I’m buying my Bronco at Granger and will be getting my extended warranty from them at $50 over cost.The previous conversation got me to thinking. Years ago I bought a dutch oven. I priced the same one at a bricks and mortar Walmart and on Amazon. Huge difference. But when I ordered it from Walmart through their internet store with free delivery to my local Walmart, the price was the same as Amazon's.
Another example. When I go online and order parts for my Subaru with delivery to a local dealer, the price can be up to 20% lower than if I walked into the same local Subaru parts department and buy the same part without first ordering and paying for it online.
The question being, Granger is giving us a great price online. I wonder what price they quote to customers in their their bricks and mortar office. Is it the same as what we're getting? If I were to walk into Granger and buy a car, would they offer me the same warranty at $50 over cost, or is that price only available to internet customers? Not that it makes any difference for us. I'm just wondering. Often bricks and mortar and internet branches of the same company have different managers and price structures.
Sponsored