What some may not realize is that the
KDM wings were because the Genesis is not sold as a Hyundai brand in Korea. It was sort of like Ford and
Lincoln. A
Lincoln is made by Ford Motor Company, but it has a separate brand.
A more apropos example for here would be the Mustang and Corvette would have their own
badges and not the Ford blue oval or the Chevy bow-tie.
In Korea, the Genesis and Equus are their own sub-brands (as is the
KDM version of the
Buick LaCrosse which is sold as an Alpheon).
Same thing for Japan where the luxury Toyota Century and Crown Majesta and the departed Nissan President had their own special badging.
Aren't you totally missing the point? Who cares about all that? If they wanted to follow the Kia model it is very easy to create, or even appear to create, a separate entity and dealer network. It also begs the question of why Genesis and/or Equus weren't done under Kia instead of Hyundai, and that consideration itself means Genesis deserves to be separate.
Why would the Genesis and Equus be done under Kia - when Kia has their equivalents - the K900 and soon to come (presumably) K800?
And also, it takes a massive amount of capital to launch a new brand, much less a new dealer network - and simply wasn't worth doing it based on the volume of Genesis sedan and coupe sales (with the later addition of the Equus).
Hyundai is still undergoing the process of revamping its own dealer network - which takes priority over spending $$ on trying to build a new separate one.
In addition, the $$ would be better spent on expanding its luxury models/offering than subsidizing the build-out of shiny, new dealerships.
Hyundai-Kia (or whatever their corporate brand is this year) are really bad at brand marketing. How many more years are we going to have to explain what a Genesis is?
Yeah, they are so
bad at it - that the Genesis sedan is the
no. 3 best selling midsize RWD luxury sedan in the US and
no. 2 in Canada (even outselling the 5 Series).
Gee, why can't
Infiniti and Lexus do a better job of
marketing the Q70 and GS?
Or for that matter, Acura with their entire lineup of sedans?
If Hyundai-Kia wants to make Genesis separate, they can, and the excuses people make are BS. That that do not make Genesis or Equus separate after all these years and after missing all the opportunities when they were getting all the attention in 2010-11-12, means the marketplace is continually confused as to what they are doing with Genesis and Equus.
Sure they can do it - it simply does not make good business sense to do it right now.
Now, when they are ready to add a CUV, along with the new coupe and compact RWD sedan - then it would be a diff. proposition.
And again, how is the marketplace
confused when the Genesis sedan outsells the GS and M/Q70 both of which having had a head start?
What did having a separate brand do for the Q45?
Infiniti was in such bad shape/bleeding so much $$ that Ghosn seriously thought of doing away w/ the brand.
Along the same lines, Akio Toyoda had to be talked out of killing the GS.
I think Hyundai would make more money selling Genesis vehicles as a separate brand OR as a sub brand. The sub brand would be much less expensive. But - if they chose to go the separate brand route - I still feel they'd either make more money or break even for the time being. Yes, the vehicles would cost more - but people would be willing to pay more and more people would buy them because of it being a luxury brand with a luxury sales and service experience.
Doubtful.
Going the full separate brand would have added $7-8k to price of the Genesis which would bring it to price parity w/ the GS and Q70.
Sales of the Q70 are abysmal and the GS isn't doing that great despite the supposed brand-strength of Lexus.
Acura is on track to sell a whopping
2,400 of the RLX for the YEAR! (Which is like a good sales month for the Genesis.)
Not every Hyundai dealership would be involved. Only dealerships that sell the Equus would either host the sub brand or co-brand with "Genesis". And, as mentioned, this has been done before. Lincolns being sold out of Ford dealerships and Oldsmobiles being sold out of
Cadillac dealerships. There are less GM brands now but there are still joint-dealerships in a lot of locations.
While I agree that moving to a sub-brand is the way to go and having a certain requirement when it comes to the new sub-brand, only about maybe half of Hyundai dealerships would meet that requirement - which would mean fewer dealerships selling the Genesis and hence, fewer Genesis sales.
Hyundai needs all the Genesis sales it can get at the present - and such a move would only make sense when Hyundai has a fuller lineup of luxury models to offer.
Multi line mfgs have separate brands for a reason. People do not want their BMW / Mercedes / Lexus / Infinity, etc associated with a lower cost or lower prestige brand. Brands move up market or down market by separation of existing names. They do so because they have to in order to get the premium price in the premium brand. If they go down market they separate the brand yet again in order not to polute the existing premium brand. Hyundai will end up doing so or they will never get the price points to hold on the top line models.
While that is true, it certainly is no guarantee of success/greater success.
See all the above examples.
Hyundai has been able to attain the level of sales success w/ the 1G Genesis and now the 2G primarily due to the pricing advantage it has over its competitors (primarily the Japanese).
Going the full, separate lux brand route and the Genesis would lose much, if not all of that pricing advantage and the Genesis sales would probably be more like that for the Q70.