Car dealer Pendragon profit warning as consumer demand wanes
Discussion
Pendragon has warned on full-year profit, blaming a decline in demand for new cars and the consequent price correction in the used car market.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2017/10/23/car...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2017/10/23/car...
gizlaroc said:
ElectricPics said:
Their astonishingly appalling reputation can't have helped.
Agreed, Evans Halshaw and Stratstone are becoming like Big Motoring World and Motorpoint dealerships in regards to 'ones to avoid'. Now when looking for a car if it turns out to be at a stratsone dealer I don’t even bother to read the ad.
gizlaroc said:
ElectricPics said:
Their astonishingly appalling reputation can't have helped.
Agreed, Evans Halshaw and Stratstone are becoming like Big Motoring World and Motorpoint dealerships in regards to 'ones to avoid'. I would not trust them an inch, the dealership I worked at was more wideboy than Derek Trotter.
A prime example; there was a P/X Avensis needing to be cleared on the cheap. The DP marked it up by a shocking (read greedy, I recall £3000, when bought for a 3 figure P/X) amount. An old dear, probably in her 70's came in, she really liked it, said she wanted it, and that she'd be saving for ages for a new car. The thing is the car was a dog. There was more white smoke coming from it than one of Jimmy Saviles cigars, the head gasket was about to go.
I said to him how can you sell that car to her, it's a piece of crap. He simply replied 'well we best just hope it gets past 90 days' (the warranty)
A second example. During my time there my mums sister died very suddenly, out of the blue, so I needed a day off for the funeral. Wrapping up work the evening before the DP said something along the lines of 'we can get back on this tomorrow', to which I advised I was not in, Aunts funeral. A normal person would say something like, 'oh I'm sorry to hear that, I'll sort it, don't worry'. His only words were 'have you filled in a holiday form'. I replied 'are you fking stting me right now?!'
I could cite many many more examples. A hateful company.
Edited by Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah on Thursday 2nd November 20:59
Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah said:
gizlaroc said:
ElectricPics said:
Their astonishingly appalling reputation can't have helped.
Agreed, Evans Halshaw and Stratstone are becoming like Big Motoring World and Motorpoint dealerships in regards to 'ones to avoid'. I would not trust them an inch, the dealership I worked at was more wideboy than Derek Trotter.
A prime example; there was a P/X Avensis needing to be cleared on the cheap. The DP marked it up by a shocking (read greedy, I recall £3000, when bought for a 3 figure P/X) amount. An old dear, probably in her 70's came in, she really liked it, said she wanted it, and that she'd be saving for ages for a new car. The thing is the car was a dog. There was more white smoke coming from it than one of Jimmy Saviles cigars, the head gasket was about to go.
I said to him how can you sell that car to her, it's a piece of crap. He simply replied 'well we best just hope it gets past 90 days' (the warranty)
A second example. During my time there my mums sister died very suddenly, out of the blue, so I needed a day off for the funeral. Wrapping up work the evening before the DP said something along the lines of 'we can get back on this tomorrow', to which I advised I was not in, Aunts funeral. A normal person would say something like, 'oh I'm sorry to hear that, I'll sort it, don't worry'. His only words were 'have you filled in a holiday form'. I replied 'are you fking stting me right now?!'
I could cite many many more examples. A hateful company.
Edited by Fermit The Krog and Sexy Sarah on Thursday 2nd November 20:59
best was a salesman who would add TUP to all his order forms as agreed by the DP. This normally cost £200 or £300 and the TUP stood for Tuck Up Pack. Most customers didn't even notice as the salesman would constantly distract them.
Dispicable
I worked for Pendragon for about 3 years. And still have friends who have climbed through the ranks and all say the same thing. They have been making very questionable decision in regards to day to day operations and its having a knock on effect on the basic principle of selling cars.
I think the company has lost its way. Considering in 2008-2009 they pionered the way forward with every day low pricing strategy amd recovered very well from the recession where they were on the brink of closing
I think the company has lost its way. Considering in 2008-2009 they pionered the way forward with every day low pricing strategy amd recovered very well from the recession where they were on the brink of closing
Big Robbo said:
You would think manufacturers would want a dealer network that works as it should. I think multi franchise groups are on their way out, people want to feel valued, something that smaller dealerships seem to understand. You could add Marshall s to the list of shame
The only way to have a dealer network that works is to own it.I think the future of car retail is most likely direct to retail rather than through middle men that don't add value
And now the axe falls on the majority of Car Store outlets, with Brexit uncertainty cited as affecting customer confidence. Nothing to do with poor service, uncompetitive pricing wrapped up in buy now pay much later PCP and the overall attitude that the consumer is a mug whose pockets should be dipped at every opportunity.
jamoor said:
The only way to have a dealer network that works is to own it.
I think the future of car retail is most likely direct to retail rather than through middle men that don't add value
If you now have a high quality but not too specialist consumer product which isn't going to cause trouble in the warranty period, and you have a support structure that can handle recall, marque trained servicing, change tyres etc. then it makes sense, because all the big manufacturers are under cost pressure, and their biggest single cost is the dealer mark up. The increasing use of leasing is taking them in that direction, because the car can come direct from the manufacturer. At the end of the lease, it is the finance company which now tries to sell you your new car, not the dealer. I think the future of car retail is most likely direct to retail rather than through middle men that don't add value
They can run experience centres, give you a nice day out for the family, and sell you cars on that basis. What manufacturers can't do, in my experience, is run a dealership. However bad you think Pendragon is. And at the high end of the market, the customer needs a point of contact and enhanced service which the factory can't give him.
Edited by cardigankid on Tuesday 19th November 12:40
cardigankid said:
jamoor said:
The only way to have a dealer network that works is to own it.
I think the future of car retail is most likely direct to retail rather than through middle men that don't add value
If you now have a high quality but not too specialist consumer product which isn't going to cause trouble in the warranty period, and you have a support structure that can handle recall, marque trained servicing, change tyres etc. then it makes sense, because all the big manufacturers are under cost pressure, and their biggest single cost is the dealer mark up. The increasing use of leasing is taking them in that direction, because the car can come direct from the manufacturer. At the end of the lease, it is the finance company which now tries to sell you your new car, not the dealer. I think the future of car retail is most likely direct to retail rather than through middle men that don't add value
They can run experience centres, give you a nice day out for the family, and sell you cars on that basis. What manufacturers can't do, in my experience, is run a dealership. However bad you think Pendragon is. And at the high end of the market, the customer needs a point of contact and enhanced service which the factory can't give him.
Edited by cardigankid on Tuesday 19th November 12:40
I think this is just the beginning, closing 22 Car Stores following 188% H1 profit decline is a big figure.
Maybe I should just go and check my travel checklist and lets just see what will pendragon become in the near future.
Maybe I should just go and check my travel checklist and lets just see what will pendragon become in the near future.
Edited by Keyar on Monday 2nd December 12:59
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