you can buy what you want. We don't need phone insurance, but we all pay the $10/mo. and forget about it just in case. Same principle.

By trying to sell people something they don't need at a ridiculously high markup that benefits the dealer at the customer of uneducated customers? And you wonder why people hate dealerships.


megger5963 said:
Any Nissan dealer is REQUIRED to record all incoming and outgoing phone calls with customers. Do I want you to come in? Absolutely. I can't sell you a car over the phone. And bait and switch gets me NOWHERE on the Leaf. You've got three offers in your back pocket for around the same price anyway. Leaf customers have the ultimate buying power. I'm more than happy to communicate over email and put everything I say in writing - after we have discussed it on the phone. It takes me all day to draft emails that ask you what color, features, packages, etc you want on your new Leaf when I could just ask you a few questions on the phone.

Welcome to the 21st century. People like email, text, etc. It is more convenient for the vast majority of customers. Salesmen who responded to my email requests for quotes (with the EXACT options I wanted) did not get any further consideration. Demand to talk on the phone? You're dead to me.

megger5963 said:
All we're trying to do is save you time. If something seems fishy, don't buy there. It's a free market. Pretty simple stuff. It would cost you just a few hundred dollars more to buy from a dealer a little farther away, even if you are remote and they have to transport the car to you. And save you a lot of headache.

There's loads of dealers within the LEAFs range to my house in the Atlanta area. Not everyone has that much choice, but it certainly wouldn't have cost me any more to go to a dealer 35 miles away instead of the one 5 miles away.

megger5963 said:
I love my job. I said that several times. I don't want to work for Tesla. Their business model demotivates salesman and leaves no room for growth. The "positive car buying experience" is a two-way street. We need your help to provide that.

So instead of a salesman motivated to screw me over I have to rely on a superior product to sway me? And that is bad why?


megger5963 said:
I agree with all of you. 90% of customers have done enough research to know more about the Leaf than I do. Do your homework before, when we ask what you want, just tell us, don't play shopping games. We will try our best to get you the deal you want. We know damn good and well what we are getting into when we sit down with a Leaf customer.

If you have a bad experience, SHOP ELSEWHERE. We respect that. Trust me, we know when we f**k up.

Customers only play games because you force them to. A customer tells you what they want and you make them wait 15 minutes after every question so you can go to your manager and "beg" them to approve your dealer. Then you come back with not quite what the customer wanted but something you think they'll like (aka something you think you can screw them over with) and the whole process gets repeated. Some of your points in your OP seemed genuine, but now you are just sounding like the same old same old car salesman that the world doesn't need anymore.

Sorry to disappoint. Some people will not be happy regardless. My point in posting this is simply to dispell the idea that LEAF SALES (not F&I, not other cars, not managers) are a very high risk, low reward business to be in.

Is F&I crooked? Absolutely. Are the managers responsible for making money? You bet. Can we crack people over the head for thousands on other vehicles? Sure.

I'm in no way arguing the merits of the car business or F&I. It's an outdated, broken system. This is about Leaf Sales.

My only point is that there is a lot more that goes into selling a Leaf than the standard car. We don't mind that -- just wish the surveys reflected our work.
 
megger5963 said:
...
I love my job. I said that several times. I don't want to work for Tesla. Their business model demotivates salesman and leaves no room for growth. The "positive car buying experience" is a two-way street. We need your help to provide that.
...

I think you have simply been told that and don't really know the specifics of their sales model.

The Tesla store employees I have met, and a few I know well, are more motivated than any other car salesman I have ever met.
They have, on average, a much higher level of knowledge about their own cars (granted, they only have two models, soon three).
They have set goals, but take their job as education, not sales.
I have seen "specialists" become leads, store managers, even regional managers. And of course, if owning a chunk of a disruptive company (stock) doesn't motivate you, I am not sure what would.

The excitement and enthusiasm shown by these people are unbelievable.

And...there is none of this, "let me go clear this with my manager" three times before you even get to do a dance with the finance guy.

If their business model "demotivates" sales staff, I would hate to see the Tesla staff I know when they were motivated.
 
This was a most interesting read. I have friends who have worked in the service dept for car dealers and it opened my eyes to an incredibly broken system that rewards technicians for lying, cheating, and doing crappy quality work. Now I have a complete picture now that I see how broken the system is on the sales side of things. I really would like to see car dealerships disappear.

