RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Toyota’

Is Toyota ‘doing an Audi’ in the US?

The problems Toyota is having with alleged ‘unintended acceleration’ related to mechanics – as opposed to the floor mat problem – in the US sound reminiscent of what some may recall as a similar problem for Audi in the 1980s. Except that Audi’s ‘similar problem’ back then – exposed on an influential US TV programme called ’60 minutes’ – turned out not to be a mechanical problem. The TV programme had misled (it turned out to be driver error connected with the positioning of the pedals), but such was the hullabaloo, that Audi sales in the US subsequently collapsed and took a decade to recover.


The difference this time with Toyota may be that there is actually a mechanical fault with sticky accelerator pedals. The publicity will be a big worry for the company, but at least it is now acting. And if a car company addresses the issue openly, quickly and sorts it out, doesn’t that actually improve its image? Can it be turned around into a positive, public relations disaster avoided? Maybe, but Toyota’s hitherto squeaky clean  reputation for industry-leading quality – a massive selling point for the brand – is taking a dent.

US: Toyota stops some model sales, suspends output

Make or brake

Toyota suffers another blow to its already wavering reputation

IN A race that matched Formula One for its predictability, Toyota Motor Corporation slipped past General Motors just under two years ago to become the world’s biggest carmaker. But even as Toyota built up the revs, all has not been well. The latest setback came on Tuesday January 26th when the firm announced that it would halt production temporarily at six assembly plants in north America and suspend sales of eight of its most popular models, including the Camry, the best-selling car in the United States.

Toyota’s latest troubles in America had begun to surface a week before when it announced a huge recall of 2.3m vehicles to fix accelerator pedals that could jam open, sending cars racing forwards without warning. Toyota is mulling a similar move in Europe that could affect a further 2m cars. The firm’s decision to stop sales and production in America is a substantial blow for the stumbling car giant. The output of these plants accounted for some 60% of sales in 2009. The news put a banana skin under its share price. …

Toyota to boost hybrid production: Report

Toyota Motor Corp plans to double its production of hybrid cars to one million units in 2011, economic daily Nikkei reported Monday.
Toyota plans to add about 10 new hybrid models from minivans, subcompacts to luxury cars in the next few years to its existing lineup, Nikkei said. The carmaker also plans to increase the number [...]

Toyota Yaris Commercial Banned In Australia

The Australians are pumping the brakes on an “incestuous” new ad for Toyota.
Controversy’s abrewing head Down Under after Toyota fan commercial contest has led to one of the company’s ads being yanked from Australian TV. The Clever Film Competition solicited contestants to come up with 30-second commercial clips for the Toyota Yaris, awarding $7000 to [...]

Alcatel-Lucent, Toyota Drive LTE Connected Car into Concept Spotlight

Toyota, Alcatel-Lucent and other companies banded together to create the LTE Connected Car, a concept vehicle that went on display in New York on Nov. 3. The vehicle combines an LTE broadband radio link with in-car Wi-Fi to bring the power of cloud computing to driver and passengers, giving them access to online content such as music, YouTube and games through four individual touch screens.

It’s not all about multimedia, however. The concept car also supplies the driver with real-time GPS updates and information on nearby points of interest. The vehicle also offers continuous status updates about the car, using sensors to feed data to the driver about tire pressure and other maintenance issues. Although the concept car’s creators were reluctant to name specific automotive companies, apparently they are in talks to extend some of the technology seen here to real-life vehicles at some point in the future.
– …


Toyota to quit Formula One: reports

Toyota Motor was expected to announce Wednesday it is quitting Formula One, joining an exodus of Japanese automakers from the multi-million dollar sport due to the global economic crisis. Toyota announced it would hold a briefing on its motorsports activities at 5pm (0800 GMT) Wednesday,

24 hours in sport pictures

The best sports pictures from around the globe in the last 24 hours


Is small the new big?

Are relatively mature car markets going to become fertile ground for highly specified small cars? It is perhaps a niche that has proven difficult to crack for manufacturers in the past. The Mercedes A-class, Daimler Smart and Audi A2 spring to mind. Each of those had a rough ride – for different reasons, perhaps – but the highly specced small car area is one to be treated with care.


BMW handled it well with Mini, but that success based on a modern take for a retro-brand is something of a special case and perhaps serves as a lesson on how difficult it is to hit the premium small car sweet spot.


However, markets change and it could be that the market environment is becoming better for well specified small cars. The regulatory/tax framework in urban areas, volatile/high fuel prices and changing societal attitudes to vehicles generally are all perhaps pointing towards higher sales of small cars.


And a proportion of the ‘new’ consumers who consider small(er) cars will want something comfortable and relatively highly specified. In the future, the argument goes, the small car area will be less dominated by low-cost driven ‘econoboxes’.


In this context, Toyota’s initiative with its IQ small car is certainly an interesting one. The car has attracted some flak on the basis of its relatively high price, but some people will be prepared to pay a little more for something that isn’t a low-cost Aygo. There are discrete customer sets for those two small cars with their different prices, spec and ‘feel’.


Things can get even more interesting when considering ‘sub-brands’, which is a part of Toyota’s strategy with IQ.


Even more intriguingly, Toyota is planning a collaboration with Aston Martin for a ‘luxury commuter vehicle’.


As ever, execution and properly aligning brand values with the product proposition and price will determine how successful future products will be. Is this a step too far for Aston Martin? Maybe not, but it is a gamble. If they get it wrong, it would be an expensive mistake with adverse consequences for brand image. At least they are trying new things and I think that is to be applauded. Collaborating like this also keeps costs down for Aston while Toyota gets an association that is potentially very positive indeed.


But the really big question is a great big fat unknown: just how many people out there will opt for a highly specced small car?

BELGIUM: Toyota gives Aston Martin an iQ boost