Monday, June 30, 2014

Owned by the Chinese, Volvo Swears It's More Swedish Than Ever (BusinessWeek)



Volvo’s latest television ad is less about horsepower and gas mileage than it is about nostalgia. A woman behind the wheel of an SUV recalls when she was a little girl, sitting in the rear-facing seat of her parents’ boxy Volvo wagon. “I loved every minute of it,” the voice-over says. “Then you grow up, and there’s no going back. But it’s OK. It’s just a new kind of adventure. And really, who wants to look backwards, when you can look forward.”
Looking backwards may be just what Volvo needs to do to reverse more than a decade of declining sales in the U.S., its largest market. Through the 1990s, millions of Americans chose its quirky, square station wagons and sedans over sleeker luxury cars, attracted by Volvo’s safety features and uncluttered, Swedish design. Then, from 1999 to 2010 when Ford (F) owned the brand, Volvo lost some of the Scandinavian practicality that set it apart from other luxury and near-luxury cars. Sales in the U.S. fell 55 percent, to 61,233, from 2003 to 2013.
“We’ve done a relatively poor job trying to blend in,” says Alain Visser, senior vice president for marketing, sales, and customer service at Volvo. “And now we’re saying, ‘We don’t want to blend in. We are different.’ ”

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