I'd say that's a little tiny bit harsh. Many salespeople are not 100% certain they'll be in the game in the long run. Thus, if they see someone who says "I'm not ready to buy now, but my ship may come in 2-3 years from now and I'll buy that $200,000 Breguet from you then," the salesperson is probably thinking, "I might not even be here, and two years from now, he might forget me." So the salesperson generally politely excuses himself from the situation and helps the next customer. Salespeople are compensated with commission. So they want to increase that commission as much as possible. So I can totally understand why this happens - it's 100% logical. If you were a salesperson, you'd simply find it unaffordable and too expensive to indulge every non-buying client. It's not scalable if a dozen people come in to take your time and not buy. So if it's not scalable, then the mentality is to avoid this as much as possible. Should a Porsche salesperson take a high school kid out for a drive in a Porsche? What if a dozen kids come after that? If we expect these salespeople to do the whole song and dance for everyone who walks in the door, then we might be asking too much. But You are DEFINITELY NOT WRONG. ADs certainly do LAVISH attention on some clients while almost ignoring others. And sometimes they should be paying more attention to smaller clients.