It is the car that baby boomers may remember as much for its compact
chic as for its slogan ("Datsun, We Are Driven!"). Now, a new version of
this storied brand may get more attention for something else: its price
tag.
In a bold move into the auto industry's fastest-growing
category—emerging-market countries—Nissan Motor Co. is planning a
revival to this Beatles-era star that might surprise its fans. According
to interviews with Nissan's
CEO, Carlos Ghosn, and other company executives, the rebooted car will
appear in these countries as bare-boned as any rival has tried. And
Nissan is hoping to set new lows for pricing for a global auto maker,
offering the cheapest Datsun model for about $3,000 to $5,000. The
lowest price is nearly a third the price of its most inexpensive car,
the $8,000 Tsuru compact sold in Mexico. In revealing new details to The
Wall Street Journal about the tightly controlled project, Mr. Ghosn
said the company was committed to offering six Datsun vehicles, due out
beginning in 2014, at a price range lower than all but a handful of
smaller car makers in China and India specializing in mini autos.
He
portrayed the relaunch as much as a life's mission as a business
strategy, with the goal of providing poorer populations a greater chance
at car ownership. No major car company has yet figured out how to
penetrate profitably the lowest price segment in emerging markets, even
though these countries already make up nearly half of all global vehicle
sales.
But both the overall strategy and selection of Datsun to
lead the cut-rate charge has already faced some opposition within the
company and is likely to cause concern among some analysts and car
buffs. In its heyday, Datsun was a much-beloved brand, an economy car
that was nonetheless prized for classy designs and innovative touches.
But to have a shot at keeping the price at $3,000 for the lowest-priced
model—which even Nissan officials concede will be a hard to pull off—the
company will have to jettison features that have long been standard in
the U.S. but not in developing markets, from automatic transmissions to a
full supply of air bags.
Inside the company, some executives are
worried the campaign diverts scarce resources needed to bolster
established products in established markets. Nissan hasn't disclosed any
figures, but analysts estimate it can easily cost $1 billion to build a
new car. And while doubters among industry analysts are few so far, the
company's Japanese rivals aren't convinced sufficient demand exists for
such vehicles in the developing world.
"It's a big mistake to
think you can introduce a cheap car in emerging markets and be
successful," said Yukitoshi Funo, the executive vice president at Toyota
Motor Corp. in charge of developing markets, where the auto maker has
bet heavily on subcompacts and pickup-truck derivatives in the
$8,000-$10,000 range. "People want a car they and their families can be
proud of."
That Datsun is part of any Nissan power play,
especially one this large, is an ironic twist for a company whose very
decision to extinguish the car brand in the early 1980s was heaped in
controversy. The nameplate was still popular at the time—it was the
second-biggest selling foreign brand in the U.S. in 1981, with 580,000
cars sold—but Japan-based executives decided that year to stop using
Datsun and replace it with Nissan to unify the corporate identity. The
move, which caused widespread confusion among dealerships and buyers,
contributed to Nissan's decline at the time and is still considered one
of the worst marketing decisions in automotive history.
Now,
the 58-year-old Mr. Ghosn, who came to Nissan 13 years ago to rescue it
from the brink of bankruptcy, has decided to stake his reputation on
this very brand. Born in Brazil and raised in Lebanon, he is the only
head of a major car maker raised in the developing world, a fact that he
says has deeply influenced the legacy he wants to leave at Nissan. He
himself didn't own a car until he was 18, and in many underdeveloped
countries, car ownership at any age remains more of a dream than a
reality. In India, only 38 people out of 1,000 owned a car in 2010,
compared with 808 people per 1,000 in the U.S., according to one study.
Of
all brands, Mr. Ghosn is hoping that dusting off one of the industry's
most recognized nameplates will generate excitement among buyers.
Countering
his competitors' criticisms, he promised to roll out a car that will be
"modern and fresh," because buyers in emerging markets want an
automobile "that makes them feel good and is in their budget." He
describes the new Datsun as one of the company's main "accelerators of
growth," a key weapon in a plan to lift global market share in units to
8% by 2016, up from 6%.
To do that, the car maker plans to boost
sales in emerging economies, which it expects to account for 60% of all
auto industry sales in five years, up from 43% today. Mr. Ghosn claims
that with enough first-time buyers, Datsun could capture one-third to
one-half of total car sales in these countries.
Ralf Kalmbach, an
automotive consultant with Roland Berger in Munich, calls its an
ambitious but necessary move for the industry's big players. Indeed,
Volkswagen AG \officials have recently confirmed the company is looking
into options to enter the low-cost segment but that no decision has been
made. "There is no way around this entry-level segment for global auto
makers," said Mr. Kalmbach. "It's growing too fast."
But even
some corporate insiders at Nissan say the company's goals won't be
easy—at least in a way that makes a profit. Outside of specialty
vehicles—like the minicars made by Japan's Suzuki Motor Corp. in
India—other global auto makers have steered away from the very low end
of emerging markets. It remains the preserve of sub-$5,000 cars with
razor-thin profit margins such as the Chinese-made Chery QQ, Suzuki
Motor's Indian-market Maruti 800 and Tata Motors' Nano. To compete,
Nissan must develop a full line of brand new vehicles, which it says it
can do by 2014 by using simplified designs and an existing inventory of
parts, and streamlining its usual approval and testing processes.
What
is more, in the quest to make a profit despite charging rock-bottom
prices, Nissan officials say they will have to take a bare-bones
approach to comfort and safety, tailoring to societies less coddled than
developed markets. For example, the cars will only offer manual
transmissions and their exhaust systems will be noisier and vibrate
more, much as they did before the addition of silencers and stabilizers,
according to people familiar with Nissan's plans. Datsun's team is also
peeling back the now-typical multilayered approach to safety for
markets that care less about it than the U.S. "If an accelerator pedal
sticks, they tend to overlook it rather than obsess," says Datsun team
senior adviser Tokuichiro Hosaka, referring to emerging-market buyers.
