uniballer
Well-known member
I had a 5 year knowing my snappy dealer, all of a sudden I get a new one. He said the other guy was givin a new route! The prices are higher with this guy. should I go find the other guy?


That is what I was wondering!Isn't it against their policy to sell to someone in another dealers route?
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1. Find old guy, offer to do business with him, might have to be a "cash customer" and meet him at his house or on his route.
and/or
2. Just don't do any business with the new guy. He'll either figure it out, or he'll get out.
I'd hate to lose either off my tool truck guys, they're both pretty damn good and willing to wiggle on price. If I had one that was all MSRP all the time, I'd just stop buying from them.
He lives a mile on same road, I will go by and see him today. I think cash is king in any situation! But is it ok for him to deal outside his route, I dont want him to lose his job or sponsorship.
The old dealer can't show up and sell within the new dealer's territory.
The old dealer can sell to anyone in his territory so you'll need to go to him.
SO can't tell you who you can and can't buy from.
That is what I was wondering!
He is not using same number, new guy got his old cell!
Pisses me off, my prices are 20% higher, WTF people.
I know its not SO, so who dicking who?![]()
As far as the customer always being right? I disagree but the customer is always the customer and needs to be treated as such.
The customer is always right.
I would let the new SO guy know that his pricing is higher then the last guys and that he needs to adjust or you cant' buy from him. It wouldn't hurt to show your buying history but there is a good chance he already has it. Do it nicely and it may work. Be a d**K and it won't for sure.
Otherwise, buy from you old guy.
I have owned a small business since 1988 and I wouldn't do a SO franchise because of the rules. Don't know that I would do any franchise but lots of folks do well at them.
As far as the customer always being right? I disagree but the customer is always the customer and needs to be treated as such.

After reading the occasional post about changing / losing snap-on dealer I wondered what the rules are concerning snap-on dealers and their routes. I found the 2011 franchise agreement and if a dealer strictly follows the rules, they are not allowed to sell to anyone other than people on their Snap-On provided or Snap-On approved customer list. I guess that's why another poster stated that you might have to be a cash customer to continue using your old dealer.
The franchise agreement that I read can be found at http://www.unhappyfranchisee.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/SnapOnFDD2011.pdf
It provides a lot of information and I can't imagine why anyone would want to buy a Snap-On franchise because Snap-On imposes so many restrictions that favor the franchisor (Snap-On Corporation) over the franchisee (the tool truck owner/operator) and limit the franchisee's ability to grow the business to a level where the franchisee can make significantly more money than a typical employee.
That only means he can not go to that shop or run a Snap-on credit account for someone on another route (they would have two in that case). You can go to ANY driver and meet him somewhere on his route and pay cash or buy on truck credit from that dealer. Snap-on can't dictate where you spend your money but they can dictate to the franchisee where he can sell as they buy a protected area that other dealers are not allowed to sell in.
That is no different than any other franchise operation. You purchase the exclusive right to market a product in an area.
To me, it's like anything else; if the service is bad at Applebees, if your waiter doesn't serve you properly, is a general ***, and you could get the same food anywhere else, why wouldn't you go across the street to TGI Fridays? Sorry for the rant!
If you read the Snap-On franchise agreement, which the dealer signed, Snap-On does not grant exclusive rights. They give you a list of 200 potential "Core Customers" and Snap-On alone can grow it, shrink or otherwise adjust the list as they see fit. I don't think any smart Snap On dealer is going to turn away a cash customer, but I'm sure some do. Several respondents have mentioned about how a Snap-On dealer stops at a shop next to theirs but not their shop. That's most likely because their shop isn't on that dealer's list from Snap On corporate.
I like how one franchise owner is forbidden to sell to a guy who works in another franchise owner's area (even if they do it outside of the route), but SO has no problem selling to you direct and not letting your tool guy get a cut, essentially cutting his throat.
Also, owning a SO franchise is quickly becoming a bad investment. Techs cannot afford tools with how pay has been going.
I have news for you, all internet sales have a percentage given back to the dealers.