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The Chevy Tahoe Brouhaha
April 10th, 2006Ed Peper responds for General Motors on the GM Fastlane blog regarding the recent Chevy Tahoe promotion that did not go awry. In the promotion, people were invited to create their own Chevy Tahoe television ad.
A fair number of parody advertisments were created. Images of the Tahoe motoring through the snow were overlaid with text reading “Like this snowy wilderness? Better get your fill of it now. Then say hello to global warming.”
GM FastLane Blog: Now that we’ve got your attention
So, a few media pundits seem to think this social media program was a failure and others seem to revel in the apparent anarchy. We, on the other hand, welcome the opportunity to clarify the facts regarding fuel economy, vehicles equipped with E85 capability, and consumer choice. In our opinion, this has been one of the most creative and successful promotions we have done.
General Motors and specifically Chevrolet were early to build the modern concept of branding. Does anyone recall “See the USA in Your Chevorlet?” or “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie, and Chevrolet?” If not, it may probably be in Chevy’s best intrest.
The quintcential all-American brand name. A brand name stamped on almost half the cars made in 1950s.
Which is why it doesn’t concern me to see the buzz at the expense of brand equity. The brand equity has been slowing draining since about 1965.
The stock footage of a bowtie clad truck rolling down an winding road is banal and meaningless. You can turn off the sound and recite the financing offers yourself.
Pink Moon is an advertisment that still means Volkswagen. Not a car on winding roads, but a brilliant vinette about winding roads, or Synchronicity, which rolls down Royal Street. Volkswagens will forever after be about the Road of Life. The only advertisments that told stories about driving, rather than about about a vehicle.
Look at the way Dodge pokes fun at it’s muscle car legacy in their advertisments about the Hemi. A way to remind folks that Dodge has been making V-8s since before you were born. A humerous evocation of the Mopar legacy.
Much better than that horrible attempt to ressurrect the late, great Harley Earl that Buick untook in recent fit of heresy. “My name is Harley Earl, and I’ve come back to build you a great car,” says veteran Miami Vice actor John Diehl.
This Tahoe experiment? There’s no place to go but up.
Bob Lutz, GM Fastlane Blog: Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before…
We can and will do a better job of advertising and communications in the traditional sense, but we need to step up our non-traditional communications and word of mouth, and get our message directly to the people on a grass roots level. This blog is one example — but we need more avenues, and bigger ideas. What do you think?
This comes to me via Debbie Wiel, where she paraphrases the Bob’s comment thus…
Debbie Wiel, BlogWrite for CEOs: Bob Lutz mentions GM’s “financial state” on FastLane blog
I don’t know about you but that sounds pretty transparent to me for a Fortune 500 blog. Translation: we’ve got a problem. Can you help? So far, 178 readers have left comments on this entry. Fascinating to read: lots of specifics, on warranties, 1-day take-home test drives, tips on how to deal with MSM’s approach to the GM death spiral story, etc.
Other than Bob Lutz, I can’t think of any automotive CEOs that I read weekly. Does it help? I think so. When I read Lutz, GM’s products don’t seem half as dowdy as they do on their television commercials. GM is learning to listen and communciate with it’s customers in a new medium.
It may well be an revolution in automotive marketing, from the same guys who brought you a car for every purse and purpose.
One Response |



OK, Alan. I’m finally replying on your blog! Since you are so bad about reading and answering emails I figured I give this a try.
I loved your comments about the VW ads. Not being much of a TV viewer, I hadn’t ever seen the Cabrio one, but the first time I saw “Synchronicity” I got a little choked up–no, the ad isn’t THAT great. It just reminded me how much I missed New Orleans.
VW in America has always had outstanding advertising. Remember THINK SMALL? Yes, I know, neither of us were born yet, but somehow I still do. See some of their great 1960’s print ads at
http://www.adslogans.co.uk/hof/ad_vw.html
http://www.adclassix.com/vwvolkswagenbusbeetleads.htm
I distinctly recall seeing the 1967 floating Beetle ad and I was only 4 at the time. Of course my parents had just bought a 1966 “1300″ so my dad probably showed the ad to me at some point. Part of his program to teach me all about cool cars. That’s why I can recognize a Bricklin…
I even bought one of the 1965 “How much longer can we hand you this line” ads as a Christmas gift for the cousin who sold me my 1973 Super Beetle (limited edition Super Sport model with a heftier steering wheel, blacked out chrome and high end cloth, not vinyl, seats). He says he still thinks the little yellow car is “coming home” to him whenever he hears that unmistakeable Beetle engine hum near his house in DC.
I did a little looking around and found two more interesting bits of VW news. They have a series of new ads on Unpimping Your Ride. See them at
http://www.leftlanenews.com/2006/02/22/vw-strikes-again-un-pimp-my-ride-videos/
And amazingly and amusingly enough, VW is going to rename the new Golf “The Rabbit!”
http://www.leftlanenews.com/2006/04/11/volkswagen-golf-to-be-renamed-rabbit/
I learned to drive on a bare bones, red 1976 Rabbit that was an incredibly fun car for a sixteen year-old to cruise around Baltimore. My younger sister learned on it too and we hadn’t even worn out the clutch whenever my dad finally decided to sell it about ten years later. Now THAT was a great car. Hard to believe my $18,000 German luxury vehicle (AKA 2002 2.0L Jetta GL wagon) is its descendent. Let’s hope it continues to be as much fun and as reliable as the VWs I grew up in!
I **heart** Volkswagens.
So when will we all hear about the yacht buying excursion, anyway?