Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sold a car to a dealer for $3k. They listed for $5500 on their site snd it sold within 2 wks. Not sure what the sales price was, but clearly, they have thousands to work with in negotiating.
Except that they prepped your car for sale, advertised it, stored it, paid someone to show it, processed the sale. None of that was free.
Not the pp you replied to. They have economies of scale and they are advertising it on their own website. They have their own employees prepping it. Let's not kid ourselves, their overhead cost per car is very low. Probably $100.
And the employees that put out the advertising and prepping it and showing it are working for free?
They don't pay them much, those are probably low level porter employees being paid minimum wage. The website is already owned by the company. You're crazy if you think the overhead cost on getting a used car ready for sale is high. I was being generous saying $100. It could be as low as 40 or 50. Remember that everything they would use to detail it and clean it up they would get very cheaply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sold a car to a dealer for $3k. They listed for $5500 on their site snd it sold within 2 wks. Not sure what the sales price was, but clearly, they have thousands to work with in negotiating.
Except that they prepped your car for sale, advertised it, stored it, paid someone to show it, processed the sale. None of that was free.
Not the pp you replied to. They have economies of scale and they are advertising it on their own website. They have their own employees prepping it. Let's not kid ourselves, their overhead cost per car is very low. Probably $100.
And the employees that put out the advertising and prepping it and showing it are working for free?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sold a car to a dealer for $3k. They listed for $5500 on their site snd it sold within 2 wks. Not sure what the sales price was, but clearly, they have thousands to work with in negotiating.
Except that they prepped your car for sale, advertised it, stored it, paid someone to show it, processed the sale. None of that was free.
Not the pp you replied to. They have economies of scale and they are advertising it on their own website. They have their own employees prepping it. Let's not kid ourselves, their overhead cost per car is very low. Probably $100.