Belanger Park River Rouge
NFL DRAFT THONGS DOWNTOWN DETROIT »



Page 1 of 3 1 2 3 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 71

Hybrid View

  1. #1

    Default I worked at a Detroit Car dealership

    If you work [[or used to work) at a car dealer in Detroit, tell us about what it was like. What changes did you see over the years?

  2. #2

    Default

    I was a 19 year old salesman at Riverview Dodge [[Grosse Pte.) in 1984. You couldn't give a Dodge away in 1984. Competition among salesmen was quietly fierce. If you weren't sharp another guy would "skate" you & steal your "up".

  3. #3

    Default

    There used to be ALOT of new car dealers in Detroit area.
    They really didn't take away the local trade from each other.

    Biggest change, and a huge loss for Detroit was in the 70's when the new car destination charge was 'evened out' all over the country.
    Up until then people flew in from all over the country to buy their new cars in Detroit, since the destination fee was minimal. Many dealers ran a shuttle to the airport and train station. The savings weren't real huge, but alot of buyers are proud to tell their friends they saved maybe $100.[[after their own transportation charges)
    Alas, then the Big 3 discovered THEY could save $$$ by assembling the cars in other parts of the country, since they no longer received the destination charge on the distance from assembly.

  4. #4
    Retroit Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by econ expat View Post
    Biggest change, and a huge loss for Detroit was in the 70's when the new car destination charge was 'evened out' all over the country.
    That's interesting. Do you have any more info on this? Who instigated the "evening-out"? And why? It seems only fair that the further you are from the factory, the more you should pay for delivery.

  5. #5
    DC48080 Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Retroit View Post
    That's interesting. Do you have any more info on this? Who instigated the "evening-out"? And why? It seems only fair that the further you are from the factory, the more you should pay for delivery.
    That was done to level the playing field amongst dealers. Those that were located farthest from the plants would now have their cars cost the same as the Detroit dealers cars did.

  6. #6
    DC48080 Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Eastburn View Post
    I was a 19 year old salesman at Riverview Dodge [[Grosse Pte.) in 1984. You couldn't give a Dodge away in 1984. Competition among salesmen was quietly fierce. If you weren't sharp another guy would "skate" you & steal your "up".
    Are you talking about the Riverview Dodge that was at Lakepointe and Jefferson? If so, it was not Riverview Dodge in 1984.

    It became Tessier Oldsmobile in 1973. It remained an Olds dealer under various owners until it closed in the mid '80s. It was torn down a few years later.

  7. #7

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DC48080 View Post
    Are you talking about the Riverview Dodge that was at Lakepointe and Jefferson? If so, it was not Riverview Dodge in 1984.

    It became Tessier Oldsmobile in 1973. It remained an Olds dealer under various owners until it closed in the mid '80s. It was torn down a few years later.
    My bad. It was 1964 not 1984. Trying to lop 20 years off my age. Oh, to be 45 again.

  8. #8

    Default

    Have been in car dealerships since 1970. Worked in the city from 71-72 at Packer Pontiac on Livernois.

    Changes? Lots. How about what does not change? The hours. Long. Benefits, not bad except no pension except for 401K if offered and insurance until you retire and take Social Security, then it's Medicare, nothing in between.

    Not crying, it was my choice, but if I had it to do all over again, I would have taken the job[[s) at Michigan Bell, Ford [[UAW), Consumers Power or the LEO job that I turned down.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by shovelhead View Post
    Have been in car dealerships since 1970. Worked in the city from 71-72 at Packer Pontiac on Livernois.

    Changes? Lots. How about what does not change? The hours. Long. Benefits, not bad except no pension except for 401K if offered and insurance until you retire and take Social Security, then it's Medicare, nothing in between.

    Not crying, it was my choice, but if I had it to do all over again, I would have taken the job[[s) at Michigan Bell, Ford [[UAW), Consumers Power or the LEO job that I turned down.
    Didn't Packer Pontiac eventually turn into Porterfield Wilson Pontiac?

  10. #10

    Default

    The change I see at our little "B" lot,is an informed customer.By this I mean the use of the interweb and all the info thats out there.Carfax,Kelly Blue Book,Edmonds are all mentioned by customers during the back and forth up to the buy or no buy decision.Many people use this info in an informed way before purchasing a vehicle,which is good.Others still expect a $2000 car to be like new,which it can never be.
    Of course the use of the internet has changed the way cars are made available to the public.TV,print and radio ads still work,but most people today are getting their info online.Thats where our ads are.The future?Who knows....

