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Ford's Thunderbird Gets Axed
Forbes ^ | April 22, 2003 | Jerry Flint

Posted on 04/22/2003 7:32:35 AM PDT by Timesink

Forbes.com


Backseat Driver

Ford's Thunderbird Gets Axed

Jerry Flint, 04.22.03, 7:00 AM ET



The news is out and official. Ford will kill the Thunderbird.

I've been down this road before. The original little T-bird, a two-seater, came out in 1954. It wasn't really a sports car, but it was great-looking. Sales were never much--15,000 to 18,000 a year. So the moneymen made it into a four-seater in 1958. Sales went up, all right. Ford built 87,000 in 1960, but the car never looked so good again. Eventually the Thunderbird evolved into a mediocre, bloated car that was put out its misery during the reign of Ford (nyse: F - news - people ) President Jacques Nasser.

A few years back, and with great hoopla, a new, sleek Thunderbird was unveiled on the auto show circuit. The car returned to its roots as a smaller, stylish, two-passenger convertible. The production vehicle came out late in 2001, and it turned heads wherever it went. But Ford expected sales of about 25,000 a year, and the car never met this goal.

For starters, the new Thunderbird came out a full year late. So much time had passed from the unveiling of the show car to the release of production models that the buying public had lost some its enthusiasm.

Quality was also a problem. The plastic top (for winter) scratched the body. And Ford dealers got an early reputation for ripping off customers by overcharging for the car. Although the car's exterior was beautiful, the interior was a bit of a letdown, especially for a car with a $40,000 price tag. And the T-Bird could have used a bit more pep.

Selling a $40,000 car through the Ford channel may have also hurt the Thunderbird, which was far more expensive than its high-volume predecessor. Ford dealers have been successful selling $35,000 to $45,000 trucks but have little experience selling automobiles in the near-luxury price range. If there was a marketing effort by Ford Motor, I wasn't aware of it. Naturally, sales didn't meet expectations.

Ford figured it could sell 25,000 Thunderbirds a year at $40,000 apiece, but last year it moved only 19,000 cars. In first-quarter 2003 only 4,000 were sold. The automotive press went on a deathwatch.

Automotive News, the industry's fine trade publication, just reported that Steve Lyons, head of the Ford Division, said the Thunderbird run would end after four or five years, in 2005 or 2006.

"While it may go away for a short period of time, it may reappear from time to time," Lyons told Automotive News. "When you really stand back and think about the volumes we're trying to sell that vehicle in, it is meant to be a collector's item. And it doesn't have to have a production run every year."

Collectors' item? No, you don't sell 19,000 collector's item cars in a year.

I don't doubt for a moment that someone will suggest adding two backseats to the Bird to improve sales. Heck, someone will probably suggest making it a four-door. That happened once before, too.

Instead of fixing the Bird, making it right, selling it as it should be sold, Ford will kill it.

That's just part of the story at Ford product development. General Motors (nyse: GM - news - people ) has a low-volume car, too. It's called the Corvette. From time to time people have tried to kill the 'Vette. But people at GM seemed to understand that to kill the 'Vette would kill the company's spirit.

Ford is killing the Taurus, too. It will let the present model run until the rent-a-car companies don't want it. The replacement will be a smaller sedan, built off a Japanese Mazda platform, to be called the "Futura."

I think that some high-powered egos are at work here. The present management at Ford didn't create the Thunderbird. And the present management didn't create the Taurus. Rather than fix the problems, they'll start fresh with cars for which today's managers can take credit. That is, if these cars succeed.

These new managers also think that the names of Ford vehicles should start with the letter F. That's why the Windstar minivan is being renamed Freestar. And a new crossover wagon will be called the Freestyle. This strategy is silly and means nothing to anyone who doesn't work on executive row at Ford headquarters.

I remember when they killed the first two-passenger Bird. I thought that the car was beautiful. A Ford executive back then said, "Beauty is a good 10-day sales report." The original Thunderbird reminded people that Ford could build a beautiful car. Ditto for the short-lived new Thunderbird.

The news about its demise is ugly indeed.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: ford; thunderbird
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To: FrankRizzo890
I was thinking the same thing, e.g., the "Funderbird". Awwwk!
141 posted on 04/23/2003 6:36:27 AM PDT by miele man
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To: Timesink
Ford could have made a killing by just re-issuing the original car design, much better looking than this new version, at a reasonable price.
142 posted on 04/23/2003 6:39:13 AM PDT by The Wizard (Saddamocrats are enemies of America)
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To: Timesink
Quality was also a problem. The plastic top (for winter) scratched the body. And Ford dealers got an early reputation for ripping off customers by overcharging for the car. Although the car's exterior was beautiful, the interior was a bit of a letdown, especially for a car with a $40,000 price tag. And the T-Bird could have used a bit more pep.

Selling a $40,000 car through the Ford channel may have also hurt the Thunderbird, which was far more expensive than its high-volume predecessor. Ford dealers have been successful selling $35,000 to $45,000 trucks but have little experience selling automobiles in the near-luxury price range. If there was a marketing effort by Ford Motor, I wasn't aware of it. Naturally, sales didn't meet expectations.

I think these two paragraphs touch on the real problems: Less than stellar quality coupled with a price tag way too high. The execs at Ford are missing the things that sell cars. For a company that tries to tell us that "Quality is job 1", there is no excuse for quality problems. If the quality isn't there, no one will pay $40K for any car, and if you want to sell a decent quantity of cars, the price should be about half that.

The way you recover your production and development cost is to sell a lot of cars and recoup the costs that way, over time, rather than to try to recover the costs up front by overcharging for the car. Makes me wonder what these yo-yo's learned in business school...do they even know how Captitalism works? Most people I know will not buy a new model in it's first or second year of production, simply because there will be bugs that need to be worked out and fixed. I know I wouldn't spend that much money on a new design. Why should I pay for the "priviledge" of being, in effect, a road tester for their cars? Ford should realize that this model can and will be successful if they will commit to two things: make the quality first-rate, and keep it in production long enough to gain the buyers, like me, who will wait until year 3 or 4 of the production run to buy one, after the quality is where it should be. If Henry Sr. were alive today, he'd smack every one of the Ford execs up 'side their heads and tell them to grow a brain!

It wasn't a success because it only sold 19,000 instead of 25,000? Did it ever occur to them that the original estimate might have been a little optimistic, especially in the beginnings of the Clinton recession? Duh! I wouldn't call sales of 19,000 a failure! If they only sold 19, or 190, or 1900, yes, that could be classified as a failure. I honestly don't think that the Ford execs are all that smart when it comes to average car buyers. They think they can tell us what we will like (Does the Edsel ring any bells?), but it is us who tell them what they should build!

143 posted on 04/23/2003 6:54:36 AM PDT by nobdysfool (Every time I learn something new, it pushes something old out of my brain...Homer Simpson)
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To: DCPatriot
Posted by DCPatriot to bribriagain On News/Activism 04/23/2003 9:28 AM EDT #139 of 143 I'd be tempted to trade cars with you for the weekend, but I'm afraid you wouldn't give mine back. I've owned 2 Corvettes. '64 and '66 Stingray convertibles. Apples and oranges, I'm sure.

With all do respect to your previous vette's, the C5 is a different animal entirely. I've owned a '79, '85 and a '90 vette and they can not begin to compare with the C5. And besides, vettes are american made my patriot friend.

144 posted on 04/23/2003 5:12:02 PM PDT by bribriagain
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To: DCPatriot
Check out this link:

http://members.roadfly.com/jason/AMS103.htm

145 posted on 04/23/2003 5:35:08 PM PDT by bribriagain
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