A reboot for Lexus?

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Jesda
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http://www.autoextremist.com/

Most noteworthy parts are bolded.
Toyota’s luxury-themed division, Lexus, has decided that it wants to join the ranks of the hip and cool. Not content with its bland-tastic, “the cars for people who don’t care about cars” image, Lexus is now going after the young, influential, hip and affluent crowd with a totally different marketing direction and a new brand campaign, complete with a new advertising theme line, “Amazing in Motion” featuring nine-foot mannequin-like puppets (ugh).

Akio Toyoda, scion of the founding family and the guy who’s now running the show at the global automotive giant, is spurring this new directional shift. Toyoda is absolutely convinced that by turning over a new, youthful and hipper leaf, Lexus is just a heartbeat away from achieving automotive greatness - complete with a cool new wrapper.

We should all know the Lexus story by now. Toyota, eager to get a piece of the American luxury market, went after the leaders at the time - Mercedes-Benz and BMW – with a dead-nuts imitation that more closely resembled the Mercedes than a BMW. It was 1989 and no one really gave them a chance, but Lexus redefined what the luxury experience could be at the dealership level, and even though the car – the LS 400 – was a rolling monument to tedium with marginal appeal it didn’t matter. Lexus built one of the most successful luxury brands in the U.S. market purely based on a level of customer service that up to that point was unheard of.

But as successful as that brand launch was, the cars continued to be somnolent sleds, vanilla-themed luxury coaches that were oddly detached from the act of driving. And that was fine, for a while at least. But the competition got a lot better, especially with Audi turning up the wick and even Cadillac manufacturing a new brand aura for itself, and even though Lexus was delivering sales numbers that were still formidable, the brand seemed tired and predictable.

So forays into the performance arena were made, with a line of performance cars developed dubbed “F” to suggest that Lexus could play in the S (Audi), AMG (Mercedes), M (BMW), and V (Cadillac) high-performance luxury game with a lineup of performance models of its own. That didn’t really work either. Sure, they found some customers for these cars, but the brand image didn’t move one iota.

So now Akio Toyoda, the guy who flaunts his gear-headed-ness like a badge of honor, is determined that the Lexus brand image will go from one of purveyors of somnolent sleds to purveyors of the hip and hot.

He turned up the wick with the LFA supercar and now Lexus is poised to introduce the LFA-influenced LF-LC concept to the U.S. market, a car that torched the auto shows with its sheer design presence. And he’s going to use those two vehicles – and their bold new design language – to fuel a renaissance for the brand in terms of image and prestige.

Oh, if it were that easy.

There aren’t enough trendy hipster balls like the one Toyoda staged in the Chelsea district of New York last week for the “new” Lexus that will make a difference. Sure, the design-themed events, those that focus on artists and creative movers and shakers to the detriment of the actual products are fun and get a nanosecond of coverage from the hip-hot media, but they’re like so much marketing cotton candy, offering you a taste that vaporizes before you even have time to think about what just happened. And does anyone in the room (other than the auto journalists invited to cover such events) take anything substantive away about the brand other than it was a good party? Please.

The key word here for Mr. Toyoda is aspirational, which has become the hottest word in auto company marketing circles, especially for the assorted brand champions who aren’t even close to having a whiff of understanding what it really means. He wants Lexus to become a brand that people aspire to, which is exactly the same thing that everyone else is saying to themselves at the other car companies.

I can tell you what this talk sounds like in the marketing department at your average Belchfire Motors (feel free to insert your favorite car company here): “We want to be hot. We want to be hip. We want to be the brand that everyone talks about first. And we want to be different from all the rest. We want consumers to love us, not because we’re eminently likable, but because we do it better than anyone else.”

How is Lexus going to be different? Well, let’s see, by being “Amazing in Motion"? Uh, maybe, if the planets align just so and everything falls into place in a miracle of marketing that stuns the automotive world and ends up rewriting the history books. (But then again that’s like saying Alfa Romeo is going to be selling 75,000 units here in the U.S. market by 2014. Oh, wait a minute, that’s another column.)

"I will personally drive Lexus forward with beautifully designed product that is fun to drive," Toyoda told the crowd last Friday night in New York, according to Automotive News.

Really, Akio, you are personally going to drive Lexus forward? Uh-oh. Where have we heard this before? Sorry to remind you, Akio, but this business is littered with broken-down executives who insisted that they were going to personally change the market or change a brand’s image overnight.

And unfortunately for Mr. Toyoda I can say with a fair amount of certainty that it ain’t happening. At least not anytime soon. It has taken Audi fifteen years of high-level image wrangling to get where they are today and Cadillac is now in its fourteenth year of rejuvenation and they still have miles to go. So if Mr. Toyoda thinks this is going to be a finger-snap transformation, he is going to be bitterly disappointed.

Besides, chasing youth and hipness for an automaker is like chasing candy-striped unicorns, especially when the young and hip can smell image wrangling from a mile away. (And everyone’s doing it, too, including Nordstrom. The ultra-conservative, upscale retailer is attempting to reinvent itself with a new digital campaign "YOUphoria" designed to make the store hipper - and different - to young consumers. Sound familiar? You can see it here, here and here.)

