Thursday, March 29, 2012

Hyundai's Crafty John Krafcik And His Last Major Challenge

Hyundai-ceo
If you’re John Krafcik, you’ve been able to check off some pretty huge items on Hyundai Motor America’s to-do list:

–Achieve mainstream status in the U.S. market. Check.

–Steal chunks of market share from the Japanese. Check.

–Use Super Bowl advertising and other “tentpole” events as effective platforms for defining your brand. Check.

–Expand your product line to adequately address consumer needs from parsimony to performance, from the ordinary to the opulent. Check.

Yet despite that impressive list of accomplishments over his four years in the job, the president and CEO of Hyundai Motor America now faces what could be his biggest challenge yet: finding a way to stretch a single brand, Hyundai, to provide a credible platform for every one of his company’s widening array of vehicles, from the $15,000 Elantra to the $60,000 Equus.

Conventional wisdom in the industry says that it can’t be done. Toyota, Honda and Nissan all bowed to that convention a quarter-century ago when they created Lexus, Acura and Infiniti brands out of whole cloth to house their upscale product lines and pursue American luxury buyers with a higher-level proposition, complete with separate dealer networks and higher customer-service standards.

And when Mazda toyed with the idea of going up-market in the Nineties, it favored creating a separate luxury brand. After Mazda ultimately backed away from such an expensive undertaking, it didn’t at the same time decide to take the existing brand decidedly upscale. And now the Mazda brand is, basically, what Mazda was then.

Today, the rationale for Hyundai to spin off its own luxury brand remains pretty much the same as for the Japanese companies before it: Shoppers willing to consider a $50,000, rear-wheel-drive Genesis R-Spec 5.0 must be pursued differently, and distinctly, from those who’ll be happy to qualify for a lease on a $20,000, front-wheel-drive Sonata, according to this logic.

But Krafcik isn’t buying the “wisdom.”

“Our strategy is very simple, and perhaps the best way to [explain] it is to contrast it with what others are doing,” he told me. “Lexus and Acura and Infiniti have [established] isolated islands of retail excellence. They have raised customer-service processes in their stores. Unfortunately, those wonderful processes haven’t really cascaded down to their mass-market brands from a sales-satisfaction point of view.”

Hyundai, he maintained, will do the opposite — and stick with a single brand to house it all. “I don’t know why this concept is so hard for people to get,” he said. “We want everyone to have a phenomenal experience.”

It’s little surprise that Krafcik believes the brand he leads can cut against the industry grain. After a long tenure at Ford, Krafcik joined Hyundai in 2004 as vice president of product development and strategic planning. He guided the highly successful reshaping of Hyundai’s U.S. lineup and was rewarded with the top role in 2008, where he has only succeeded to an even greater degree.

Krafcik also has flashed his iconoclastic side in external settings, gaining himself a bit of an edgy reputation in the industry. At the 2009 Chicago Auto Show, for example, Krafcik caused visible discomfort telling an assembled crowd of peers and media that the auto industry was “viewed with contempt” in the United States because it was “slow, dim-witted” and “typically unresponsive to consumer and environmental needs.”

And last year, again using the Chicago show platform, Krafcik generated more buzz by commenting on an extremely generous incentive program by General Motors in January that some feared would launch a price war. Krafcik said that “this is a step backward for the industry. This is short-term thinking in a long-term process that hurts manufacturers and consumers.”

He shook things up inside the house a bit last month when Krafcik admitted that Hyundai had considered the idea of creating a “Genesis” sub-brand around its RWD nameplates that would occupy a separate zone in Hyundai dealers’ showrooms. “We study thousands of things and ask provocative questions about even more things, and that’s probably in the category of ‘What if we did this?’ or ‘Should we consider that?’” he told Automotive News.

But Krafcik added that such thinking was “just scenario planning” and that Hyundai had “absolutely no plan to make any change” involving a Genesis sub-brand. And Krafcik reiterated to me, “There is no plan for a sub-brand.”

There’s no doubt that the value of the Hyundai brand continues to rise and has shown remarkable elasticity already, as the company has dramatically extended its product lineup over the last few years. For example, Hyundai has risen to the top spot in the Brand Keys Customer Loyalty Engagement Index, heading all other automotive brands and placing sixth among a total of about 600 brands across 83 verticals.

So Krafcik insists his strategy will remain to elevate the upscale bona fides of the existing brand rather than to launch another marque. Part of that campaign, of course, is marketing. The use of Jeff Bridges as its advertising-voiceover guy is one way that Hyundai is trying to cut a more “hipster” image than its strictly econobox past might have allowed. So was employing indie film director Wes Anderson to helm a couple of Hyundai’s TV spots during the Oscars telecast in February.

