California dealer at Capistrano stores says resisting sticker markups is good business

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Brandon’s first temptation to add market adjustments to high-demand vehicles came in the late 1990s after he bought Capistrano Volkswagen in the coastal town of San Juan Capistrano. The launch of the New Beetle was nine months away and shoppers were asking whether the dealership would take orders for the highly anticipated revival of the German automotive legend.

More importantly, buyers wanted to know whether Brandon would sell the New Beetle at sticker price or add thousands of dollars, as other dealers in the region were.

“Those were both easy questions for me — yes to orders and no to markups,” Brandon, 60, told Automotive News. “We quickly developed a huge order bank, at times in excess of 250 vehicles.”

While the New Beetle launch 24 years ago cannot be compared to the widespread inventory shortage of today, the debate over market adjustments hasn’t changed much.

Brandon’s mentor, now-retired San Diego auto dealer Ken Nieman, felt strongly about never selling above sticker price. “It’s easier to replace a car than a customer,” was one of Nieman’s lessons, Brandon said.

“I lost sleep one night realizing how much I was leaving on the table,” Brandon said. “But I realized that most customers don’t think in terms of supply and demand curves, and that making friends for life is more important than catching the big one today.”

The typical $3,000 markup for the New Beetle, multiplied by hundreds of cars, could reach into the millions of dollars back in the day.

While there was a steady supply of New Beetles from the factory, VW couldn’t catch up with demand for about 18 months, Brandon said. That created an opportunity to make a lot of money from markups — or at lot of happy customers buying at sticker price.

Among his satisfied New Beetle customers was a local couple who worked in marketing. They later helped the dealership develop the Smileage Guarantee, a set of promises and perks. One is that no vehicle is sold over sticker price regardless of popularity. Perks include a seven-day return policy and a knowledgeable staff focused on customer satisfaction.

Brandon added a ground-up Mazda dealership next door to the VW store in 2015.

The Smileage Guarantee at the two San Juan Capistrano dealerships was the subject of an Automotive News Best Practices story in 2019.

Last year, combined sales at the dealerships were 2,012 new and 780 used vehicles, a decline from pre-pandemic 2019.

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