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What if you were in charge of GM?

874 messages,  Last post on Oct 28, 2009 at 10:20 AM

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What is this discussion about? Automotive News, Classic Cars, Concept Cars, Future Vehicle


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#182 of 874
Re: Ouch! [jchan2] by TIMGT5
Jan 28, 2009 (1:39 am)
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Replying to: jchan2 (Jan 27, 2009 8:27 pm)

Good points all!
#183 of 874
If I were GM CEO by netranger4
Jan 28, 2009 (6:41 pm)
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1. Drop Pontiac and Saturn branded passenger cars & SUV's, GMC pickup trucks and SUV's. Restrict GMC branded products to heavy duty commercial vehicles only. GMC has severe overlap with Chevrolet..too much duplication...badge engineering does not play in the market anymore. Badging the Aveo as a Pontiac model will not prove profitable.
 
Since Opel is the primary source for many Saturn products, drop the Saturn name and re-introduce the products as Opel if line is not discontinued.
 
2. Reduce passenger car convenience and power options. Only offer the most popular ones. Too many options increase consumer purchasing and operational confusion and adds to manufacturing, mechanical and servicing complexity unnecessarily. Many are never understood or used by end users.
 
3. Reduce or eliminate excessive or bizarre exterior colors and interior fabric choices. Three grades of fabric should suffice. Restrict fabric patterns to three per fabric grade. Bizarre exterior colors and equally bizarre fabrics damage resale values.
 
 4. Eliminate any trim line that fails to sell without reservation.
#184 of 874
Re: If I were GM CEO [netranger4] by fezo
Jan 28, 2009 (7:04 pm)
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Replying to: netranger4 (Jan 28, 2009 6:41 pm)

That's not bad. #2 - 4 is pretty much adopting teh Honda marketing model which certainly isn't a bad one to follow.
 
They do need to cut brands. If that needs a government assisted bankruptcy then do it.
 
Right now they are nibbling around the edges. They need to make some deep cuts.
#185 of 874
If I were in cgarge of GM... by bpizzuti
Jan 29, 2009 (7:55 am)
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...I would pull the plug on OnStar. you know how expensive that operation must be to run?
#186 of 874
Re: If I were in cgarge of GM... [bpizzuti] by imidazol97
Jan 29, 2009 (12:39 pm)
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Replying to: bpizzuti (Jan 29, 2009 7:55 am)

>you know how expensive that operation must be to run?
 
I wonder if it's actually a contractor setup where GM has nothing to lose and makes a percentage. Sort of like the departments in a store like Lowes or HD where what appears to be part of the store is actually a contractor/vendor taking the risk with merchandise and all.
 
Frankly if OnStar were priced more like a Walmart product, I suspect the penetration of the potential market would be much, much greater and overall profits higher despite having a lower price to the individual user.
 
You've brought up a good subject and I hope someone has some data.
#187 of 874
Re: If I were in cgarge of GM... [imidazol97] by steve_ HOST
Jan 29, 2009 (12:58 pm)
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Replying to: imidazol97 (Jan 29, 2009 12:39 pm)

And just on the site this week:
 
Can Paying for a Telematics Service Actually Save You Money?
 

 
Not sure what data you can gleam from the lead story since it focuses on potential driver savings, but here's the link:
 
What's the Best Value: Paying for a Telematics System or Buying Separate Services
#188 of 874
Re: Ouch! [TIMGT5] by andre1969
Jan 29, 2009 (2:11 pm)
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Replying to: TIMGT5 (Jan 06, 2009 2:19 am)

Your L300 only managed to produce 180Hp from 3.0 Litres. The same model year Accord had a 3.0 Litre that put out another 60hp (240) and thanks to its 5 speed autobox compared to the L300's 4 speed probably got better gas mileage to boot.
 
Sorry I'm late in responding to this, but I just came across it today. Saturn's 3.0 V-6 was deceptive, in that while the hp might have seemed low, at 181, the car itself was actually pretty quick. Edmund's did a comparison test back in 2000 of 9 family sedans, and the L-series was the quickest of the bunch, both in 0-60 and quarter mile. The results from that test can be seen here, and on that page there are other links to the test.
 
Now overall, the L-series didn't score so hot. It came in 7 out of 9, beating out only and Impala and an Intrigue.
 