For
that reason—and because Nissan has no interest in cannibalizing its
existing sales—the company says Datsun cars won't be sold in the U.S. or
other industrialized nations, at least not initially. In those markets,
regulatory and safety issues alone would virtually eliminate the
company's super low-pricing strategy. "If you go to the U.S., it's not
going to end up being $3,000," Mr. Ghosn said.
But reviving
Datsun as a cut-rate incarnation anywhere in the world has prompted
worries that the strategy will tarnish the reputation of a spunky
nameplate that charmed a generation of first-time American buyers from
the early 1960s to the mid-1980s looking for an economic and
fuel-efficient option. While most of the sedans were boxy, some Datsun
models offered sporty, technological innovations, including the 240Z,
a coupe which debuted in 1969 with a fully independent suspension. The
Fairlady 1500, which went on sale in the U.S. in 1962, came loaded with
so much standard equipment that Road & Track wrote: "We have never
seen a car that comes with so many extras at no additional charge."
Among
those with misgivings: Yutaka "Mr. K" Katayama, a former Nissan
executive who saw the first mass-produced Datsun roll off the line as a
new hire in the spring of 1935, and was widely credited with making
Datsun a household name in the U.S. "When the Datsun name disappeared, I
was very sad—it is good to hear its coming back," the 103-year-old Mr.
Katayama said, sitting in an office in a residential neighborhood of
Tokyo, surrounded by a lifetime of automotive memorabilia, including a
U.S. Route 101 sign. "But it'll be a shame if they're cheap cars. I had
really hoped they'd make a more polished car," he said.
Other
critics point to a similarly bold campaign by Mr. Ghosn—the pioneering
battery-powered Leaf. Despite great fanfare as the car was rolled out,
the Leaf has stalled out over the past year, with sales plunging to half
the levels of last year in the U.S., and well below the volume of rival
offerings from General Motors Co. and Toyota. "Mr. Ghosn has already
made one big mistake with the Leaf, and he may be making another blunder
with his approach to Datsun," said Hideo Hohgi, a professor at Waseda
University's business school and former No. 2 at Nissan North America in
the 1990s. Nissan officials have blamed the Leaf's woes on a shortage
of recharging stations and higher-than-expected pricing caused by a
stronger Japanese yen.
The genesis of Datsun's rebirth as an
emerging-market brand came after India's top car maker, Tata Motors,
floated plans in the mid-2000s to build a no-frills car for under
$3,000. Nissan officials say the move stunned Mr. Ghosn, who had been
told a full-fledged car couldn't be built for less than double that
amount. Seeing the Nano as a wake-up call, he turned to his internal
brain trust, a group known as the Nissan Exploratory Team, to find a way
to build a better cheap car. The group kicked off a secret project
called "The $3,000 Car" in 2007 and choose India to begin accumulating
data for a detailed analysis of what car buyers wanted most—and what
they could do without—to limit costs. Two years later, Tata introduced
Nano to disappointing sales, blaming a flawed marketing campaign.
To
try to compete on that level, Nissan has pared back on the latest
safety technology and redundant quality checks. "You make a car as
simple as you can and you're going to wind up with an $8,000 car from
the costs of safety, powertrain efficiency, fuel efficiency and
structural data for the platform," said François Bancon, 60, Nissan's
general manager of product strategy and a member of the exploratory
group. "We had to change the recipe, because the same recipe gives you
the same dishes plus or minus some details. The notion of safety?
Believe me, they are very flexible about this," he said.
Some
exploratory group members spent stints of up to four months immersing
themselves in India, sharing meals with focus-group participants and
conducting repeated home visits to learn about their driving habits. One
result: few Indians desired side or rear air bags hidden in the body
panels, but most wanted a prominent bonnet out front as a perceived
crash buffer in case of a head-on accident.
Today, the Datsun
project has a core team of 15 full-time members—including a former
dishwasher marketer at Hitachi Ltd. and a septuagenarian chief engineer
lured out of retirement—who work with 250 other Nissan employees not
exclusively devoted to Datsun. Leading Team Datsun is Vincent Cobee, a
sharp-elbowed younger executive Mr. Ghosn put in charge after he
successfully led the relaunch of one of the company's subcompacts. A
Harvard Business School graduate with years of experience in the auto
industry, the 44-year-old Mr. Cobee stands out even in Nissan's
heterogeneous culture. Insiders say he has left mouths agape by
routinely challenging higher-ranked executives at internal meetings, but
he says he is unapologetic. "There is a tacit recognition that you
don't do some things without some level of friction," said Mr. Cobee.
Neither
Mr. Cobee nor other Nissan executives would discuss most features of
the new Datsun. But according to a sketch viewed by the Journal, the
reincarnated car will have its familiar hexagonal-shaped front end and
honeycomb grille with a blue Datsun badge. Other features may not be as
glamorous. As it looks for shortcuts, the company is considering
replacing data-intensive and layered quality and safety checks with
simplified final reviews based on hands-on inspections. As part of that
effort, Nissan rehired a veteran engineer, the 70-year-old Mr. Hosaka,
11 years after he retired from heading Nissan's March/Micra small car
development program in the 1980s and 1990s. His job: helping Datsun
engineers rediscover how cars can be sped to market based on a simpler
era, when blueprints were sketched out by hand.
"In cars made for
the U.S. market, these days there's a huge mountain of regulatory and
product liability paperwork," Mr. Hosaka said. "But that's not necessary
for developing markets, where they are looking at the bigger picture."
http://autos.yahoo.com/news/for-datsun-revival--nissan-gambles-on--3-000-model.html
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