| It is something that will become increasingly common: Japanese carmakers launch cars at home in Japan, long after they have been introduced to emerging and emerged market elsewhere. This seems to hurt Japanese feelings. Today, Nissan presented the Latio at its headquarters in Yokohama, and the usually polite assemblage of media representatives turned into a growling pack. It probably did not help that Nissan had announced that the car "is already on sale in global markets including China, the United States and Thailand." Nissan's "global strategic model" successfully caters to the low price markets all over the world under various names (Tiida, Versa, Sunny, Almera, Pulsar, Scala, and possibly more,) but Japan had to wait. The patriotic sensitivities of the members of the Japanese press also seemingly were rubbed the wrong way by the fact that the car is made in Thailand, and imported to Japan. A bow to Japanese intricacies in the shape of a rotating front seat did not mollify the media. "Those who wear skirts or a kimono can get out of the car elegantly," we were told, but this did not keep an audibly upset reporter from delivering a long rant:
A visibly perturbed Executive Vice President Takao Katagiri said something about diverse needs of diverse target groups, and the precedence of better rear visibility over center headrests, but the media representatives kept piling on and complained about everything from the lack of tire pressure detection systems to the fact that rarely taken option combinations will take a long time until the boat from Thailand comes in.
Successfully. Nissan already sold more than 500,000 of the car elsewhere. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|
No comments:
Post a Comment