Packing is played out when a customer finances their vehicle through the dealer. A customer agrees to a purchase the car at a monthly payment that is much higher than what is needed to cover the price of the vehicle. That creates a "pack" or room in the payment to add in the optional products....of course without the customer knowing he's actually paying more for the extra stuff!
Car sales people call this "Buyers Remorse" or "Coming Out of the Ether!" This is the sales person's worst nightmare, because this is when the buyer starts looking for ways to back out of the car deal.
However, it is the car sales person's job to turn you into a "Today Buyer!" They are trained in techniques that do just that. They have a Selling System in place that is designed to take control of you, culminating in you taking delivery of your new or used vehicle before you leave the dealership. They will go to great lengths to put you in that vehicle "today" including doing a Spot Delivery! BEWARE!
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I think way back they started using this lingo so the customer did not know what they were talking about.
Like a nickel over. $500
I despise "Used Car slang", especially when it is thrown around in the presence of the client...even when the client himself/herself attempt to use it. I remember hearing a used car manager one morning, tell a young lady he had his "balls to the walls" with her trade....He was not working there by lunchtime.
Your car needs new sneakers and a Jean Nate, (tires and a full recon)...another one that just came to mind...haven't heard it in years!
I feel that negative and postive equity are acceptable terms to use, most understand this... "Upside Down"...no...carries a lot of negative connotations.... client screeches and immediately "struggle drugs" (hormones expelled throughout the body which cause signs of anxiety, sweaty palms, increased heart rate, etc) are released!
Maintaining professionalism while choosing words for your dialect is critical, but remember not to talk above or beneath the client in front of you!
I despise "Used Car slang", especially when it is thrown around in the presence of the client...even when the client himself/herself attempt to use it. I remember hearing a used car manager one morning, tell a young lady he had his "balls to the walls" with her trade....He was not working there by lunchtime.
Your car needs new sneakers and a Jean Nate, (tires and a full recon)...another one that just came to mind...haven't heard it in years!
I feel that negative and postive equity are acceptable terms to use, most understand this... "Upside Down"...no...carries a lot of negative connotations.... client screeches and immediately "struggle drugs" (hormones expelled throughout the body which cause signs of anxiety, sweaty palms, increased heart rate, etc) are released!
Maintaining professionalism while choosing words for your dialect is critical, but remember not to talk above or beneath the client in front of you!
The primary reason, I am guessing, we "still talk this way" is to provide the most amount of information in the least amount of words/time.
For the 19 Industry language terms cited above, you used 806 words to define them.
Sometimes the shortcut term used backfires and requires additional words to clarify when there is a potential for multiple meanings like "shooter". Is he really a man of means and can pretty much do as he pleases or is he a shooter in his mind only. I get tripped up on that one all the time.
There is also the feeling of having arrived in an industry....when you can finally have a beer after work with your peers and toss around acronyms, terms and jargon with the best of them without fear of not understanding or being misunderstood. "I'll have another Bud please", now that is living!
This is a great write up for some of the new sales people out there,very true
The primary reason, I am guessing, we "still talk this way" is to provide the most amount of information in the least amount of words/time.
For the 19 Industry language terms cited above, you used 806 words to define them.
Sometimes the shortcut term used backfires and requires additional words to clarify when there is a potential for multiple meanings like "shooter". Is he really a man of means and can pretty much do as he pleases or is he a shooter in his mind only. I get tripped up on that one all the time.
There is also the feeling of having arrived in an industry....when you can finally have a beer after work with your peers and toss around acronyms, terms and jargon with the best of them without fear of not understanding or being misunderstood. "I'll have another Bud please", now that is living!
Microsoft counts for me when I run out of fingers.....Consumers should never hear or overhear the slang in any industry ...as far as we, the dealership personel not using it in our closed circles???...it will always be part of our culture as it is for most industries....We can not help ourselves as evidenced by Nancy...she does not like the use of "used car slang" and in her post she pops a new one on me while making her point: "...... client screeches and immediately "struggle drugs" (hormones expelled throughout the body which cause signs of anxiety, sweaty palms, increased heart rate, etc) are released!
In the context that the term was used, I would consider it slang.
Nancy makes a great rule to follow, "....but remember not to talk above or beneath the client in front of you!"
My opinion and a buck will get you a coffee most places.
Craig Lockerd said:
lol...good insight Thomas.....and of course those 806 words {I can't believe you counted them} are definitions for the slang,but "Roach?".....I think one of my main concerns is that clients actually hear this slang while they are at the dealerships....
Thomas A. Kelly said:The primary reason, I am guessing, we "still talk this way" is to provide the most amount of information in the least amount of words/time.
For the 19 Industry language terms cited above, you used 806 words to define them.
Sometimes the shortcut term used backfires and requires additional words to clarify when there is a potential for multiple meanings like "shooter". Is he really a man of means and can pretty much do as he pleases or is he a shooter in his mind only. I get tripped up on that one all the time.
There is also the feeling of having arrived in an industry....when you can finally have a beer after work with your peers and toss around acronyms, terms and jargon with the best of them without fear of not understanding or being misunderstood. "I'll have another Bud please", now that is living!
Microsoft counts for me when I run out of fingers.....Consumers should never hear or overhear the slang in any industry ...as far as we, the dealership personel not using it in our closed circles???...it will always be part of our culture as it is for most industries....We can not help ourselves as evidenced by Nancy...she does not like the use of "used car slang" and in her post she pops a new one on me while making her point: "...... client screeches and immediately "struggle drugs" (hormones expelled throughout the body which cause signs of anxiety, sweaty palms, increased heart rate, etc) are released!
In the context that the term was used, I would consider it slang.
Nancy makes a great rule to follow, "....but remember not to talk above or beneath the client in front of you!"
My opinion and a buck will get you a coffee most places.
Craig Lockerd said:lol...good insight Thomas.....and of course those 806 words {I can't believe you counted them} are definitions for the slang,but "Roach?".....I think one of my main concerns is that clients actually hear this slang while they are at the dealerships....
Thomas A. Kelly said:The primary reason, I am guessing, we "still talk this way" is to provide the most amount of information in the least amount of words/time.
For the 19 Industry language terms cited above, you used 806 words to define them.
Sometimes the shortcut term used backfires and requires additional words to clarify when there is a potential for multiple meanings like "shooter". Is he really a man of means and can pretty much do as he pleases or is he a shooter in his mind only. I get tripped up on that one all the time.
There is also the feeling of having arrived in an industry....when you can finally have a beer after work with your peers and toss around acronyms, terms and jargon with the best of them without fear of not understanding or being misunderstood. "I'll have another Bud please", now that is living!
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The primary reason, I am guessing, we "still talk this way" is to provide the most amount of information in the least amount of words/time.
For the 19 Industry language terms cited above, you used 806 words to define them.
Sometimes the shortcut term used backfires and requires additional words to clarify when there is a potential for multiple meanings like "shooter". Is he really a man of means and can pretty much do as he pleases or is he a shooter in his mind only. I get tripped up on that one all the time.
There is also the feeling of having arrived in an industry....when you can finally have a beer after work with your peers and toss around acronyms, terms and jargon with the best of them without fear of not understanding or being misunderstood. "I'll have another Bud please", now that is living!