VW Giving "Spanish Pontiac" One Last Chance

Edward Niedermeyer
by Edward Niedermeyer

Whenever TTAC took GM to task for branding run amok and excessive platform sharing, the example of Volkswagen has always been the key counterfactual. With seven brands available in Europe, the Volkswagen-Audi group is the continental GM, always looking for another way to repackage a pedestrian FWD platform. The only difference is that VW has actually been growing. But Wolfsburg’s brand profligacy is starting to bear some GM-style bitter fruit. Skoda has been surprisingly strong of late, actually making problems for the Volkswagen brand in certain markets. Seat, on the other hand, is not doing so well. With only one factory, at Martorell, near Barcelona, Seat has always been a slightly niche player, offering older VW designs with some Pontiac-style “emotional” styling flair and a sportier image. The problem now, as Seat CEO James Muir tells The WSJ [sub], is that

The brand really is too small for this plant

Running at only 60 percent of its 500,000 unit capacity, Seat is too small for its lone plant. As a result, VW is launching a last-ditch effort to save its dying brand.


And make no mistake, the rescue of Seat is a last-chance effort. Muir explains

I think this is the last attempt for the brand. It wouldn’t make sense to think something else. If one would want to get rid of Seat, one would have to give the other party money to take it.

Seat lost about $430m last year, as sales dropped eight percent to 337,000 units, according to BusinessWeek. So, what’s the problem? The European market is projected to contract this year, and Seat isn’t just VW’s weakest brand… it’s one of the weakest brands in Europe. Sales in Seat’s main market, Spain, fell 21 percent last year, and the other Southern European markets where Seat is popular haven’t fared well lately either. And outside of being a Volkswagen for those vulnerable Mediterranean markets, it’s not clear what Seat is supposed to mean to anyone else. Mike Tyndall, an automotive analyst at Nomura Securities in London, explains

It seems to me that VW hasn’t fully committed itself yet to the brand image of Seat. At some point they wanted Seat to be the sporty brand within the VW family, but some of the model decisions don’t add up

So what’s the plan to rescue this weakened and increasingly irrelevant brand? According to CEO Muir

Our clear focus over the next three years will be to improve utilization. One cannot solely rely on cost reductions to make Seat profitable

That means building the Audi Q3 compact crossover in Martorell, and boosting sales of Seat’s Golf-based Leon from 75k units to 200k units by adding more variants. Currently at nine models, Seat plans on increasing its number of nameplates to 40 by 2018. More fleet business is also in the cards.

And though overcapacity of the kind that’s bringing down Seat is a distinctively European problem, the brand’s troubles are more than a little reminiscent of Pontiacs. Skoda competes with Seat in the budget-VW category, and does so consistently better across Europe. Seat is supposed to be the “sporty Volkswagen” brand, but it must compete with GTIs and Skoda RS models. And despite struggling with geographic limitations to its appeal, VW thinks it can solve the brands problems by boosting volume and nameplates. As we all know by now, taking a sporty brand into the mass-market with more models and more fleet sales is a classic technique for destroying its last vestiges of authentic appeal. Just ask the Pontiac G6. Keeping Seat alive is just another step for Volkswagen down the path towards General Motors-dom.

Edward Niedermeyer
Edward Niedermeyer

More by Edward Niedermeyer

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 12 comments
  • Buckshot Buckshot on May 13, 2010

    Seat has some attractive models, on the outside. The interiors on the other hand are depressing. It is a plain, cheap and ugly looking place. To get it more "sporty", the gearing is lower than VWs.

  • Galne Gunnar Galne Gunnar on May 14, 2010

    I think the Altea and Leon look just fine! Should we discuss matters of taste? (No.) Seat could have just the right sporting image, if they made them drive like Peugeots used to (205, 206, 306, 406... ), for example.

  • TheEndlessEnigma Of course they should unionize. US based automotive production component production and auto assembly plants with unionized memberships produce the highest quality products in the automotive sector. Just look at the high quality products produced by GM, Ford and Chrysler!
  • Redapple2 Got cha. No big.
  • Theflyersfan The wheel and tire combo is tragic and the "M Stripe" has to go, but overall, this one is a keeper. Provided the mileage isn't 300,000 and the service records don't read like a horror novel, this could be one of the last (almost) unmodified E34s out there that isn't rotting in a barn. I can see this ad being taken down quickly due to someone taking the chance. Recently had some good finds here. Which means Monday, we'll see a 1999 Honda Civic with falling off body mods from Pep Boys, a rusted fart can, Honda Rot with bad paint, 400,000 miles, and a biohazard interior, all for the unrealistic price of $10,000.
  • Theflyersfan Expect a press report about an expansion of VW's Mexican plant any day now. I'm all for worker's rights to get the best (and fair) wages and benefits possible, but didn't VW, and for that matter many of the Asian and European carmaker plants in the south, already have as good of, if not better wages already? This can drive a wedge in those plants and this might be a case of be careful what you wish for.
  • Jkross22 When I think about products that I buy that are of the highest quality or are of great value, I have no idea if they are made as a whole or in parts by unionized employees. As a customer, that's really all I care about. When I think about services I receive from unionized and non-unionized employees, it varies from C- to F levels of service. Will unionizing make the cars better or worse?
Next