I don’t think you can read too much into the recent announcement that Infiniti, the posh arm of Nissan, is going to withdraw from sales in Europe.
I once sat in a room with Carlos Ghosn, formerly the boss of RenaultNissan, where he said he didn’t care how many cars Infiniti sold in Europe, so long as the sub-brand’s profit margin was into double digits. Although apparently he’s not quite so influential now as he once was. Anyway, it turns out that double digits on naff all is still naff all.
But in that ‘double digits’ figure you can see why having a posh brand was so appealing to Nissan in Europe. It also reveals how tight profit margins are if you’re not a premium car maker. The market is so cut-throat that normal car makers aspire to moderate single-digit figures, so if they have an underwhelming year, or if they find themselves behind the curve of a new trend, they can be scuppered for ages.
So they all want a bit of what DS, the posh bit of Peugeot-Citroën, has been similarly explicit about. Premium bits of the car market account for 11% of all car sales, DS says, but 37% of all profits. And so DS would like to sell cars into 70% of this profit-rich environment.
Which, as Infiniti has found in Europe, is a problem. How do you convince people that your car is worth spending more than average money on? The easiest way is to be German or British or Italian and to have been doing it for a century already. Then you can claim that you’re ‘the ultimate driving machine’ or ‘engineered like no other car’. Which is fine. If it’s still true.
But here’s the thing: what if it isn’t? Or, at least, what if it’s true for some of your cars but very much not true for others. Because while it’s irresistible for ‘normal’ car makers to try to sell cars in the premium market, it’s similarly tempting, for makers of hitherto posh cars, to try to sell them to people who previously couldn’t afford them.
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Look at Audi
DS
Should have been retired, then could have been brought back as an electric only brand otherwise I think the DS3 crossback is pretty much the last throw of the dice, the running costs of this brand must huge when viewed with the number of cars sold.
Nissan Z . Citroen DS
and ahead of the competition.
Make quality vehicles that stand out and you can charge a premium.
Rolling turds in glitter is not the way to do it....looking at you Citroen....
Thekrankis wrote:
That was a LONG time ago. The market is very different now.
I dunno. It worked for Audi, VW, etc...