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A real luxury marque spin off from Hyundai afterall?

ConceptVBS

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http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=98566

Hyundai Likely To Tout Assurance Program In Bowl
by Karl Greenberg, Yesterday, 4:38 PM


Is Hyundai's buy-back program, Hyundai Assurance, alive? Too soon to tell. Or is it?



Joel Ewanick, the Fountain Valley, Calif. company's VP/marketing for the U.S., says the vital signs are strong--with January sales so far holding up to last January's. That may not mean much in more salubrious times, but when "flat" is the new "up," it's pretty good news.

The program--which allows buyers to return their new or leased Hyundai within 12 months without a big penalty if they lose their income or are disabled--is generating buzz online. Edmunds.com reported that Hyundai purchase intent increased 15% initially, remains 7% above normal since, and rose 31% last Sunday when the Hyundai Genesis was named North American Car of the Year at the Detroit auto show.

"Fourteen days in, we are happy with results on the showroom floor," says Ewanick. "And we can already see anecdotal and quantitative research that brand lift has been substantial. I have started getting emails, even at home."

Ewanick says Hyundai is expanding the program next month to an offer that lets customers return their vehicles after up to four years of ownership. Ads for Assurance are designed to drive traffic to the Web, but the automaker has also been building a national system of information kiosks in dealerships that delineate the Assurance program, other offers, and company news and product information. The touchscreen portal ("The Tube," in Hyundai parlance) was launched with the Genesis car last fall and is now in 300 of Hyundai's 800 U.S. dealerships.

If there's a short-term problem for the company, it's which message to trumpet during next month's Super Bowl, where Hyundai has at least two 30-second ad buys in the first half--meaning that the company must choose among touting the new Genesis Coupe, the Genesis sedan and its Automotive Car of the Year kudos, or the Assurance program. "We now have seven or eight commercials to choose from," Ewanick says.

One of the ads in consideration was directed by Jeff Goodby of Goodby Silverstein & Partners, the San Francisco-based agency that was Hyundai's AOR until the Global Marketing Group (GMG), controlled by Hyundai, took control of the account.

"There were stories that dealers did not like Goodby's work, but that was wrong," he says. "[Goodby] is one of my favorite people in the ad business, and dealers were very happy with the agency." He says the company consolidated with GMG because Hyundai is the agency's only client, and it allows a global ad strategy. "Our long-term goal is to establish an agency focused on Hyundai. It has been something we have been implementing all over the world to unify communications," he says, adding that the North American arm of GMG's U.S. unit will take a larger role in crafting global creative and communications strategy.

He also intimated that while the company had planned to use the Bowl to talk up the Genesis Coupe, at least one of the spots is likely to be for the Assurance program, because it also builds brand consideration. "It makes sense to do Assurance," he says.

The company is also considering making Genesis or its successor the first vehicle in a new luxury channel bearing a different marque.

Six years ago, the company was the 11th-largest manufacturer in the world. "Today, we are [No. 5]. If you have been in an organization that grows that fast, you can imagine the teething problems. It's a rocket ship ride that doesn't allow for bad times. There's a huge opportunity to take it to the next level."


This is going to cost Hyundai a lot of money, but from the reaction to the Genesis, I think the top brass of Hyundai is thinking twice about NOT having a luxury brand.
 
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Very interesting.. So either the Genesis or the upcoming Equus will kick things off.. I love the Genesis but the Equus may be where I'm headed...
 
If they hope to gain momentum with the Genesis they need a luxury marquee, the equus is very interesting, is it definately coming to the US? I would only want it in V8 form though
 
I can't see the Equus having anything BUT a V8.. I'm not sure it's coming here yet.. I have a feeling it will, though. It's just looks like too good a vehicle to not sell here...
 
This is going to cost Hyundai a lot of money, but from the reaction to the Genesis, I think the top brass of Hyundai is thinking twice about NOT having a luxury brand.
It will also cost consumers a lot of money, since prices will have to increase and discounts from MSRP will be reduced. They could just have a different nameplate within the same dealer network until volumne is high enough to justify a separate dealer network.
 
I think a Genesis section would be a good choice plus Dealers would have to get high marks for customer service and cleanliness to sell Gens.
 
It will also cost consumers a lot of money, since prices will have to increase and discounts from MSRP will be reduced. They could just have a different nameplate within the same dealer network until volumne is high enough to justify a separate dealer network.

This is essentially what they're doing now. I remember reading somewhere that the cost of setting up a separate network would have been about $2.5 billion.
 
How about "Genesis-only" dealerships? Would/could that work? One the coupe is around - maybe Hyundai will badge the Veracruz as "Genesis" as well.. Three "higher end" vehicles under one roof would work nicely. And these shops would only service Genesis vehicles as well...
 
The main effect that this will have is that you can no longer buy a Genesis for $30-40K but prices will have to go up to Lexus level.

Something has to give. I much rather take the high value to price ratio on the car than free lattes at the dealership.

Cheers

Thomas
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They could just have a different nameplate within the same dealer network until volumne is high enough to justify a separate dealer network.

Hyundai should have done something along the lines of what Toyota did w/ Scion w/ the tagline - Genesis by Hyundai.
 
The Equus will have to wait until the Genesis has been out longer & proven itself a little more. Also, most of the present dealerships are not up to the task of taking care of high end customers that expect a little more than they are used to giving. Hyundai has to have more than just the Genesis, the Coupe, & Equus to start a high end brand. If they added a 4 door coupe & the Veracruz to the mix, that might be enough to start the lux brand. And, Yes they need to start a seperate brand & charge more for the quality products they are providing. Yet they could still under cut the competition by several thousand dollars, which they can do. You will not have your 10-20 thousand dollar savings, but more like 5-10 thousand dollar savings. Although, none of this can begin until their image is nearly or completely healed, which will take about 3 more years. IMO
 
How about "Genesis-only" dealerships? Would/could that work? One the coupe is around - maybe Hyundai will badge the Veracruz as "Genesis" as well.. Three "higher end" vehicles under one roof would work nicely. And these shops would only service Genesis vehicles as well...
First answer these questions:

How many cars do you think they would sell per month?
How much profit would they make per car after carrying cost (interest) and selling expenses (salesmen)?
What is the upfront investment cost for a dealership (franchise fee, land, buildings, initial car inventory, tools, etc).

Then do a little math.
 
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