I always fill out my surveys honestly. I've had salesmen tell me that "anything less than a 10 is a failing grade." and while that may be true from their perspective, the survey does not word it that way. So I grade the survey honestly. After all, if Nissan wants to have salesmen graded on a pass/fail scale then they should only give me two options to begin with. I'm sorry this affects the salespeople negatively, but obviously the system is broken internally and that isn't my fault.

I also imagine the Leaf buyer is not a salesman's best friend because most people buying a Leaf are probably more intelligent than the average car buyer. They probably want the best deal. They probably don't want any of the dealer add-ons and extended warranties that are usually a scam. Sometimes a company is better off selling products to idiots because that makes them more money. When they create a product that caters to intelligent people only, that can be a problem.

On the bright side, the Prius used to be similar to this. But now that it has gone mainstream, most of those issues are gone. It is no different than selling a Camry. I would hope that in time the Leaf would be no different than selling an Altima.
 
In your first post you mention this:

megger5963 said:
So, in total, we are looking at making $300-$500 on every single Leaf deal we close, sometimes a little more.

Mostly because of the "spin", but you said you get at least $200 on your spin.

In another post, you say this:

megger5963 said:
If a "mini" (or minimum commission on a car) is $100, and I sell 12-15 units, I make $12-1500/month. Minus 30% tax.

When was the last time you heard of feeding a family on $12-1500/month?

But that's not really accurate.. You'll never only make $1200-1500/month because you are guaranteed a spin of at least $200. I love how the dealership has their employees "gamble" after each sale. Would you rather have the "spin" where you get $200-400 each time, or just get $300 per sale. If it's the spin, then you are gambling with your own salary every day.

Now, not that $3600/mo is much to live on, but its more than your dramatic $1200-1500/month. This is why we don't like salesmen, they "spin" (get it) the numbers to get a reaction.
 
megger5963 said:
Yeah. Spiffs exist. Absolutely.

We get paid a couple of hundred dollars for selling the most cars over the weekend or $25 per sold appointment. Or something to that effect.

But at the end of the day, and what many people fail to understand:

If a "mini" (or minimum commission on a car) is $100, and I sell 12-15 units, I make $12-1500/month. Minus 30% tax.

When was the last time you heard of feeding a family on $12-1500/month? That's why surveys are crucial. That can be an extra $1200-$5000 we wouldn't get otherwise.

No they aren't all "mini's", but Leafs tend to be. That's the point. Get your good deal -- just take care of salespeople on the survey. It's a broken system... agreed... but we can't fix it. And we love our jobs (well, some of us anyway). Sometimes it's just the little things that make it hard.

In these markets like ATL and California, salesman can sell more Leafs than any other car because the incentives are so good. So they really get hurt.

Food for thought while you guys shop (or look to replace your current Leaf). :)

ya, car sales, tough business which is one of many reasons why I don't do it anymore. But you have the advantage of having a hot item to sell. Where I worked, top sales was lucky to sell 13-15 a month. It was Ford. We were in the EV program but never had more than 2 FFE's on the lot at one time when I was there. EVSE was installed almost a year after I left. EV Program was about 16 months old by then. Ya, we were in it but all in?? ya right
 
Now, not that $3600/mo is much to live on, but its more than your dramatic $1200-1500/month. This is why we don't like salesmen, they "spin" (get it) the numbers to get a reaction.

I don't get a spin on every car. Just Leafs. Betwen 1 and 3 a month in my market is a good month for a Leaf Salesman. We also sell other cars. Sorry I didn't clarify.
 
Anyway, none of this is about the merits of the car business or the wealth car salesman can/cannot acrue.

I just wanted to educate the average Leaf customer on our side of things. I think that my fellow Leaf Sales Guys will appreciate it.

That pretty much concludes my participation in the thread.
 
megger5963 said:
Now, not that $3600/mo is much to live on, but its more than your dramatic $1200-1500/month. This is why we don't like salesmen, they "spin" (get it) the numbers to get a reaction.

I don't get a spin on every car. Just Leafs. Betwen 1 and 3 a month in my market is a good month for a Leaf Salesman. We also sell other cars. Sorry I didn't clarify.

