- May 1, 2006
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Why do we always have to punish the majority for what the minority does? I'm sure that's not the kind of question you were asking for...
Hello! The challenge is being compliant and knowing what is really required, without overdoing it. For example, we have our fees listed on the VDP, etc. What about homepage banners? Our agency is listing the doc fee on the homepage banner for any vehicle. Is there a one-click rule to get to the specifics? Instead of MSRP, should we list it as "Total Price" and include the fee? I don't see any other dealer websites posting like this.
Is there a website example out there that is correct to reference?
Thanks!
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Funny, I was just thinking about this conversation on my drive in this morning. I was going to note how I saw a billboard the other day from a company that provides those large dumpsters people can order for temporary use. It mentioned how they had "no surprise fees," which obviously meant a lot do. Thought it was interesting we are having this argument with dealers yet other business types have a similar problem.Bill, In short, the auto business is not being punished. The current administration is going after many industries who do not have transparent pricing, including ticket companies (StubHub, LiveNation) and pharmacy companies (Express Scripts), to name a few.
Funny, I was just thinking about this conversation on my drive in this morning. I was going to note how I saw a billboard the other day from a company that provides those large dumpsters people can order for temporary use. It mentioned how they had "no surprise fees," which obviously meant a lot do. Thought it was interesting we are having this argument with dealers yet other business types have a similar problem.
While alienating their base in many cases...As the Republican party has become more populist, they want to appeal to a wider demographic. You will continue to hear about this issue. Cheers.
I'm thankful this is all that's being required by this administration.While alienating their base in many cases...
I'd say you nailed all of that.I'm thankful this is all that's being required by this administration.
Ultimately, I think this is what the majority of dealers wished would be the case all along. Everyone was just gun shy about being the first in their market to make their cars look like $500 worse deals than every other dealer. This helps level the playing field and eliminates the minority of unscrupulous dealers tarnishing everyone else's reputation.
In an alternate reality, we had Chinese EV manufacturers ready to set up camp across the border in Mexico and flood our market with cheap D2C EVs.
TikTok has made those EVs desirable by showing how much value they provide for the money, even if a big reason they can offer that much value is CCP subsidies. At the end of the day, any vehicle becomes desirable when it’s half the price of the other available options, even a Chinese EV.
At least we kicked that can down the road a while longer.
Dealers pose questions to FTC compliance expert Tom Kline about pricing transparency requirements, including whether fees must appear on homepage banners and how to maintain consistent pricing across a website. Kline clarifies that the auto industry isn't being singled out — the current administration is broadly targeting hidden fees across industries like ticketing and pharmacy. The thread also touches on the political dimension, with Kline noting that populist consumer-protection messaging will only grow regardless of party.