Jump to content
Create New...
  • William Maley
    William Maley

    Cadillac's Chief Marketing Officer Calls ELR 'A Big Dissapointment'

      Uwe Ellinghaus Doesn't Hold Back His Thoughts On The ELR

    Cadillac's chief marketing officer, Uwe Ellinghaus isn't one to mince words. In a interview with Automobile Magazine, he labels the ELR as a disappointment.

     

    "Put it this way: The ELR's a big disappointment; there's no denying," said Ellinghaus.

     

    Ellinghaus explained the ELR "was the niche in the niche in the niche," and therefore appealed to a small audience. Not helping matters is the way Cadillac marketed the ELR a luxurious two-seater coupe has proved unsuccessful partly due to the coupe market shrinking. Many customers compared it to the Tesla Model S which offered more practicality.

     

    While there might not be a second-generation ELR, Ellinghaus says Cadillac will work on having plug-in hybrid variants across its lineup starting with the new CT6.

     

    Source: Automobile Magazine

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Just some random quips - discuss!!!

     

    I am amused how Cadillac can get away with cribbing executives of their current luxury rivals...yet when Hyundai's Genesis brand does it; they just get lambasted for it in this forum.

     

    Any level of inspiration is wrong. Johan said it himself. If you follow others you always follow. So why copy the alphanumeric naming style that no one wants, at least in America?

     

     

     

    I have no issue with Hyundai taking execs from other makers.. such as the Lambo guy for Genesis.. my issue comes into being when Hyundai decides to crib from other makers styling... with little shame. Anyone looking at the current Genesis and not able to see Audi is either blind or in denial

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Just some random quips - discuss!!!

     

    I am amused how Cadillac can get away with cribbing executives of their current luxury rivals...yet when Hyundai's Genesis brand does it; they just get lambasted for it in this forum.

     

    Any level of inspiration is wrong. Johan said it himself. If you follow others you always follow. So why copy the alphanumeric naming style that no one wants, at least in America?

     

    Maybe I have slept through missing the bitching about executives being cribbed away. But Most people here do not care about that as much as the style of the auto's and naming convention. I would say I have seen minimal complaining about taking an executive away from another company and far more complaining about coping a style from others.

     

    Either way, If I was Johan, I would have gone with names for cadillac and use the alpha numeric for the global models if market research truly shows that is what Europe and Asia wants.

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    Cadillac boxed themselves in with that dumb alphanumeric crap...

    How so. There is still 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, and even higher.. Even if they use just the even numbers for sedans... U still have 5 sedans... Which is 2 more they currently do... If they need more.. They could whore out the odd (opposite) numbers like BMW with the Grand Coupes

     

    Cool...I see that what you are suggesting to me is that numbers on a number line are infinite.

     CT1000, CT2000

     

    Maybe Cadillac could copy the  Terminator  way...

    T-100

     

     

    T1000

     

     

    and so forth...

     

    Casa, I understand the thought process of alphanumerics...

    But going up and down the number line is still boxing yourself up.

    Numbers are definitely infinite, and Cadillac really does not need an infinite amount of models either. I get that.

    But stupidity in alphanumerics is also infinite. And Cadillac cannot afford infinite amounts of stupidity.

    Im NOT sold on alphanumerics.

     

    The Germans had a decent logic to it, but even them they  screwed it up...

     

    a 318 Bimmer had a 1.8 liter engine...

    a 325 Bimmer had a 2.5 liter engine...

    Yeah, I know...even efficient German CEOs complicated their life when they started over thinking things...

    "Like OMG!!!....we once had a 325 BMW 2.5 liter Inline 6...now we have a 2.3 liter 4 cylinder...we cant possibly call that a 323...becasue its too close to the 325 we did a decade ago and people will get confused that this is not an inline 6 but a 4 cylinder so we will just use random numbers higher up on the number line that has nothing to do with engine displacement....it dont matter that this how how we did it for the last 100 years....all of Europe actually...we will re-invent the wheel instead in confusing the peeps less..." 

     

    The  brand is more of value than the model name is what these alphanumerics are suppose to do...

     

    That would be on paper....

     

    In real life...well, Like Drew said...Cadillac pays big bucks to Johan and Ellinghaus.  I actually like what they are doing, even with the naming scheme....I still dont like alphanumerics though!

     

     

     

    Toyota already had T100 before the Tundra.. adding a 0 would serve to confuse people even more. My point had nothing to do with adding zeros.. and more to the idea that the CT7 could.. if it were the El Miraj.. be expanded into a CT7 GC the same way that BMW has done to the 6Series 4-door GC.

     

    Names mean little to me at this point.. the reason for the delve into Alphanumeric in the first place was to bring more focus on the name CADILLAC.. and not CTS. Escalade's iconic status was a fluke in a world that was shying away from big SUVs due to $3.50+ Regular gas prices from 2007-2014. The Lambdas were created, duplicating the size, for the most part, of the GMTs, FWD based.. more able to accommodate advanced drive-trains for this very reason. Gas prices went down.. GMTs as K2XX became hits.. advances in drivetrains made even the V8 more efficient.. and here we are. Escalade is an Iconic name, like Tahoe.. like Yukon and Denali. IMO... CTS is iconic at this point.. but its also the reason why I think the next CTS will be named CT"5." Because, quite frankly, on the rear of a current CTS.. it looks like the S is already a 5

     

     

    2015-Cadillac-CTS-Vsport-Sedan-GMA-Garag

    Edited by Cmicasa the Great
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Just some random quips - discuss!!!

     

    I am amused how Cadillac can get away with cribbing executives of their current luxury rivals...yet when Hyundai's Genesis brand does it; they just get lambasted for it in this forum.

     

    Any level of inspiration is wrong. Johan said it himself. If you follow others you always follow. So why copy the alphanumeric naming style that no one wants, at least in America?

     

    Maybe I have slept through missing the bitching about executives being cribbed away. But Most people here do not care about that as much as the style of the auto's and naming convention. I would say I have seen minimal complaining about taking an executive away from another company and far more complaining about coping a style from others.

     

    Either way, If I was Johan, I would have gone with names for cadillac and use the alpha numeric for the global models if market research truly shows that is what Europe and Asia wants.

     

     

    Cadillac bringing in outsiders, ones that have worked with the luxury competition, Cadillac can be enlightened as to where the market is going and how they can lead in the future. I think that the move to New York will reap untold rewards. 

