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BMW uses lifestyle products as a strategic differentiating factor in the automotive industry
by Dr. Markus Seidel, General Manager of Product Line Management, Merchandising & Lifestyle, BMW Group (Markus.Seidel@bmw.de) Companies can benefit from leveraging their brands. But the road to successfully doing this is fraught with dangerand unique challenges. Here is how one international company BMWis moving into the lifestyle products arena systematically.
products had no connection to the car, the core competencies, or brand values. Our lifestyle program therefore focuses on mobility products including bicycles, skateboards, and miniature cars for kids. The product programs genetic code builds on BMWs technological core competencies, which have evolved over decades. The development process involves intensive cooperation with designers and engineers from the core business to create outstanding mobility
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ver the past few years, the BMW Group (BMW) has begun to differentiate itself with the creation of a number of lifestyle products in the automotive industry. This article will describe how we created these new products and extended the power of several of our brands through development and collaboration. Most specifically, we have used both the BMW and MINI brands for these lifestyle product extensions. In 1994 BMW acquired MINI, a brand that has reached iconic cult status since the 1960s. In extending these powerful brand identities, an example of successful collaboration was the new MINI motion shoe introduced at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 2003. The MINI motion shoe was the result of cooperation with the German sports goods manufacturer PUMA, as shown in Exhibit 1 on this page. Two years earlier, the BMW X-Bike concept study, an innovative high-tech bicycle shown in Exhibit 3 on page 25, grabbed the attention of the press in Frankfurt. The BMW StreetCarver, an innovative skateboard shown in Exhibit 4 on page 25, also generated a lot of attention and received numerous awards, including being named Invention of the Year by Time magazine in 2001. These three products are part of BMW Groups fast-growing lifestyle business, covering all non-car-related products for the BMW and MINI brands.
BMW has begun to differentiate itself with the creation of a number of lifestyle products in the automotive industry.
products and related accessories, such as functional clothing. MINIs lifestyle program tells a different story: The companys vehicle program relies on a unique vehicle concept, created over 40 years ago, in which the driver can experience a unique and exciting go-cart feeling, as shown in Exhibit 2 on this page. From the beginning MINI fascinated the world, evoked an emotional experience, and gradually became a powerful brand. This emotional basis of this brand makes experimentation possible in extending the brand to other product categories. In fact, stretching the MINI brand into other product categories is almost an imperative. With its strong emotional appeal, the MINI brand can flourish through additional sources of income. A broad product base has the potential to market the brand. The MINI product-extension categories range from design pieces to fashion items such as clothing, eyewear, handbags, and watches, as shown in Exhibit 5 on page 25.
NPD PRACTICES
Our goal is to create a unique cosmopolitan lifestyle world. A MINI enthusiast will be able to experience MINIness in many aspects of daily life.
uct that has little to do with a car. This purchase of a lifestyle product in an automotive dealership is essentially an impulse-driven decision. The single-brand showroom environment at an automotive dealership represents a sort of supply-side monopoly for the lifestyle product lines, since there are no competitor products for sale in that location.
Marketing activities
Finally, we place our lifestyle products within overall Group marketing activities such as TV commercials, print campaigns, or special events. It is vital that whenever a lifestyle product is needed, we try to integrate one of our own into the specific marketing activity. In the years to come we see almost no limit to further expansion of the BMW/MINI lifestyle product portfolio. There are many ideas for products of greater sophistication on the way. This continuous process may in the end become a game changer for our business. w Dr. Markus Seidel is the General Manager at BMW Group in Product Line Management, Merchandising, & Lifestyle.
Ease of use
First, the products must be easy to use and self-explanatory, since sales personnel are busy selling ever more complex cars. Additionally, these products should be perceived as premium products for the customer and provide a good margin for the dealer. Their conceptual design and pointof-sales layout should reflect the fact that the decision to buy a lifestyle product in an automotive dealership is usually spontaneous and impulsive. When customers enter the showroom they usually do not intend to buy a prod-
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