No Fixed Abode: Plate Tectonics of the Prestige Drift

Jack Baruth
by Jack Baruth

It’s June, which means it’s the time of year for my son to visit his grandfather in South Carolina and spend a week at golf camp. Sometimes I have to spend the week working, sometimes I spent it traveling, and sometimes I get to spend it hanging out with my dad and his friends.

Most of them are cast from the same group of molds: either self-made or with only minor family advantages, a long history of executive positions or highly remunerative small business ownership, more millions left in the bank than they have years left in the tank. They’re not interested in art or literature, they have a casual and hilarious disrespect for modern social ideas, they maintain a sort of gruff good humor about everything from heart attacks to coastal hurricanes. We will not see their like again, which is kind of a shame.

Yesterday one of them came over to say hello, meet the grandchildren, and to ask me a couple of questions about his next vehicle purchase. I long ago figured out that these fellows don’t necessarily want my authentic opinion regarding the merits of the SL65 or the Continental GT. Rather, they want me to nod approvingly at whatever they’ve already decided to buy, at which point we can have a nice lunch and engage in some mutual appreciation of our good fortune in life, regardless of how unevenly said fortune is distributed.

This fellow was different. He came prepared: with notes, impressions, questions. He had hard financial limits in mind, which is vanishingly rare among a class of Baby Boomers who no longer bother to count pennies or Krugerrands. Most importantly, he gave me something to think about long after he’d left.


Our friend — let’s call him Alan — wanted something to replace his E350 Benz, which was just about to finish its lease. He knew what he wanted to pay, and he knew approximately which cars would fit the bill. He was looking at sedans but, despite his genial contempt for the “high-rider cars,” he figured it would be less painful for him to get into something like an X5 or an Acura MDX. His list of candidates had all the usual foreign-brand suspects in that price range…

…plus the Ford Explorer.

“I see a few of them in the neighborhood,” he said, “and they seem pretty decent.”

I explained to him that the most competitive Explorer leases tended to be on the mid-tier models, as opposed to the fully-loaded SUV he’d want in order to duplicate the feature set of his Benz. That seemed to satisfy him and we continued down the list. Afterwards, he told a few stories about some business arrangements he’d had with various auto dealers over the years, including “a really great Chevy dealer” down the street.

“Do you still have a contact at that dealer?” I asked.

“Oh, sure,” he replied.

“In that case,” I suggested, “you might want to wander over there and take a look at the Chevrolet Traverse Premier. It would offer a pretty similar feature set to an MDX or RX350, and your dealer might be able to work out something really competitive.” He was silent for a moment, then his face crinkled in a smile.

“I’m sure what you say is right, but… People on this plantation don’t like to ask what you did for a living before you retired, but they do like to judge on appearances. I don’t think that I could get away with driving a Chevrolet.” I had to laugh with him, both for the frank truth behind the statement and the forthright way in which he expressed himself. It wasn’t until after Alan had left that my brother said,

“Isn’t it interesting that he was willing to consider a Ford — that he even suggested it himself — but he couldn’t bear the idea of a Chevrolet?”

“Interesting, yeah, but not surprising,” was my verdict. After all, wasn’t Alan just saying something out loud that almost everybody in this business knows but won’t say? Fifty years ago, the domestic automakers would frequently refer to the “low-priced three” in advertising and marketing materials. James Cobb at the Times resurrected the concept twenty years ago in one of his reviews, and at that point it was still fairly apt.

Things changed after that. Plymouth got the axe, while Chevrolet and Ford managed to effectively swallow the brands immediately above them in their corporate hierarchies. They made large public investments in traditional sedans while quietly moving production volume to half-ton trucks and beefing up their unibody crossover lineups. With a few exceptions — Corvette, Raptor, Suburban for a while — they fielded lineups which were effectively mirror images.

It would be difficult to make a case for Chevrolet having a notably stronger lineup than Ford or vice versa. Yet Chevy has struggled to maintain brand equity while Ford has effortlessly waltzed into the position of America’s most prestigious mainstream automotive brand. I’m not sure how they did it. The only major difference I see is that Ford hasn’t bothered to protect Lincoln very much in previous years, particularly on the truck side. There are no fewer than three hyper-premium F-150 variants — Platinum, King Ranch, and Limited — while until recently Chevrolet wouldn’t let you go any higher than LTZ, saving the good stuff for Cadillac and GMC. Maybe that was it. Maybe it was the fact, rarely confronted directly in the auto press outside your humble author’s work, that Ford was selling German small cars while Chevy was selling Korean small cars.

You might have your own theories on the subject, just as valid as mine, if not more so. The key takeaway, however, has to be this: Automotive brand prestige was once a matter of power, performance, and durability. After the Second World War, the marketing and advertising became scientific enough to ensure that brand prestige was determined via the media.

None of that works any more. Today, brand image is slippery and hard to fix in place, like mercury or the value of a Bitcoin. It ebbs and flows on social media and celebrity involvement. It can be manipulated through a tie-in with the Kardashians or destroyed through vague slanderous blog-whispering the way that would-be Instagram competitor Vero was destroyed by oh-so-convenient allusions of sexism and racism that just happened to receive major play in media sources that had already invested heavily in the current order of things.

Most of all, brand image is fragile now, more than ever before. The old generations, the people who are living in 7,000-square-foot plantation McMansions now, grew up as “Ford men” or “Chevy men” or even “Toyota men.” Those preferences persisted through decades. We are on Internet time now. Today’s Ford fanatic is tomorrow’s Subaru loyalist. It’s not good news. It means that more and more effort has to be diverted from engineering and testing to marketing and social media. It damages the product even as it tries to save it. It is nothing more or less than the way we live now.

Worst of all, most of us can’t even be honest with ourselves, or others, about it. In that respect, at least, we still have something to learn from our parents and grandparents. That, and a strong handshake, which might not be in style in Brooklyn but is definitely still de rigeur on the plantation. If it’s okay with you, I’m going to stop typing for a while. Ow.

[Image: General Motors]

Jack Baruth
Jack Baruth

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  • NoID NoID on Jun 20, 2018

    As someone who works in Engineering for one of the Big 2.5, I can verify that the Brand/Marketing people play an ever larger role in our lives.

  • Old Scold Old Scold on Jun 20, 2018

    "like to judge on appearances" Keep me out of that neighborhood. Doesn't matter how much money they have. They haven't made it. Good riddance when that generation is gone.

  • SCE to AUX Range only matters if you need more of it - just like towing capacity in trucks.I have a short-range EV and still manage to put 1000 miles/month on it, because the car is perfectly suited to my use case.There is no such thing as one-size-fits all with vehicles.
  • Doug brockman There will be many many people living in apartments without dedicated charging facilities in future who will need personal vehicles to get to work and school and for whom mass transit will be an annoying inconvenience
  • Jeff Self driving cars are not ready for prime time.
  • Lichtronamo Watch as the non-us based automakers shift more production to Mexico in the future.
  • 28-Cars-Later " Electrek recently dug around in Tesla’s online parts catalog and found that the windshield costs a whopping $1,900 to replace.To be fair, that’s around what a Mercedes S-Class or Rivian windshield costs, but the Tesla’s glass is unique because of its shape. It’s also worth noting that most insurance plans have glass replacement options that can make the repair a low- or zero-cost issue. "Now I understand why my insurance is so high despite no claims for years and about 7,500 annual miles between three cars.
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