     
    Its like the new ads that Uwe Ellinghaus has been putting forth. The New York buildings. The air of city life. The positive parts of grandiosity, of ostentatious(ness) is what luxury is all about. U just don't get that from a broken city in the midwest.

     

    I think that they were OK with using names.. but updated names. The names from the past, with exception to Fleetwood.. really should have not been used. They were OLD.. and depicted a time of old.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    @Casa

     

    who responded to my post, but also in compliment to Suave`s post about copying others to which Casa also responded to...because all same idea...

     

    I know Casa...about why the alphanumerics...

    Before you explained it, I also did.

     

    Not that you mentioning it angered me or bothered me...I just what to point it out that I truly understand it. So we both could focus on to which why you like alphanumerics and I dont...so we both dont repeat ourselves...

     

    Good...

    Cconcerning Suave`s post aboput Johan saying that Cadillac should LEAD not follow...I agree with Suave in that Cadillac and EVERYBODY else that went down the road alphanumerics really is just following an OLD standard...a EUROPEAN standard...

    The alphanumeric naming scheme on a European car was logical in that it told you what modle it is...Model T...but also told you the displacement of the engine.

     

    Chevy A-Body inline 6 equals A-250

    Chevy A-Body 455 equals A-455...we could add the SS if we wanted to as in A-455SS

    Chevy B-Body 327 equals B-327

    Chevy  B-Body 427 equal B-427 SS

     

    and so forth...

     

    However...in America...we stopped doing that...Ford no longer produced a Model T.

    Ford started doing Fairlanes

    Chevy did Bel Airs and Impalas and Chevelle Malibus and then Chevelles AND Malibus

     

    Olds did Cutlass...and then they did 442s...OK...there are exceptions to the rule...

     

    BUT...

     

    I do agree with NOT bringing in OLD names like a Fleetwood....Brougham...Seville...Deville...Coupe DeVille...THAT should stay in the past...perhaps even Eldorado...

     

    But a name like Ciel for a flagship land yacht convertible seems like a marriage made in heaven rather than CT7 or CT8...

     

    El Miraj could EASILY take the place of Eldorado....

     

    Cadillac is NOT...was NEVER...a car maker filled with LOGIC and EFFICIENCY....it was ALWAYS about EXCESS and EMOTIONS

    V16s...Eldorados...CHROME...stainless steel roofs...bling bling SUVs...mile high fins....stacked headlights...both modern like in a 1st gen and 2nd gen CTS and in late 1960s Devilles...

     

    CT4 and then CT6  and a model above that for CT7 and CT8 is waaaaaaay too logical for the brand...

     

    Cadillac NEEDS attitude...

    Cadillac NEEDS emotion...

     

    Numbers dont bring emotion....numbers are science...logic...

     

    El Miraj...Ciel...sell dreams...

     

    Cadillac ALAWYS sold you a dream...

     

    Dare Greatly in NYC sells you a dream...that ELR Americans are the Best commercial...sold you THAT attitude!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Production versions of a Ciel full size 4dr convertible and Elmiraj hardtop coupe would go along way towards making Cadillac really stand out again.. if M-B can build 2dr ht coupes, why can't Cadillac?   Sure, build lots of 4cyl X* CUVs for the mass market lux volume, but build some bold low volume, high end models also...

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    @ Drew.

     

    It is true. Johan was not the one to do alphanumerics  at Cadillac. Neither at Infiniti.

     

    I like what Jo0han did at Audi. At Infiniti his hands were tied. He could not do anything without the top top dogs at Nissan-Infinti-Renault having a final say...and they denied him most of what he wanted to do.

    At cadillac, he has carte blanche....it will be awhile before we see what influence he has had though.

    I think one move he made that has ALREADY impacted the mentality at Cadillac for the POSITIVE was to head out in NYC.

     

    PS

    I made a tine boo-boo.

    I meant to write 454...not 455.

     

    454 was Chevy. I tend to do that often.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    I agree with Drews post and figure the next 5 years will show what Johan has done with Cadillac and the success or failures that go with it.

     

    Going to be an interesting ride.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

     

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling. 

    Edited by surreal1272
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

     

     

    Wagoner put Lutz in charge of product and that's when things started to turn around.  A large part of GM's issue was the corporate culture. Prior to the BK, they were simply running out of cash to develop things properly. Even if the will was there to do it right, the cash wasn't.   I didn't say the person at the top doesn't matter.  They have to be competent and have an actual passion for the product, but they don't have to be an engineer. Wagoner, Henderson, Akerson... none had both the competence and passion for the product.  Barra appears competent and passion for the product, and has the added benefit of having a cleaner slate to start with. 

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

     

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling. 

     

     

    Dr. Z is an engineer. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

     

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling. 

     

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually.  Remember "Ask Dr. Z"  But he is just the Daimler CEO.

     

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

     

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics.  And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks. 

     

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage. 

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.  

     

     

    Wagoner put Lutz in charge of product and that's when things started to turn around.  A large part of GM's issue was the corporate culture. Prior to the BK, they were simply running out of cash to develop things properly. Even if the will was there to do it right, the cash wasn't.   I didn't say the person at the top doesn't matter.  They have to be competent and have an actual passion for the product, but they don't have to be an engineer. Wagoner, Henderson, Akerson... none had both the competence and passion for the product.  Barra appears competent and passion for the product, and has the added benefit of having a cleaner slate to start with. 

     

    I will agree with that, and Lutz did push for better products.  If Lutz was CEO they would have even had better product.  But the trio of econ/finance guys that only wanted to cut costs did GM no good.  You don't need to be an engineer, but I think it helps when a "product guy" is in charge.  Look at Apple when Jobs ran the show, when he was gone it was a disaster, when he was there they had the best products and profits were huge.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Lutz was right where he belonged, just like Ruess was when he was head of product. Lutz was too big of a liability when someone with a microphone was nearby to be CEO, (so was Akerson, but even worse because he was a jerk.)

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Agreed, Lutz was a bit out there to be CEO, they did use him the right way.  It would be nice if GM had a product guru that wasn't as radical (and sometimes senile) like Lutz was, that could run the show.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage.

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling.

     

    Dr. Z is an engineer.

    Fair enough. Did not see that fact when I read about him. Doesn't change the fact that he is more known for his contributions outside of engineering.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage.

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling.

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually.  Remember "Ask Dr. Z"  But he is just the Daimler CEO.

