To add to what Roger said - there are so many fewer boat dealerships for any brand than for cars. You are in Portland - I think the C-Dory dealer is Sportcraft, period. If you don't like their price, you can't just go up "Boat Row" to the next dealership if you want a C-Dory. A dealer may make some deals on boats in inventory, based on how long a boat has been in stock or whatever. But if you are talking about "the" boat you want (model, color, power, options, accessories), don't expect to wheel and deal. The dealer probably won't ask you "What would it take for you to buy this beautiful baby today?" or "Well, I have to go ask my manager if I can accept that."
"Full price" on cars is changing too. Have you ever bought a car through the Costco car buying program? Or through an online car buying service? We have done both. There is no haggling, the car purchased through these means is a fixed price item, like any other item of merchandise at a store. The sales force at a regular car dealership is trained to beat you even if you THINK you are getting a "deal" anyway.
Boat dealers mostly don't wear gold jewelry and drive Mercedes (well, the yacht brokers do, but that is a different deal). I have dealt with Les at EQ, when he tells me the Honda BF15 installed with the Trollmaster is $XXXX, I am not going to ask him if he would take $XXXX minus $500. I would be interested to hear what Les, Marc at Wefings, or any other C-Dory dealer has to say on the topic. (Yes, I know Les is no longer a C-Dory dealer).
We have bought two new C-Dorys at the Seattle Boat Show in 2003 and 2005, when the factory was the dealer here. They put together good packages. The boats were orders, not boats sold out of inventory. Also with a close-knit communty like the C-Brats, we can compare notes - so if I were a dealer, I would not want Pat knowing that David got a $3,000 better deal on an indentical boat (you didn't, did you, David?).
The bottom line, unless a boat has been sitting in a dealer's inventory for an inordinate length of time, I would not expect to see a lot of dealing, and I would not feel like a chump if I did pay full price. I might want an extra or two thrown in, but I don't expect that if they are asking $60,000, I ought to be able to get it for $50,000 as a matter of the normal way of doing business.
Or, you could go to Olympic Boat Centers - I bet they wheel and deal on Bayliners just like the car dealers do!