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Marketing/Advertising,
Chrysler
Claim some ground, control that ground and then expand.
Chrysler, wandering the Earth like Kane from
Kung-Fu when it came to brand message after the bailouts, pulled off the first two feats in only 120 seconds when its "
Imported from Detroit" commercial aired during the 2011 Super Bowl. Two years later and now that the brand has a center in the minds of consumers, the Chrysler Group's head of marketing, Olivier Francois, says it's time to move away from the "Detroit" component of that slogan and express the "Imported" aspect.
It is, more precisely, about positioning Chrysler as genuine competition for imports and not
Ford or
General Motors, but rather
Toyota on quality or
Audi on technology. A report in
Forbes said that Francois not only "wants to attract import owners to Chrysler vehicles by focusing on quality, technology, fuel economy and style," but to "take back the lead in these four things." That is the new understanding he wants people to infer from the idea of Detroit - that the nation's car capital isn't just a patriotic rallying point but a lively competitor for established giants.
Chrysler has been running ads that no longer refer to Detroit, and recent efforts have
linked a specific character to each brand - like Jenny with
Jeep and Steven with the
Chrysler 300 - to create brand separation. Francois hasn't detailed what he plans to do to bolster Chrysler's upscale pretensions, but his efforts would be helped by CEO Sergio Marchionne
loosing the pursestrings and the arrival of
strong new product.
Chrysler to veer away from 'Imported From Detroit' message? originally appeared on
Autoblog on Wed, 17 Apr 2013 08:45:00 EST. Please see our
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