     

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

     

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics.  And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks. 

     

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

    Sorry but I remember how those "engineers" treated Chrysler and then left them for dead with their "hand me down" platforms and tech. They have as much crap on their hands as the old guard at GM. They being engineers make it worse if you ask me because they did not act like engineers where Chrysler was concerned. They acted like bean counters with slick PR. Sound familiar?

    • Agree 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I also recall being him being President/CEO of Chrysler Group from middle of 2000 to December 31, 2005. How'd that engineering knowledge work out for Chrysler btw? As an owner of his E class platform derived 2006 Magnum, I'm curious to know.

    Edited by surreal1272
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually.  Remember "Ask Dr. Z"  But he is just the Daimler CEO.

     

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

     

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

     

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics.  And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks. 

     

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

     

     

    Coming from the computer Industry, being a well educated Engineer does not make the company infallible to piss poor management. 

     

    Anyone remember Digital Computer Corporation? Engineered some of the best storage, computers and other technology that much of the industry has been based on especially the AMD CPU's with their memory management and superior throughput for that time.

     

    This was all done by people who had PHD in Engineering and thought if they built superior products they would last forever as a company.

     

    Bought by Compaq who was then bought by HP. Engineers alone do not make a great company. In the long run they will die without much needed assistance from sales, marketing, etc. This does not mean they cannnot hire and get the right people in place but even then one must never take their eye off the end prize.

     

    MB has done great but is not the best company out there, no one is and eventually they will drop the ball and fall from grace as you perceive as the best luxury auto maker. History has proven that over and over again.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Lutz was right where he belonged, just like Ruess was when he was head of product. Lutz was too big of a liability when someone with a microphone was nearby to be CEO, (so was Akerson, but even worse because he was a jerk.)

     

     

    Yup... having Lutz as CEO would have been almost as bad as having ME as CEO.. I would have blatantly told Toyota buyers who were taking their cars in for the Acceleration recall "I Told U So.. And Eff U if U don't buy Domestic now..."

     

     

    Non-Jokes aside.. yes. Wagoner and Co were heading the ship when it was going steadfast into an Iceberg.. they did what they had to do to survive. The GM now under Barra's watch is showing huge signs of LIFE.. Profitable.. strong.. products best in class in most segments they compete. Cadillac is hindered more by the products they DON'T HAVE than the ones they do. ATS and CTS are blasted for not having enough room in the rear for everyone' s non-existent.. or moocher friends. That's pretty much where the hate begins and ends.. OH.. and the Envision being imported from China despite Americans having no issue with importing everything else from China losing 10,000,000 jobs .. suddenly they are up in arms about losing 100 jobs.. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually.  Remember "Ask Dr. Z"  But he is just the Daimler CEO.

     

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

     

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

     

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics.  And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks. 

     

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

     

     

    Coming from the computer Industry, being a well educated Engineer does not make the company infallible to piss poor management. 

     

    Anyone remember Digital Computer Corporation? Engineered some of the best storage, computers and other technology that much of the industry has been based on especially the AMD CPU's with their memory management and superior throughput for that time.

     

    This was all done by people who had PHD in Engineering and thought if they built superior products they would last forever as a company.

     

    Bought by Compaq who was then bought by HP. Engineers alone do not make a great company. In the long run they will die without much needed assistance from sales, marketing, etc. This does not mean they cannnot hire and get the right people in place but even then one must never take their eye off the end prize.

     

    MB has done great but is not the best company out there, no one is and eventually they will drop the ball and fall from grace as you perceive as the best luxury auto maker. History has proven that over and over again.

     

    And that is exactly my point by bringing up his terrible handling of Chrysler. Being an engineer doesn't mean squat in relation to how to run a business. When you are at the top like Dr. Z, then you are no longer an engineer.  

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

     

     

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing.  Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there.   An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for.   In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it. 

     

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product.   At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage.

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now.  Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted.   I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

     

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat.  Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure.  He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral."  If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

     

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling.

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually.  Remember "Ask Dr. Z"  But he is just the Daimler CEO.

     

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

     

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics.  And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks. 

     

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

    Sorry but I remember how those "engineers" treated Chrysler and then left them for dead with their "hand me down" platforms and tech. They have as much crap on their hands as the old guard at GM. They being engineers make it worse if you ask me because they did not act like engineers where Chrysler was concerned. They acted like bean counters with slick PR. Sound familiar?

     

    Jurgen Schrempp was Chairman and CEO from 1995-2005, sort of the dark days of Mercedes.  He had an engineering background too, but he wasn't a very good CEO.  Dr. Z is a really good CEO.   Chrysler was pretty much beyond saving, and they did give Chrysler the Crossfire and the LX platform, and the Grand Cherokee is still based on a derived ML-class platform.  Notice Chryslers only decent cars are derived from mid 2000s Mercedes.  Perhaps the problem with that merger is Chrysler was still developing their own engines, transmissions and cars, the Crossfire was the only Chrysler with a Mercedes engine/transmission and chassis.  IT was a failed merger, but if Chrysler didn't have Mercedes or Fiat platforms, they wouldn't have anything to sell except Ram trucks and a minivan.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    Sorry but I remember how those "engineers" treated Chrysler and then left them for dead with their "hand me down" platforms and tech. They have as much crap on their hands as the old guard at GM. They being engineers make it worse if you ask me because they did not act like engineers where Chrysler was concerned. They acted like bean counters with slick PR. Sound familiar?

     

    Jurgen Schrempp was Chairman and CEO from 1995-2005, sort of the dark days of Mercedes.  He had an engineering background too, but he wasn't a very good CEO.  Dr. Z is a really good CEO.   Chrysler was pretty much beyond saving, and they did give Chrysler the Crossfire and the LX platform, and the Grand Cherokee is still based on a derived ML-class platform.  Notice Chryslers only decent cars are derived from mid 2000s Mercedes.  Perhaps the problem with that merger is Chrysler was still developing their own engines, transmissions and cars, the Crossfire was the only Chrysler with a Mercedes engine/transmission and chassis.  IT was a failed merger, but if Chrysler didn't have Mercedes or Fiat platforms, they wouldn't have anything to sell except Ram trucks and a minivan.

     

    Except Chrysler was very profitable at that point in time just before the merger.

    Except that "cab forward" design language was the most unique and sexy design language at that point in time.

