1 / 33

Case Study: Saturn vs Scion

Case Study: Saturn vs Scion. November 19, 2007. Executive Summary. Saturn. GM launched Saturn in 1990 to appeal to the young, educated buyers who had been leaving the brand for imports.

umed
Download Presentation

Case Study: Saturn vs Scion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Case Study: Saturn vs Scion November 19, 2007

  2. Executive Summary

  3. Saturn • GM launched Saturn in 1990 to appeal to the young, educated buyers who had been leaving the brand for imports. • Saturn was initially successful in attracting these buyers because it differentiated itself from GM as a quality brand with impeccable customer service. • GM failed to protect the integrity of the Saturn brand, failing to invest in new products and allowing it’s image to blend in with the parent company.

  4. Scion • Scion was created in 2003 in an attempt to make Toyota a brand that was as important to young people as it had been to boomers. • Thus far Scion has attracted the industry’s youngest buyer base without cannibalizing Toyota’s young buyers. • Toyota is carefully cultivating the Scion brand by separating it from the parent brand and allowing it to form a corporate culture, and to remain on the cutting edge of pop culture.

  5. GM: 1990 State of the Union • GM was seeing steady declines in market share as its youngest and most well-educated buyers defected to imports for value and QDR.

  6. GM was steadily losing sales to imports; its market share declined 22% from 1980 to 1990… Source: Ward’s Automotive Data, 1971-1990

  7. …and GM’s defectors were increasingly young, educated buyers. Source: CDS 1993

  8. Saturn “A different kind of car, a different kind of company” • Goal: • Create a brand that appeals to the young, educated buyers who have been defecting to imports. This brand will focus on the very issues that GM has been struggling with; quality, innovative design, and customer service. • Strategy: • Breed a loyal culture by creating a low-pressure, friendly relationship with the customer. This relationship starts with “no haggle pricing” and continues with customer service that people might expect from a bed and breakfast, not a car manufacturer.

  9. Saturn: First Generation • Saturn initially attracted young, educated buyers who were considering defecting to an import or have already. • These buyers found appeal in Saturn’s innovative engineering and attention to QDR.

  10. Saturn immediately attracted buyers that GM had been struggling with; those who had already defected to an import or those who were about to. 43%of Saturn buyers were either potential domestic defectors (19%) or conquests from imports (24%) Source: CDS 1993

  11. Saturn was initially successful in luring young, well-educated domestic defectors back to GM. Source: CDS 1993

  12. Saturn owners viewed it as a smart buy because of its innovative engineering and solid QDR features. • Saturn Owners • Well Engineered 80% • Safe 77% • Value 75% • Fun to Drive 74% • Responsive 70% • Domestic Defectors • Well Engineered 65% • Fun to Drive 64% • Responsive 58% • Value 55% • Functional 52% • Domestic Owners • Safe 58% • Fun to Drive 57% • Functional 55% • Responsive 51% • Well Engineered 50% Source: CDS 1993

  13. Saturn Loses Momentum • As GM failed to invest in the brand, Saturn’s sales flattened, and its buyer base began to resemble the buyer bases of GM and the other domestics. • Only a few new models were introduced, and those were GM products repurposed for Saturn, which lacked the quality of the initial Saturn offerings. • Disappointed in Saturn’s limited lineup and quality problems, the young, educated buyers that had initially formed Saturn’s loyal buyer core migrated to imports.

  14. As GM failed to invest in the brand, Saturn lost ground on engineering, QDR and value. Images Among Saturn Owners, 1993 vs. 2007 Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  15. The brand also lost ground on high-energy, emotional imagery often associated with youth. Emotional Images Among Saturn Owners, 1993 vs. 2007 Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  16. As a result, overall brand opinion suffered. da Chevrolet Chrysler Source: AFI 1999, 2006

  17. Poor quality and a lack of new, innovative products caused Saturn to steadily lose its ability to conquest from imports… Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  18. …and Saturn replacers increasingly opted for the QDR and value offered by imports. Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  19. Overall, Saturn lost its edge with the young, educated buyers, and began to look like GM and other domestics. Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  20. Overall, Saturn lost its edge with the young, educated buyers, and began to look like GM and other domestics. Source: CDS 1993-2007q1-2

  21. Toyota: 2003 State of the Union “Kids saw Toyota as a Japanese equivalent of General Motors, with uninspired design, ordinary performance, and staid marketing.”– Automotive News, Oct. 29, 2007 • Toyota’s sales were at all-time highs, but it was attracting an increasingly older buyer base. • Young, cool buyers viewed Toyota as a brand for their parents or grandparents, but not for them. • The youngest buyers in 2003 were only the tip of the Gen Y iceberg; the generation eventually will dominate the automotive landscape.

  22. Toyota was having trouble attracting young people to the brand; it’s owner base was aging more rapidly than the competition… Source: CDS 1993-2003

  23. …and Toyota’s young buyers scored lower on cool, exciting imagery than the typical young buyer. Source: CDS 2000-2003

  24. Scion “WHAT MOVES YOU” • Goal • Create a cool, exciting youth brand whose culture is completely separate from Toyota’s, and whose sales do not cannibalize Toyota’s. • Strategy • Offer small, stylish, single-trim cars that come fully loaded at a reasonable, non-negotiable price. Source:Automotive News, October 29, 2007 (Toyota’s 50th Anniversary Commemorative Edition)

  25. Scion • Scion attracted the youngest buyer base in the industry without cannibalizing from Toyota. • Scion made Toyota an important and relevant brand to young people.

  26. Scion attracted the industry’s highest mix of young buyers… Source: CDS 2006

  27. …and Scion buyers were more likely than typical young buyers to think of their vehicles as cool and exciting. Source: CDS 2003-2006

  28. Scion bred a completely different culture from Toyota. Far from cannibalizing Toyota’s young buyers, Scion instead attracted a younger buyer who was likely to be single and still in college… Demographics Among Buyers 18-34 Source: CDS 2006

  29. …Scion’s young buyers viewed their vehicles with much cooler, more exciting images than young Toyota buyers. Source: CDS 2006

  30. Scion intercepted these buyers most often from Honda, which is Toyota’s biggest competitor in the youth market. Source: CDS 2003-2006

  31. Appendix

  32. Source: Ward’s Automotive Yearbook, 1990-2006

  33. Domestics as a whole were steadily losing market share to imports. Source: Ward’s Automotive Data, 1971-1990

More Related