Yup, one of the key points in salesmanship is. "Sell the customer what he wants, then he'll come back and buy what he needs!"My dealer quoted $150 plus parts. I turned it down and just bought the supplies.
The thing that piqued me was the parts counter guys kept trying to sell me UDT when I was requesting SUDT or SUDT2. He kept trying to convince me my tractor should use UDT.... especially down here in Texas ....where the climate is perfect for UDT. (Neither of us certainly could not for-tell THIS week.)
Since the tractor (a 1996 M4700) was new-to-me.... I figured he must know what he’s talking about so bought three 5-gal pails of UDT. Later-on, reading the Owner’s Manual...turns out it left the factory with SUDT and that is what is recommended both in the OM and the WSM. So I took the UDT back for exchange.
He was very insistent that I should keep the UDT and use that in my tractor...and I had to repeatedly tell him “I WANT SUDT2!”..... and only after several back-and-forths.... did he finally make the exchange with me.
It really puzzles me why a seller will argue with a customer when the customer...even after explaining their reasoning...and that reasoning agrees with the mfr’r..... clearly and purposefully states what they want!
I am likely to install 80W90 GL5 in the front axle when the 600 hr service occurs sometime next month.
I guess I don’t “get” your meaning D2Cat.... I was wanting what (unknowingly) Kubota specified, and the seller insisted on selling me something different. When I discovered my original request was what was needed...the seller continued arguing in-favor of the wrong fluid. If he’d sold me what I first requested I would not have had to return anything. Perhaps you can clarify your post....Yup, one of the key points in salesmanship is. "Sell the customer what he wants, then he'll come back and buy what he needs!"
I guess I don’t “get” your meaning D2Cat.... I was wanting what (unknowingly) Kubota specified, and the seller insisted on selling me something different. When I discovered my original request was what was needed...the seller continued arguing in-favor of the wrong fluid. If he’d sold me what I first requested I would not have had to return anything. Perhaps you can clarify your post....
The reason he kept pushing the UDT, is because they know that all the newer tractors are going to be using SUDT2, and the parts guys don't want to get stuck with obsolete fluids. I have been in many stores that sell oil, and when the salesman tells them that a particular product is going to be phased out, and to dump the inventory, they start by putting it on sale, and keep dropping the price till it is all gone. No retailer wants to have obsolete inventory that they cannot sell. In retail, the saying is "your first loss is your least expensive one". Every time you mark a product down to sell it, you are losing more money.My dealer quoted $150 plus parts. I turned it down and just bought the supplies.
The thing that piqued me was the parts counter guys kept trying to sell me UDT when I was requesting SUDT or SUDT2. He kept trying to convince me my tractor should use UDT.... especially down here in Texas ....where the climate is perfect for UDT. (Neither of us certainly could not for-tell THIS week.)
Since the tractor (a 1996 M4700) was new-to-me.... I figured he must know what he’s talking about so bought three 5-gal pails of UDT. Later-on, reading the Owner’s Manual...turns out it left the factory with SUDT and that is what is recommended both in the OM and the WSM. So I took the UDT back for exchange.
He was very insistent that I should keep the UDT and use that in my tractor...and I had to repeatedly tell him “I WANT SUDT2!”..... and only after several back-and-forths.... did he finally make the exchange with me.
It really puzzles me why a seller will argue with a customer when the customer...even after explaining their reasoning...and that reasoning agrees with the mfr’r..... clearly and purposefully states what they want!
I am likely to install 80W90 GL5 in the front axle when the 600 hr service occurs sometime next month.
Just making less profit.The reason he kept pushing the UDT, is because they know that all the newer tractors are going to be using SUDT2, and the parts guys don't want to get stuck with obsolete fluids. I have been in many stores that sell oil, and when the salesman tells them that a particular product is going to be phased out, and to dump the inventory, they start by putting it on sale, and keep dropping the price till it is all gone. No retailer wants to have obsolete inventory that they cannot sell. In retail, the saying is "your first loss is your least expensive one". Every time you mark a product down to sell it, you are losing more money.