    Except that Chrysler was spending a ton of money on R&D at that point in time before the merger and many effed up projects came to life. Viper being one of them. The Prowler is the other. The Prowler had NO Mercedes Benz input....THAT was ALL Chryco.

    Except that RWD was on the table BEFORE the merger and THIS was the Charger that was supposed to be with Chryco's engineering efforts...

    1999-dodge-charger-rt-concept-06.jpg

    But because M-B generously 'gave' Chryco their old platform, Chryco had to improvise...

    And Chryco engineers probably did a better engineering job on that platform than what M-B did...

     

    The Crossfire was definitely proof of how M-B viewed Chryco...they viewed Chryco as a second class company...

    It was OK for M-B to rake in the billions that the Grand Cherokee and Wrangler raked in though...

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Mercedes didn't rake in anything, they spent $38 billion to buy Chrysler and sold it for $7.4 billion.  It was a bad idea from the start, cultures were too different, products too different.  Daimler is better off without them, they can focus on their own car brand and their commercial truck brands.  

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    That was because M-B screwed the pooch with that merger...

     

    SMK...look at how they engineered and sold the Crossfire...YOUR own example...

     

    THAT was the kind of crap M-B let happen in their showrooms...

     

    BEFORE that...not that Chrysler was a model company for reliability and for quality, but at least their designs WERE class leading and state of the art.

    Before that, at least Chrysler was spending money in R&D trying to figure out different ways to manufacture cars...

    Prowler was just an experiment to see how they could use aluminium in mass produced cars and how to manufacture mass produced cars withh aluminium.

     

    Cab Forward design was another R&D development program.

    The LH cars were some of the most spacious and comfortable cars in that era.

     

    The cloud cars, the JA platform aka, the Breeze and the Stratus and the Cirrus, never mind the build quality, were also some of the most spacious and comfrtable cars in their class.

     

    The merger of equals failed because the German overlords thought they were too good for their American counterpart.

    The German overlords FAILED to actually use ALL the resources they had at their disposal..THAT would include Auburn Hills engineers and product planners...

     

    After the 1980s...where Chryco failed...the 1990s were Chryco's finest in terms of products...and product planning...M-B failed to capture  this specialty...

     

    And to tell you the truth SMK...M-B has NOT learned from their mistakes with that merger...

    M-B is just producing vehicles in all kninds of niches hoping they would be succesful in them.

     

    Whatever sticks is a huuuuuge success, but whatever fails is a huuuuuuuuge failure.

    But there are many failures....

     

    Smart cars for one.

    The R-Class for another.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Mercedes screwed the pooch in a lot of ways in the DCA merger.  They screwed up the Liberty by shortening it so it would be CR-V sized.  They had no real idea at all what to do with Jeep.  Their product planning was horendous..... it was evident very early on that they had no idea how to deal with the mainstream consumer market in the US.

     

    Can you imagine being in the product planning meeting where they announce "This is your new boss Wilhelhm Johan.... he thinks it would be a good idea to drop your great selling, highly acclaimed, well reviewed family sedan and replace it with a wagon only model... oh, and it RWD... and V8".   *groan*  "Oh, and you know what else guys?  Chrysler is going to get the sedan version, and it will be cheaper and with a smaller base engine".

     

    Benz has no flipping CLUE how to run Chrysler... the talent we have HERE would have been better.

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    It was all just the price. Had they priced it in the mid-50s it probably would have sold decent enough to have a second generation.

     

     

    My dad sees these things go down the line....he and quite a few workers see them as nothing then Caddy badged Volts......and suddenly-we have have flashbacks of an 80s J body....

     

    While yes, it was a bit more different than the Volt, it simply was not enough. Something more "Bolt" like would have been a much better, offering not only something different, but something a Caddy buyer might actually be interested in!

     

     

    GM killed this....simply by just giving Caddy a pretty Chevy....

     

     

    I've seen the two together, I would have to agree with my Dad on this one....

     

     

    I'm not sure that's a fair comparison.  The J-cars of the 80s had similar door panels, roof lines, pretty much everything except for some trim pieces and the front/rear clips.  I think a better historical comparison for the ELR was the original 1975-1979 Cadillac Seville.  Underneath that car was a massaged Chevy Nova platform powered by a Chevy 350cid small block or the unfortunate Olds V8 diesel.  The exterior lines and interior of that car wasn't anything close to a Nova.  My parents actually had both at the same time...my mother drove a 1979 Seville and my stepdad drove the Nova's twin...a 1975 Buick Apollo.  I learned how to drive on the Apollo and drove the Seville occasionally when I was allowed.  It was hard to believe they were on the same platform (the Buick was a tired piece of junk).  The Seville was also a very expensive car (more expensive than the Fleetwoods of the day) but it was a successful vehicle.

     

    The interior of the ELR was quite bespoke for Cadillac at the time and it had a much tighter amount of interior room than the Volt.  The ELR's rear seats were a joke...I openly commented to my dealer of why the engineers even bothered (my friend's 911 Turbo had more rear leg room).  The 1st gen Volt I sat in during a car show was much roomier, but it had the interior of a Chevrolet that had been looking over the shoulder at a Prius.

     

    At the end of the day, the ELR didn't have enough powertrain separation to make it interesting in the new Cadillac (all show and no go with 8 sec. 0-60).  And man was it too expensive (interesting how the original Seville was a sales success at a high price).  My dealer sold a few of them in the first year but now if you want one, they only come on order.  They don't want to stock them.

     

     

     

    Point is they put a badge on something they did not need......

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    As much as we would like to blame the Cadillac naming on Johan, it wasn't his doing. Cadillac trademarked the CTx and XTx series names before he got there. An executive doesn't need to be an engineer to create good cars, he just needs to listen to his engineers and give them the direction they need to aim for. In fact, there is very little product at Cadillac right now that is Johan's doing at all. Even the CT6 is mostly Mark's baby, but Johan will get the credit for it.

    I'm not Johan's biggest fan, but I'm still taking the "wait and see" approach to find out what he will actually do with the product. At the moment, all he can really do publicly, is grit his teeth and present someone else's idea on the stage.

    CT6, XT5, etc aren't even on sale yet and Johan has been on the job a year or two now. Even if they trademarked CT1 through CT100 he could have still pushed for word names if he wanted. I think he likes alpha-numerics because it he is a marketing guru and marketing gurus like to look smart when they design naming conventions.

