MinnesotaEric
Super Member
Answer to question no 2. Yes or no. Depends on the value as Coyote already stated. When I was looking for a tractor, I went to Kubota where an L 3400 had a $19,300 dollar price tag. I'm looking at this thing and I'm saying "no way" is this worth this much. I asked if he could sell it to me for 17.5 K. He turned away from me while laughing and said "its here when you become a real buyer"
Answer to question no. 1. This is not how to grow a business and even if he called me the next day to accept my offer, I would not have bought from this salesman. Whoever he was, he was not an asset to this business. What he did not realize was that "I WAS A BUYER". So you grow a business by being polite. helpful, accommodating, honest and respectful with solid service. Some of these things have little to do with pricing but have everything to do with "sales".
Now , lets play this with your scenario: Question no 1: He doesn't budge from over 19K. Nor does he accept my offer to the point of disdain. Would you care to "negotiate with this guy?
Question no 2. he accepts the offer of 17.5K. I already accepted this price because it matched my perceived value. I become a contented purchaser. Would you attempt to beat him down further?
I'm willing to pay more for salesmanship (cf. the link I dropped earlier in this thread about the lack of professionalism in tractor sales, and my thesis as to where the problem resides). To your example of a bad salesman, a good salesperson would not have thrown out a remark that burned your bridge and pissed you off, but rather he or she would have recognized their own need to educate you, the customer, about the true cost and true value of their product. The salesperson could have done this by auguring in about build quality, or features, serviceability, availability of spare parts, or whatever. If they reached an impasse, then they could ask you what it would take to get your business, and then worked on their own value add that is in their power to bring to the bargaining table. Also they can spell out the clear difference between what they are asking you what you are bidding and then frame that difference in terms of the overall cost of the machine or package, and then ask if, at the end of the day, what you're really looking for isn't necessarily the cheapest machine, but the machine that gives you the best value? At which time you'll frame your expectations for the salesperson right there for him or her.
I gave my sales people the autonomy to make their own deals so long as we made money.
FWIW, I have no idea what Coyote said as I have him on ignore since he made it clear to me that he cannot discuss anything without making personal attacks. Life is too short to talk to negative people.