There’s an old auto industry adage that goes like this: You can sell a young person’s car to the older folk, but you can’t sell an old person’s car to the young.

Here’s a tip, Akio: Build great cars. There's no magically hip bullet at your disposal.

And if you want to really reinvent the Lexus image, buckle-up and settle in for the long haul.

It’s going to be a bumpy ride.


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Jesda wrote:
Here’s a tip, Akio: Build great cars. There's no magically hip bullet at your disposal.
This ^ little line which appeared near the end of the article pretty much sums it up. A marketing campaign by itself will not convince people to buy a new car.

Nissan should pay particular attention. They looked foolish when they attempted to market a FWD, CVT-only Maxima as a 4DSC.

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Bubba1 wrote:
Jesda wrote:
Here’s a tip, Akio: Build great cars. There's no magically hip bullet at your disposal.
This ^ little line which appeared near the end of the article pretty much sums it up. A marketing campaign by itself will not convince people to buy a new car.

Nissan should pay particular attention. They looked foolish when they attempted to market a FWD, CVT-only Maxima as a 4DSC.
Fully seconded.

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I think the biggest thing I thought of when I saw the thread title is that "this will take a while".

What Lexus (and Toyota) really hasn't done well in my opinion with is introducing NEW ideas or something that really stands out from the competition. What they do best is make what other manufacturers MEANT to create even better... For instance, the LS400 they took all the styling cues from BMW and MB, made a Cadillac-like interior, added Japanese reliability, and sold it.

Cadillac brought their name to the game by introducing something that performed as well as an M5 for M3 money. AMG and ///M have had their names in the game long enough that they don't really count.

In my opinion, there's really not much that isn't already covered in the very niche high end performance market. Only so many people are willing to buy those types of cars, and I certainly would have a hard time believing someone would consider a lexus over an M, V, AMG, etc...

... Although 10 years ago I would have said the same thing about Cadillac, and now look where we are!

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elwesso wrote:What Lexus (and Toyota) really hasn't done well in my opinion with is introducing NEW ideas or something that really stands out from the competition. What they do best is make what other manufacturers MEANT to create even better... For instance, the LS400 they took all the styling cues from BMW and MB, made a Cadillac-like interior, added Japanese reliability, and sold it.

Cadillac brought their name to the game by introducing something that performed as well as an M5 for M3 money. AMG and ///M have had their names in the game long enough that they don't really count.
EXACTLY. Lexus has been so busy being so good for so long at mimickry that they seem to have completely lost sight of a much grander goal: being BETTER.
Right now, everyone in the performance luxury game does SOMETHING better than everyone else.

BMW does whole-package driving experience.
Audi does amazing drivetrains under lightweight cars.
AMG/Benz put the biggest damn engines that'll fit into everything in sight.
Jaguar does lightweight and driver-centric
Cadillac is mean and menacing (appearance AND powertrain-wise)

And then there's Lexus. Even their "F" models are copycats. They do a lot of things AS WELL, but they do NOTHING AT ALL better.
I also don't know who had the idea to start slapping "F Sport" badged on aero'd-up versions of average Lexuses, but this is clearly NOT the way to enhance your performance cachet. Imagine if Cadillac had put V sport stickers on mesh-grilled 3.2 liter CTSs. Or if BMW put M Sport stickers on bespoilered 318tis. Why would you build an entire badge for the purposes of launching an ultra-hotrod spinoff sub-brand but then turn around and put that badge on everything?! The only POSSIBLE result this could yield is a dilution of meaning for everything involved. Considering this alongside many of the comments in that article, one really gets the impression that Lexus doesn't really know ANYTHING about selling CARS, they're just good at attracting CUSTOMERS.

Ultra-silliness:
Image
Look at the badge on the lower rear door. Look at the badge on the Fender. I am not responsible for any resulting head explosions. Not only are these two badges bad for each other, but they also show that this car (along with the people behind its brand positioning) has NO IDEA WHAT IT WANTS TO BE or, for that matter, what it IS in the first place.

I really do honestly think that the concept of DOING SOMETHING BETTER THAN the competition is one that doesn't even register with anyone at Lexus. It's not a matter of copy OR do better. It's like a foreign language to them. Copycat is what they DO. Start talking about OUTDOING and suddenly you're speaking greek to a bunch of Japanese businessmen.

Also, while I'm bashing the CTh/CTF:
Can we PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE stop with the whole "quarter windows that you can't actually see anything out of because they're tiny and tucked back into seventeen inches of pillar material" thing? It looks silly and is entirely nonfunctional.

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elwesso
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Honestly, I don't think there's anything wrong with what Toyota is doing. They take the best features of all the other brands, make it with better quality and reliability, and put it on sale... For most people that value cars as a machine that takes them places, what else could you possibly want?

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Jesda
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elwesso wrote:Honestly, I don't think there's anything wrong with what Toyota is doing. They take the best features of all the other brands, make it with better quality and reliability, and put it on sale... For most people that value cars as a machine that takes them places, what else could you possibly want?
That's good enough for Toyota, especially with their expansion into emerging markets where any car is an upgrade over a motorcycle. But for Lexus, it's not enough.

Even the Chinese are getting quite picky.

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Xdisaster240sX
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The new supra looks stupid. Just thought Id through that out there.


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