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Buying Tips
Confessions of a Car Salesman
Part 1: Going Undercover
I
had driven by the dealership a hundred times
and never stopped. As I passed I would look
over at the row of salesmen standing in front
of the showroom windows, white shirts gleaming
in the sun. This phalanx of salesmen looked
so predatory it always made me think, "Who would
ever stop there?"
But today, I knew I would be the one stopping
there.
I turned my ancient Dodge Conquest into the
dealership parking lot and immediately felt
their eyes on me. As soon as I opened my car
door a salesman was on me.
"Is that a Mitsubishi? Or a Dodge?" the salesman
asked, seeking common ground, a way to relax
me before getting down to business.
"It's a Mitsubishi imported by Dodge," I said,
and quickly added, "Who do I see about applying
for a job?"
His attitude changed in a heartbeat. Not only
was I not going to buy a car, but I wanted to
be his competition.
"See the receptionist," he muttered, and walked
away.
Inside, the receptionist was fortified behind
a semi-circular counter.
"I'd like to apply for a job," I told her.
"What department?" she asked, yawning.
"Sales."
"New or used?"
"New."
She whipped out an application form and slapped
it on the desk. "Fill out both sides and complete
this too." She slammed down another form. It
looked like the SAT tests I took in high school.
I took a seat in a nearby sales cubicle. It
was in a large room divided into glass-walled
sales offices. In the corner was a large glassed-in
office with a high counter in front of a raised
platform. The salesmen in this room looked older,
better dressed and had an air of power and authority.
They sat behind computers and also seemed to
be eyeing the salesmen out on the lot.
Looking down at the application, it blurred
in front of my eyes. Could I really do this?
Could I really become a a car salesman?
Me, a law abiding middle-aged American. A
gasp college graduate (well, barely).
A writer. A person sometimes described as soft
spoken and reserved? Why was I applying for
a job in one of the most loathed professions
in our society?
Well, here's how a strange turn of events turned
me into a car salesman.
About a month earlier I applied for a job at
Edmunds.com, touting my experience as a How-To
book writer. One book I ghost-wrote was about
buying used cars, the other was about leasing
cars. The books were published under the name
of a guy who had once been a car salesman. I
assumed the books qualified me to work for the
fast-growing consumer-based Web site. As I saw
it, I would sit in the comfort of an office
and, from this lofty perch, dispense advice
on how to buy and sell cars.
The Edmunds.com editors had other plans.
After we finished lunch one of the editors suddenly
asked, "How would you feel about an undercover
assignment?"
"What do you mean?" I asked, even though I suspected
where this was going. His question had stirred
something I had thought about for a long time.
"We would hire you here at Edmunds.com. Then
you would go out and get a job as a car salesman
and work for three months."
"Selling cars?" I asked unnecessarily.
"Right."
"Where would I work?"
"Wherever you can get hired. That would be up
to you. We were thinking you should work at
two dealerships. The first would be a high-volume,
high-pressure store. Then you could quit and
go to a no-haggle dealership. You could tell
them you didn't like the pressure at the first
place and you'd probably get a job on the spot."
The editor explained that they wanted me to
write a series of articles describing the business
from the inside. Of course I would learn the
tricks of the trade, and that would better prepare
me to write advice for Edmunds.com. But the
benefits of the project would be greater than
just information. I would live the life of a
car salesman for three months. That would give
me an insight and perspective that couldn't
be gained by reading books or articles or interviewing
former car salesmen.
"So what do you think?" the editor asked. "Interested?"
I have a history of acting before I think things
through. I jump in with both feet and sometimes
live to regret my decision. But here I was,
in the middle of my life, long past the adventures
of adolescence, past all the lousy summer jobs,
past my early newspaper days on the police beat.
It was a long time since I'd had a good adventure.
But selling cars?
"Sure, I'll do it," I said. A week later, they
offered me the job.
It was several weeks before I started at Edmunds.com,
and then several more weeks before I was to
begin the undercover project. Plenty of time
to wonder what the hell I'd gotten myself into.
I began clipping newspaper ads for car sales
positions. Just the language in the ads made
me nervous: "Aggressive sales professionals
wanted!" or "Selling hot cars at MSRP. Join
the #1 Team. Xlnt pay & benef. App in person."
I could almost sense the pressure of the car
business coming through the newspaper.
A friend of mine used to have an office surrounded
by car lots. He would eat lunch with car salesmen
and listen to them brag about the tricks they
used to move cars. Occasionally, another man
would join them, a guy they called "Speedometer
Shorty." He would go from one car lot to another
winding the odometers back to show fewer miles.
"What do you think they would do to me at the
dealership if they found I worked for Edmunds?"
I asked my friend.
"They'd kill you," he said without hesitation.
Then he began laughing. "What they'd do is put
your body in the trunk of a competitor's car."
He was yanking my chain, of course. But the
fact that he answered so quickly gave me pause.
Still, I told myself nothing like that would
happen to me. I wasn't there to hurt the dealership.
I wasn't there to steal anything or to hurt
their business. We weren't going for dirt. But
if dirt was there we would report it. Basically,
we just wanted to see what was happening at
ground zero in the auto business.
The date finally arrived for me to leave the
Edmunds.com offices and begin looking for a
job selling cars. As I prepared to leave, my
editor offered me this advice: "When you're
interviewing, don't tell them you know a lot
about cars. They don't care. If they ask why
you want to work there, just tell them you want
to make a lot of money."
He then flipped open his calendar and counted
off the weeks. "You're due back in the office
in 10 weeks. We won't expect to see you until
then. Let us hear from you every 48 hours or
so with a phone call or e-mail. And good luck."
That weekend I went to the store and bought
three new white shirts and a pair of black shoes
with soft soles. I figured I'd be on my feet
a lot. Monday morning I put together a resume.
How should I present myself? Why would someone
hire me to sell cars? I thought back to what
my editor said, "Just tell them you want to
make a lot of money." Good advice. But I needed
more than that. There would be questions about
who I was. Where I had worked. Requests for
references maybe.
I decided that I would look over my recent past
and select those things that could be viewed
as being sales related. In other words, I wanted
to avoid lying. For the previous three years
I'd written video proposals for training films.
A proposal is a form of selling right?
Maybe that would work. I called my friend and
asked him to back me up in case the dealership
called him. No problem, he said. I had also
sold sporting goods at one time. And I had written
proposals for grants for another company. I
was beginning to see a biography that might
work.
Monday morning rolled around and I realized
that the time had arrived. It was time to get
a job as a car salesman. I drove to an auto
mall near my house. Acres of shining cars stretched
out in front of me. One dealership had a large
banner reading, "We're growing! Now hiring!
Apply within."
That was when I pulled in and got the application.
"I understand you want to sell cars." The voice
brought me back to the present. I looked up
from the application. A man stood there smiling
at me. He had carefully cut black hair. He wore
a white shirt and a silk tie. As he extended
his hand to shake, light flashed off a gold
Rolex.
"I'm Dave. When you're done filling that out
have me paged and we'll talk."
He smiled again, evaluating me. Then he disappeared.
Nice guy, I thought. Maybe this won't be so
bad. I was about to begin work on the application
when I looked around. I glanced toward the glassed-in
office in the corner of the building. The one
with the raised platform and the senior sales
guys watching over the car lot. Dave was in
there speaking to several of the older men in
white shirts and ties. They all turned and looked
at me.
It was too late to turn back now. I bent over
the application and began writing.
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