    I think the type of executive does matter somewhat. Rick Wagoner was a finance guy, and look at how GM produced the lowest cost products possible under his tenure. He was about cutting product cost to feed the UAW labor cost and "managing the downward spiral." If you put an engineer at the top they are going to focus on engineering and product.

    Does Mercedes have an engineer running things? If not then does an engineer EVER get final say on a product in ANY company? I only ask this because last time I checked, Dieter Zetsche was not an engineer.

    And again, he did not come up with number scheme so why bother even mentioning it? You have been wrong on so many things here SMK, it is just baffling that you keep beating the same dead horse here. From being incorrect about platform origins to nitpicking naming schemes in Cadillacs, it is just baffling.

    Dieter Zetsche is an engineer, he has a PhD in engineering actually. Remember "Ask Dr. Z" But he is just the Daimler CEO.

    Probably the person what would have more influence on Mercedes cars would be Prof. Dr. Thomas Weber, and oh wait, he has a PhD in mechanical engineering.

    Tobias Moers, CEO of AMG, also has an engineering degree.

    Head of Daimler trucks Dr. Wolfgang Bernhard, masters in engineering, masters in business, PhD in economics. And Mercedes, Freightliner, and Western Star make the best trucks.

    We'll see if Cadillacs marketing guys can beat Daimler's engineers, around 2020 all will be revealed.

    Sorry but I remember how those "engineers" treated Chrysler and then left them for dead with their "hand me down" platforms and tech. They have as much crap on their hands as the old guard at GM. They being engineers make it worse if you ask me because they did not act like engineers where Chrysler was concerned. They acted like bean counters with slick PR. Sound familiar?

    Jurgen Schrempp was Chairman and CEO from 1995-2005, sort of the dark days of Mercedes. He had an engineering background too, but he wasn't a very good CEO. Dr. Z is a really good CEO. Chrysler was pretty much beyond saving, and they did give Chrysler the Crossfire and the LX platform, and the Grand Cherokee is still based on a derived ML-class platform. Notice Chryslers only decent cars are derived from mid 2000s Mercedes. Perhaps the problem with that merger is Chrysler was still developing their own engines, transmissions and cars, the Crossfire was the only Chrysler with a Mercedes engine/transmission and chassis. IT was a failed merger, but if Chrysler didn't have Mercedes or Fiat platforms, they wouldn't have anything to sell except Ram trucks and a minivan.

    Stop with the excuses. He was CEO of th Chrysler division during those crap years and he led the nickle and dime charge on Chryslers entire lineup. I drive proof of that and have for almost eight years. Who care about one motor or tranny? The Crossfire is proof of how Daimler screwed Chrysler. When the new SLK came out, Mr. Z saw fit to give "bless" the Crossfire with the previous gen leftovers of the SLK. Sorry but your engineer took cheap to another level and no excuse you can give changes that. History proves it.

    You most certainly cannot be foolish enough to think those were Chryslers best years either. I love my car but I know its shortcomings along with everything else that Daimler tried to pass off as better. If it was so much better, then they would not have needed a desperate sale to Cerebus followed by bankruptcy. That was all Daimlers doing and it is well documented for anyone who is not an overzealous Mercedes fanboy.

    Edited by surreal1272
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • google-news-icon.png



  • google-news-icon.png

  • Subscribe to Cheers & Gears

    Cheers and Gears Logo

    Since 2001 we've brought you real content and honest opinions, not AI-generated stuff with no feeling or opinions influenced by the manufacturers.

    Please consider subscribing. Subscriptions can be as little as $1.75 a month, and a paid subscription drops most ads.*
     

    You can view subscription options here.

    *a very limited number of ads contain special coupon deals for our members and will show

  • Community Hive Community Hive

    Community Hive allows you to follow your favorite communities all in one place.

