You miss my point, Miss Lizzie. There were in fact different niches to be filled and my point was that GM, mainly, simply vacated those niches in the name of industrial efficiency. Critics of the automotive industry, meaning Detroit and no where else, weren't in the business of making money by building cars. Once those niches were empty, they were filled by foreign competition. There's more to the automotive industry than efficient factories. But that's only part of the story, of course. The dealer network is a critical element.
Cars are as subject to fads and fashion as anything else. At one time, critics said American cars changed too often. The word was planned obsolescence, the way computer software is today. They did in fact introduce new models every year. But now, the complaint is that they don't keep up because imported models are constantly being updated. Of course, I understand that the critics job is to criticize. It's a tough job, I imagine.
This so-called badge engineering happened in other countries, too, of course, usually with the same results. A critic can easily say that all that is happening is that they're selling the same car with a different grille and a different trim inside and out under different names. But they do manage sometimes to produce a different car one way or another and in any event, there is a degree of brand loyalty that accounts for all of that happening. What you don't know is how strong that loyalty is.
So, a person who buys, say, a Pontiac, wouldn't even think of buying a Buick, much less a Dodge or a Ford. What cars do you imagine people who bought Mercury's or Plymouth's are driving.
Gee, our old LaSalle ran great; those were the days.
Cars are as subject to fads and fashion as anything else. At one time, critics said American cars changed too often. The word was planned obsolescence, the way computer software is today. They did in fact introduce new models every year. But now, the complaint is that they don't keep up because imported models are constantly being updated. Of course, I understand that the critics job is to criticize. It's a tough job, I imagine.
This so-called badge engineering happened in other countries, too, of course, usually with the same results. A critic can easily say that all that is happening is that they're selling the same car with a different grille and a different trim inside and out under different names. But they do manage sometimes to produce a different car one way or another and in any event, there is a degree of brand loyalty that accounts for all of that happening. What you don't know is how strong that loyalty is.
So, a person who buys, say, a Pontiac, wouldn't even think of buying a Buick, much less a Dodge or a Ford. What cars do you imagine people who bought Mercury's or Plymouth's are driving.
Gee, our old LaSalle ran great; those were the days.