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Consider the state of affairs when
viewers tuned into the Super Bowl in February: Banks had failed, a stimulus
package still hadn't been announced, and unemployment was surging toward 8%, up
from 4.8% the year before. Escapism was the order of the day, and most
advertisers played right along, with brands like Coke and Pepsi offering
saccharine happy-happy joy-joy visions that jarred with the bleak reality.
There was one advertiser, however, that didn't. In the third quarter, in
an otherwise standard-issue cars-rolling-through-landscape spot, a voice-over
brought into the light of day something that ranks up there with death and
erectile dysfunction as something people don't want to talk about. "Now
finance or lease any new Hyundai, and if you lose your income in the next year,
you can return it with no impact on your credit."
With that bold stroke, Hyundai - yes, Hyundai - an automaker not historically
known for fearless marketing, began in earnest a frontal assault on a recession
that was not dampening consumer enthusiasm but drowning it. But while its
Assurance Program received heavy support, it wasn't the sole route of advance.
Hyundai also took an upmarket route, with its very successful efforts to push
the Genesis, its entry into the premium-car market that was also pushed during
the Super Bowl as well as during the game's female-skewing equivalent, the
Academy Awards, where the carmaker bought an eye-popping nine spots.
Engaging with both the broken dreams and the intact ones through high-profile ad
buys that garnered plenty of positive press was in sharp contrast to the
tail-between-the-legs mode of Hyundai's rivals, many of whom had slashed budgets
and retreated into retail-focused advertising. An example of the
opportunism: Those nine Oscar spots - purchased when GM, then on the verge of
bankruptcy, bailed out of the show. For Hyundai, the overall results were
clear: Sales and market share were up, and its brand image overhauled.
Hyundai's market share jumped to 4.3% in the first ten months of 2009 from 3.1%
in the same year-ago period. In September, while the industry overall
suffered a 22% sales drop in a post-Cash for Clunkers hangover, Hyundai managed
to increase its new-vehicle tally by 27% to 31,511 units.
Scott Fink, chairman of Hyundai's national dealer council, said he has more
showroom traffic today than two years ago. And while his New Port Ritchie,
Fla., dealership used to get mostly Detroit model trade-ins, he's now seeing
mostly Japanese nameplates. Mr. Fink said he's getting "a lot of Acuras"
traded in, along with BMWs and Mercedes Benz cars, for the new Genesis.
"We're really eroding other brands."
Before the recession, "these same people [that] never would have been caught
dead in a Hyundai" might have worried about what their neighbours would think,
said Mr. Fink. "Now people are very comfortable because the brand has been
elevated. We used to be a price player, but now we're a mainstream
player."
A lot has been done to change a very ingrained image of Hyundai in a very short
time. Hyundai entered the U.S. market in 1986 with small, affordable,
entry-level models that were often the butt of jokes by late-night TV hosts.
After early success with these cars, Hyundai hit a speed bump with quality.
The automaker started building momentum in late 1998 after introducing the
industry's first 100,000-mile warranty, repricing its lineup closer to
transaction prices and slashing build combinations. In the middle part of
this decade, Hyundai management ranks had a revolving door, and there was a
great deal of instability at the company. Ex-Chief Operating Officer Steve
Wilhite disbanded all regional dealer ad groups shortly after he signed on in
2006. That angered many dealers and slowed momentum, as the move
eliminated some $300 million in regional ad spending for uniform messages,
though most groups have re-formed now.
In early 2007, things began to stabilize when Joel Ewanick, Hyundai's
VP-marketing, arrived from Richards Group, then Hyundai's creative and media
agency, where he had been director-brand planning. In Chris Perry, the
director-marketing communications who had been at Hyundai since 2000, Mr.
Ewanick found an ally who thought along the same lines he did.
Mr. Ewanick said the two men "share the same mindset" when it comes to
marketing, so they don't need to be at all the same meetings. That's why Mr.
