PMK
Active member
Very true...but being a pretty patient person for the most part...if they're all gone I will just wait for a used one to show up.
Guessing you saw the link...
Very true...but being a pretty patient person for the most part...if they're all gone I will just wait for a used one to show up.
That could be, but keep in mind the old adage, "How do you know if a salesman is lying? See if his lips are moving!"
BRP owning the trucks and drivers being employees sounds fishy. BRP very well may have contracted firms doing the deliveries though. If they owned the trucks then they would have to either dead head them back to the factory, which means delivery costs would be about double, or be a Common Carrier so they could do back hauls. Neither of those options sounds sensible to me, especially for a Canadian company for whom the US is the single biggest market. Trucking is not a lucrative business. The only company I can think of off hand that has its own trucking fleet is WalMart, and they are multiple times larger than BRP. Even Harley uses a contract carrier for their trikes, Haul Bikes.com.
If, as you say, BRP pays the dealer to assemble the bike, which I really doubt, then you can be sure that the average cost of doing so is built into the invoice price.
In the end the cost to buy a bike includes the cost of manufacturing + mfr margin to get the bike to the loading dock, then the cost of delivery from factory to dealer, the cost of getting it ready to go out the dealer's door, and the dealer's margin. On average none of these will be zero or negative or the business goes broke. On an individual unit sale, because of various circumstances like really old unsold new stock, some parts of the pricing may be negative. If the buyer can snag a deal where one of those components is taken to zero or negative then he/she will have a great deal.
Hmm..on the phone right now and they have never heard of Trevor...his name is Dillon!!!....:agree:
He's trying to work a deal out for me!
I sent him a PM...thanks for the find...hopefully luck will be on my side.
Next time I'm at the dealer I'm going to ask the owner how shipping is figured in and paid for. Not that he will actually tell me, but at least I can try. The 2014 I was looking at the other day had a handwritten price tag listing shipping at something like $500. That's half of what I paid to Haulbikes.com to bring my 2013 from Wisconsin to Idaho but the dealer gets them shipped in a crate. A lot cheaper than shipping a fully assembled bike. Harley apparently ships their trikes fully assembled. Maybe they don't trust the dealers to assemble them right? :dontknow: I bought my Spyder used off Craigslist.I'm sorry you were right ( damnit )....I called the Salesperson back and after some ARM twisting I got them to admit they LIED to me about the free shipping and set-up charges.........He said He actually paid for them Himself ...from his own pocket .......because He felt I was such a WONDERFUL, SWEET, LOVABLE , ETC. GUY...:yikes: ...................Mike :thumbup:.........................:roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack::roflblack:...........:lecturef_smilie::lecturef_smilie::lecturef_smilie:
That could be, but keep in mind the old adage, "How do you know if a salesman is lying? See if his lips are moving!"
BRP owning the trucks and drivers being employees sounds fishy. BRP very well may have contracted firms doing the deliveries though. If they owned the trucks then they would have to either dead head them back to the factory, which means delivery costs would be about double, or be a Common Carrier so they could do back hauls. Neither of those options sounds sensible to me, especially for a Canadian company for whom the US is the single biggest market. Trucking is not a lucrative business. The only company I can think of off hand that has its own trucking fleet is WalMart, and they are multiple times larger than BRP. Even Harley uses a contract carrier for their trikes, Haul Bikes.com.
If, as you say, BRP pays the dealer to assemble the bike, which I really doubt, then you can be sure that the average cost of doing so is built into the invoice price.
In the end the cost to buy a bike includes the cost of manufacturing + mfr margin to get the bike to the loading dock, then the cost of delivery from factory to dealer, the cost of getting it ready to go out the dealer's door, and the dealer's margin. On average none of these will be zero or negative or the business goes broke. On an individual unit sale, because of various circumstances like really old unsold new stock, some parts of the pricing may be negative. If the buyer can snag a deal where one of those components is taken to zero or negative then he/she will have a great deal.
BRP does not own their own trucks, they are contracted. The dealer pays the trucking company freight, not BRP.
if you are willing to travel ... stick to your offer... some dealers just don't want to cut their profit margin...that's ok.. save them the trouble of depositing your money into their bank account... some dealers figure a smaller profit is better than NO PROFIT.. its to your advantage to be informed.. the internet is your best friend for getting better prices... then call the dealer.. get a signed buyer order faxed to you.. then go get it... and enjoy the ride home with a big smile of your face....
osm
Interesting , and you know this because you are a BRP / Spyder Dealer ???????.....................Mike :thumbup:
I do work for one, yes sir.
That is the $30,500 question! I would guess if ACE knows the answer he's not going to tell because he will want to keep his job. There is no doubt in my mind there are variables like what you ask about and those variables can, and probably do, impact the final selling price a dealer will quote. It's my understanding pricing schemes got changed in the auto world with the advent of automotive web sites. The factory invoice price that a site like Edmunds quotes is, I believe, a real invoice price that gets put on the books as the flooring cost of the car to the dealer. When the dealer says this is what the car cost me to bring into my showroom, he's not lying. What we don't know, and what's not widely known, is what the year end rebate or other factory incentives there are that determine the real cost of the car to the dealer. From what I have seen and experienced those numbers have successfully been kept under wraps. It's all part of the cat and mouse game dealers and customers play with each other. I just looked at one car price on Edmunds. The average selling price for a new car was about 8% less than the MSRP and $50 above factory invoice. There's no way dealers will stay in business selling new cars with only a $50 margin. They have to be getting money somewhere else in the entire scheme of moving new cars. And one thing you can hang your hat on is they are not going to tell us! Those are just as secret as the Colonel's 11 herbs and spices recipe!Do you know if all dealers end up paying the same cost for each unit, or do rebates, quality discounts, and other factors come into play that put the cost to one dealer at a different level than the cost to another dealer?
I believe this is the way it works based on knowing a former BRP dealer.
Each Dealer is charged the same price for new BRP product being delivered to their store. The difference comes in depending the the BRP classification of the dealer. If the dealer is classified as gold rather than silver than he will receive a discount (or larger kick back) on the product from BRP. So, he may pay the same amount as all the other dealers (on paper) but once the numbers are played out he ends up with more profit (theoretically..........also has more room to discount) in the end.
The same holds true for service work. A dealer that has a higher classification level will get paid a higher hourly rate for BRP warranty service work. The higher the BRP classification level the more "perks" a dealer receives.
The real question is how does a dealer achieve a higher classification? I think that has to do more with what they buy from BRP than anything. What they buy meaning. If a dealer "buys" service tech training from BRP every year for their techs they receive a higher classification. If the dealer fully subscribes to the BRP parts and maintenance software they receive a higher classification. If a dealer sells more product they receive a higher classification. So, a dealer has to invest more in order to receive a higher classification and therefore potentially make more.
Exactly, all BRP dealers work off a "floor plan". They have X amount of time to sell product with no payments and then start making payments on the inventory once that grace period is up. This insures BRP receives their money when the product is delivered to the dealer. The dealer may have 50 new units on the floor he hasn't paid for but BRP has been paid in full and the floor plan company is waiting on their money from the dealer. This set up has pros and cons obviously but its typically the way business is done for items like this.