Re: Once again, Chevy has a great deal -
"Dealer invoices" can be made to say anything they want them to say, and do not necessarily reflect what the dealer paid the factory, no matter what the salesman says.<br /><br />Everything works on supply and demand, and the dealers know pretty much how many units of a particular model they have, or are available, and how long it is going to take them to sell them at a given markup. They will often deal on a difficult to sell model, and not deal on a popular one.<br /><br />The tried and true best way is the old fashioned way--go to several dealers, tell them what you want, and at what price---even send some letters out to sales managers with the same info--and if they take it, fine, but if not, walk out. If several dealers allow you to walk out, chances are that if you want that vehicle, you are going to have to move your price up. Or change what you are looking for to one that is in greater supply and dealers are willing to deal more.<br /><br />I have a friend that is a Ford dealer, and the factories do lots of strange things to them. A while back, he could sell as many Mustang convertibles as he could get his hands on, so the factory made him take two Taurus' (which was a dog) for every Mustang they would ship him. You can bet he was willing to deal on those Tauruses, but he was going to get every last nickel on that Mustang. And he could print you up a factory invoice to tell you anything you wanted to see.
"Dealer invoices" can be made to say anything they want them to say, and do not necessarily reflect what the dealer paid the factory, no matter what the salesman says.<br /><br />Everything works on supply and demand, and the dealers know pretty much how many units of a particular model they have, or are available, and how long it is going to take them to sell them at a given markup. They will often deal on a difficult to sell model, and not deal on a popular one.<br /><br />The tried and true best way is the old fashioned way--go to several dealers, tell them what you want, and at what price---even send some letters out to sales managers with the same info--and if they take it, fine, but if not, walk out. If several dealers allow you to walk out, chances are that if you want that vehicle, you are going to have to move your price up. Or change what you are looking for to one that is in greater supply and dealers are willing to deal more.<br /><br />I have a friend that is a Ford dealer, and the factories do lots of strange things to them. A while back, he could sell as many Mustang convertibles as he could get his hands on, so the factory made him take two Taurus' (which was a dog) for every Mustang they would ship him. You can bet he was willing to deal on those Tauruses, but he was going to get every last nickel on that Mustang. And he could print you up a factory invoice to tell you anything you wanted to see.