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Some Sales Scams - Part 1
As I’ve said before, there are many ongoing scams that dealerships will throw
at you in order to bank some extra money from you. I’ve shown you the most
popular, but let’s look at some more.
1. Written contract scam: This is basically when the finance manager sits
you down and begins to write himself into frenzy, while quickly throwing numbers
at you until you are so confused, you end up paying more than you agreed upon.
This may seem impossible for a person to get away with but believe me; it
happens all of the time.
The finance manager is counting on you being confused and desperate to get out
of there, so assumes you will simply go along with whatever he says. Most of the
time, it works.
Avoid it by forcing the guy to slow down, and calculate right along with him to
make sure that you are getting a fair deal and that you both come up with the
same numbers.
2. Price beating scam: This is when the dealer tells you that they will
beat anyone else’s prices or give you $500.
They simply ask you to get the price from another dealer and they’ll beat it.
The hard part is that other dealers will not just hand over their information
for you to take to someone else.
This deal is almost impossible to get because most dealers sell different makes
and models anyway.
Avoid it by not buying into it in the first place.
3. I won’t get paid scam: This is when the dealer tells you that he won’t
get paid if you don’t purchase the options package. This is a tug at your heart
strings.
To avoid this simply tell them that you refuse to buy something you don’t want
just so that they get paid. If it’s that much of a problem they should get
another job.
4. No payments until scam: This is when a dealership advertises that you
don’t have to pay for 6 months.
Next thing you know, you buy the car and they tell you that it is due for
payment in 2 months. Some will not even be applicable at all.
They can claim a typographical error or that the deal was a week ago. It’s an
outright lie, and you should get your deposit back.
Avoid this by asking the dealer to put that in writing before you purchase the
car and make your deposit by credit card so that you can refute it.
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