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      10-01-2010, 03:30 PM   #1
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News Artical: Is BMW Getting Too Big?

http://autos.aol.com/article/bmw-get...togenlfpge0065

BMW is a brand that for decades has embodied the notion of sporty performance driving. Indeed, the company invented the "sports sedan" in the 1960s, and in the 1980s saw its products become de-rigeuer symbols of business success.

Today the company is focused on another kind of performance: Sales. With grandiose goals of increasing worldwide sales by 55 percent in the next 10 years -- an objective that has little to do with quality or design excellence -- skeptics wonder whether the German company is beginning to lose its way.

At The Paris Auto Show this week, BMW had a slate of mostly fresh versions of vehicles we already know: A new 6 Series coupe, a new X3 crossover, and a new 5 Series Touring. But there was also a new concept car for a hybrid vehicle, as well as an electric plug-in, Mini-branded scooter. On the horizon to help meet the sales target are small, front-drive BMW cars -- a real departure from the traditional rear-drive cars the brand has always championed -- and even smaller electric city cars.

"Any company that chooses a sales number as its primary and most publicly stated objective is wiring its organization for something that doesn't necessarily have to do with its reputation, quality, or engineering, which are the things that, in BMW's case, are the things that have made it successful," says Charlie Vogelheim, executive editor of auto buying website IntelliChoice.

BMW CEO Norbert Reithofer said earlier this month that the Bavarian company aims to sell 2 million vehicles a year worldwide by 2020, up from 1.29 million last year. Most of this growth will come from the BMW brand. The company also owns Mini and Rolls Royce, both acquired in the mid-1990s when BMW was also focused on increasing sales and scale. At that time, the company was wary of predictions about massive consolidation in the auto industry and wanted to grow through acquisition to make sure it was a buyer and not a seller.

Indeed, The company has always been fiercely independent. The Quandt family of Germany holds a controlling stake in the company, which has long positioned itself to avoid being a takeover target by another auto company.

The acquisition of Mini came as part of the larger of acquisition of the Rover Group, which proved disastrous for BMW. In search of sales at the lower end of the consumer spectrum and an engineering base focused on front-drive vehicles, BMW lost billions on Rover, a company that was in tatters and proved impossible to integrate into BMW's culture. BMW eventually sold off Rover and Land Rover, but kept Mini.

After that experience, it’s no wonder that BMW is now set to achieve its growth dreams from within, rather than by acquisition.

"We can achieve our targets with the brands we have, and through alliances we have formed," said Reithofer earlier this year on the sidelines of the Geneva auto show. Indeed, according to sources at the company, BMW looked into buying Swedish automaker Volvo from Ford, but passed on the opportunity because of a fear of a repeat of the Rover fiasco.

BMW’s growth will come in several areas. The company has big plans for China where it currently sells about 120,000 vehicles each year, and is adding capacity to build 300,000. It will also be expanding the BMW lineup with front-drive cars smaller than the current 3-Series, which will begin rolling out in late 2012. Those cars are being added to help BMW expand its entry-level premium offerings, as well as to meet stiffening fuel economy regulations in North America and other markets. BMW is expecting a resurgence in North American auto sales in the next five to seven years, and also expects that its smaller, less expensive front-drive models will take a bigger market share.

Mini, which sold 217,000 vehicles worldwide in 2009, is a big part of the plans. BMW management envisions Mini’s potential to be more than 400,000 vehicles annually, to be reached by expanding the model offerings. The company is launching its first four-door Mini, a crossover called the Countryman this year. It will join the Mini Cooper and Clubman, and even more variants are being planned.

BMW also believes it will capture a healthy share of the green vehicle market as it introduces more hybrid and electric vehicles. There will be a full hybrid version of the 5 Series out in 2011, and more are planned to roll out over the next five years. That plan includes BMW’s “Megacity” electric vehicles that will begin rolling in 2013 under a new brand designation.

Given BMW’s recent success, it’s not easy to poke holes in its growth plans. It passed Mercedes-Benz in sales in 2005 and Fortune Magazine named BMW "The most admired automotive company in the world” earlier this year. Certainly the job it did in resurrecting the moribund Mini brand will find its rightful place in top business school curricula.

But there are cracks in the foundation. Some of BMW's recent designs have not been well received by the auto press, or paying customers. BMW has also struggled in recent years to develop designs that fit with the brand's image and consumer perception, especially outside of its comfort zone of sports sedans and a roadster like the Z4. The X6 luxury crossover has neither been praised critically, nor lit showrooms afire. True, it was launched around the time of the financial crisis, but it has lacked buzz ever since. The same can be said in North America of the 5-Series GT, a crossover derived from the 7 Series sedan chassis.

