Hot! BMW Future Retail


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EnI

Piston Pioneer
After CreativeMarketing there comes the CreativeSales : via BMW Future Retail project:


POP GOES THE BIMMER

BMW tries to win shoppers' time back from third parties


bmwpopupstore1.webp

BMW's pop-up store in an upscale Costa Mesa, Calif., mall: Neon lights, big flat screens, museum artwork, a merchandise boutique and a BMW car.


Pop-ups to Geniuses

BMW's year-old Future Retail program includes:
• A dealer facilities program featuring a modern, premium look, sans booths and offices
• Increased use of in-store, smartphone and tablet digital technology. Stores have big flat screens to provide information, configure cars and speed F&I.
• Streamlined dealer processes, including a pilot targeting 8-minute completion for service drive check-in
• Training staff to provide a premium experience that includes concepts such as in-store product Geniuses, a 2nd BMW driving academy and pop-up stores

Diana T. Kurylko
Automotive News
March 23, 2015 - 12:01 am ET

Late last year, BMW of North America opened a pop-up store in a California mall occupied by high-end retailers -- its first temporary store in the United States.

bmwpopupstore.webp


BMW did it quietly, without the usual national fanfare over a new program. For four months, the BMW Gallery in the South Coast Plaza mall in Costa Mesa showcased a car -- initially the i8 plug-in hybrid sports car -- in an eye-popping environment featuring neon lights, large flat screens for configuring cars, art from a local museum and a merchandise boutique.

A few years ago, a pop-up store would have been unthinkable for a luxury titan such as BMW. But BMW is facing new competition, including Tesla stores sprouting in numerous malls. And it wants to lure customers back to stores and away from online shopping sites.

Pop-ups are part of a year-old global BMW initiative called Future Retail that emphasizes digital tools and clean, cool environments like those of Apple stores. BMW wants all of its 339 U.S. dealers on the program by 2019. This year, Ludwig Willisch, CEO of BMW of North America, said the program will cost dealers about $500 million total.

The Costa Mesa pop-up offered a peek into how it all could work. Car sales weren't permitted, but visitors could register with one of five participating local dealerships for a test drive.

On its peak day, 2,400 people went through the store, said Peter Miles, vice president of sales channel development and customer relations. In total, more than 100,000 people visited the pop-up store.

"In some ways, we — and not just BMW — need to catch up with our whole environment."
John Desmond, Hendrick Automotive Group

Steve Rudkin, general manager of Irvine BMW in Irvine, Calif. -- one of the first stores that participated -- said the pop-up helped his store set November and December sales records: "I really believe we get the brand in front of people that are not looking to go to a BMW store in the near future."

The pop-up housed a special-edition 5-series sedan during the Black Friday weekend in November, and "we sold 20-plus -- we sold out of that car," Rudkin said. "It was a great result and had a great impact on our business here."

Miles sees it as a way to give potential customers "a gateway, an impression [of] the brand and an invitation to have a test drive at the convenience of their home." The five dealerships will be involved in another pop-up store in the same mall in June, in a space that will house more than one car.


Umbrella of change

BMW's Future Retail program "is the umbrella of the facility, people and processes change," said Miles, who heads a new team focusing on customer experience.

Future Retail is a response to lead generators that have gotten in between dealers and customers, he said.

"We are on a mission to earn back our customers from third parties that sell us leads because we lost the trust and the transparency of our customers -- that is why the digital environment has been so successful over the last 20 years," Miles said.

Miles wants the revamped dealerships, programs and apps to offer customers an opportunity to "learn, try and buy."

Dealers say it's important to get buyers back into the stores to configure cars. Rudkin said traffic in his store is down compared with previous years because more shoppers research cars on the Internet.

But once customers are in his store, Rudkin said, the dealership has a closing rate of about 50 percent: "One facet of Future Retail is to bring people into these buildings and to have them spend some time here and enjoy that car-buying experience again."

John Desmond, market area vice president for 12 luxury dealerships owned by the Charlotte, N.C.-based Hendrick Automotive Group -- including three BMW stores -- said BMW's program addresses a new reality.

"In today's world, we are not just operating in the automotive retail space; we are being benchmarked and compared to the Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons and other luxury retailers," Desmond said about luxury carmakers. "In some ways, we -- and not just BMW -- need to catch up with our whole environment."

Miles said Desmond is part of a recently formed committee of eight of "our most innovative dealers" who "are specifically charged with working with us to look at what we need to do differently."

Counseling customers
BMW isn't alone with its Geniuses. Luxury brands are in a race to cater to customers. Here are some examples.
• Lexus has set up delivery and technology specialists at dealerships.
• Each Cadillac dealership must designate 1 employee as a technology expert who handles anything to do with the Cadillac User Experience system or connectivity.
• Mercedes-Benz wants to train 1,600 product concierge specialists by year end.


Better brand image

A year into Future Retail, 22 dealerships have been updated or rebuilt, and 147 letters of intent have been signed. Construction will continue during the next three years, BMW executives said.

The store design was influenced by the work of the late modernist German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe with an emphasis on open space, lots of glass and natural light. The new look includes a clean, white exterior, with a focus on the showroom display of cars called the "driving gallery," according to a company description.


Laham: Expects sales to jump


The showroom is open and free-flowing. Large, virtual display screens are required. "We can control up to eight channels of what goes on that screen, whether it is a marketing message, a new car, or if we want to advertise a specific model," said Greg Marks, head of BMW's center development.

Joe Laham, owner of BMW of Cape Cod in Hyannis, Mass., opened his $10 million dealership, built to Future Retail specifications, in August. Laham said he expects his annual new-vehicle sales to jump to 500 this year. The previous franchisee sold 90 vehicles a year, Laham said.