    Follow on Community Hive
  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • "Tired of the Voom, Voom, Voom of a performance Borla exhaust, ... " Nope. 
    • Tired of the Voom, Voom, Voom of a performance Borla exhaust, the wife asked for a new ride. This is my journey of what I experienced in working to buy/lease an EV in 2024. Let me first start off by saying that I am in no way a normal sized human. At 6 foot 6 inches 300 lbs with a 40 inch long legs, I am much larger and big bone than most Americans. My wife being of Korean descent is also larger than most at 5 foot 8 inches compared to the average female height of 5 foot in Korea. The USA census has the average female at 5 foot 4 inches tall and the average male at 5 foot 9 inches tall. With this knowledge of size, subcompacts, compacts are totally out of the question. I know mid-size to full-size is where our EV choices will be. My journey started with me asking myself, what are the Pro's and Cons of buying versus leasing an Electric Vehicle (EV). This image above pretty much wraps up what I came up with for leasing versus buying an EV and there was just one last thing to consider, technology. Battery Technology, controller boards and software are all in their infancy and as such will be probably changing greatly over the next few years. Do I take on the risk of buying and having the OEM stop updates to my EV or do I lease and go with trading it in and getting current technology in a new EV two or three years later? 2023 was an explosive year for auto companies as everyone was pushing to get an EV on the marketplace. Some made it with less than stellar results and others delivered. Trucks, SUVs and cars pretty much allowed one to have a selection of what style of EV they wanted. For my wife and I we had already decided to ignore the cars and focus on the SUVs and Trucks. With that in mind we made up the following list of EV companies to consider. BMW Cadillac Ford Genesis Hyundai Kia Mercedes Rivian Tesla A busy weekend ensued and the experiences of driving so many different EVs showed where some succeeded and others fell short. Clearly some are still holding onto ICE (internal combustion engine) legacy engineering approach and others delivered on what is called a clean sheet design. Here was our weekend experience with the following brands: BMW - iX was a nice drive, interface experience was fine, it actually had plenty of room in the front, a little tighter in the back but for short drives, another person my size could sit behind me and would be fine. Exterior is a styling love / hate experience. Wife is not a fan of the huge kidney bean grill; she said it looked like a pig nose on steroids. The side profile was fine, and the back end looked like it was pinched in molding the design. Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported, overall, it would still be considered. Salesperson was polite and not pushy. Cadillac - Lyriq was the quietest drive of the day, Cadillac has nailed it, fast, solid and overall, a luxury EV ride. Interior over all was good, a little tight on head space with the sky roof, but the seat goes down far enough to adjust for that, interface of the dash was good. Android Auto / Apple Carplay is supported for the 2024 model year but is supposedly going away for the 2025 model year being replaced with the GM play store. Exterior styling my wife was fine with, better front end looks than the BMW. Would be on the consideration list. Salesperson was polite and not pushy. Nice balance of buttons to touch screen. Ford - Test drove an F150 Lighting and the Mach e, interior was fine, she liked the space and comfort. Was hoping for a midsize pickup truck, so ruled out the Lighting. Mach e she liked, both fit comfortably and clearly anyone could sit behind me my size and smaller. Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported. Major dislike was the salesperson who was very pushy and made comments that told my wife he was a male chauvinistic pig. He actually told me to man up as the wife would drive whatever I decided since I was the man. Big mistake as we do everything in equal partnership, so his approach failed to work. Mach e is still in consideration, we will go with another salesperson, maybe even another dealership. Genesis - GV60 / GV70, exterior was fine, though the GV60 she did say reminded her of a jellybean. Interior was very luxurious, but no one could sit behind me in the GV60, would be fine for short trips in the GV70. Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported. Interface was easy to use. She loved the interior but had reservations on the exterior but could not put her finger on it. GV70 would be in consideration. Nice balance of buttons to touch screen. Hyundai - Ioniq 5 SUV. She was not wowed by the exterior, felt it was sitting a bit low, bunker style, yet interior had plenty of room, Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported. Solid candidate to consider. Salesperson was nice, normal pushy attempts to have us make a decision, but as we told him, we still had others to test drive. Nice balance of buttons to touch screen. Kia - EV6 / EV9 - Exterior was not bad, was clearly different than many of the other EVs we had seen. EV6 is super tight inside for me, was fine for the wife as was the interface of their dashboard. No one could sit behind me. EV6 was out she said. EV9 was great, more room inside than our Escalade. Anyone could sit behind me, spacious for both of us and would transport anyone in comfort. Liked the exterior styling much more than many of the others we had test drove to date. Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported. Salesperson super nice and not pushy. Solid candidate. Nice balance of buttons to touch screen. Mercedes - EQS, interior was nice, driving was the second quietest behind the Cadillac. Interface was fine, but lower menus seemed cluttered. We liked the interior for the most part, the hard part of this EV was the exterior lack of any real styling. The worst Jellybean style around. Android Auto / Apple Carplay supported, Salesperson was super nice and not pushy, but as we told him when we thanked him for his time, the auto needs an identity. Wife said for her daily driver, this was a hard pass. Rivian - R1T / R1S - Exterior was a win for the wife right up there with the EV9 from Kia. Interior was also a big win as it was spacious and comfortable front and back. Interface was easy to use, over all a nice balance of buttons to touch screen. Sadly, Rivian is off the list as she asked the counselor about Android Auto / Apple Carplay, no support, no plan to support it. Must buy your apps from the Rivian store, failure big time we felt. Bummer as Rivian was a leading candidate for us. Tesla - Due to friends who have Tesla, even with her knowing my dislike for the Tesla CEO, she wanted to check out the Y / X. Overall the experience in talking with their counselor was good, good people skills, they went over the interface with the wife, in the meantime she saw that while I could fit in the Y, no one could sit behind me. in the X I could also fit, but only about 2 inches of space from the back of the seat to the back seat. Wife asked about Android Auto and Apple Carplay, they told her no plans, they offered her a test drive and she passed. Told me it was a bit weird in how you used the single interface in the center of the dash and a few other things, minimalist failure to her. Pass on Tesla. Now that we had spent a long weekend driving so many EVs, I asked her what her thoughts were on what she was leaning towards. She told me give her a few weeks to digest the information and she would let me know. While the wife digested the EV overload of info, I moved onto researching the EV technology of these auto makers. Auto EV Platform Info 2024.pdf One key item is that I do not want to be behind the 8 ball of technology standards. In this case, I am talking about companies that are on 400V platforms versus 800V platforms. in this case, this brings us down to the following, Cadillac, Genesis, Hyundai and Kia as everyone else is on 400V platforms and already have announced that 2025 and 2026 model years will be the conversion to new 800V platforms. Knowing my wife, one does not rush her, when she is ready, she will let me know, weeks passed by and finally one day at breakfast, she said I have an answer for you. I like the Cadillac Lyriq and the Kia EV9 the best. I want heated seats, steering wheel and AWD, otherwise I could care less about other features. In looking on the websites for my local dealerships, the Cadillac dealership that I have bought from before was sold during the pandemic to Brotherton Cadillac of Renton. So Brotherton Cadillac NW is the dealership near me, and the wife and I reviewed all the Lyriqs and settled on the following:  Cadillac Lyriq Sport 2 AWD Celestial Metallic. This paint color is a color shifting paint that covers purple to silver / grey spectrum depending on the light of the day and especially as I discovered sun versus rain. In the sun it is a radiant purplish color and under dark raining weather a serious silver/dark grey.     