View Single Post
      02-27-2021, 12:38 PM   #71
Artemis
Moderator
Artemis's Avatar
29634
Rep
13,134
Posts

Drives: BMW M2 Competition
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Belgium

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
What’s clear is that both men feel a huge amount of responsibility towards BMW. Both are well aware of the history of the brand – indeed, they’ve justified their current strategy by looking back to the 1960s, when BMW pioneered a sports car that came with a healthy dose of limousine. Cars like the 1500, which set the standard for the company for years to come, right up to today.
These days, the fragmentation of what customers want (and Dukec is clear on this: he’s aiming for customers to want his cars, not need them) means that van Hooydonk and Dukec have identified two groups they want to appeal to. They’ve called them the elegant creators and the expressive performers. While it’s tempting to dismiss this as marketing hyperbole, it does make sense when you view it in terms of the product. The creators tend to sit in the odd-numbered cars – the traditional 3, 5 and 7 Series – while the performers are the even-numbered buyers, with cars like the M4 or X6.
It boils down to how people will use their cars. As Dukec has it, the creators want a car “more focused on the cabin, but it still has to have a fluid silhouette and nice proportions”, while the performers don’t want such a practical car. The cabin will be smaller, like a suit that’s “not the most comfortable one, but it’s the one in which you look the best. They want a car that’s almost irrational.”.
Making an artificial distinction between "elegant creators" and "expressive performers" ?

Sounds indeed like marketing hyperbole.

2003:
Name:  BMW_E46_M3_CSL.jpg
Views: 1849
Size:  288.6 KB

2020:
Name:  G82_M4_SideView.jpg
Views: 2023
Size:  293.8 KB
__________________
///M is art Artemis
Appreciate 2
stein_325i25086.00
chris7197345.50