Toyota killing Scion after years of slumping sales
Toyota is killing its youth-oriented Scion brand after learning an important lesson: Young buyers simply want Toyotas.
Scion
was formed in 2003 to court Generation X buyers, who didn't like their
parents' brands and didn't trust traditional marketing, says Bob Carter,
Toyota Motor Corp.'s senior vice-president of U.S. operations. It was
known for its funky designs, like the boxy xB, and was the brand Toyota
used when it wanted to experiment with new kinds of marketing, like
pop-up test or no-haggle pricing.
But as those buyers matured, they started buying Toyotas.
Next
came the Millennials. For a while, that generation delayed car buying
because they were underemployed and had too much student debt. But when
they did buy, they liked their parents' brands and wanted Toyotas, too.
"For
those buyers, frankly speaking, Toyota as a brand is more aspirational
than Scion was," Carter said. Carter said Millennials made up nearly
one-third of the Toyota brand's buyers last year.
There
were other issues with Scion. The small, oddball lineup never connected
with buyers and cost a bit more, since features like touchscreens that
were optional on other cars came standard on Scions. Scion's bestseller,
the tC coupe, starts at $21,330, or $2,600 more than a Honda Civic.
Scion also doesn't have any SUVs, which are rapidly becoming the most
popular style of vehicle in the U.S.
At
the brand's height, in 2006, Americans bought just over 173,000 Scions.
In 2015, they bought 56,167. By comparison, Toyota sold more than
363,000 Corolla sedans last year.
So,
beginning in August, 2017 model-year Scion vehicles will be rebadged as
Toyotas. The FR-S sports car, iA sedan and iM 5-door hatchback will be a
part of the Toyota line-up. So will the C-HR, a small SUV concept shown
at the L.A. Auto Show that Toyota will likely make. The tC coupe will
have a final release series edition and end production in August,
according to Toyota.
Toyota says it
achieved what it had hoped with the Scion, including attracting younger
buyers. Half of the 1 million Scions sold were bought by people under
35, Carter said, and 70 per cent of those buyers were new to the Toyota
family.
Katie Seals, 22, was new to the
Toyota family when she bought a Scion xD subcompact about five months
ago. Seals, a television reporter, lives near the beach in San Diego and
wanted something easy to park. She also wanted something reliable but
thought the Toyotas and Hondas she looked at were dull. And she loved
the xD's sound system.
Toyota may not
keep buyers like Seals. She said she liked having something different,
and would probably look around at other brands when it comes time to buy
again.
Carter said the company will
bring some of its experiments at Scion to its other brands. The Toyota
Care maintenance program, which provides two years of free maintenance,
originated with Scion, he said. Lexus is currently running a no-haggle
pricing pilot borrowed from Scion, and Toyota will soon offer an express
purchase program. Scion taught Toyota that consumers want transparent
pricing and want to spend less time buying.
"Scion was the test bed," Carter said.
Sarah
Wall, a 39-year-old marketing and communications executive in San
Francisco, said she bought a Scion xD in 2010 because of the no-haggle
pricing policy. The car is distinctive, easy to park and has low
maintenance costs, she said.
Wall said
she's "devastated" that Scion will no longer be a separate brand. But
she says she would consider a Toyota in the future, especially if the
brand adopts no-haggle pricing.
Toyota's
decision will have minimal impact on dealers and owners. Scion, which
is only sold in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico, has no stand-alone
dealerships. The brand is sold through 1,004 Toyota dealerships, which
will continue to service the cars.
It's
not unusual for auto makers to kill a brand or pull it out of a
particular market. Ford Motor Co. killed its Mercury brand in 2010, and
multiple brands, like Izusu and Renault, have left the U.S. market. But
Kelley Blue Book senior analyst Karl Brauer said this is the first time a
U.S.-specific brand launched by a Japanese manufacturer has been
scrapped.
Brauer says Scion was a
victim of the success of the Toyota brand. The Toyota Camry sedan has
been the bestselling car in the U.S. for 14 years, and the brand has a
full lineup that appeals to Millennials and Baby Boomers alike.
Scion's
demise doesn't necessarily spell trouble for other small car brands,
like BMW AG's Mini or Daimler AG's Smart, said Ivan Drury, an analyst
for Edmunds.com.
Those brands differentiated themselves from their parent brands more than Scion ever did, he said.
Toyota Killing Scion After Years of Slumping Sales.......................... www.redlineautosales.ca/toyota-killing-scion-after-years-of-slumping-sales.htm
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