I don't feel bad for the guy at all. He should have taken legal action not argued in front of the shop. I've been the guy on the other side before.
I remember I got behind once with the Snap-On dealer on a Snap-On corp. account for a box I bought. I owed like 400-500 on the account and I started at like 5K. Anyway the district manager comes by one day while I'm on the job and tells me he's taking my toolbox and everything in it right there no warning nothing. Now I know that I'm late but not that late. I tell him there is no way I'm giving up the box as I owe 400-500 bucks on the account and I'm going to pay it next week when I get paid. He starts screaming at me to give him the keys. I told him he would need to come back after hours and he grabbed my box handle and acts like he's taking it. I yell for my service manager and he comes over and after asking nicely he had to threaten to call the cops for trespassing to get the guy to leave. I lock my box up and call Snap-On corp. and they tell me I'm too late to make a deal with them I can only pay off the balance. I take the box home that night and swap my tools inside into a smaller Mac box I had at home and take it to work the next day. The Snappy guy comes back and I tell him to pound sand. He threatens me and gets all crazy and I tell him in a week the account will be paid in full. Honestly it was my fault for not paying on time but I'm not losing my tools inside the box over it. The guy was saying they would sell the box with it's contents and send me a check for whatever they get over the balance. Yeah right.
The next week it was paid in full, account closed forever.
Another thing that was BS was my regular dealer was taking payment for my account and not paying snap on corp. which made me more late (over 60 days) when in reality I was 30 days late. After that I'll NEVER finance again.
Through this site I am becoming educated in the uniqueness of the Snap On (or any truck tools sale) business model. I see much risk (transferred from corporate to the Dealer), I sure hope reward for the drivers is there somewhere.
Thanks, MC
Does Snap On have their own credit card service like most retailers have? You know how they push the sears card. Even offer 15% off 1st purchase with sign up.
Something inside tells me they don't. But, if they do, why would a independent truck dealer issue his own credit? If corporate runs a credit check and issues somebody a snap-on card, then corporate takes the credit risk. The dealer gets instant payment on all card purchases. And maybe the dealer could make some extra $$ as a corporate "Repo Man"?
Through this site I am becoming educated in the uniqueness of the Snap On (or any truck tools sale) business model. I see much risk (transferred from corporate to the Dealer), I sure hope reward for the drivers is there somewhere.
Thanks, MC
Another thing that was BS was my regular dealer was taking payment for my account and not paying snap on corp. which made me more late (over 60 days) when in reality I was 30 days late. After that I'll NEVER finance again.
I don't feel bad for the guy at all. He should have taken legal action not argued in front of the shop. I've been the guy on the other side before.
I remember I got behind once with the Snap-On dealer on a Snap-On corp. account for a box I bought. I owed like 400-500 on the account and I started at like 5K. Anyway the district manager comes by one day while I'm on the job and tells me he's taking my toolbox and everything in it right there no warning nothing. Now I know that I'm late but not that late. I tell him there is no way I'm giving up the box as I owe 400-500 bucks on the account and I'm going to pay it next week when I get paid. He starts screaming at me to give him the keys. I told him he would need to come back after hours and he grabbed my box handle and acts like he's taking it. I yell for my service manager and he comes over and after asking nicely he had to threaten to call the cops for trespassing to get the guy to leave. I lock my box up and call Snap-On corp. and they tell me I'm too late to make a deal with them I can only pay off the balance. I take the box home that night and swap my tools inside into a smaller Mac box I had at home and take it to work the next day. The Snappy guy comes back and I tell him to pound sand. He threatens me and gets all crazy and I tell him in a week the account will be paid in full. Honestly it was my fault for not paying on time but I'm not losing my tools inside the box over it. The guy was saying they would sell the box with it's contents and send me a check for whatever they get over the balance. Yeah right.
The next week it was paid in full, account closed forever.
Another thing that was BS was my regular dealer was taking payment for my account and not paying snap on corp. which made me more late (over 60 days) when in reality I was 30 days late. After that I'll NEVER finance again.

That's terrible. If you know you're late, then deal with what happens. If you can't afford it, you shouldn't have it. You are a disgrace.
Shows a complete lack of character.![]()
I'm afraid I disagree: the debt not withstanding, with 90% of the money paid, the 'dealer' is wrong. You cannot, or should not, be trying to repo that which is paid for. The last 10%, maybe, but not the stuff that's paid for.
It also displays a complete lack of, at the very least, manners on the part of the tool guy. What is it they say, 'one good experience will generate another, but one bad one will be retold 7 times', or somesuch ? Purely from a business standpoint, acts like that will just lose you business at least in that shop, if not the locale. Very shortsighted behaviour.
I hate to say it but if you pay 90% on your car or house and stop making payments you lose your car or house, so why should it be different with tools/toolbox? I realize that you build up a relationship with the tool guy, hell my Matco dealer and I exchanged Christmas gifts annually for 6 years until he moved up to a Distribution Manager's role. I eventually changed jobs and wasn't buying as many tools, but there were times my balance was pretty high and only once in many years did I not have the money for the guy and that was because of a family emergency.
Your tool bill is just like any other bill, you make it, you know its there and then expecting them to change their expectations because you've paid "X" amount into is just unreasonable.
TheGrooveking
Is Snap-on corporate credit " recourse" paper? Meaning, does Snap-on roll the debt back on the dealer if the customer goes deadbeat?