In the past year, BMW North America has also shifted its marketing strategy to one themed "Joy of Driving." Indeed, BMW's U.S. ad agency, Austin, Texas-based GSD&M, has become the company's lead global ad agency, which means it has taken a leadership position in defining the company's global brand strategy. The company has not shelved its long-running "Ultimate Driving Machine" slogan, but it has de-emphasized it in favor of "Joy."

For years, BMW's ad slogans around the world have loosely translated culture to culture as "Joy of Driving." As far back as the late 1990s, BMW was trying to get the U.S. to adopt the "Joy" positioning to harmonize a global brand idea. Those efforts were rebuffed until recently when BMW's Munich Germany leadership insisted.

"Ultimate Driving Machine," say BMW's U.S. officials, while distinct in the marketplace and considered one of the most effective (and longest running) ad slogans in the U.S., was holding the brand back. BMW's research shows that too many premium car buyers either did not find BMW's performance-driven brand image accessible, or they rejected the brand as being for people who are "arrogant" or "poseurs." The "Joy" brand idea is designed to open up the brand and make it feel more accessible without, hopefully, sacrificing its aspirational quality.

But some analysts and critics believe that BMW is on the road to doing just that. "BMW seems to be on a mission to dilute their brand’s equity," says Cameron McNaughton, principal of auto marketing consultancy TreeFarm Partners. “They have been chasing volume for years, then you have the ‘Joy’ campaign which demoted the long standing 'The Ultimate Driving Machine' to an afterthought, and now you have the announcement that they are taking the brand into small front-drive cars... It's all going to work to water down its brand identity."?

Worse, and possibly more dangerous for the company, is that the BMW organization is being rewired to emphasize sales, potentially at the cost of profits and reputation. As Volkswagen, for example, has chased big sales numbers, it led the company to make several poor decisions -- developing the VW Phaeton luxury car, which was an expensive flop, and acquiring money-losing Spanish automaker Seat to name two.

“There is risk in any strategy,” says Tom Kowaleski, vice president of corporate communications for BMW North America. “But the risk comes in how you execute.”

Kowaleski notes that growth will come from continuing to acquire new customers in its two main markets of Europe and North America, plus in regions with newly affluent customers like China. As far as BMW becoming to ubiquitous and losing cachet, Kowaleski says, “If you look at the numbers, it’s hardly as if there is one on every street corner.”?

A critical piece of BMW’s culture has always been profitability. By focusing on premium cars, and wielding a financial cudgel over the entire organization to keep costs down without sacrificing engineering excellence, BMW has always been well positioned to take the occasional risk. Steady profitability has always been part of what has made the company, not just the car, so admired. And though it seems just a few years ago that Reithofer’s predecessor, Dr. Helmut Panke, resisted setting long-range sales targets in favor of goals of bigger profits and better quality, it looks like priorities in Munich have shifted.

Today, it’s difficult to miss the parallel proclamations of BMW and rival Audi, each targeting the goal of being the world’s biggest premium brand, and beating one another to the top -- wherever the top is. Isn’t making the most money the “new black” of global business, rather than achieving the greatest sales? It’s enough one-upmanship on sales targets to make one place their bets on Mercedes-Benz.?
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      10-01-2010, 07:56 PM   #2
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Great article, its unfortunate but holds some truth.
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      10-01-2010, 09:19 PM   #3
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What's go up, must eventually comes down !!!!!

But when ???
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      10-01-2010, 11:30 PM   #4
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I see valid points in this article, but I don't entirely agree with it. It is true that there isn't a BMW on every corner, but I'm sure BMW wouldn't mind if there was. In the end, a company's main goal is to grow in order to produce a profit for its shareholders. You can't really disagree over a company's need/want for growth. I'm sure some BMW owners don't want there to be a BMW on every corner because then it won't be as exclusive (at least in the U.S., there is a BMW on every corner in Germany). BMW is obviously choosing growth over exclusiveness. I just hope they don't diminish the brand in their appetite for growth. You can see a prime example with growth vs. exclusiveness in their M packages and cars. Most of the cars that BMW makes now have some sort of M package available, or is there is a seperate M car for the series. If I own their stock....I want them to keep on growing. If I own their car, I want a good quality BMW. Let's hope they can balance these two business issues.

On the other hand...I can't wait until they enter the Pickup Truck market in the U.S.!!!
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      10-03-2010, 02:03 PM   #5
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I think you're seeing the mainstreaming more and more. Softer riding, more emphasis on tech and luxury. China in particular is biased towards soft riding cars (Buicks sell well there) so if they're aiming at their market that makes sense.

There are so few car brands that actually have cars which handle well, it'd be a shame if they only kept around one or two models for handling, and went luxo with the rest.
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