- First Name
- Chris
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2021
- Threads
- 75
- Messages
- 4,754
- Reaction score
- 5,185
- Location
- Cold Spring, NY
- Vehicle(s)
- 2021 Bronco, 2020 Ranger
- Your Bronco Model
- Black Diamond
There will always be someone that pays big bucks just to get the newest, fanciest thing.I recently got offered a 4DR Big Bend to hold us over for $5k over…seems like a deal compared to some of these:
Top 10
Sad that some with expendable income will feed the greed and jump on these without looking back.
And I do appreciate that lol. It said it’s click-bait-like (in nature.)Not clickbait, it shares info for dealer shaming. Haha.
I’d wager that a majority of these are converted orders without commitment and that the dealers don’t care about the slap on the wrist. They were not built with intention to be dealer stock.So this is evidence that priority of builds to reservationist-orders (pre-orders) to be filled before dealer stock is not being well controlled if MIC tops are the long-pole commodity constraint for 2-door versions. The June 26th email indicated that commodity constraints were forcing Ford to manufacture configurations that did not meet any customer pre-orders. Considering the issue is mostly MIC tops, both 2 and 4-door models, one could consider there are some 4-door soft-top only builds being manufactured that go to dealership inventory. I can accept that situation and understand why.
I also think the ADM that we’re seeing will off-set any slap on the wrist from Ford to the dealerships. They’ll still come out ahead once the dust has settled…I’d wager that a majority of these are converted orders without commitment and that the dealers don’t care about the slap on the wrist. They were not built with intention to be dealer stock.
This is why it was always my opinion that Ford should have required $1000 non-refundable deposit upon order by the March 15 deadline.
I can believe that somewhat, but my understanding is all pre-orders are tied to an actual customer and Ford has the customer's name in their database via the initial $100 credit card deposit tied to a VIN upon build scheduling. Surely the dealership could have an employee do a bogus reservation using their credit card, but the 80% genuine sales requirement was supposed to curtail such activity. However, with Ford now supposedly building dealership stock units because commodity constraints are not allowing pre-order builds, one would think the 80% rule is now not enforceable, or at lease allows for sales shenanigans such as Ray Silkman Ford.I’d wager that a majority of these are converted orders without commitment and that the dealers don’t care about the slap on the wrist. They were not built with intention to be dealer stock.
This is why it was always my opinion that Ford should have required $1000 non-refundable deposit upon order by the March 15 deadline.
I’d wager that a majority of these are converted orders without commitment and that the dealers don’t care about the slap on the wrist. They were not built with intention to be dealer stock.
This is why it was always my opinion that Ford should have required $1000 non-refundable deposit upon order by the March 15 deadline.
And I agree, Ford should have required a non-refundable* $1,000 deposit upon ordering and kept the funds in escrow, only to be transferred to dealership upon the actual sales transaction at delivery to the customer.I also think the ADM that we’re seeing will off-set any slap on the wrist from Ford to the dealerships. They’ll still come out ahead once the dust has settled…
I feel like I resemble this comment... lolAnd I agree, Ford should have required a non-refundable* $1,000 deposit upon ordering and kept the funds in escrow, only to be transferred to dealership upon the actual sales transaction at delivery to the customer.
* unless the customer died and his heirs present a death certificate to have the $1,000 refunded. Considering how long it may take to get a Bronco, some customers are probably going to die waiting.![]()
You’re linking to a website for this. Gtfo with this, “iTs NoT cLicKbaIt.” If it wasn’t you would just post the figures.Not clickbait, it shares info for dealer shaming. Haha.