Pop-up stores, says BMW's Peter Miles, can provide consumers "a gateway" to the brand.

BMW dealers are required to install an Isetta Bar -- the name harks back to the tiny bubble car BMW sold in the 1950s. Laham said he serves fruit-infused water and changes the flavor every day. The air in the dealership carries the Asian Gardens scent, the same scent used at the Encore Hotel in Las Vegas, Laham said.

Laham said the overall ambiance of his dealership is "immaculate -- they have to feel like they are walking into a luxury hotel."

BMW wants to enhance that feeling with programs, such as customer vehicle pickup and delivery, and an effort to get the total sales process down from about 41/2 hours to one.

It has run about 3,000 senior dealership leaders through its Modern Luxury training program.

Desmond, of the Hendrick group, said pop-ups and the Future Retail program are the kinds of steps dealers must take: "We want to create this environment where it's not the old school: You come in the door and get attacked by five people."



http://www.autonews.com/article/201...-to-win-shoppers-time-back-from-third-parties

http://evworld.com/news.cfm?newsid=34892
 
BMW is Apple of the car industry.

Seriously, what the badge has ended up standing for (other than the product) is the number one reason that puts me off with BMW.
 
Sounds like a great idea. Bring those pop up stores to the cities! All dealerships are in industrial zones in the outskits of the cities over here, you only go there if you really have to. Bring back those show cars to the old city centrals in small boutiques!
 
B
BMW is Apple of the car industry.

Seriously, what the badge has ended up standing for (other than the product) is the number one reason that puts me off with BMW.
The badge stands for a BRAND more than a product.

This is the same for all Corporate brands today.

BMW is a brand first ......and a car manufacturer second. Brand identity is what distinguishes BMW from its competitors ......especially when the general quality and performance of BMW, Mercedes, and Audi is very similar.

Think of it like McDonald's .......does anybody really think there's anything special about a McDonald's burger?

Mcdonald's sells a lifestyle through brand identity.

The days when a manufacturer could just build a product and sell it on its own merits is long gone .......in these times of rampant consumerism, products are marketed with strong connections to lifestyle and aspiration rather than their usefulness and functionality.

People buy products based on what a product communicates to others about them.

Unfortunately, in a Western world culture where people consume products to express their identity, self-esteem has become heavily dependent on the brands people like to associate themselves with.
 
BMW have realized the "Millennials" have different needs & expectations when it comes to car purchasing. And that the current car retail process is completely outdated & out of sync with contemporary consumers. So, the Future Retail project is all about that: to bring the purchasing process closer to the contemporary customer, his/her needs, expectations, habits. Meaning: more boutique (pop-up) stores in shopping areas, more internet sales, more emphasis on tech, brand, product's story itself - than on product per se.

As Rob have said: not only products are being sold - the brands are. Even more important factor today. And shopping for those brands & products in industrial areas in separated dealer units ... Not a great shopping experience! So, putting BMW brand & products in the upscale shopping malls & upscale shopping streets / areas. Makes MUCH sense. Even when it comes to (meta)context: the BMW belongs there ... to Chanel, Gucci, Prada, LV, Hermes, Burberry, Cartier, Armani, Versace, even Apple, B&O etc.
 
Think of it like McDonald's .......does anybody really think there's anything special about a McDonald's burger?

Of course. It's the product that makes the brand, not the other way around.
BMW is worth nothing if they start making crappy FWD cars. Brand or no brand, people will look through that.
 
Of course. It's the product that makes the brand, not the other way around.
BMW is worth nothing if they start making crappy FWD cars. Brand or no brand, people will look through that.
Very true klier ......but think about how BMW bought Rolls-Royce: they didn't buy a factory or even a workforce, they only bought a brand name with a strong identity. The culture of a brand is where the product development begins.

The BMW brand identity is at the heart of the products BMW produces ......it is the impetus for everything else.
 
but think about how BMW bought Rolls-Royce: they didn't buy a factory or even a workforce, they only bought a brand name with a strong identity.

The brand and identity was severely weakened before BMW took over. BMW took over because of the potential, but that potential can only be achieved with triple A products. RR was almost off the radar, they hadn't made a good car in decades and they were on the way of the dinosaur.

Again, it's all about the product. A brand is forgotten very quickly if the products are crap. Think of Nokia, Kodak or Sega.
 
Crappy FWD cars? Go, try & drive 2er AT ... and then compare it to the rivals. It's far from crappy.

But I agree the overall product quality has to improve - cost cutting can be very damaging. And with modular platforms the R&D and production has to be very precise ... otherwise A LOT of models will be affected. The threat is bigger in the case of modular architecture. If the base module is defected, everything can fail.

Brand ... It's a promise, it's a story. But the product has to live up to that promise / story, of course. Any significant discrepancy can be damaging.
 
Crappy FWD cars? Go, try & drive 2er AT ... and then compare it to the rivals. It's far from crappy.

Well ok, but you know what I mean ;)
Crappy for a BMW. I don't like it when a BMW drives 'as good' as a freaking VW Touran. It's like the lowest possible standard.
 
Well ok, but you know what I mean ;)
Crappy for a BMW. I don't like it when a BMW drives 'as good' as a freaking VW Touran. It's like the lowest possible standard.

Don´t look at it as a BMW, look at it as a van.

The fun will come with the next 1er though.
 
The fun will come with the next 1er though.

Sadly the fun is now with the F20. And with the E87 of course.
The people who thought it was a good idea to give the next 1er FWD should be deported to Jemen.
 

BMW

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, abbreviated as BMW is a German multinational manufacturer of luxury vehicles and motorcycles headquartered in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. The company was founded in 1916 as a manufacturer of aircraft engines, which it produced from 1917 to 1918 and again from 1933 to 1945.
Official website: BMW (Global), BMW (USA)

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