Ok, that makes more sense.. but I still couldn't imagine gambling for some of my salary. Also, the surveys shouldn't be the "majority" of your salary. Your pay shouldn't be determined by an inconsistent metric (ie different customers understanding a rating differently). I agree with an earlier poster, if Nissan wants it pass/fail, it shouldn't be 1-9 = fail, 10 = pass. I almost never give 10s on things, but I'm probably still a really happy returning customer if I put 8s or 9s. A 10 means perfect and I've never had a perfect sales experience (car sales or otherwise), except for the self-checkout line at the grocery store.
 
xtremeflyer said:
megger5963 said:
Now, not that $3600/mo is much to live on, but its more than your dramatic $1200-1500/month. This is why we don't like salesmen, they "spin" (get it) the numbers to get a reaction.

I don't get a spin on every car. Just Leafs. Betwen 1 and 3 a month in my market is a good month for a Leaf Salesman. We also sell other cars. Sorry I didn't clarify.

Ok, that makes more sense.. but I still couldn't imagine gambling for some of my salary. Also, the surveys shouldn't be the "majority" of your salary. Your pay shouldn't be determined by an inconsistent metric (ie different customers understanding a rating differently). I agree with an earlier poster, if Nissan wants it pass/fail, it shouldn't be 1-9 = fail, 10 = pass. I almost never give 10s on things, but I'm probably still a really happy returning customer if I put 8s or 9s. A 10 means perfect and I've never had a perfect sales experience (car sales or otherwise), except for the self-checkout line at the grocery store.

the OP's example of the impact of surveys may seem extreme but I have personally witnessed people losing up to half their salary/bonuses due to having two low scores within a 30 day period.
 
I appreciate the original post trying to educate us about the car business. The post helped some, but missed many. Some people will never be satisfied.

Consumers want it both ways. They don't want to do the sales dance... or at least that's what they say. They say that they like the Tesla sales model or the CARMAX model. Both these sellers charge retail and won't negotiate. CARMAX charges more than retail in my experience. But when these people come to your dealership, they don't want to pay the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP). They ask you for "your best price." so that they can make a decision in the comfort and privacy of their own home. If you allow them to do that, you will be among 80% of underpaid and miserable salespeople who sell only 20% of auto sales. You have a choice of either lying to them or giving them a price with a reasonable/average profit. When you give them an honest fair price, any other dealer can beat it and you lose the sale. So much for not doing the dance. The one price model will not work for the auto business. Hello Saturn. This is the modern version of the horse trading business. People have cars to trade in. Don't hold your breath waiting for it to change.

For consumers, I recommend that you put on your big boy pants, do your research, and negotiate like an educated human being. You have plenty of tools. A lot of you like TrueCar. TrueCar charges the dealer $300 to $400 on each sale, so the dealer's cost on your car is $300 to $400 higher than if you didn't use TrueCar. It may make you feel better when buying a car, but I don't see it as a sustainable business model.

For salespeople, I recommend that you perfect your dance. Do whatever trickery you can to get the customer into your showroom. Don't lie to customers. Perfect your demonstration technique. Get them in the back seat to show them how much room is in there. Shut the door and keep them in the car. Get in the driver's seat and drive away. Take them to a secluded area away from the dealership and get them out so that they can get an undistracted view of the vehicle. They will surely want to drive it back to the dealership. If they like it, ask them to buy it. Give them the MSRP and your cost. Let them decide the profit. Who cares what the profit is? You just need to get them the car that they want. Most reasonable people will agree to a profit. They're just scared little children who have no idea what they should pay. Give them the information so that they can make an informed decision and ASK FOR THEIR BUSINESS. You will be among the 20% of salespeople who sell 80% of cars.

... and quit beating up on F&I managers. If you don't want super duper undercoating or $300 wheel locks, don't buy them. Just say no. Finance, insurance, extended service contracts etc. are valuable to some people and not others. Buy what you want. Don't buy what you don't want. Stop making it about the F&I manager. It's about you, isn't it?
 
kikbuti said:
I appreciate the original post trying to educate us about the car business. The post helped some, but missed many. Some people will never be satisfied.

Consumers want it both ways. They don't want to do the sales dance... or at least that's what they say. They say that they like the Tesla sales model or the CARMAX model. Both these sellers charge retail and won't negotiate. CARMAX charges more than retail in my experience. But when these people come to your dealership, they don't want to pay the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP). They ask you for "your best price." so that they can make a decision in the comfort and privacy of their own home. If you allow them to do that, you will be among 80% of underpaid and miserable salespeople who sell only 20% of auto sales. You have a choice of either lying to them or giving them a price with a reasonable/average profit. When you give them an honest fair price, any other dealer can beat it and you lose the sale. So much for not doing the dance. The one price model will not work for the auto business. Hello Saturn. This is the modern version of the horse trading business. People have cars to trade in. Don't hold your breath waiting for it to change.

