Last updated: May 10, 2026
I Spent 20 Years On the Other Side of That Desk
I sold cars on Vancouver Island for over twenty years. Started at Bow Mel Chrysler when I was 29, finished with fifteen years at Duncan Honda before MS made me hang it up in 2015. Somewhere in there I worked Tom Harris in Nanaimo and Wheaton Pontiac Buick. Four dealerships. Thousands of customers. Every kind of buyer you can imagine.
So when I say you can tell in the first five minutes whether the salesman across from you is going to find you the right car or waste your Saturday — I mean it. I’ve watched both happen so many times I could write the script before either party opens their mouth.
This post is everything I learned about reading car salesmen from the inside. It’s not anti-salesman and it’s not anti-dealership. We’ll get to that at the end. It’s pro-informed-customer — because a buyer who knows the game saves time, money, and frustration. And honestly, so does a good salesman working with that customer.
The First Tell: The Wet Noodle Handshake
I hate a wet noodle handshake.
When a salesman walks up to greet you and shakes your hand like a damp dish rag — that tells you something instantly. Either he doesn’t care, or he doesn’t have the confidence to do the job, or he’s already gone through the motions so many times today that you’re just one more lap on his shift.
A proper salesman shakes your hand like he means it — firm, eye contact, your name spoken back to you. That’s not a sales trick. That’s a guy who’s about to actually pay attention to what you’re about to tell him.
If you get the wet noodle, don’t even sit down. Politely say you’re just looking and walk to a different lot. There are dealerships across the entire Island. There’s only one weekend.
The Second Tell: Did He Actually Listen?
This is the single biggest mistake I watched green salesmen make for two decades. I’d be working with my own customer on the lot, watching a newer guy out of the corner of my eye, and I’d want to scream — but I couldn’t, I had my own person to help.
Here’s what would happen. A customer would walk in and say something specific in the meet-and-greet. “I need a truck for work. Something I can haul plywood in.”
Three minutes later, the green guy is walking them past a row of cargo vans.
He didn’t listen.
The customer said “truck.” The customer said “haul plywood.” The customer was telling him exactly what to put them in. And the salesman was already running his own internal script of “what do we have on the lot that I can sell today?” instead of “what does this human across from me actually need?”
As a veteran watching that play out, you just want to take over. But you can’t. You have your own people to help.
The lesson for you, the buyer: say what you need in plain language in the first thirty seconds. Then watch what he does. If he shows you something that matches what you said, he was listening. If he immediately pivots to whatever’s sitting on the front line, he wasn’t. Walk away from the guy who wasn’t.
Some salesmen have it. Some don’t. And you can spot them in five minutes.
The Third Tell: Did He Respect Your Spouse?
This one’s bigger than people realize.
Nine times out of ten, the partner is the one you really need to impress. Because nine times out of ten, the partner has the real control over the money.
I watched this dynamic play out a thousand times. Husband and wife come in, husband is the obvious car enthusiast, and the green salesman makes the rookie mistake of talking only to the husband. Eye contact only with the husband. Questions only to the husband. Wife is standing there politely while the salesman walks her partner through every spec sheet like she’s not part of the decision.
That sale is dead. She’s already decided.
The veteran salesman knows: shake the wife’s hand first. Ask HER what she’s looking for. Make her feel like an equal participant. Because she controls the household budget more often than not, and even when she doesn’t, she’s the one who will say “I don’t like that one” on the drive home and kill the deal in the driveway.
So as a buyer, here’s how to use this: watch how the salesman treats your partner. Is he making eye contact with both of you? Does he ask both of you what matters in the car? Or does he default to the husband / the guy / whoever he thinks holds the wallet?
If he’s dismissive of your partner — that’s a tell about the kind of guy he is, and what your experience with him is going to look like for the next two hours.
The Fourth Tell: The Upsell-Then-“Discount” Game
This one’s the dirty little secret of the lot.
Dealerships push salesmen to upsell everything they can — undercoating, paint sealant, fabric protection, window tint, roof racks, rear spoilers, mud flaps, anything. Every accessory in the catalogue. The dealership wants those numbers added to every deal because that’s where a chunk of the margin lives.
Here’s the move you need to understand: the salesman builds value in those accessories. He really sells you on them. “This undercoating will save your truck from BC rain. The window tint will keep the interior temperature down. The fabric protection is worth its weight in gold for kids and dogs.”
You start to want them. You start to feel like the car needs them.
Then — when you sit down to negotiate — the salesman uses those exact same accessories as negotiation chips. “Okay, you know what, I’ll throw in the undercoating for free. And I’ll get the window tint included.”
