Why Australians fell out of love with Holdens
- Written by Gary Mortimer, Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology
The jingle used to tell us we loved “football, meat pies, kangaroos and Holden cars”.
These days we love[1] Japanese utes and small Toyotas, Hyundais and Mazdas more.
Monday’s announcement[2] from General Motors, Holden’s US parent, that the brand brand will be “retired” and local design and engineering operations cease is doubtless based on strong financial reasoning, but poor brand management is also part of it.
The numbers didn’t stack up
Sales of Holden vehicles and a shift[3] from large sedans to small and medium sized cars and sportscars and SUVs didn’t help.
At its peak, between 2002 and 2005, Holden sold more than 170,000[4] vehicles a year. By 2019 it sold less than 40,000; none of them made here.
In November, it sold just 2,668 cars, down from 5,125 the previous November.
Global competition from Japan, Korea and Thailand for brands like Kia and Hyundai, added to its woes[5].
Internationally, Holden was only present in two small markets, Australian and New Zealand, which between them don’t even account for 1% of global sales, and require steering columns on the right hand side of car. It has made Holdens hard to internationalise.
Wikimedia[6]Monday’s press release[7] blamed “highly fragmented right-hand-drive markets”, the cost of growing the brand, and the unlikelihood of achieving a decent return on the investment if it tried.
General Motors isn’t even going to bother to sell foreign-made sedans in Australia, although it will continue to sell speciality vehicles.
Yet its brand is ingrained in Australian history.
Holden defined a brand
AAPBrands are a combination of tangible and intangible elements. Among the tangible elements are visual design elements, like logos, colour, images and packaging, such as the Holden “Lion and Stone” and distinctive product features, such as the feel of the leather, the sound of a roaring V8 and the quality of the duco.
But that is only part of what makes a brand. Tangible elements can be easily copied and are a feature of nearly all products. The challenge is to develop and leverage intangible qualities.
These can include experiences (such as service) and feelings such as reputation, personality and values[8].
Nostalgia is a Holden value. It’s rich history, dating back to 1856, has helped define the brand.
Many of us who grew up in the 1970s remember family car trips to the beach in a Kingswood station wagon. In the 1980s, we watched Brock, Richards and Perkins[9] win Bathurst. Movies like Puberty Blues[10] made the Holden Sandman panel van every young man’s dream, and every parent’s worse nightmare.
References
- ^ love (www.caradvice.com.au)
- ^ announcement (media.gm.com)
- ^ shift (www.budgetdirect.com.au)
- ^ 170,000 (www.whichcar.com.au)
- ^ added to its woes (www.carsguide.com.au)
- ^ Wikimedia (upload.wikimedia.org)
- ^ press release (media.gm.com)
- ^ values (www.ignytebrands.com)
- ^ Brock, Richards and Perkins (www.mount-panorama.com.au)
- ^ Puberty Blues (www.imcdb.org)
- ^ Australian (www.cmo.com.au)
Authors: Gary Mortimer, Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology
Read more https://theconversation.com/why-australians-fell-out-of-love-with-holdens-131907