For consumers, I recommend that you put on your big boy pants, do your research, and negotiate like an educated human being. You have plenty of tools. A lot of you like TrueCar. TrueCar charges the dealer $300 to $400 on each sale, so the dealer's cost on your car is $300 to $400 higher than if you didn't use TrueCar. It may make you feel better when buying a car, but I don't see it as a sustainable business model.

For salespeople, I recommend that you perfect your dance. Do whatever trickery you can to get the customer into your showroom. Don't lie to customers. Perfect your demonstration technique. Get them in the back seat to show them how much room is in there. Shut the door and keep them in the car. Get in the driver's seat and drive away. Take them to a secluded area away from the dealership and get them out so that they can get an undistracted view of the vehicle. They will surely want to drive it back to the dealership. If they like it, ask them to buy it. Give them the MSRP and your cost. Let them decide the profit. Who cares what the profit is? You just need to get them the car that they want. Most reasonable people will agree to a profit. They're just scared little children who have no idea what they should pay. Give them the information so that they can make an informed decision and ASK FOR THEIR BUSINESS. You will be among the 20% of salespeople who sell 80% of cars.

... and quit beating up on F&I managers. If you don't want super duper undercoating or $300 wheel locks, don't buy them. Just say no. Finance, insurance, extended service contracts etc. are valuable to some people and not others. Buy what you want. Don't buy what you don't want. Stop making it about the F&I manager. It's about you, isn't it?


You appear to be missing a lot. Customers are forced to do the dance. The dance is perpetuated by the dealers. If I know I cannot get the vehicle price any lower and it is fair I will pay that price. But dealers don't want that because they couldn't gouge so many people that way.

As for the F&I guys they deserve their bad rap. Despite saying no they will continue to push it or give you attitude etc. The car buying experience would be a lot better without them in the picture. If people want those things they can/will ask. If they don't you don't have to try to shove it down their throats or coerce them into paying way too much for something.
 
I had two experiences with Leaf salespeople:

Dealer #1: I showed at the dealership, talked to a salesman. Explained what I wanted: A straight quote on a specific model and set of features. He leaves me to "try to get the best deal from his manager." I see them through the glass, joking and having a good time. I wait for 35 minutes. I leave.

Dealer #2: I show up, ask for the same as before. He gives me a lease quote right away, in writing. I test drive. I go home, check it out with other dealers and this Web site. It's not the best, but close within a few dollars per month. I show up again, have 3 questions about federal and state tax credits, rollovers, battery warranty, further lease details. He gives me accurate info (I looked it up in advance). I close the deal. One hour after my second visit, I'm driving off. Three coworkers leased Leafs from the same dealer that day.

He insisted on pairing up my Bluetooth phone with the Leaf and do some other setup, but I had to go back to work and I knew how to do all that. I did it myself later.

He offered advice on EVSEs, but I already had one picked. I ran it by him, and he had no objections.

If you treat customers right, from time to time you will get some that are relatively quick to close a deal with.
 
To this day, my experiences with Danny and Joanna at Fontana Nissan are the gold standard of what a sales and customer experience should be like!
Should I ever buy another Leaf, there is no question but that I would go back to them if Danny and/or Joanna are still there!
 
First I agree 100% with wbleaf's post above, which is why most of us hate dealing with car dealerships and salespeople. The only two new cars I bought, I knew far more about them than the salespeople, and that has continued to be my experience when considering EVs.

Zythryn said:
megger5963 said:
...
I love my job. I said that several times. I don't want to work for Tesla. Their business model demotivates salesman and leaves no room for growth. The "positive car buying experience" is a two-way street. We need your help to provide that.
...

I think you have simply been told that and don't really know the specifics of their sales model.

The Tesla store employees I have met, and a few I know well, are more motivated than any other car salesman I have ever met.
They have, on average, a much higher level of knowledge about their own cars (granted, they only have two models, soon three).
They have set goals, but take their job as education, not sales.
I have seen "specialists" become leads, store managers, even regional managers. And of course, if owning a chunk of a disruptive company (stock) doesn't motivate you, I am not sure what would.

The excitement and enthusiasm shown by these people are unbelievable.

And...there is none of this, "let me go clear this with my manager" three times before you even get to do a dance with the finance guy.