  11. #11

    Default

    @Cincinnatti Kid...yep, Packer Pontiac on Livernois later became Porterfield Wilson Pontiac.

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gary View Post
    @Cincinnatti Kid...yep, Packer Pontiac on Livernois later became Porterfield Wilson Pontiac.
    Kinda sorta, Packer in about 1975 moved to their new location on Opdyke in Auburn Hills, later becoming Auburn Pontiac.This was after his advertising campaign, "Detroit, I'm Here For Good", born in the post 1967 era of businesses leaving the city. Not to be hard on the Packer family, they did a lot for the city in their day. One of their legacies was the forming of the Hundred Club.

    I feel that they saw better opportunities and moved on, following the population shift to the suburbs. The Detroit location was beset with a LOT of problems, failing old buildings, no parking spaces for employees or customers, a hodge-podge of lots for storage of new cars/used cars, and security issues.

    Porterfield Wilson moved to the Packer location, 18650 Livernois from his previous building on Grand River and Prevost. That was formerly Glenn Pontiac, Porterfield Wilson having bought that business in the early 70's.

    Packer later sold that Opdyke location to the same group that owned Quality Pontiac.

    Personally, I never understood why Mr. Wilson bought that building. It was built in the late 1940's, state of the art for it's day. But it's day was well past, even in the early 1970's. I once found some old postcards of the dealership in a pile upstairs above the parts department. Excepting for the cars on the hoists, it still looked the same almost thirty years later, even down to the same chalk board in the service department and the color of the walls. Hot in summer, cold in winter, dark, poor ventilation. Customers cars were parked across Livernois in a storage lot shared with used cars and collision shop cars, at least in my time there. What an image this place projected for the dealership and Pontiac Motor Division.

    The last time I was in there, before it was torn down was in 1990, as part of an inventory crew to finalize the closing of Palmer Pontiac. Palmer was a figurehead put in to keep the store open while GM searched for a buyer as they desparately wanted to keep that franchise open in the city. And it still looked like it did when I left in 1972.

  13. #13

    Default

    Packer had such a booming biz, Porterfield Wilson was probably expecting the same. Yep, that was an outdated complex, wasn't it? But all the Livernois dealerships were dated, and most closed up by 85'. Even Floyd Rice Ford couldn't turn a profit anymore.
    About mid-80's, Wilson's new car inventory was noticeably slim. Perhaps he invested too much in the marina project. Not long after, he passed away. His widow kept the Honda franchise, moved it to Ferndale.
    GM was stuck with the real estate, and really wanted to keep a Pontiac dealer on Livernois. Dick Harris passed on the offer, as many others did.
    GM put in a 'dealer' to baby-sit the dealership till it could be sold - Don McIntyre, retired owner of Superior Olds. It was funny to hear him answer pages for 'Mr. Palmer' ., He told me the Palmer name was just a generic name chosen because of nearby Palmer Park.
    The Packer family had dealerships in several states, especially Michigan and Florida. They sold/closed the Flint Pontiac dealership [[Superior) to Al Serra Buick in Grand Blanc a couple years ago. Lucked out, since it was before GM discontinued Pontiac brand, pulled the bankruptcy scam and avoided buying out dealers' franchises. GM 'paid off' many Olds dealers when that brand was cut.

  14. #14

    Default

    The Serra group didn't lose completely, the Cadillac franchise was dualed with the Pontiac at Superior.

    And to add to the Palmer story, I had a third party call me to inquire if I would have been interested in becoming the parts manager there. The whole story of the dealership was related to me, and that even though GM "owned" the point, I would not be a GM employee, and no guarantee that I would be retained upon appointing a new owner.
    The no guarantee, this is standard in dealerships when ownership changes. Been through this before, sometimes you get the elevator, other times the shaft.

    Too many negatives, condition of the facility, uncertain job future, lousy job market in the early 90's [[I was at another dealership less than a year making decent money)no contract, and no promise of GM employment. Coupled with driving from the far northwest burbs, pretty unattractive offer.

    A few months later, the plug was pulled. I went in one more time, on the inventory crew to make the termination return of parts inventory.

    I wandered around during break time, taking in all the sights. Turn the clock back twenty years, the place still looked the same. In fact, I found my initials magic markered on the ceiling above the north shop that I put there in 1971.