But the most important work may be taking place in Hyundai’s 800-plus dealerships around the United States. Krafcik insisted that what the brand and dealers have achieved so far in learning to peddle the top-end models and to deal with demanding customers will redound to their handling of the rest of their product lineup and clientele.

“What we’ve done in introducing Equus and Genesis to the Hyundai brand is having all the people in a Hyundai store experiencing and learning how to deal with demanding, high-demographic customers,” he said. “That learning is cascading into their interactions with customers who are interested in buying Santa Fes and Accents… Folks who are buying one of our core three vehicles [Elantra, Sonata and Accent] really see the benefit of having vehicles like Equus and Genesis on the showroom floor with [the other vehicles]. It gives them confidence in the brand. They’re classic halo vehicles.”

But skeptics in the industry say this is one mountain that Krafcik and Hyundai simply won’t be able to climb without cleaving the brand. One thing that luxury auto customers are “buying,” this argument goes, is some form of separation from the mainstream consumer, not the opportunity to share exactly the same kind of purchase and ownership experience. Such demands begin with how luxury buyers like to be wooed at all sorts of expensive drive-and-schmooze events that are continually on the dockets of brands such as Lexus, BMW, Audi, Cadillac and their dealers, and carries through to the more intense after-sale customer-relationship management programs that are usually applied by luxury brands.

“The No. 1 hurdle is that new luxury buyers note that they can move from the part of the market where they’ve spent part of their life into another part of the market that has some exclusivity about it,” said Doug Scott, senior vice president of GfK Automotive, a Southfield, Mich., outfit that consults on automotive branding. “Hyundai wouldn’t get that in a single-channel-distribution brand.” And, he said, “People who are interested in the luxury market ultimately want to be pampered. If they buy a vehicle with some manner of exclusivity, they also expect to be — if not pampered, then treated in some special way.

“It’d be difficult in a single brand for Hyundai to say to a Sonata buyer, ‘You don’t really deserve what they get for buying Genesis.”

One top industry marketing executive told me that “it’d be crazy to try to make that [Hyundai] brand stretch. There are very few brands that are that elastic, either way. People aren’t going to buy a $15,000 Mercedes-Benz either. It is just not going to work.” In addition to how the Japanese established separate luxury brands as they went upscale, this doubter noted, Daimler and BMW have nurtured distinct brands for their less-expensive lines in the United States: Smart and Mini, respectively.

Another luxury-brand executive added, “If you’re spending $60,000-plus on a car, you need a different name” than Hyundai.

“If you really want to create a prestige image, why not?” spawn a separate luxury brand, said George Cook, executive professor of business at the University of Rochester and a former Ford Motor marketing executive. “It’s proven to be successful … And at this point, while Hyundai stands for good stuff, it still doesn’t communicate ‘the best of the best.’”

Some of Hyundai’s upscale customers already are voting with their pocketbooks. U.S. dealers sell an option for Genesis that literally swaps the Hyundai “H” badge on the hood for a winged badge used by Genesis sedans sold in South Korea, and one New Jersey dealer told Automotive News that about 90 percent of his Genesis buyers make the swap.

Time and again, Krafcik also gets the suggestion that Hyundai might easily solve this challenge by gradually, yet decisively, moving Hyundai into position as the South Korea-based parent company’s upscale brand in the United States. In that scenario, Hyundai would allow its lower-end models to fade away, while its sibling Kia brand more fully occupies the mainstream market in America as it, too, continues to succeed and expand.

If Hyundai were GM, Krafcik’s approach would be the equivalent of stretching one brand to fit from Chevrolet through Cadillac, conceded Chris Perry, vice president of Chevrolet marketing. So maybe Hyundai will “position it more where lower-end Hyundai models get phased out” and Kia effectively becomes the company’s entry-level brand, suggested Perry; he was briefly Hyundai’s vice president of marketing before he joined Hyundai’s previous chief marketing officer, Joel Ewanick, in2010 at GM, where Ewanick had become U.S. CMO and, more recently, global CMO. Said Perry about Hyundai: “It’s not easy to reposition a brand.”

But such a brand realignment relying on Kia could only be de facto. That’s because, as Krafcik explained it, the two brands remain separate not only in the marketplace but also in many other important practical, financial and legal ways. “You can’t buy a share of ‘Hyundai-Kia’ stock,” he explained. “You have to choose one or the other.” Hyundai’s situation in that regard, he explained, is similar to that faced by Ford and Mazda when Ford owned 25 percent of the Japanese company. Hyundai and Kia are “completely independent based on U.S. antitrust guidelines.”