If their business model "demotivates" sales staff, I would hate to see the Tesla staff I know when they were motivated.
I used to work commission-only designing and selling off-grid AE systems, and my experience of that was exactly like your description of Tesla "salespeople". Fortunately, neither my boss or I had any desire or need to sell people something they didn't need. As above, I didn't consider myself a salesman, I considered myself in customer service. I wanted to help the customer make the best, most informed choice they could, ideally by educating them enough so _they_ could design the system themselves with me only giving advice when asked of if I thought they were making a major mistake, and save them money in the process. If I didn't think a system would work for them, I was free to say that, too. Nor was I restricted to trying to push a single company's products; we always had at least three company's products in any particular area to choose from, so I was free to mix and match to best suit the customer's needs instead of pushing a particular line.

As far a straight commission sales go it was a dream job, and the only kind of sales job I'd take; I refuse to work for a company that prioritizes maximizing profit at the expense of customer satisfaction, i.e. requires me to lie to customers or sell them stuff they don't need or want. As others have said, the current car dealership model is broken, and the sooner we get rid of it, the better.
 
Dealer #1: I showed at the dealership, talked to a salesman. Explained what I wanted: A straight quote on a specific model and set of features. He leaves me to "try to get the best deal from his manager." I see them through the glass, joking and having a good time. I wait for 35 minutes. I leave.

One of the worst tactics that dealerships use is the "make them wait" sales model, in which they both wear you down and increase your investment of time and effort, to the point where not buying or leasing a car seems like a huge personal loss. Worse yet, this carries over into service visits. Today I went to drop my Leaf off to have the recall reprogramming done, and the Leaf Service Manager suggested I wait for the car instead, as they'd do it immediately. I said fine, I'd be back in...an hour? He agreed. An hour later the car wasn't ready. Two hours later it still wasn't ready, my pain meds were long worn off, and my blood sugar was dropping because I hadn't eaten before leaving to drop it off. I asked him what the holdup was, and 20 minutes later I was finally leaving. While I was waiting, I asked a salesman what time it was:

"Daytime!"

"Time to buy a new car!"

"Just kidding. It's 4:05."

He seemed put out that I didn't enjoy the joke. Now when the post-visit survey arrives, the perfect score I would otherwise have given them will instead be a "fine except for unexplained two hour wait for 20 minute job" mixed score.
 
This isn't going to sound polite, but I don't mean it that way to the individual who posted this. I just have a strong opinion about the car buying process from the consumer point of view. Thank you for your write up, it was interesting.


I don't care. I just don't care. I don't want to care about a sales man and what he makes or doesn't make. I care only about the car that I am either evaluating or after decision has been reached, purchasing.

  • When I am trying to find out information about a car I want to be able to do this in a way that I trust and on my own terms.
    When I am ready to hands on evaluate a car, I want to be able to do this quickly, conveniently and at my own pace.
    When I am ready to buy a car I need the process of trading money for vehicle to be easy, transparent, trouble free, and then have the car delivered quickly.

Never in this process do I want to think about the mechanics of the transaction, worrying if I have played the game right or wrong.

This is what is so fundamentally broken with the automotive dealer system in this country. It fails in nearly all of these ways.

I have had two extremely negative experiences at dealers.
#1 at a Chevy dealer, where they wouldn't let me test drive a sports car, because I was a young man I guess, type cast as someone who couldn't afford such as car and only wanted a joy ride. I bought a sports car from another manufacture in the same price range two weeks later.
#2 at a VW dealer. I told them I wanted a particular model, with particular options and that I was willing to pay appropriate for it. Dealer said "great Mr. P71, I have one exactly like that on a boat right now inbound for the dealer. It is due here in about 10 days. I'll give you a call." I ask if they want a deposit, they say no. 11 days later, no call and they sold the car out from under me. I bought a car from another manufacture in the same price range two weeks later.

Both of these times, incompetent independent dealers soured me from a whole brand. This whole terrible brand tarnishing system is what Tesla is trying to up end and I applaud them for it. They meet almost all of my requirements above, except delivering quickly after ordering with their whole reservation system.

I have been able to buy computers configured the way I want them and delivered shortly there after with no sales man involved for over 15 years now. Why can't I do this for a car?

So Mr. Sales man, I'm sorry, but I just don't care. Get out of my way and let me buy a car. Your employer hired you to preform a role in a sales process that is broken, and as car buyer I just don't care and don't want the transaction to work the way it does at all. You profession has been deprecated, at least for me, and other customers like me.
 
Back
Top