Disbelief
Illuminator
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2007
- Messages
- 3,608
Just to add some thoughts on a few points ...
It seems everybody is on this "upscale" bandwagon. Nothing is entry level anymore. (OK, there are some models, but overall?) Take any given model and watch what happened over time. Anyone recall the BMW 2002? Great car ... a tad expensive, but not like the new ones which can't be touched for under $30K. Or the VW Beetle. Or the Audi Fox. Or early Subaru's; (remember their slogan? Inexpensive and built to stay that way. You don't hear that said anymore!). Cars that were built and marketed as inexpensive, fun to drive and got very good mpg. And it's not just cars. Who builds entry level homes anymore? Everything going up is a McMansion. Could this have been part of the housing bubble's burst?
There's a difference between taking a vehicle upmarket as opposed to an entire brand that supposedly had a purpose. Further complicate this by making it compete with another one of your own brands, instead of making it better at what it does.
Or killed the Pontiac Fiero? That could have been a great car to compete with the then Toyota MR2, which did get nice improvements in time. Not so with the Fiero.
They did bring out the Solstice, which is a nice little Roadster. How about just a better focus on the brand?
There's something to be said regarding Toyota, Honda and some European car manufacturers that got a good footing in the US market back in the mid 1970's to 80's. They basically always made good fuel efficient cars ... yes, smaller than US cars, but almost always better mpg. Now, that's a feature that is always in demand. In good times with low fuel costs there are always those who want less expensive cars to buy and maintain, so they have that market. But in hard times, they become even more in demand, as more and more folks simply can't afford gas hogs. So their market goes from good, to better, to back to good ... and on and on. So, how does the US make a similar dent into that market? Well, one way I don't think they do it is by making a product that nobody would want during hard times ... yet, that's exactly what happened.![]()
The worst part is, that GM and Ford have the knowledge for building fuel efficient cars. They have competed in Europe for a long time and have adapted to the trends over there (hence the use of Opels for Saturn and bringing the Fiesta over the pond). GM also owns Daewoo, who has substantially improved there position in Korea and brings that knowledge.