To some extent, of course, this isn’t entirely Krafcik’s strategy to forge. Sure, the parent company may be comfortable with development and manufacturing of a few upscale models for Hyundai, but top leadership may be insisting on stopping short of the creation of an additional distribution system, manufacturing complexities and other challenges that typically come with creating a separate luxury brand. And, of course, whatever lines exist in the U.S. and other markets between Kia and Hyundai have been drawn there by the chaebol.

Yet some peers believe that Krafcik can, indeed, accomplish his objective of holding the brand together over a growing collection of attributes as well as models. Hyundai “could probably do something in the context of the showroom” to stretch the existing brand into upscale positioning, said one top marketing executive of a luxury brand, “as long as you adequately provide the type of experience consumers are looking for, with the esthetics, the right salespeople and, ultimately, the right type of followup.”

And Krafcik’s ex-colleague Perry told me that, if anyone can achieve what Hyundai is still trying to do with the brand, his old boss can. “It’s pretty remarkable where they’ve come from over 10 years,” Perry said. “So while it might be difficult to see what them doing this, John is a very smart guy and a shrewd businessman.”

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Hyundai Motor CEO says new Sonata planned in 2014

Hyundai
Hyundai Motor plans to launch a revamped version of its flagship Sonata sedan in 2014, its first upgrade in more than four years, its chief executive said on Wednesday, as the company grapples with increasing foreign competition in its home market.

 

Hyundai, the world's fifth-largest auto group along with its affiliate Kia Motors, has only one new model planned for a global launch this year. It started taking pre-orders on Wednesday for the new Santa Fe sports utility vehicle, which will be unveiled in April.

 

The latest version of the Sonata was launched in September 2009 in South Korea and early 2010 in the United States.

 

Sonata, which competes with Toyota Motor Corp's Camry, is Hyundai's top-selling model in the United States and helped the South Korean automaker achieve record sales and market share there last year. It was Hyundai's third-best selling model in South Korea last year.

 

Hyundai's domestic car sales are increasingly coming under pressure following free trade deals with Europe and the United States that have boosted international automakers' access to South Korea's formerly sheltered market.

 

Sales of imported cars topped 10 percent of the market for the first time in January this year, according to industry data.

 

Toyota has started to sell U.S.-made Camry sedans in South Korea and is considering importing cars from Europe as it seeks to boost local sales by 160 percent to 13,000 vehicles this year, and Lexus sales by 90 percent to 8,000.

 

Hyundai chief executive Kim Choong-ho also told Reuters on the sidelines of an industry meeting that the revamped version of the large-sized Genesis would be introduced in late 2013.

 

Shares in Hyundai fell 0.9 percent by 0310 GMT, versus a 0.6 percent rise in the broader market.

 

Source: Reuters

Monday, March 26, 2012

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

PSA: Bruce Wayne's average Batmobile costs $214,700

Batmobile-explosion
Where does he get those wonderful toys? We're speaking, in case you didn't catch the movie quote, of Batman. Specifically, his most famous car, otherwise known as the Batmobile. There have been well over a hundred Batmobiles since the first, a 1936 Cord, was used in 1941.

Seventy-one years later, Bruce Wayne's number-one ride has gotten considerably more expensive to procure. According to the sleuths at Centives, between 1940 and 1970, Batman spent a miserly (and inflation adjusted) $32,000 for the average Batmobile. After that date? A whopping $358,000. Holy Toledo, Batman!

While some Batmobiles are completely custom designed for the Caped Crusader, others are based on more pedestrian production cars... like the Lamborghini Reventón or Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR. Indeed, over the years Batman has, among others, made use of various Chevrolet Corvette models, a Ford Mustang or two, a number of Jaguar XKE models and even a British TVR.

After it's all tallied up and recorded for posterity, Centives guesstimates that the average Batmobile set Batman back roughly $214,700. Remember, there's been over a hundred Batmobiles in comic book land. We guess it takes a multi-billionaire playboy like Bruce Wayne to afford the crime-fighting lifestyle of an alter-ego like Batman.

Courtesy of Centives & AutoBlog

Thursday, March 15, 2012

2013 Hyundai Santa Fe Previewed Ahead Of New York Auto Show

2013-hyundai-santa-fe-ix45-teaser_100385319_l
We’ve known for a while that a new, completely redesigned Hyundai Santa Fe (ix45 for European readers) was in the works thanks to the sighting of numerous prototypes and even an inadvertent leak a few months back.

Hyundai has now released two images of its new crossover, while also confirming that it will be unveiled next month at the 2012 New York Auto Show before going on sale later in the year as a 2013 model.

Hyundai has also revealed that the 2013 Santa Fe will debut its latest design language dubbed "Storm Edge".

Described as an evolution of the current “Fluidic Design” theme, Storm Edge adds some sharper and more pronounced creases to create a futuristic and urban-style look.

