Did Saturn Move Up Market too Fast?
Jerry Flint from Forbes: Saturn probably had the latest and best lineup of any GM brand: two well-done SUVs, the Outlook and the Vue, the handsome Aura sedan, a sister of the Chevy Malibu, the European built-small Astra car, and even a two-seat sports car, the Sky. But sales went nowhere. GM had said it will kill the brand, but now hopes to sell the name to Roger Penske. Why did Saturn fail despite a decent product lineup? I would say because they went "upscale." Saturn was created as a low-priced line, below Chevrolet, to take on lower-priced imports. That new lineup was good, but its prices were higher - $20,000 for the small car, $25,000 to $35,000 for the others. There's nothing wrong with moving up-market; lots of companies do this. But it takes time to build a new customer base, maybe a decade. People who paid $15,000 for the last Saturn will have trouble trading up for a $35,000 model. GM gave up on Saturn after two years.
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Road Test Rewind: Bigger is Better in Saturn's Outlook
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Saturn entered a new market segment a little over a year ago when the brand began building the Outlook crossover sport-utility. The company best known for selling small cars and sport-utilities now has a full line-up of vehicles of all shapes and sizes. The full-size Outlook offers something that no Saturn has in the past: lots of style and a vast amount of space. |