Perry has autonomy in many cases to make decisions for fast-track online ad
deals, and "he doesn't have to wait for me," Mr. Ewanick said.
One major move came quickly. In April of that year, Mr. Ewanick ditched
his old shop and hired Omnicom Group's Goodby, Silverstein & Partners to handle
advertising duties after a two-month review.
One of the team's most important challenges was helping Hyundai to get into the
driveways of more affluent drivers, something auto pundits were skeptical of.
The then-new Genesis sedan started in the $30,000 range and was the automaker's
most ambitious and priciest product ever. (It was the two-door coupe
version that Hyundai launched during the Super Bowl this year.)
Nevertheless, Hyundai Motor America was in a funk at the end of 2008. With
the U.S. auto industry in a tailspin due to the economy, the credit crunch and
plummeting consumer confidence, the marketer's fourth-quarter sales dropped by
41% - more than the total industry's 34.7%. And the company's 2008 vehicle
sales slid 14% from the prior year's tally of 467,009 units - the highest since
the American arm of the South Korean carmaker started selling here in 1986.
The Genesis launch, too, wasn't exactly a huge hit, as early sales targets were
missed and dealers became disenchanted with Goodby's "Think About It" campaign.
By fall, there were reports that the Hyundai-Goodby relationship was about to
fall apart.
This year, however, was a different story. The automaker announced in the first
week of January it was launching the Hyundai Assurance program to let buyers or
lessees return their new vehicles for up to a year if they lost their jobs.
The program was launched with Goodby's high-profile commercial in the Super Bowl
and another in-game spot dubbed "Bosses" that touted the Genesis win as North
American car of the year at the Detroit Auto Show. Hyundai scooped up
sponsorship of the pre-game show, and a trio of 30-second commercials there.
"This is a recession of fear," Mr. Ewanick told Advertising Age back in
February. "We realized that the elephant in the room was the fear of
losing your job. I feel the same way. We all do. The idea of
giving people the option to give the car back if they were struggling . . .
seemed a great way to make customers comfortable and increase our market share
in an economy like this."
In a recent interview, Mr. Ewanick said the Assurance program came together in
37 days from concept to ads on the air. A relatively lean, flat
organization has been one of the automaker's core strengths, he said. "One
of the things that have served us well is our ability to adapt quickly to the
changing economy and competitive marketplace."
Nielsen's online post-game survey found 43% of participants said Hyundai's
Super Bowl ads improved their opinion of the brand. Rebecca Lindland,
research director of consultant IHS Global Insight's automotive group, said the
Assurance plan "made people feel Hyundai cared about their situation - that they
were sympathetic, and there's a lot of human emotion sort of selling there."
She said Hyundai is "certainly outpacing the market this year, gaining
significant share."
Americans were apparently so wowed by the ads and press exposure of the
Assurance program that consideration for new Hyundai vehicles jumped to 59% in
the first two months of the year, CNW Marketing Research found.
Hyundai followed up its Super Bowl gambit with an ad blitz in ABC's Academy
Awards broadcast, its first national play with the Oscars. The automaker's
new media agency, Initiative, Irvine, Calif., had alerted Hyundai to the void
left by financially ailing GM as exclusive auto sponsor of the program, a vacuum
Hyundai will be filling for three years after inking a deal less than two months
before the broadcast. Hyundai also signed a deal with Fox to place its
vehicles in "24" and advertise during the show after Ford pulled out.
In April, the marketer dropped Goodby and moved its national creative account,
including digital, without a review, to Innocean Worldwide Americas, a
subsidiary of Korean parent's Hyundai Motor Group. Innocean also provides
media oversight, promotion and events planning for both Hyundai and affiliate
Kia Motors America. Jim Sanfilippo, exec VP and CEO of Innocean's Irvine,
Calif., office, said Goodby was "a tough act to follow." After reviewing
all the metrics, which Innocean had as media coordinator, Innocean opted to
stick with the "Think About It" theme.