Chuck Olson Kia which is less than a mile away from Brotherton Cadillac NW on HWY 99 here in the greater Seattle area had a nice assortment EV9s in Wind, Land and GT versions. They had the traditional blue GT and an Ice Green that the wife really liked. So I settled on the Ice Green to test drive and see what the final price would be. Again, like the Lyriq, the ICE Green metallic paint job has a dominant blueness but turns various shades of lite green to greenish blue depending on the light of the day. At this point we get to the nitty gritty of the dealing, Price paid, rebates, final pricing to determine what the deal ends up being. Over dinner, the wife and I discussed the options of buying versus leasing and to both of us, it made sense at this early stage to lease rather than buy an EV. The addition of the IRA $7,500 rebate also played into our decision. For Cadillac the Lyriq qualifies again for the full $7,500 rebate whether you buy or lease, in the case of the Kia, due to manufacturing in Korea, the EV9 only qualifies for the rebate if you lease. This fall, Kia and Hyundai start manufacturing in the US allowing their EVs to get the full $7,500 rebate if buying. For me, I wanted to see what a zero down Lease deal would be as a starting point before paying down. Depending on credit rating, most auto leases require anywhere from $3,000 to $10,000 down and of course the more you pay down, the lower your monthly payment is. The nature of my work allows me flexibility and as such, I was able to go on a Friday morning at 10am to the Brotherton Cadillac NW to test drive the Lyriq Sport 2 edition. In fact the EV is still on the lot now almost two weeks later. New 2024 Blue Cadillac 4dr Sport w/1SJ LYRIQ for Sale North of Seattle, VIN = 1GYKPVRL1RZ127387 (brothertoncadillacnw.com) Upon driving onto the lot, I parked and saw the Lyriq as it shinned in the morning sun giving that purplish glow that my wife liked. I walked up and checked it out externally and it looked great. After about 10 minutes of checking the Lyriq out, I was still not approached by anyone, so I went into the sales floor and asked if I could talk with someone about a Lyriq. First salesperson said I needed to talk to their EV specialist and walked away, a second person came out of a side hallway and asked if I was being taken care of and I told them what just happened, and I was still standing here. He did apologize and asked me to wait just a moment and he would get the specialist.  A young man came out, introduced himself and asked me if I had any special model in mind and if I wanted to take a test drive. I took him out to show him the one I was interested in. He took down their special code and left to get the keys. At this point, over all experience with the dealership was not bad, neutral for me as it is nothing personal, just business and some do it better than others. The sales rep returned with the keys, he opened up the Lyriq and took me on a tour of the auto pointing out many of the features and explaining the functional differences between how it works on the EV versus an ICE auto. This I have to say was very welcomed as it showed me the man had knowledge of the auto and could show / explain to me how it was to be used. I appreciate this as my wife is not a tech person but show her how to do it and she it set, so this was a good start. We did the traditional driver's license and insurance validation, signed on the dotted line and I then took off for a road trip in the Lyriq. Android auto works as expected, over all interface was easy to understand and use with a nice balance of common used items in physical form right under the screen. Steering wheel had all the expected buttons and dials for using the auto. The Noise canceling of the auto gave it a quiet ride that I have never experienced before and still to this day is the best yet of all the EVs I have test driven.  Negative of the Lyriq is that it is not a true SUV, you sit lower more car like and headroom while I would be fine, required me to drop the seat to the bottom of it's settings which makes my driving position even lower. Knowing that this is the wife's auto, I returned to the dealership to talk price. Here is where things started to go south and why people hate dealerships. I tried my best to negotiate in good faith for a fair price on the EV. The dealership replied that it was the hottest ride available and as such no discounts, you paid the price they had on the auto which was MSRP plus $5,000. I informed them that no I was not going to pay over MSRP for an auto that shows over 300 are available in the greater Seattle area.  The Dealership then said fine, they would sell it at MSRP to me. Knowing that I get $7,500 off I was not put off by this but also not happy that they would not go down on the price. I told them at this point I was interested in leasing and wanted to see what the lease rate would be for 15,000 miles a year for three years. Here is where it got ugly.  The sales rep came back to me and had a handwritten piece of paper with a TRD (Total after Rebates and Discounts) price, Lease money factor number, Residual price and monthly payment including tax. The monthly payment was a little over $1,200 a month. I asked to see firm numbers showing the selling price minus the IRA rebate, tax, etc. all lined up so that I can understand the numbers. I was informed this is how leases are done, your rebate is figured into the residual amount and that this is all the accurate info they provide the buyer. If I agree to this, they can then process and sell me the Lyriq. I told the man that this handwritten paper did not explain any of what I asked to verify and see, so they would need to properly print out or hand write all details in order for me to make a decision. The rep left and was gone for about 10 minutes and then came back with another salesperson who reminded me of a traditional wild west snake oil salesman who tried to use the same paper I was shown and yet tell me I was not able to understand the complexities of leases and should trust him on this awesome monthly cost. When I told him I would not accept that vague random info, he then moved into the terrible game of "What can you afford a month?" Here is where many people either give up and accept or leave as they feel overwhelmed, I on the other hand laughed and told him that I would not play his game. Show me the valid real numbers with a final price on the Lyriq before processing for the Lease monthly amount.  My wife always told me I was a very frustrating person when it came to buying an auto as I would push for facts and have on more than one occasion made salespeople cry when they could not get their way playing their monthly afford game. This is how people get ripped off and taken advantage of. The two folks left and came back with the sales manager who tried again with the paper to spin a different tale. At this point, I said fine, I would consider this as I needed to talk with the wife, and she would need to drive the auto anyway before we would buy.  Leaving the Cadillac dealership, I drove south to Chuck Olson Kia, figured I would see how the EV9 drove again and see what kind of deal I could get. Arriving at the dealership, I saw the EV9 I was interested in on the lot, looked it over and turned around to see if I can get some help and a young man greeted me and said he was with another customer, but would let another salesperson know I was looking at that EV9. Only a few minutes later, the sales rep came out, greeted me and had the keys so he opened up the EV and showed me the SUV.  Here the experience was similar in that we took the EV9 in Ice Green for a drive. As I drove it, I was informed about the various features and how they all worked. An overview that was enjoyable as I drove the near silent EV locally. I did notice that it was not as quiet as the Lyriq, but most would not really notice the difference, everything else on the road was far louder. We returned to the dealership and sat down; I asked the rep for the best price on this EV9 he could give me. He left to talk to his manager. Now I was comparing the price of the Lyriq Sport level 2 to this EV9 AWD Land edition and the MSRP price between the two was within a hundred dollars of each other. The EV9 had a number of features that the Lyriq did not have unless I paid substantially more and go to the top end Sport Level 3. At this point the Kia was winning on features giving it a better value due to the two being priced nearly the same. The sales rep came back to the table with a price that was $5,000 off MSRP. I felt based on internet searching that this was a fair price and felt it was good. I asked him then at this price with my IRA rebate of $7,500 what would a three-year lease with 15,000 miles a year cost me per month. The rep said give him a few minutes to have the manager put this in the system and he would come back with a detailed price for me. The salesperson returned about 10 minutes later with a Deal Sheet for me to review. Here is where the