  15. #15

    Default

    Alas, those of us who had no family 'at the plant' bid did work for dealers got no pension, no job guarantees. Before the 401k s, there was nothing for retirement contributed by most dealers.
    When GM ran factory owned GMC dealers in Pontiac and Dearborn, I heard those employees were actual 'vested' GM employees.
    Not so with the dealerships the manufacturers 'take over' until sold, and there have been more of those than people realize. Name on the building doesn't always tell who really owns the place.

    3 degrees there, shovelhead.
    I was approached by an employee to 'help out' with the service department warranty billing at Palmer, the manager at the time had no knowledge of auto service.
    Then I met with Don. Knew him from Superior on 7 Mile, and Brighton. He didn't quite say it, but the message was "You really don't want to work here, this place is dying"
    Most of the employees seemed zombie like, didn't care about much at all. And some I recognized from other dealers as well, substance abusers? On the way down, unable to get a better job.

    Glad I passed, it was only a matter of months before the place closed. No reason to stay open if no cars get sold.

  16. #16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by shovelhead View Post
    Kinda sorta, Packer in about 1975 moved to their new location on Opdyke in Auburn Hills, later becoming Auburn Pontiac.
    Packer later sold that Opdyke location to the same group that owned Quality Pontiac.
    I work for both of those locations, Quality and Auburn I'm the parts manager of both!

  17. #17

    Default

    I, used to work at Dalgliesh Cadillac on woodward in 2000. I was on the used car side as a porter. It's closed now, but it did real good the time I was working there. I think they got a raw deal when G.M. put them on the list of dealerships to close. I remember when the new Cadillac escalade , and DTS came out. There were so many people buying, it was crazy. I think G.M. hit big with those designs.

  18. #18

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bragaboutme View Post
    I, used to work at Dalgliesh Cadillac on woodward in 2000. I was on the used car side as a porter. It's closed now, but it did real good the time I was working there. I think they got a raw deal when G.M. put them on the list of dealerships to close. I remember when the new Cadillac escalade , and DTS came out. There were so many people buying, it was crazy. I think G.M. hit big with those designs.
    Were you brave enough to ride that unique conveyor belt elevator?
    I got such a kick out of that, never took the stairs or the golf cart shuttle ride up the ramp when I visited the Body Shop on the 3rd floor. I always hid from the service tower and went around back to the 'elevator'.

    A co-worker refused to return to Dalgleish, and sent me from then on [[I did not mind). He was too heavy for the poor golf cart's battery power, could not climb stairs, and had a close call driving his own car up that narrow ramp. [[met another car on the curve that was going DOWN the ramp.) Guess that's the reason management preferred visitors ride up in the golf cart, driven by someone who knew when to look for oncoming traffic.

    Must have taken a real pro to negotiate that ramp with the older tail fin Caddys or them Escalades.

  19. #19

    Default

    Econ, the first time I rode that elevator thing it was crazy[[ like jump rope) I had to wait till the right moment. When I got used to it that was the only way I traveled through the floors. I remember pulling the used cars in and out with no problems. long story short I had Mr. Dalgliesh brand new Cadillac DTS to detail. I had no problem pulling in all the other cars, but that one day I had his car and I nicked it. Cleaned the car and everything, had it gleaming. I told Keith and he told me don't worry about it. They shot it up to the body shop and fixed it quick[[small nick he wouldn't of noticed). It was just a good family that owned the dealership. Good times. One of the many reasons I love Detroit. It's just crazy how many people got a bad deal out of the auto industry down size. Me working there showed that alot of good people lost alot, and not just the dealerships. I have a better job, but I really did like working for Dalgleish. I got alot of stories that's just one.

  20. #20

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bragaboutme View Post
    Econ, the first time I rode that elevator thing it was crazy[[ like jump rope) I had to wait till the right moment. When I got used to it that was the only way I traveled through the floors. I remember pulling the used cars in and out with no problems. long story short I had Mr. Dalgliesh brand new Cadillac DTS to detail. I had no problem pulling in all the other cars, but that one day I had his car and I nicked it. Cleaned the car and everything, had it gleaming. I told Keith and he told me don't worry about it. They shot it up to the body shop and fixed it quick[[small nick he wouldn't of noticed). It was just a good family that owned the dealership. Good times. One of the many reasons I love Detroit. It's just crazy how many people got a bad deal out of the auto industry down size. Me working there showed that alot of good people lost alot, and not just the dealerships. I have a better job, but I really did like working for Dalgleish. I got alot of stories that's just one.
    That building was full of so many stories. History. Gone. But I suspect they had the offer from WSU on the table for the building for awhile. I heard the franchises were not to be pulled until later this year. And now, too little, too late, GM is reconsidering some of the rejected appeals.

