On a warm Spring day in 1991, my brother Tim visited Rochester with his first new car – a Saturn S series coupe. We took it out on Kings Highway through Durand Park for a road test. Drove ok. But it looked different and Tim was really proud of it. He had a story to tell, something about cookies and a song from the dealer. He was a Saturn brand evangelist.
Tim’s evangelism lasted another year perhaps. The Saturn brand meanwhile soldiered on, right up to this past Wednesday when GM announced that a planned takeover by auto mogul Roger Penske had fallen through. It appears the Saturn division will close next year.
Even before the current auto slump, Saturn had become a staple of MBA case studies on how to kill a promising business. Conventional wisdom has it that the meddling execs of GM killed the quirkiness in an effort to lower costs. The predictable cycle commenced, with loyal owners spun off each year.
I’d like to introduce an alternate theory: Saturn was dead on arrival. That it even got off the ground is a testament to brilliant advertising from Hal Riney and a decent dealer network. The problem was the cars – uniquely styled at times, but nothing special in performance, quality, or safety. Saturn created a compelling brand narrative, but not a good product.
Saturn has failed spectacularly, but not uniquely. Countless brands try to create a “brand experience” before doing the hard work of legitimate differentiation. My favorite category is airtravel – remember Song or Ted (we want to be like Jet Blue, can we do it without actually changing?).
Sadly, agencies and marketers are often asked to create the story and then canned when it doesn’t connect. Wish I had a more uplifting message. Cheers!
mj
P.S. while appreciating some of Hal Riney’s Saturn tv work, came across his work helping to elect Ronald Reagan. Politics aside, far more memorable than anything I’ve seen lately from candidates.
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@P.S.
Do any of the big agencies still work with politicians on TV ads, or is it pretty much small specialty shops that work off a formula? And do whatever the politicians’ advisers say? That’s my perception. No Hal Riney’s creating real effective ads.
I guess there’s also a parallel between Saturn and politicians. Politicians sell themselves as being everything the people want and make every effort to separate themselves from their opponents, but how many really “shake things up” once elected? Maybe at first, but eventually they all seem to assimilate. My 2¢.
interesting post matt. not surprised GM effed it up. look what they did to saab. i would never have bought my mini had they not sucked the life out of that once-iconic brand.
btw, remember this “people first” ad? still one of the best ever:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_oWmY_mkCA&feature=related
(believe the account had moved from riney to goodby at this point)