VivienM
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The main reason why it is different for US manufacturers vs the Asian manufacturers is that there is a distributor/importer in-between the dealer and manufacturer (HMA or Hyundai Canada). Historically, the distributor/importer was set up to import all the cars, even though many Asian brand names are now made/assembled in the USA (as we all know). Some companies have regional distributors/importers that are not even owned by the parent company, such as Gulf States Toyota. Such a separate distributor/importer does not exist for US manufacturers, and therefore the dealers are ordering and buying the cars directly from the factory (so to speak).
But what about the Germans?
It's standard practice among multinationals to have one subsidiary per country. So you have MB USA, BMW USA, Audi of America, Hyundai USA, etc. Same in other industries. e.g. you have Apple Inc. (US), Apple Canada, Apple France, Apple UK, etc.
And what about an outfit like Ford? You have Ford Motor Co., Ford Motor Co. of Canada Limited, a Mexican outfit, etc. If you go down to your Ford dealer and custom order a Ford Edge, it will be built in Oakville, ON by Ford Canada, which will sell it to Ford Motor Co. (the US parent), which will sell it to your dealer.
I understand Toyota does something weirder in the US and has intermediate distributors, but that's unusual. Maybe that structure prevents factory orders, but there's no reason why each entity can't just pass the order to the next level up.
In any event, allowing factory orders/retail sold orders/etc has NOTHING to do with corporate structure or location of manufacture. I don't know why you think it does.
Most customers are not going to wait around that long for a car, and dealers/distributors have been burned in the past when doing that kind of custom ordering (plus one has to hire extra people and have computer systems that can handle those special transactions). Unless the customer is willing to put up a non-refundable deposit, dealers don't like to do that, and besides they don't get paid until delivery so they want you to purchase from their inventory. The Sonata is made in Alabama and the production quantities are much higher than the Genesis, so it would not surprise me that some custom custom requests may be possible for those reasons.
German car buyers seem to have no problem waiting. Go hang out at an Audi or MB forum. You'll find MANY, MANY posters ordered their cars, waited 3 months for them to come to the US or Canada, etc. There are even entire threads dedicated to tracking the cars on the Wallenius Wilhemsen web site.
And in my limited experience, at least with German dealers, they know what's in inventory at their dealership and other dealerships, and if you're discussing something else (e.g. a MB without the premium package, or a non-white/black/silver car), they'll happily say "there won't be one of those in inventory, but we can order you one, and it'll be here in three months."
Regarding you last comment about shipping a custom order to a dealer--for imported cars, they are not shipped directly from Hyundai Korea to the dealer. The cars are imported by HMA or Hyundai Canada (not a trivial matter), and then sold and shipped to the dealer by the distributor/importer.
Oh please.
Have you ever heard of a bonded warehouse/carrier? (Bonded carriers can carry goods around before they're cleared through customs, and are required by law not to release the goods until they get customs' okay.)
The cars arrive at the port of entry (for German cars coming into Canada, Halifax; for German cars coming into the Eastern U.S., I think it's Baltimore). They stay there for a few days. They may be inspected, etc. The cars get sorted by destination, and put onto trains. When they reach the closest big rail yard to the destination, they're unloaded, put on trucks, and the trucks drive to the dealership listed on the sticker, where the car is unloaded, PDIed, and delivered to the customer.
Meanwhile, while this is going on, the Canadian (or U.S.) head office is doing all the import paperwork, paying customs, etc.
Another analogy: let's say you order a custom Apple computer. It is sold to you by Apple Canada Inc., since you're a Canadian customer. But it will be shipped straight from Foxconn in China to your address by FedEx or whoever. Apple Canada Inc. handles the customs arrangements and 'imports' the computer. Once customs has signed off on the shipment (which is a computerized thing, at least for small shipments), FedEx gets the all clear to deliver. It never touches an Apple Canada warehouse, and you can see it on the FedEx tracking which shows China as the pickup location.
I don't really know exactly why Hyundai Canada decided to have only one interior color per exterior color.
Oh, I agree that they are trying to limit the number of combinations.
Ultimately, it is up the auto companies to decide how much trouble they want to go to in order to accommodate special customer requests. It may be that once the Genesis is more established, they will allow more special requests like you say they do with the Sonata, but even if they do, the lead times are still going to be a lot longer than a Hyundai built in Alabama.
I think we are confusing two things:
1) The ability to custom order something that is available in your country, and
2) The ability to custom order something sold in other countries, but not available in your country.
Most automakers will let you do 1) easily. If I can go to mercedes-benz.ca or audi.ca and equip a car in a given way, then once I give them a (usually-refundable) deposit, my local dealer can call up MB Canada or Audi Canada, and a matching car will arrive three months later. Same with Ford - I know a friend's dad who had custom ordered the first EcoBoost Lincoln MKS in Ottawa. He picked his options from the Canadian order guide, got screwed because the Canadian navigation package doesn't include a rear view camera, and 'the Ford organization' delivered the car with the options he picked to his dealership. Of course, past April or May, it's impossible to order the current model year, but the dealer will have the order guide for 2011s, and will happily place an order for a 2011.
You claim that Hyundai USA does not do this. That may be. I was told that Hyundai Canada does, at least on Sonatas.
And as I said, Audi USA has SOME options (listed on the normal order guide for the US market) that are offered ONLY this way. You will not find a single inventory car with those options unless somebody backed out of a factory order. Go to audiworld's forums, for example - every year, a friendly US sales rep posts the order guide for the US market, a friendly Canadian sales rep posts the Canadian order guide, etc.
Many/most automakers supply dealer inventory the same way (i.e. the manager picks options from the order guide, enters the order, and the automaker builds/ships it), but give lower priority to inventory orders compared to sold orders. One example: some years ago, I noticed while playing with GM's inventory web site that all cars of a given model at one dealer had the optional side airbags, while none at another dealer did. Why? Clearly one dealer's manager ordered the airbags on all his cars, while the other didn't.
2) is what the people wanting different interiors want. It is rare. Audi Canada does it, for obscene fees (e.g. ~$3000 for a colour). Most automakers do not.
The thing is, if you are set up to do 1), then you can increase the number of choices, and reduce the need for 2).
For as long as a given interior colour is offered with ONE exterior in Canada, then they have to supply all the spare parts in that interior colour in Canada, and so there is no additional post-sale difficulty in offering it with more exteriors. And you don't need to stock that combo in inventory if you think it won't be popular - just have the plant build that combination and ship it over if somebody wants it and is willing to wait. Worst case scenario, no one orders it, and all the manufacturer has lost is a little ink in their order guide.