As It Tries to Gain Traction in Europe, Jeep Brand Boss Promises 'the Year of Jeep'

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Two years ago, Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne could barely contain his enthusiasm for the Jeep brand and its barely-tapped global appeal. A sales juggernaut in America, the rugged, go-anywhere brand had a stable of models ripe for the global picking. All it needed was more local production, more new models, and voila — world-straddling dominance.

Two years later, and the brand’s growth predictions are starting to look less than plausible. Marchionne hoped for worldwide Jeep sales of 2 million vehicles in 2018, but last year’s sales may well have been a glass of cold water in the face. While the brand’s strategy could still pay off, it’s going to take longer than expected to reach Marchionne’s target.

Forget the minor markets — Europe needs to learn to love Jeep, America needs to pick up the pace, and China can’t back off now.

Jeep’s global sales fell 1 percent in 2017, dropping to 1.388 million vehicles. In the U.S., sales of the seven-slot brand fell 11 percent (after 2016’s record tally). In Europe, despite a product push spearheaded by the second-generation Compass, sales only nudged upwards 2 percent.

The sales results were “disappointing,” said Jeep’s European brand chief, Jeff Hines, in an interview with Autocar. Earlier this year, Marchionne called the brand’s performance “lousy.”

Hines places the blame for the lackluster European tally on a delayed Compass launch. Another model, on sale since 2014, declined in spite of its Euro-friendliness. The Renegade saw its sales fall 4.8 percent in 28 European countries (and 3 percent in the United States).

This will all soon change, Hines said, calling 2018 “the year of Jeep” in Europe. The Compass is now in place, and new model introductions loom. Among them, the same next-generation Wrangler that set the internet ablaze with rumor in North America over the past two years. Also scheduled to appear is a restyled Cherokee, a facelifted Renegade, and — just maybe — a baby Jeep built off the Fiat 500’s petite skeleton.

FCA’s five-year plan comes out June 1st, so we’ll likely see confirmation then (dream on if you think you’ll get one here). We also might get a look at the updated Renegade, expected later this year.

Hines said getting the UK interested in Jeep is key, as locals on those misty isles traditionally stay close to the home-grown Land Rover brand. FCA needs to soften that resistance by communicating the brand’s attributes “in an easy to understand way,” he said. “That’s the biggest challenge for us.”

In China, buyers can look forward to a new model of their very own in the form of the three-row Grand Commander. It couldn’t arrive at a better time. Despite boffo volume growth last year, Jeep brand sales dropped significantly in China in 2018. FCA needs the Orient on board to reach its global goal.

Still, it’s not all dark clouds for the brand. Tentative good news is starting to crop up. Jeep brand sales rose 12 percent in the U.S. in February, year over year, and 7 percent over the first two months of 2018. Canadian Jeep sales rose 36 percent over those same two months. In Europe, Jeep sales rose 68.8 percent in January, year over year — its best sales month to date.

[Image: Fiat Chrysler Automobiles]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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4 of 21 comments
  • Ernest Ernest on Mar 21, 2018

    We don't need more Jeeps riding on Fiat 500 underpinnings. We need a REAL Cherokee... like Jeep used to build. I'd buy one in a heartbeat.

    • See 1 previous
    • Ernest Ernest on Mar 21, 2018

      @Big Al from Oz Odd- they had a reputation here of being bombproof. I can't say how many examples I've seen rolling well into the six digit odometer readings. They have an almost cult following with the off-road crowd here.

  • NN NN on Mar 22, 2018

    sales of the smaller models are growing in Brazil, China, and now India...and that will account for a lot. a new Wrangler will certainly help in the developed world markets. But a new Grand Cherokee would really, really, really help. and a 100k warranty!

  • ToolGuy Some say that white is the presence of all colors. I say that my car isn't white until a human looks at it, and then it looks white. (I wonder how it looks to the lizard currently living in my garage?)Anyway, my truck is white, and my car is pearl white, and my other car is a lighter pearl white, but my newest truck is two-tone. So take that! 😉
  • Dave M. I truly tried to. I ordered my Maverick in a dark blue; by the time they rolled my order over to a '24 that color was no longer available and there was no similar shade of blue. They have a bright blue, but I'm not a fan of flashy cars, so I defaulted to dark gray although white was acceptable as well.
  • Ajla All my new cars have been red. I actually can't think of anyone I know that bought a new grayscale vehicle. With used it is about 50/50.
  • Ravenuer Few years ago, my wife decided she liked red, so we are on our 2nd red suv. The only thing is, in a parking lot there seems to be more and more red suvs!
  • Redapple2 Sorry. I like white. Current car is a deep, lustrous, metal flake pearl white. Gorgeous. Better than the $1300 upgrade on a Yukon Denali. White:-helps with visibility. Safe.-hides dirt.-more potential customers at resale.I have owned Gold, Buckingham Blue, candy apple red (x2). Might do those again.
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