"We love the brand voice that Joel [Ewanick] has achieved, and that's rare in
automotive these days," said Mr. Sanfilippo. Hyundai is "no longer an
alternative, we're a rival."
At the end of the half-year mark, Hyundai posted an all-time high U.S. market
share of 4.2% compared to 3.1% at the end of June 2008. Not only that,
even though Hyundai's monthly June sales slid by 24% from the prior June, it
outsold Chrysler Group's volume Dodge brand for the first time, boosting the
brand to the sixth biggest by sales in the U.S. in the industry's worst climate
in decades. June 2009 marked Hyundai's best monthly sales tally ever, even
with decreased sales. June brought another accolade to the brand.
Hyundai ranked fourth behind Lexus, Porsche and Cadillac, respectively, in
consultant J.D. Power and Associates' annual Initial Quality Survey. In
2008, Hyundai ranked thirteenth in that survey, in which consumers rate their
new vehicles at 90 days of ownership.
The Fountain Valley, Calif., automaker kept the pressure on competitors in July.
Rather than advertise vehicle incentives that can damage brand image, Hyundai
introduced Assurance Gas Lock, which guaranteed summer-month buyers
$1.49-per-gallon for a year. The feisty marketer then jumped the gun in
early July, weeks ahead of the Cash for Clunkers' program, with an ad campaign
saying it was already offering the tax credits ahead of Uncle Sam's July 24
start date.
"We saw the [clunkers] program coming, and we understood the [government's]
rules, so we mobilized the program and had ads running July Fourth weekend,"
said Mr. Ewanick. Hyundai's messages of the early clunker rebates, along
with Assurance and the Gas Lock programs, gave the marketer "a better and richer
story to tell," he said.
In early October, the marketer started advertising the new HyundaiMomentum.com
microsite, a place for people to see what third parties are writing about the
brand's cars and trucks. Ads from Innocean will run online and during NFL
TV broadcasts through November.
"We have been receiving a lot of accolades, awards and positive reinforcement
from the press and consumers, and shoppers are noticing this," said Mr. Perry.
"We needed to find a way to harness this momentum and offer it up in a way that
is easy for the consumer to access and understand."
"Hyundai is really ahead of the game," said CNW Marketing Research President Art
Spinella, and the brand has managed to capture a lot of shoppers who had Toyota
on their lists. He said Hyundai is building its brand and consideration
the same way Toyota did decades ago - "with a good car at a good price and a lot
of exposure with a lot of ads."
The marketer said 60% of Americans today are now aware of Hyundai and willing to
buy the brand, compared to just 40% two years ago. Mr. Ewanick credited
better products backed by the "Think about it" campaign. "It's a proof
campaign, and we are giving people evidence about our cars and our quality and
our styling, and we keep shovelling on the facts and information."
Mr. Ewanick admitted his budgets have been flat and will stay that way in 2010,
give or take a few percentage points. This year he shifted dollars from
print to online, buying more on newspaper and magazine sites. The
automaker spent nearly $115 million in U.S. measured media in the first half of
2009 vs. $107 million in the same six-month period of 2008, according to TNS
Media Intelligence. Both figures are without internet spending. The
marketer spent $348 million last year, including internet, TNS reported.
"Hyundai has been very successful with their new-product launches," especially
the Genesis line, said Alexander Edwards, president of consultant Strategic
Vision's auto group. The sedan and coupe models attract buyers with median
annual household incomes of $120,000 vs. $75,000 across the rest of Hyundai,
Strategic Vision data show. "Clearly the Genesis has brought in a new kind
of buyer to Hyundai," Mr. Edwards said.
As for what rivals make of Hyundai's innovation streak, he said the "Bosses"
Super Bowl spot showing German and Japanese-speaking car execs screaming at
underlings because of Genesis' car-of-the-year win, isn't so farfetched.
Competitors he wouldn't name, including mass and premium makers, are asking Mr.
Edwards, "What do we have to worry about with Hyundai?"
"Everybody wants to find out what Hyundai will do next," he said.
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