DarkMossJustin
Well-known member
Your hard-earned money. Your best judgements, according to your finances, circumstances, time-frame. Ultimately, your decision.
If $6k, $10k over MSRP doesn't bother you, then please have pay the crazy high ADMs. While you're at it, have dinner with Prince Gavin and his homies at The French Laundry in upscale "up-valley" Yountville, and enjoy $1,500 bottles of wine and $300 soup along with other people from affluent areas around California with a lot more money than sense.
For most people, however, burning ANY money unnecessarily doesn't make sense, and if we all shop around and only reward smart dealerships that value long-term customer loyalty over short-term gains with our hard-earned money, then perhaps certain dealership behavioral patterns can be modified.
The problem with that is, many people do have that much money to burn. Silly Valley for example. To me, $6,000 is a lot of money. For Silly Valley execs, that's merely chump change. So it all depends on where y'all are coming from. They're looking for top-trim XC90s with Night Vision, Audi Q7s and SQ7s and BMWs and FuglySpindleGrillLexuses and the ultra-reliable-never-brokendown Range Rovers, and possibly Bentleys SUVs or Tiger Woods' GV80 pre-crash, and for them, stepping "down" to a lower price point car and then paying a $6-8k premium is nothing.
I prefer patience, careful consideration and smart shopping and being open to multiple options, making careful judgements and doing a rudimentary cost-benefit analysis, long-range demand forecast and trying to use some of what I paid to learn in school, before arriving at final decisions that involve large sums of money, but maybe that's just because I'm a crazy person.
If $6k, $10k over MSRP doesn't bother you, then please have pay the crazy high ADMs. While you're at it, have dinner with Prince Gavin and his homies at The French Laundry in upscale "up-valley" Yountville, and enjoy $1,500 bottles of wine and $300 soup along with other people from affluent areas around California with a lot more money than sense.
For most people, however, burning ANY money unnecessarily doesn't make sense, and if we all shop around and only reward smart dealerships that value long-term customer loyalty over short-term gains with our hard-earned money, then perhaps certain dealership behavioral patterns can be modified.
The problem with that is, many people do have that much money to burn. Silly Valley for example. To me, $6,000 is a lot of money. For Silly Valley execs, that's merely chump change. So it all depends on where y'all are coming from. They're looking for top-trim XC90s with Night Vision, Audi Q7s and SQ7s and BMWs and FuglySpindleGrillLexuses and the ultra-reliable-never-brokendown Range Rovers, and possibly Bentleys SUVs or Tiger Woods' GV80 pre-crash, and for them, stepping "down" to a lower price point car and then paying a $6-8k premium is nothing.
I prefer patience, careful consideration and smart shopping and being open to multiple options, making careful judgements and doing a rudimentary cost-benefit analysis, long-range demand forecast and trying to use some of what I paid to learn in school, before arriving at final decisions that involve large sums of money, but maybe that's just because I'm a crazy person.