The internet sales dept and internet sales mgr  is your friend. I don't go to dealership to shop or negotiate with a salesmen that probably started 6 days ago, then  have to deal with the  sales mgr, then the finance mgr. Cars sales have evolved.  I literally negoitate the OTD price before setting foot in a dealership. I know the exact vehicle/trim  I want. I research incentives /rebates I qualify for, then determine the price I'm comfortable paying. I find the dealerships that have the specific inventory or they can readily get the specific trim in short order.  I get pre approve  from my credit union /bank, before hand,   I contact multiple dealership  within a reasonable radius with my OTD price via email,  list  my zipcode,  advise  of incentives that I may qualify for ( USAA, military,  tru car,boys scout,  band member,  church choir, whatever). I state   I can purchase the vehicle in 24hrs if the OTD price work. I have them send  the POC with the sales price and OTD  listed that we discussed and signed by the GM. The  sales authorization with vehicle VIN  works too but I would rather not place a deposit.  I show up at dealership with signed document with GM signature,  test drive /inspect vehicle, finalize docs and roll out.  This works 95% of the time for me. In a sense, I really dont care about the dealer fees/mark up/freight etc. I factor in TTL +  sales price I'm willing to pay after doing my homework.  If my OTD price is 50K ,  it's makes little difference to me  if the dealer fees are 20K and sales price is 30K, or  if sales price is 49K and dealer fees  is 1K .. It's amazing how they always get the numbers to work  to make the sale, even after factoring in all the supposedly nonnegotiable fees.  I dont care about the $800 pure profit doc fee,  the  notorious double dipping with the  destination fee,  all the dealer add on's that I did not authorize, or any of the other nonsense dealers do with the pricing.  They have my zipcode to factor in regional incentives and to calculate the sales tax if applicable. Done.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			
			
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		 I guess that's better than shopping for a minivan and hearing the salesman say "It's you, basically."
 I guess that's better than shopping for a minivan and hearing the salesman say "It's you, basically." 
 
		 
 
		 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 