Blainestang
Well-known member
To ME, and I could be wrong, it allows the dealer to give some level of priority to certain customers, but they *say* it's just an "input"... not a guarantee. So, perhaps it's more like a "multiplier" than a set bump. For instance, if you JUST reserved two weeks ago, but your dealer gives you priority, then in Ford's system, perhaps you go from 200,000 in line to 100,000 in line, but not necessarily the FRONT of the line, even for that dealer. If you were 10,000 in line, now maybe you're 5,000 in line and that bumps you from 5th in line at the dealer to 2nd in line at the dealer.Anyone care to help me parse these sentences about the prioritization process?
Prioritization does not guarantee allocation. Dealer prioritization will be an input todetermine invitations to convert to an order, it is not correlated to vehicle schedulingtiming or amount of allocation at each dealership.
I'm just speculating, though, because clearly they let the dealer change internal priority, moving anyone straight to #1 if they want. BUT does that necessarily indicate the order in which the trucks will be prioritized by FORD? I don't think that's clear. The wording that it's an "input" to me means that they take dealer priority into consideration, BUT it's not set in stone that the trucks will be delivered to buyers in the order that they are in the dealer's system (even ignoring trim level and parts availability that could blow everything up).
I certainly hope that dealers can't just move around the orders however they want and completely negate the reservation timing. Ford makes it sound like they can't, and that it's just an "input", but who knows?
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