@Boatinmama14...Great thread! Something like this can really be valuable as long as it's followed through. Share this info with fellow salesman, suggest joining the site, tag them in threads, etc.
Much of the general ideas have already been laid out...honesty, don't be pushy, don't give false information, don't be an a$$hole. From my buying experience, there were just a couple instances that put a sour taste in my mouth:
First, I bought my boat a couple months into COVID so it was very difficult to find the EXACT boat I wanted (2020 Gray, AR210). I quickly realized I wouldn't get what I wanted, immediately, unless I paid full price...which I was ok with. The dealership I worked with has multiple locations within a 250 miles radius of me, closest one (that sold Yamahas) was in Savannah, GA (I'm in Charleston, SC). I initially started working with a salesman at the Savannah location, great guy. There was another dealer who had my exact boat, which was a further drive, that I found (not my salesman). I called my salesman immediately and told him to put a hold on it for me, and he did (I immediately got the charge on the card I used). A few hours passed and I hadn't heard anything. My salesman eventually calls and said that the other dealer (the dealer where the boat was actually located) just sold the boat. I went berserk...I'm like, "How is that possible? I had a hold on the boat. Did the other dealer pull something shady with a walk-in customer?? My salesman did some research, got his manager involved, and found out that the other dealer did pull something shady...sold the boat AFTER I put the hold on it. My manager called their manager and made it right. I ended up getting the boat. Don't do what the other salesman did. Props to my salesman and his manager.
Second, paper signing. Now it was time for the boat to get delivered from the dealer it was located at to the dealer I will be making the purchase from. The dealers basically meet at the half-way point and transfer the boat. Before my boat had even left the origin dealer, my dealer wanted me to sign the sales contract BEFORE the boat was delivered, without me laying eyes on it, test driving it, etc. I was not cool with that. There is a form titled "Acceptance of Vessel" that I particularly did not want to sign. There is a statement that says, "I hereby accept ownership of the Vessel and risk of loss." Didn't like that at all and explained my reluctance to sign with both my dealer and the finance manager. They were actually cool with it and understood my concern. However, what would have happened had I signed it and something happened to the boat in-transit, or something was wrong mechanically with the boat, scratched, damaged, whatever...would I have been responsible? I would like to think not but you never know what may happen in a situation like that until it does. My suggestion, don't push anyone to sign paperwork until they are 100% ready to take it home and are satisfied. If you do have someone sign prior to delivery, I suggest adding some sort of clause that relieves the buyer of any obligation until they are 100% satisfied.