The Auto Channel
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
Official Website of the New Car Buyer

Goodbye to Dad's Olds

14 December 2000


Here is a special treatment of the OLDS story from CNNfn

By Staff Writer M. Corey Goldman


 NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Cars are America and America is cars. The car is family.
The car is refuge. It is comfort. It is status. And it is hardly ever just a
way to get to A from B.

That explains why the death of the name Oldsmobile, unveiled by General
Motors Corp. Tuesday, leaves such pangs in many people's hearts. From its
Model 37 closed-carriage car of the 1930s to the 1966 front-wheel-drive
Toronado to the grand and best-selling Delta 88, Oldsmobile has been an
enormous part of America's love affair with the car for a very long time.

But like other American icons and institutions, Oldsmobile, one of six car
lines offered within the GM (GM: Research, Estimates) family, is the latest
victim of a world gone global. In today's competitive world, it's all about
value, selection, availability, reliability and price -- things that other
carmakers in North America, Europe and Japan produce in spades at similar or
better prices than GM.

It is also a victim of a company that, by its own admission, has too much
product and increasingly, too few customers. Despite more than $3 billion
invested in new models in the past several years, including the Alero, the
new and improved Bravada S/UV and the luxury Aurora, GM decided Tuesday that
Oldsmobile, as a name, simply can't keep up anymore.

"It's symptomatic of the market as it is today," said Van Wilber, a director
of research with the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers in Southfield,
Mich. "It's getting harder and harder to compete just on name recognition or
simple brand loyalty. I think Oldsmobile eventually realized that a
103-year-old name doesn't necessarily create brand loyalty."


Oldsmobile: Smooth. Dependable.

For years, Oldsmobile's image was that of stability. Big. Solid. Smooth.
Dependable. That was Oldsmobile's niche. And for years it worked. Throughout
the 1960s and '70s, the carmaker was among the top sellers in the United
States.

The Olds Cutlass was one of the country's best-selling domestic cars, and
the name Oldsmobile was the one of the most lucrative for GM through the
1980s, selling more than 1 million cars a year.

But by the late '80s, Oldsmobile was in serious trouble. Competition, both
from European and Japanese automakers and from other GM product lines, began
eating into Oldsmobile's market share like road salt on a snowy day. The
division responded by introducing a string of new cars that simply failed to
entice. Ad campaigns, including the famous "It's not your father's
Oldsmobile," failed to attract a younger generation of buyers.

Oldsmobile as an unproductive division of GM certainly wasn't alone. After
lumbering through the 1980s with a cozy lock on the U.S. auto market, the
Big Three -- Ford (F: Research, Estimates), Chrysler and GM -- began to see
their sales displaced by cheaper and better imports, particularly on the
luxury end of the scale. Honda introduced Acura. Toyota unveiled Lexus.
Nissan introduced Infiniti. And BMW and Mercedes introduced lower-priced
models, flooding the U.S. market with a bevy of automotive choice.

In response, GM poured billions into research and design to produce better,
safer, more innovative cars -- at prices that were equal to if not more
compelling than their growing roster of competitors. They introduced air
bags, antilock brakes and premium comfort packages that gave consumers more
for less than the price of a Honda or a Toyota. And if that weren't enough,
they offered massive incentives to make sure of it.


An identity crisis

But Oldsmobile, as a brand, never really fit it. It was above Buick, but
below Cadillac. It was above Pontiac but not considered as sporty or
youthful as Chevrolet. It sold but one S/UV and, despite ads proclaiming the
opposite, never really succeeded in shedding its image as a magnet for older
drivers. Try as it might, GM's Oldsmobile couldn't seem to find its niche.

The proof was like a flashing sign on the road. Oldsmobile's sales and
market share plunged steadily for well over a decade, dropping to only
265,878 vehicles sold in the first 11 months of this year, representing only
1.6 percent of the U.S. market. By comparison, in 1985 the brand sold 1.1
million U.S. vehicles, or 7 percent of the total market.

"It was one of the brands that meshed with all the others and never truly
had its own identity," said Jeff Schuster, a senior manager of forecasting
with automotive consulting firm J.D. Power and Associates in Troy, Mich.
"There were too many brands, so something had to go. Being that this was the
one that was fluttering, it made the most sense."

While the Oldsmobile line of cars may be the biggest to die, it certainly
isn't the first. DaimlerChrysler (DCX: Research, Estimates) last year
announced that it was dropping its Plymouth brand at the end of the 2001
model run; the only other company to completely drop a line of cars was
American Motors, which dumped its AMC Eagle brand of four-wheel-drive
vehicles back in 1987.

Analysts generally applauded GM's move to shed the Oldsmobile line, figuring
it will save the company money and allow it to put additional resources into
developing products among its other brand names.


Better late than never

"I guess the old cliché applies of better late than never," said Ephraim
Levy, an auto analyst with Standard & Poor's. "The division really didn't
have a niche in the market, and GM's decision to scrap it will allow it to
commit more resources to other lines that do have a niche and help turn a
profit."