Hello all!
My Wife and I were "roped in" to a BlueGreen sales pitch on our honeymoon while visiting a local attraction. We have never visited a time share sales spill, but the gifts for showing up was worth a couple hours of our time. The lead generator at the attraction did a good job of talking us into going, saying it wasn't an aggressive sales pitch, etc etc.
Glad to say it wasn't, at all, but it did work! I feel they did a great job of explaining everything, and putting up with me. I'm the guy that reads EVERYTHING before I sign, asks more questions than anybody wants to answer, takes notes during negotiations, etc. Seemed it wasn't an issue at all.
After the initial "presentation" in the room with everyone, we were given a tour. We were thrown in with the group at the end (about 8 of us) as I'm SURE they thought we were not going to buy. We're both 27, EVERYONE else in that room was over 40. After the group tour of the example rooms/yurts/cabins we were handed off to a guy that I guess was not the best closer... kind of reminded me of Walter White from breaking bad... before he became a bad a** meth warlord.
I got the impression he knew from the get go we were not going to buy, so he honestly didn't really try. It was quite nice! Honestly we were kind of sold after the initial presentation but I've got a good poker face and there was no way of knowing it.
We both understood from the beginning that this was something that will present its value in the future... not now. Sure we could just save the money we would be spending on BlueGreen for actual vacations. However once it's paid off, I think is when we will really start to feel good about the purchase.
I have to say after purchasing I immediately wanted to go home and look for a reason to cancel. I found this forum and other sites and was a little relieved to see that we weren't "ripped off" or made a stupid, impulsive decision. From the reading I've done thus far I've come to the conclusion that it does take some learning and education to make best use of the program, and those who don't figure that out, or who took everything they heard from sales people to absolute heart, THOSE are the ones that feel like they were ripped off, and make "noise" about time shares being a rip off.
My parents owned a time share for 20+ years and loved it (conventional style, in Myrtle Beach). I know many people who have both conventional and points based and have no major issues, just the usual maintenance fees, and other things that is just a dead horse.
We don't have the opportunity to vacation much now a days, mainly due to my work schedule. I'm in retail management so this limits my weekends for getting time off, however a mon-thur vacation is easy for us to do. Thus the low point values even for peak times and the flexibility was appealing. We went with 9000 biannual points with the charter... silver charter... whatever its called.
So I look forward to reading more into BlueGreen, as well as how to use the points effectively and to our advantage. They wanted us to go to a new owner's meeting in about a month... you figure they could AT LEAST let you stay in one of their resorts for those 3 days instead of a "select area hotel." Is this really nescessary? After just getting time off for our honeymoon and recovering (financially) from the wedding, honeymoon, etc we don't really want to go if we don't have to. Will it just be another sales pitch to purchase more points/add ons/other "bonuses" or is there a genuine reason to go. I figure it's best to get the info from an independent source such as this forum, vs the guys who sold us the program. It's not in their best interest for us to get the most out of our points. So is there any recommended reading on how to get the best of our purchase? Any good threads on this forum that are a "must read" for a newbie?
Thank you all, look forward to talking with you in the future!
-Jon
My Wife and I were "roped in" to a BlueGreen sales pitch on our honeymoon while visiting a local attraction. We have never visited a time share sales spill, but the gifts for showing up was worth a couple hours of our time. The lead generator at the attraction did a good job of talking us into going, saying it wasn't an aggressive sales pitch, etc etc.
Glad to say it wasn't, at all, but it did work! I feel they did a great job of explaining everything, and putting up with me. I'm the guy that reads EVERYTHING before I sign, asks more questions than anybody wants to answer, takes notes during negotiations, etc. Seemed it wasn't an issue at all.
After the initial "presentation" in the room with everyone, we were given a tour. We were thrown in with the group at the end (about 8 of us) as I'm SURE they thought we were not going to buy. We're both 27, EVERYONE else in that room was over 40. After the group tour of the example rooms/yurts/cabins we were handed off to a guy that I guess was not the best closer... kind of reminded me of Walter White from breaking bad... before he became a bad a** meth warlord.
I got the impression he knew from the get go we were not going to buy, so he honestly didn't really try. It was quite nice! Honestly we were kind of sold after the initial presentation but I've got a good poker face and there was no way of knowing it.
We both understood from the beginning that this was something that will present its value in the future... not now. Sure we could just save the money we would be spending on BlueGreen for actual vacations. However once it's paid off, I think is when we will really start to feel good about the purchase.
I have to say after purchasing I immediately wanted to go home and look for a reason to cancel. I found this forum and other sites and was a little relieved to see that we weren't "ripped off" or made a stupid, impulsive decision. From the reading I've done thus far I've come to the conclusion that it does take some learning and education to make best use of the program, and those who don't figure that out, or who took everything they heard from sales people to absolute heart, THOSE are the ones that feel like they were ripped off, and make "noise" about time shares being a rip off.
My parents owned a time share for 20+ years and loved it (conventional style, in Myrtle Beach). I know many people who have both conventional and points based and have no major issues, just the usual maintenance fees, and other things that is just a dead horse.
We don't have the opportunity to vacation much now a days, mainly due to my work schedule. I'm in retail management so this limits my weekends for getting time off, however a mon-thur vacation is easy for us to do. Thus the low point values even for peak times and the flexibility was appealing. We went with 9000 biannual points with the charter... silver charter... whatever its called.
So I look forward to reading more into BlueGreen, as well as how to use the points effectively and to our advantage. They wanted us to go to a new owner's meeting in about a month... you figure they could AT LEAST let you stay in one of their resorts for those 3 days instead of a "select area hotel." Is this really nescessary? After just getting time off for our honeymoon and recovering (financially) from the wedding, honeymoon, etc we don't really want to go if we don't have to. Will it just be another sales pitch to purchase more points/add ons/other "bonuses" or is there a genuine reason to go. I figure it's best to get the info from an independent source such as this forum, vs the guys who sold us the program. It's not in their best interest for us to get the most out of our points. So is there any recommended reading on how to get the best of our purchase? Any good threads on this forum that are a "must read" for a newbie?
Thank you all, look forward to talking with you in the future!
-Jon
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