And also, this was 2000. The Accord was greatly improved for 2003 (even if a lot of people complained about it being too big; I was thinking that finally, they made an Accord in a size that Iliked!). Anyway, even with the 240 hp 3.0 V-6, I've seen 0-60 times on the Accord/automatic around the 7-7.2 second range. The L-series did it in 7.3. So they were pretty close.
 
The L-series was also on the low-end of the midsized spectrum. I don't remember width really being a problem, but do recall the backseat being a bit tight for legroom. It was probably more of what the Europeans thought of as a midsized car, moreso than what the Americans would have thought.
#189 of 874
Too late by bricknord
Jan 29, 2009 (9:45 pm)
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I honestly think it is too late. Too much brand equity lost with too many consumers. Too much debt, too many excuses. Too many people don't even consider a GM car when they start to shop. Perhaps as importantly, the demographic of those who are not even considering you is a desirable one, i.e. educated, higher income, younger, etc.
 
I guess if I were to give GM ANY long term chance, and I were the theoretical CEO, I would axe everything but Chevrolet and Cadillac, and focus on those two brands as soon as was feasible. This is pretty much how everyone else that you'd want to emulate does things...one lower scale brand and one upscale brand (Toyota/Lexus, VW/Audi, Honda/Acura, etc). The rest is a waste of resources. Focus is what is needed and the best way to achieve it is to have two core brands. I probably also would have pursued some kind of pre-structured bankruptcy. That's the only way to fundamentally restructure fast enough and cheap enough to matter. Yes, you'd lose some customers. But you would emerge with a viable business plan. As it is, you may lose a little less customers, but your business plan is a bottomless pit. Long term, I think the "bankruptcy-phoenix from the ashes" approach is more viable than the current Titanic school of thought (we can't sink/not enough lifeboats/into the fog/refuse to face harsh reality). In other words there are just too many problems with GM internally to fix at once no matter how dedicated or intelligent they are. Too many holes in the boat. They need a totally new, smaller boat. Customers will come back post-bankruptcy if they see that you have REALLY reinvented yourself. As it is now, most people just see this as more of the same old, same old, and hoary GM will continue to croak along only with continued taxpayer infusions of cash.
#190 of 874
Re: If I were GM CEO [netranger4] by TIMGT5
Jan 30, 2009 (1:18 am)
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Replying to: netranger4 (Jan 28, 2009 6:41 pm)

You have some good points, as for the gadetry, it depends on the car. People expect for example that a near-luxury or luxury car to be loaded with stuff, that is part of the experiance and the high price of admission.
 
In truth most car electronics are now realatively cheap to manufacture and install. I personally prefer Honda's packaging style for these things rather than having them a'la carte, I think in the end it makes the car cheaper on a feature by feature basis.
 
But you are correct, in the sense that I am not sure how many people pay a lot for an econo car that has power leather seats, xenon headlights, 5.1 ss, etc...
 
But Mazda seems to think so, hence for arround 24K the 3 can be outfitted like a Lexus or Caddy.
#191 of 874
Re: Ouch! [andre1969] by TIMGT5
Jan 30, 2009 (1:32 am)
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Replying to: andre1969 (Jan 29, 2009 2:11 pm)

i read the article, that model of Accord actually had 200 Hp not 240Hp as in the later 2003. Also Honda does not gear its cars for super low end performance, I suspect that the LS weighs less and had tighter lower end gear ratios which led to its better acceleration. .6 seconds is really not a noticable difference for most people. If I were a car buyer though, after reading that article I would have crossed Saturn off my list, there were too many negatives sighted.
 
Keep in mind that the 2003-2007-Accord to my knowledge never lost a comparrison test against the same generation family cars and even defeated the redesigned 2007 Camry in several tests.
 
The one thing that Honda has always been very good at in the past is engineering its cars ahead of its competition. It is that engineering, along with the fit and finish which makes these cars have a higher resale value and worth the extra money. In a sense the 2008 is a disappointment, the car is still really good but the competition, has in many ways caught up, especially the Altima, the Malibu and the Mazda6 which are excellent products.
 
The Aura is a good start and corrects many of the faults of the LS, it still is not there yet and the Mailbu appears to be a better application of the platform. In my opinion if GM took the funds expended for the G6 and Aura and poured them instead into the Malibu, the 'Bu would be the clear top of the class in the family sedan division, it is pretty close to the class leaders as is.

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