History repeats itself
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History repeats itself



Thanks a great story and one I can relate to
I just like the car and there aren't many like it..  I always want what
others don't it makes life differant.  The path less traveled etc.
Allen
56 Crown being repainted and releathered owned since 1976


On Sun, 18 May 2003 10:49:35 -0500 "Hugh & Therese" <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx>
writes:
> The old story goes something like this:  An Imperial owner is buying 
> gas.
> An interested bystander is enamored of the Imperial and asks 
> enthusiastic
> questions about it.  One of these includes price.  His visceral 
> response on
> the answer is, "For that much you could have got a Caddy."
> 
> The essential element missing from the Imperial equation was 
> "prestige."
> Unlike Lincoln and Cadillac, Imperial never truly made it to the 
> exalted
> ranks of being a true prestige car.  It has long been my contention 
> that
> this is squarely the fault of the old Chrysler Corporation.  In 
> their own
> minds it was an advert for the rest of the line up, a loss maker 
> that might
> attract the more wealthy client into the showrooms in order to 
> switch them
> to a reasonably similarly equipped Chrysler, De Soto, Dodge or 
> Plymouth.
> The Imperial never got its own distribution chain, unlike Ford and 
> Cadillac.
> 
> I have been accused of "revisionism" for promulgating this idea, 
> although
> this was a decidedly minority response.  However, exactly the gas 
> station
> scenario happened to me when I was trying to sell a Chrysler 
> Pacifica
> yesterday.  "For that sort of money I could get an Escalade."  I 
> have had to
> attend many meetings about the Pacifica and sit through several CDs 
> worth of
> introductory material.  Each one repeats ad nauseam the idea that 
> the
> Pacifica is up against premium completion - the BMW X5, Acura MDX 
> and Lexus
> 330.  However, despite our new German ownership, the old mistake is 
> being
> repeated.  They can say what they like till they are blue in the 
> face, but
> the Chrysler brand is not a prestige brand.
> 
> There is a 76 year old salesman at our dealership who sold his first 
> car in
> 1952.  He inherited his fathers, and his fathers before him, 
> dealership and
> ran it until the late 80's.  It was in a small Texas town.  I asked 
> him
> about selling Imperials and he said they were a real pain in the 
> butt for
> him.  He was obligated to take several of them a year by Chrysler in 
> order
> to be allocated a larger amount of better selling vehicles.  He was 
> also
> obligated to maintain a certain inventory of spare parts and get 
> training
> for technicians on a car which would never yield back the 
> investment.  The
> dealership for which I work is in a similar situation with the 
> Pacifica.
> They are an obligation for doing business, they are being very 
> poorly
> marketed by a corporate management team that has begun to believe 
> its own
> illusory promotions.  (Let's just say it is even further handicapped 
> than
> the Imperial in that it is a dull vehicle, and leave it at that.)
> 
> Those who do not learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.  
> With the
> right support, the Imperial could have been a strong contender.  
> Lousy build
> quality in its most successful year - 1957 - and an inadequate 
> distribution
> network scuttled it pretty effectively.  How many non-Imperial 
> Mopar
> enthusiasts know enough about your car to not cal it a Chrysler 
> Imperial?
> And if they can't be bothered to get it right, who else might?
> 
> We have Concorde LXis and Limiteds we can only unload with steep 
> discounts.
> Sigh.  The beat(ing) goes on.
> 
> Hugh
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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