Originally Posted By: PT1
Originally Posted By: ShiningArcanine
Originally Posted By: John_K
Originally Posted By: Paul56
Do NOT go for a test drive until AFTER the deal is arranged.
Why?
John
Because the fact that you went to a test drive is a red flag to them that they have you hooked and you will pay whatever they want you to pay, regardless of what you say. It is a psychological thing. Never, ever test drive a car from a dealership from which you might actually buy it. It will sabotage any chances you will have of receiving a good deal.
Read the fatwallet.com link I posted above and it will explain all of this to you.
I test drive at least 2 different models....makes em crazy...I study the car features on the internet before I go and then tell the salesman all about the features and benefits of the car while we are driving...stops em dead in their tracks. They don't know what to do when you start actually selling them the car...
Then I pick one that is at least 10k over my price range and offer them 40% off sticker...so they will switch me down to the first car I drove which is the one I wanted in the first place.
I edited my post to add more information after you quoted it.
Anyway, that strategy might work. I have never heard of it before though. I doubt it would work from the position of a friend helping someone buy a new car, as the person negotiating is no longer the person who will be driving, but for a person buying an actual car by himself, this could work. It seems unorthodox enough for most sales people to have never encountered it before, so they will likely not have much information that they memorized to be able to make rational decisions, especially since a study one of my professors mentioned a year ago found that the more information is on a person's mind, the more they tend to make irrational decisions. Therefore, this tactic could double-dip in not only does it catch the salesperson offguard, but it also fills-up his mind with junk, as he will try to keep track of what you like about the car to use it against you later; all of the extra information on his mind would make him more likely to make poorer decisions when it comes to making offers, possibly giving you a better deal.
Of course, this is all theory, but I like tear this sort of logic apart to understand how it works and I figured someone might find the information from my doing that helpful.
By the way, just as a disclaimer, I am a applied math/computer science major. A year ago, one of my computer science professors cited the study involving memory an rationality when discussing some odd topic that I do not remember. I also took general psychology a while back for the core curriculum, so while I know a bit about psychology, it is not my field. Please do not read my comments and mistakenly think that it is.