And you feel like you got a deal.
You didn’t. Those items were always coming. The dealership was always going to throw them in because the margins on accessories are sky-high and the cost to “include” them is tiny compared to dropping the actual car price by the same dollar amount.
The lesson: don’t get excited when they “throw in” the undercoating. That was always on the table. Negotiate hard on the price of the actual vehicle instead. The car price is where the real money lives.
The Closer Move: The Courtesy Bump
Now I’m going to tell you the move almost nobody outside the industry knows by name. It’s called the Courtesy Bump.
Here’s how it works.
You and the salesman have negotiated. You’ve agreed on a number. Handshake deal — basically done. The salesman says he just needs to take it back to the manager for approval. He gets up and disappears into the sales manager’s office.
What do you imagine is happening in there?
You probably picture the salesman fighting for you. Going to bat. Trying to convince the manager to accept your number. Strategizing.
Here’s what’s actually happening in that office: the salesman and the manager are sitting there bullshitting about the weekend, or the manager’s kids, or last night’s game. For three or four minutes. The deal is already done. There was nothing to fight over. The manager approved your number the moment the salesman walked in.
But three or four minutes is the right amount of time. Long enough that it feels real. Short enough that you don’t lose patience.
Then the salesman walks back out with one more ask. A small bump. Maybe an extra hundred dollars on the price. Maybe a slightly higher rate on the financing. Something small but real. The salesman delivers it with some version of “the manager said this is the absolute lowest he can go, but we’re so close.”
Here’s why this move works: the customer needs to win. After all that time, all that negotiation, the customer has emotional investment in the deal. So when they hear “one more small bump,” they push back — and they negotiate that bump down a little. Maybe they get it down to fifty bucks. Maybe they get it dropped entirely.
And they walk out of the dealership feeling like they won the negotiation. They didn’t. The dealer just gave them their dignity back at the end of a deal that was already perfectly fine.
The name of this move on every lot in Canada is the Courtesy Bump.
The lesson: when the salesman comes back from “the manager” with one more ask — recognize what’s happening. You’re not actually losing. You’re being given a win to walk out happy. You can accept the bump, you can push it back, or you can hold your ground entirely. None of those is wrong. But knowing it’s a script means you don’t have to feel bullied or bewildered. You can just decide what you want to do.
When to Walk
If any of these tells stack up on the same salesman, here’s the simple rule:
The lot is full of cars. The salesman is not. Walk.
Most dealerships on Vancouver Island have multiple salespeople on the floor at any given moment. If your guy is the wet-noodle, not-listening, dismissing-your-wife, hard-upsell type — you have every right to politely thank him, walk back out, and either ask for a different salesperson or drive across town.
This isn’t rude. This is exactly what an informed buyer does. A good dealership will respect it. A bad dealership wasn’t going to take care of you anyway.
The Honest Bottom Line — Salesmen Aren’t Evil
I want to land this one carefully because it matters.
Salesmen aren’t evil. Dealerships aren’t bad.
Most car salesmen are working hard to make a living. They have families, mortgages, and bonus structures that determine whether they’re making it or getting fired in three months. Most of them genuinely want to help you find the right vehicle — partly because that’s how they hit bonus, and partly because the best salesmen build their entire careers on repeat customers and referrals. I once sold an Accord to the owner of Tigh-Na-Mara Resort, then sold him a second one, then he brought his mom to me as a customer. That’s not a transaction — that’s a relationship. And that’s what the good ones are after.
Dealerships have to make money. That’s how the lights stay on, how the service techs get paid, how the warranty work gets done. There’s nothing wrong with a dealership wanting to win the deal. The system is fair when both sides are informed.
What this post is really about is levelling the playing field. A buyer who knows the game has a faster, fairer deal with a salesman who knows what he’s doing. Everybody wins. The buyer drives off with the right car at a fair price. The salesman hits bonus. The dealership keeps the lights on. And six months from now, when something needs to be serviced, the customer comes back — and the relationship builds.
The whole game falls apart when ONE side is operating in the dark. So now you’re not in the dark. Use it well.
Need Help Reading a Salesman?
If you’ve got a car-buying decision coming up and want to talk it through with someone who’s been on the other side of that desk for twenty years, drop me a line through the Contact page. I’m not a licensed automotive advisor and nothing here is professional advice — just the read of a retired Honda guy who’s happy to share what he saw.
Brew approves the messages.
— Mark Dupuis
Duncan, BC