For
the benefit of new readers, the “dealer fee” is the dirty little secret of most
Florida car dealers. It’s an extra charge ranging from about $400 to over
$1,500 and averaging about $800 that the dealers surprise you with after you've been quoted a lower price. If you want to learn more about this rip off to the
car-buyer, just Google “dealer fee” and “Earl Stewart”.
Battling
the dealer fee for years, I've often wondered why so many car dealers, sales
managers, and sales people could go along with this unfair and deceptive sales
practice. I truly believe that most people (including lawyers, politicians, and
car dealers) are inherently good, honest people. I have to ask myself why an
honest person would quote a price that he knows is a lot lower than the real
one to a customer.
I
was watching CNBC and there was a discussion about the “Milgram Experiment”.
This psychological experiment was conducted at Yale University by Professor
Stanley Milgram. What motivated him to perform the experiment was to discover
why millions of good Germans followed the orders of evil Nazi’s like Adolph
Eichman while conducting the Holocaust during WWII.
The
experiment involved volunteers called “teachers” who questioned other people
called “learners”. The teacher asked the learner to correctly match certain
pairs of words. The teacher and learner could not see each other, separated by
a partition. The experimenter instructed the teacher to push a button sending
an electrical shock through the leaner for each incorrect answer. The initial
voltage was very low and not enough to cause any discomfort. However, the
experimenter told the teacher to increase the voltage with each successive
wrong answer. The learner and the experimenter were in on the ruse, which was
that no electricity was actually flowing. The machine was connected to an audio
device which emitted recorded shouts of pain when the fake voltage reached
higher levels…all the way to 450 volts.
The
amazing results were that 65% of the “teachers” went all the way to 450 volts,
hearing screams of pain. They did this even though they believed their actions
were causing intense pain and may also cause permanent bodily damage.
Psychologists
ascertained that there were two reasons for this. The first is called “the
Agentic State Theory”. This is the “I was just following orders” reason as
repeated often in the Nuremburg Trials. The essence of obedience consists in
the fact that a person comes to view himself as the instrument for carrying out
another person’s wishes, and he therefore no longer sees himself as responsible
for his actions.
The
second reason psychologists believe accounted for this behavior is the “Theory
of Conformism”. A person who has neither ability nor expertise to make
decisions, especially in a crisis, will leave decision making to the group and
its hierarchy.
So
there you have it. Car sales people follow the orders of their sales managers,
who follow the orders of their general manager who follows the orders of the
owner of the dealership. But why do the owners, the dealers, trick customers
with the dealer fee? They aren’t following anybody’s orders. The car dealers
fall under the “Theory of Conformism”. They feel that as long as everybody else
is doing it, it must be OK for me to follow suit.
A
great local example of this started about two years ago when Ft. Pierce Nissan
began charging a $799 dealer fee plus a $750 freight fee, totaling $1,549.
Napleton Nissan in Riviera Beach picked up on this and matched Ft. Pierce by
adding $750 freight to their current $795 dealer fee. Next, Royal Palm Nissan
in Wellington followed suit. Then most Nissan dealers from Ft. Pierce to
Riviera Beach add over $1,500 to the price you are quoted on a Nissan.
Recently, I haven’t seen advertisements adding the double charge for freight to
the dealer fee and I suspect the Attorney General’s office may have had
something to do with this.
Now
you can understand why that smiling salesman can so guiltlessly throw the lever
causing 450 volts of electricity to course through your body which is about the
way most car buyers feel when they realized that they’ve been deceived. The
salesman was “just following orders”.
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