difference became clear between this Kia Dealership and the Cadillac Dealership. The Deal Sheet had all the numbers listed out clearly. Any person could walk through this in full understanding. The lease deal, started off with the Stock number for the EV9, had the MSRP listed, discount, then Selling price of the EV9. This was followed by a blank field for accessories or add on sales items as the sales rep explained. The rebate for $7,500 was clearly listed, blank space for Trade, cash cap reduction, license fee, doc fee ending in a final price of the EV that was then broken down by 36 months @ 15,000 miles a year for a Base monthly rental cost and then the sales tax on the whole deal which was broken down into monthly tax rate added to the monthly lease amount. Residual value at the end of the lease, a residual money factor that is a decimal number used to figure out the monthly lease rate. All in all, a very clear understandable deal and the monthly price for the EV9 was $837 per month compared to $1,200 plus for the Cadillac. I told the salesperson that I would need to talk to my wife when she got home tonight and would give him a call back. As I was getting ready to leave, I realized I had forgotten to ask an important question. Could the front driver and passenger windows be tinted to match the rest of the auto. Due to having had skin cancer, blocking out UV plus just having it darker is what I prefer. The sales rep said he believed so but would have to check with his manager and could call me if I gave him my number later. I left him my cell number and headed home. Sitting at home, I was thinking about the experience at the Cadillac dealership and wondering, can it really be that bad at any other dealership? So, I did a search and found the identical Cadillac Lyriq Sport 2 AWD Celestial Metallic at the Bellevue Cadillac dealership and much farther away at Larson Cadillac of Fife. Off to Bellevue I went. Arriving at the Bellevue Cadillac dealership, I was promptly greeted and professionally questioned on the auto I was interested in. The young man was always polite and more than happy to help me. This dealership is one of the newly built from the ground up dealerships that truly echo's Luxury and what I would expect from a luxury dealership. Due to the knowledge of the salesperson like the other dealership, it started off positive, went out to check and see if the auto their website stated they had on hand was actually there. It was, Identical to the one at Brotherton Cadillac NW in Shoreline Washington. At this point, I gave him the same info I had given the other person to see what the pricing would be. Ten minutes later he returned with a printed sheet of paper, that was better than handwritten. Had a set sale price that was a couple thousand off the MSRP, had a rebate of $1,000 showing a reduced price, document fee, licensing and a theft engraving that he said they do on all autos sold there so nothing I could do about not wanting it. The total at the end showed a lease money factor, term, mileage and residual with a base payment of $1,042 dollars. with no money down.  Now two things I noticed, one was that the IRA rebate was not showing anywhere on the paperwork and the second item was that at least their price was over $200 less than the other dealership. I inquired about the $7,500 rebate and he said he did not know and would go ask. Upon returning he said it was factored into the residual value of the Lyriq when I traded it back in. I pointed out that the rebate does not go into a value of the vehicle but is paid to the dealership and so comes off the price of the auto. Things continued to go downhill from here as I was told by him that I did not understand how leasing worked. His sales manager stopped by, and I pointed this out, same response, I do not understand how leasing works. I informed them that I would need to present this to my wife and discuss it with her. They attempted the pressure response of get her on the phone, we can explain it and you can drive home in your new EV. They were not happy with me and would not let me have the paperwork. When they stepped out to talk, I snapped a quick picture of the printed paperwork. Two Cadillac dealerships, two different lease prices on the identically spec / priced Lyriq Sport 2 and no honest showing of where the rebate would end up at.  Heading home this made me wonder about Cadillac and their EV focus which we have since learned in the news has changed to having ICE and EV through 2030 and beyond. At home, I explained my day of EV shopping to the wife, she was disappointed that Cadillac was not forthcoming with their pricing. She liked the looks of the Lyriq as much as the looks of the Kia EV9. At this point the phone rang, and it was the sales rep for Kia. He informed me that yes, the doors could be tinted and that his sales manager if we were willing to move forward with the deal would throw in the front window tinting. We setup an appointment for Saturday morning to go and test drive the EV9 with the wife to ensure she would be happy driving it. For full details on our EV9 Purchase read this story: Now at this point, I figured I would relax for the evening, but I got another phone call from a sales rep at Larson Cadillac who informed me that the Lyriq I was interested was already sold at their dealership, but he could make me another deal on a like existing Lyriq, different color. I informed him that my wife liked the 800V Lyriq in the Celestial Metallic. The man on the other end of the phone said he could see if they could do a trade to get what we were interested in, but he wanted me to understand that the Lyriq was not a true 800V EV. I was surprised by his comment and asked him why it was not a true 800V EV. I learned and have verified that the only EV GM makes that truly can handle 350 kW fast charging is the Hummers, the Lyriq has an 800V electrical system, but the battery packs are first generation and as such only rated at 400V meaning they have a top charging speed of 150 kW. GM is planning to roll out 800V battery packs starting with the Chevrolet and GMC full size pickups. All other EVs will continue to use the 400V battery packs for now. At this point, I thanked the man for his time and would think on it and get back to him. As a person wanting to be current, this takes me to the Kia EV9 only. I did not say anything to my wife about the tech and hoped she would be happy with how it drove. Luckily that was a success the next day. I have spent half my life on the sales side and in training new sales folks there is a pretty basic 5 step process in sales: 1) Greet the customer inquiring what brought them in today 2) Qualify the person on what they want 3) Trial close to see if they are ready 4) Clarify questions and overcome concerns 5) Close the Sale. To accomplish this basic 5 steps, you first have to fully train the individual in what they are selling. Here Cadillac clearly is not or possibly the dealerships are not wanting to ensure everyone know how to sell an EV. Recap of this whole shopping experience is that Kia is nailing it with a professional sales experience, knowledgeable people on their products and a sales / lease process that is clear hiding nothing from allowing you to commit to buying or leasing a new auto. Cadillac on the other hand has left me with the feeling of snake oil salespersons at both dealerships with vague pricing, vague rebates and me wondering just how much they really want to earn my repeat business as I would love to replace my current Escalade with an Escalade IQ, but at this point, Genesis the luxury brand for Hyundai / Kia will reveal their Full Size GV90 ICE/Hybrid/Electric SUV summer of 2024 and I might just be replacing it with a Genesis. Any questions, ask away.   View full article
    • Rivian? Value? That's hilarious.🤣
    • Let me put it this way, The amount of money I saved with the interior having more room inside than my current Escalade and the silent comfort, It is a win to me with not having to deal with any of the ICE maintenance or gas trips. My leasing / buying story should help enlighten you on why leasing an EV is a good thing right now. I am also putting in a Level 2 charger at the house that will be another story on the research, cost, etc. So you can follow up on that story too.
    • I stumbled upon a small meetup this weekend. There's a new custom/restoration shop about two blocks from my home and I was walking to a Casey's to grab a cake donut for my wife (hahaha) and this is right next to the Casey's.  This grey Chevelle was perfect, absolutely perfect. The plate is the name of the shop, Xtreme (restoration, bodywork, modification). I'm sure this is their show piece, and what a piece of work/art it is! I believe the van is theirs as well.  Later that day we ran to Aldi and came across the International Scout. it was far from mint condition, but it was "pretty good" but even cooler to see it just out and about. 
  • Who's Online (See full list)

  • My Clubs

×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search

Change privacy settings