The design of the latest 2013 Santa Fe also adopts Hyundai’s new hexagonal grille, complete with a shiny chrome three-bar pattern. LED detailing also features prominently in the fog lights.

In terms of powertrains, expect the current Santa Fe' four-cylinder and V-6 units to carry over but with several revisions, such as the addition of direct-injection technology to make them more powerful yet more fuel efficient.

Additionally, Hyundai may follow Ford’s lead and install its hot 274-horsepower 2.0-liter turbo engine in the new Santa Fe to give it a better chance against the competition, though we still don't have official confirmation on this. Also unconfirmed is whether Hyundai will choose to bring back its third row seating option on the Santa Fe after dropping it in 2009.

 

Source: Motor Authority

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Hyundai lauded for fuel economy and low emissions

Hyundai-emblem-630

On March 9, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2012 released its EPA 2011 Light-Duty Automotive Technology and Fuel Economy Trends Report. The report named Hyundai Motor America as number one in the nation for fuel economy and CO2 emissions. The automaker not only surpassed its ratings for its 2010 model year but also bested traditional leaders Honda and Toyota. This year’s rating marks the second time that Hyundai has earned the top stop in both categories; it also achieved the number one ratings for the 2008 model year.

The EPA 2011 Light-Duty Automotive Technology and Fuel Economy Trends Report identified Hyundai as the top 2010 brand with an adjusted fuel economy rating of 27.0 miles per gallon. In addition to being named the most fuel efficient brand, Hyundai also had the lowest fleet-wide adjusted composite CO2 emissions performance (329 g/mi) for the 2010 model year.

The EPA report also noted that preliminary 2011 model year data suggest that Hyundai will maintain its fuel economy leadership. Forecasts indicate that the automaker will achieve an adjusted fuel economy rating of 27.5 MPG in the 2011 model year.

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According to Hyundai, its model lineup presents a robust offering of fuel efficient models, including Elantra, Sonata Hybrid, Accent and Veloster M/T; all of these vehicles achieve an estimated 40 MPG highway fuel economy rating. In 2011, Hyundai achieved a corporate average fuel economy level of 36.1 MPG and sold 214,132 40 MPG vehicles; these cars represented one-third of total sales.

“The 2011 EPA data demonstrates Hyundai’s commitment to fuel economy leadership and validates the effectiveness of our Blue Drive strategy,” noted John Krafcik, Hyundai Motor America president and CEO. “We are committed to developing a suite of smart fuel-efficient strategies, from hybrids to new solutions in high-technology gasoline vehicles. Gas prices are expected to hit record highs this summer and consumers are looking for ways to cut back on fuel costs with cars that offer improved fuel economy. Through innovations such as light-weight steel, direct injection technology, turbocharging and advanced transmissions we are able to improve the efficiency and performance of all our vehicles, allowing us to achieve best-in-class fuel economy and emissions levels for the Hyundai brand.”

In view of the foregoing, the eco-conscious Angelenos who wish to ease the pain at the pump should check out the Hyundai lineup if they are considering a trade. Adding to the appeal of a new Hyundai is its competitive pricing, styling, and excellent warranty.

Source: Examiner

Monday, March 12, 2012

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Stop into St. Cloud Hyundai!

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Take a look at our great selections on the 2012 Hyundai Accent GS! We currently offer amazing deals on them.
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Friday, March 2, 2012

Happy Friday fans!

Remembering-wilts-historic-100-point-night-o81304da-x-large
Today is the 50-year anniversary of NBA legend, Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point basketball game. What is one memorable sporting event that you wish you had seen or attended?

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Hyundai i-oniq Concept Revealed Ahead of 2012 Geneva Auto Show

Hyundai_i-oniq-concept_f34_ns_30112_717
The Hyundai i-oniq concept, an electric sports hatchback that hints at future powertrain possibilities for the Korean automaker, was unveiled ahead of the 2012 Geneva Auto Show.

Hyundai took the wraps off the i-oniq with a single photograph that was released on Thursday. The car had been teased in December.

The concept, which gets a long hood and a low-slung look, also previews the evolution of the brand's "fluidic sculpture" design language. Design cues include what Hyundai calls a "penthouse roof" and LED headlights. The four-passenger cabin is described as a "lounge-style space" with sculpted surfaces "inspired by musical instruments."

The i-oniq is equipped with a 1.0-liter three-cylinder gas engine mated to an electric motor and a lithium-ion battery pack.

In electric-only mode, the car has a range of 74 miles, but can travel up to 435 miles with the gas engine.

No production plans were detailed.

Hyundai said in a statement that the i-oniq "provokes contemplation on the future of automotive possibilities and a powertrain that highlights one of the ways in which we could power future products — wrapped in a package that exudes premium qualities."