Was I Expecting Too Much


Hi everyone.  I'm looking for a heading check with a situation I encountered yesterday.  

Background:

I'm planning to upgrade my turntable later this year - Q3 is my target.  After my research, I've narrowed down to AMG and Brinkmann.  I was able to audition an AMG Viella yesterday, and was looking to audition a Bardo or Taurus for comparison.  I know my thought of trying to fit in a Brinkmann demo was last-minute, and some dealers are particular when it comes to appointments and allowing them time to setup their demo.  

The Situation:

So I called the local Brinkmann dealer and inquired to see if a bardo or taurus happened to be setup.  The salesman I spoke with said they had both, and he was going to check if a demo was possible.  After a few minutes, I get a phone call back from the owner who seemed rather dismissive of my request.  I explained that I'm currently doing my research and looking to hear some demos to help down-select, and that my purchase would be a few months from now.  He asked for my budget which I found strange as I already stated what I was interested in demoing.  Then the conversation turned to what gear I already own, which I understand sort-of.  Then the owner basically said it doesn't make sense for me to demo anything now and to call back when I'm ready to purchase.  

How am I going to know what I want to purchase without demoing the options?

Was I expecting too much by asking to hear equipment that I'm interested in?  My opinion is a sale isn't guaranteed and an audio dealer, just like any other dealer, needs to invest some reasonable amount of time to capture a sale.  You don't capture all the sales, but I didn't think I was being unreasonable in my request and certainly was not trying to waste anyone's time.  I was pretty transparent with where I'm at and I guess he was reciprocating my transparency by telling me to go away.  I felt "less-than" by this experience.  As if I wasn't worth investing any time into.

Thoughts?

 

cbl117

 It's opinions like @russ69's that degrade the value of customer service. 

Customer service is dead, and I didn't kill it. The tire kickers killed it. The shop has to make money to survive, they have bills to pay. "Investing" in a future customer doesn't pay the bills. I'm sorry the OP had a bad experience, I think we all have a bad experience at one time or another. The OP learned that one particular dealer may not be a place he wants to shop. He has 2 other choices for that particular product in his area. 

Reminds me of Elaine in Seinfeld buying her desired dress in the other store and waving it in the window of the initial store to pee off the cranky owner. Until the owner shouts back that she owns the other store too.

According to his website, Brian @ Whetstone Audio in Austin is a Brinkmann dealer.  I had a great experience dealing with him in the past.  He’s the polar opposite of the Covina dealer.

Demo's by appointment are industry standard you did everything by the book. The dealer responded poorly and now not only will he get the sale when you buy a turntable he won't ever get a sale from you. That's being dumb with a healthy splash of arrogance mixed in, smart dealers invest the time to make the sale now and in the future.

How do you demo a turntable for sound quality?  Too many variables.  Were you planning on getting a side by side demonstration into a reference system?

A few years ago a successful dealer told me that audiophile customers were a PITA.  They wanted to demo and compare everything while doing relatively very little buying.  For that dealer the real money was in selling whole systems to customers who really didn't care about the equipment as long as it was not the Cadillac, but the Lexus of audio systems.  (That's a "The Wire" reference).