Let me put a hypothetical scenario to the Backroomers.
A buyer searches the internet auction sites for a car.
He finds a used car he wants, which is being sold by a main dealer. He visits the main dealer, producing as evidence for his part ex vehicle a printout of an online valuation he had from that same dealer earlier that week.
The main dealer salesman checks his car, find a couple of scratches and knocks 40 quid off the online valuation. Seller is happy with that. The car is ordered from another site belonging to the dealer group, figures are discussed and verbally agreed upon; subject to buyer seeing the car and driving it. Later that evening the seller gets an email from the dealer telling him the car he ordered is no longer available because it was snaffled by someone else before it could be nailed down. Annoying, but que sera sera.
Next day buyer (lets call him Punter from now on) contacts main dealer and is helpfully provided with details of two similar cars. He picks one, it's ordered for delivery to his local branch and he awaits its arrival.
A few days later he's notified that its arrived, he goes to see it, likes it and sits down to make the deal. During this process the sales executive goes to the business manager's desk for approval of the final figures, whereupon there's a conversation and the BM comes over to the buyer and tells him that because his car has had 2 owners, its worth 350 quid less than the valuation he is relying upon and which was verbally agreed with the salesman during his first visit to the dealer.
Punter argues the toss( perhaps not as forcefully as he might do because hes keen to offload his car) and eventually settles on a figure 150 quid less than the original part ex valuation. He asks the sales exec who is responsible for this foul up, and the response is that a different BM on a different day did the first valuation and the second BM disagreed because the valuation was based on a one owner car. Incidentally, there's no facility when valuing the car online with that main dealer to list the number of owners.
Punter feels even more aggrieved when he requests a valuation from another online valuer--lets call them "wevalueyourvehicle"--which prices his car at even more than the original valuation given by the dealer, even though the valuation tool is aware that its a 2 owner car.
Punter is left feeling he's been worked over, having lost £150 on the deal he originally verbally agreed to on the car that he lost, for no apparent reason other than different pricing policies on different days by different Business Managers.
Anyone reckon he's been treated badly? Or is it the case that part ex values move with the tides?
Edited by argybargy on 22/01/2018 at 21:29
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