Fordskeptic
Well-known member
Makes sense to start with Model E, but I would like to see pricing transparency across all lines.
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I've noticed with some dealers today that had markup on their on site for the lightning are now listing at msrp.i think that’s is precisely what this announcement is NOT saying
just as with today, everything priced online has a giant asterisk next to it saying “final pricing is determined by your dealer” - because that’s the law, and the law being referenced in the article as being immutable.
so best case scenario is, an online ordering portal you choose your dealer and the online truck pricing is the pricing selected beforehand by the dealer you’ve selected, but likely only for the truck itself.
setting aside the “non-negotiable” price of the truck itself, folks will still need to do what they should be doing today to avoid other dealer “gotchas” - bring in their own third party financing (or full cash) to the closing table, only sell to a third party any “trade in,” and refuse any and all dealer “add ons” that went agreed in the original order.
At present, that appears to no longer be an option. It seems that once an order is made with a dealer, cord is not allowing or assisting to love dealers. That’s why there are a few threads here currently with dealers “springing” ADMs on them despite the order price being absent an ADM.
So, on one hand you’re right only if Ford makes it seem less and easy to switch dealers after an order, or instead make it impossible for dealers to add ADM post-order (which seems the paradigm being proposed).
personally, I agree
it’s not only Ford but every manufacturer that has realized they can increase sales prices, reduce or eliminate supply chain bullwhip, and so make significantly more net profit by selling significantly fewer units, all by simply restricting production such that demand always outstrips supply and no inventory sits.
give them call, and first thing they tell you is the ADM price (not MSRP)I've noticed with some dealers today that had markup on their on site for the lightning are now listing at msrp.
I will put in my bet at a single 25kw DCFC to match the Harley dealers. This is Price is Right rules correct?I'm hoping the dealers are putting in 4 DCFC that are at least 150 kW speed. That would be really helpful in growing the network. I wonder if they will partner with EA or use another provider and white label it as Blue Oval Charging Network?
Yeah... thats not how this is going to play out. Dealers will be required to have customer facing dcfc available 24/7. These announcements today will represent probably 750 million to 1 trillion dollars spent on dcfc infrastructure in the next 18 months. Dealers will try to capitalize on income from chargers to help offset the cost. I will not be surprised to see Dealers add coffee shops or such on dealer property to again capitalize on the charging installation costs. Most dealership have lots of available space since inventories of new vehicles are pretty much non existent.The dealerships that have chargers (that I have seen) don't charge to use them...but they aren't really easy to access. Like they'll ICE them or they'll rope chains across the stalls, place them on the backside of the building, and whatever odd sort of hassle they can conjure up.
I don't see Ford dealerships just setting these up in the parking lots like a Costco so people can easily and freely come and go.
You’ll win under those rules. You may also get a 1000 bonus for getting exactly right.I will put in my bet at a single 25kw DCFC to match the Harley dealers. This is Price is Right rules correct?
As far as I know, all dealership DCFC have already been "public facing" but whenever I've tried to use them they are slow, blocked in, roped off, or "not working." In addition to that, dealerships don't allow the public to come onto their property after hours.Yeah... thats not how this is going to play out. Dealers will be required to have customer facing dcfc available 24/7.
Dealers will try to capitalize on income from chargers to help offset the cost.
I dont disagree, but also one of the reasons I reserved the Ford Lightning in the middle of the presentation is I assumed dealers would have chargers installed all over the place and at least here in Wisconsin it is jaw dropping how many little communities have Ford dealerships. There actually is a value add opportunity here for dealers and Ford if they play their cards right. If they can combine their service lounges into nice EV charging waiting lounges their is a huge win over Tesla and Rivian currently.does it need to be this complicated? let me order the car online. let me pick it up and drive out of there within half an hour without speaking to a salesperson. don't need chargers there.