    I only met Charley Dalgleish, he was popular with the employees.

    Aha! So it was not an exaggerated memory of mine, that 'elevator'. I tried to describe it in other posts awhile ago.

  21. #21

    Default

    Well I own the building of what used to be called Verhoven Chevrolet back in the late 1970's.

    We still have posters and other chevrolet parts, and promotional matterials laying around the second floor from 30 years ago when it used to be a dealership.

  22. #22

    Default

    Verhoven, a long forgotten name. How much does it retain of the old dealership inside? I still remember the elephant logo dealer decals.

    econ, I went out west too, in late 1979. I left a suburban dealership where I was the assistant parts manager and went out west to a three line GM dealership as parts manager. Small town, 10k population. Was there until a series of bad business moves killed the dealership. The owner was a great guy to work for, he expected a lot but you got a lot in return.

    After he closed the doors [[GM pulled the franchise during the sale) I went to work for another dealer. The snake was his nickname around town, found out it was true. Burned me for my last commission check, a real upstanding guy.

    Once in the late 90's I was at a training seminar with some GM personel. One previously was his dealer rep by coincidence. He smiled and said "So you knew him, a great guy, huh?" Well, after our conversation he had a different view at least from my point of view.

    That period of time was when it was the closest for me to get out of the car business. I had a offer to go into law enforcement from the city's police chief. I should have taken it, but I got cold feet at the last minute and a wife that was against it. So I went with the easy way out.
    Last edited by shovelhead; April-30-10 at 02:15 PM.

  23. #23
    LDoolan Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CLAUDE G View Post
    Well I own the building of what used to be called Verhoven Chevrolet back in the late 1970's.

    We still have posters and other chevrolet parts, and promotional matterials laying around the second floor from 30 years ago when it used to be a dealership.
    You should post some pics of the Promotional stuff, I'm a collector of Automotive memorabilia such as promotional, fluid cans, etc...

  24. #24

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CLAUDE G View Post
    Well I own the building of what used to be called Verhoven Chevrolet back in the late 1970's.

    We still have posters and other chevrolet parts, and promotional matterials laying around the second floor from 30 years ago when it used to be a dealership.

    Do you have any knowledge of when that building was constructed? Was there a tenant/owner prior to Verhoven? I have a Ford Dealership news article from 1937 about Rivard Brothers Ford operating a mini-showroom and service facility at Van Dyke and McNichols as a feeder for their main operations at Eight Mile and Van Dyke. The article also mentions that they bought out a gas station across the street and established a 25 vehicle used car lot on the gas station parcel.

  25. #25

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mikeg View Post

    Originally Posted by CLAUDE G
    Well I own the building of what used to be called Verhoven Chevrolet back in the late 1970's.
    We still have posters and other chevrolet parts, and promotional matterials laying around the second floor from 30 years ago when it used to be a dealership.


    Do you have any knowledge of when that building was constructed? Was there a tenant/owner prior to Verhoven? I have a Ford Dealership news article from 1937 about Rivard Brothers Ford operating a mini-showroom and service facility at Van Dyke and McNichols as a feeder for their main operations at Eight Mile and Van Dyke. The article also mentions that they bought out a gas station across the street and established a 25 vehicle used car lot on the gas station parcel.
    Bump - let's get back on topic. Claude G, are you out there?

Page 1 of 3 1 2 3 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Instagram
BEST ONLINE FORUM FOR
DETROIT-BASED DISCUSSION
DetroitYES Awarded BEST OF DETROIT 2015 - Detroit MetroTimes - Best Online Forum for Detroit-based Discussion 2015

ENJOY DETROITYES?


AND HAVE ADS REMOVED DETAILS »





Welcome to DetroitYES! Kindly Consider Turning Off Your Ad BlockingX
DetroitYES! is a free service that relies on revenue from ad display [regrettably] and donations. We notice that you are using an ad-blocking program that prevents us from earning revenue during your visit.
Ads are REMOVED for Members who donate to DetroitYES! [You must be logged in for ads to disappear]
DONATE HERE »
And have Ads removed.