Skip advert
Advertisement

'Too many VW Group models end up pointlessly competing with each other'

Volkswagen Group has five separate brands constantly competing with each other, but only the consumer loses out, says Mike Rutherford

OPINION New Volkswagen logo

The largest employers on the planet – the likes of the Chinese Army, McDonalds, our NHS, and the Volkswagen Group – don’t get everything right.

For instance, despite having more workers, brands, versatility and street cred than its closest rival (Toyota), the German giant sells fewer cars, suffers bigger fines (mostly Dieselgate-related) and makes lower profits. Yes, I’m impressed that the group employs up to 700,000 people across the globe, but more of these staffers must start the long-overdue process of separating out the four (five if we include Cupra) mainstream sister brands within this ever-growing family.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Best SUVs to buy now

The way I see it, Skoda and SEAT sit at the bottom, Cupra and Volkswagen hold the middle ground, and Audi resides nearer the top. That said, they are all far too close in terms of bottom-mid-range model line-ups, product quality (each is about the same), prices and more. Often these brands and their products pointlessly compete with each other in their own showrooms. That’s daft, and horrendously expensive. And it is you, dear consumer, who pays for this in-house competition, which merely converts, say, a SEAT customer into a VW buyer. Ridiculous.

A perfect example of illogical overlapping is that while the marketing team at Skoda spends fortunes promoting its 3.6m sub-supermini (Citigo), there are near-identical versions of the car being expensively marketed by a different army at Volkswagen (Up!), then a third bunch at SEAT (Mii). What’s the point? It’d be more sensible for the VW Group to have just one entry-level/sub-supermini range. The most natural bargain/value brand is Skoda, so give the Czech firm the sole rights to produce, badge and sell this little runabout. And if it’s a must for the three brands to continue with their own versions, let’s at least have very distinct first-time-buyer, utility/commercial, and perhaps even luxury versions.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Michael Jost, product strategy boss at the VW Group is coming around to this, and has confessed that he needs to “manage brand identities more clearly”. About time too, mate.

Having driven them all, I can tell you that there is very little (apart from badge snobbery) between the bog-standard 1.0-litre versions of the Audi A1, SEAT Ibiza, Skoda Fabia and VW Polo. None of them feels like a bargain-basement or a premium product. All are better-than-average, boringly similar, and their prices aren’t that different.

A £12k, stripped-out, bargain-basement Fabia at the bottom, followed by a slightly higher-spec Ibiza, an even higher-spec Polo, then a £20k truly premium A1 (the current one isn’t) would be a far more sensible and diverse supermini mix for the VW Group.

It could, and should, be so cost-effective and simple. All SEATs and Skodas would be two-wheel drive, modestly equipped and such great value that Dacia would wince. Then Cupras and VWs could be slightly more luxurious and classy. Audis that are premium and, in turn, pricey will then sit proudly at the top of the pile. Think of this as the end of ill-thought-out overlapping, and the start of proper choice for VW Group customers.

Do you agree with Mike? Let us know what you think in the comments below...

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Halve the VAT on EVs to boost private sales, says VW boss
VW ID.4 - O/S tracking
News

Halve the VAT on EVs to boost private sales, says VW boss

VW UK boss wants a lower VAT rate for electric cars to bring down prices and stimulate demand from private buyers
16 May 2024
10 surprising things made by car companies, that aren't cars
Things made by car manufacturers - header
Features

10 surprising things made by car companies, that aren't cars

The world’s biggest auto manufacturers have many strings to their bows...
6 May 2024
Real-world MPG and emissions testing
Real world emissions testing
Tips & advice

Real-world MPG and emissions testing

In 2018, WLTP and RDE tests measuring car MPG and emissions replaced the older, less accurate NEDC tests used before. The aim was to better reflect th…
2 May 2024
UK new car buyers love a Mercedes-Benz but Ford is favourite when used
Mercedes A-Class - front cornering
News

UK new car buyers love a Mercedes-Benz but Ford is favourite when used

Data from YouGov’s BrandIndex shows that Mercedes-Benz is a top choice with new car buyers, with used buyers favouring Ford
2 May 2024

Most Popular

Ooh la la: new DS flagship to get inspiration from world’s coolest car
DS flagship - exclusive image
News

Ooh la la: new DS flagship to get inspiration from world’s coolest car

The iconic Citroen DS was voted the world’s coolest car by our readers and now DS is aiming for the same success with its new premium flagship
15 May 2024
Kia EV6 gets bigger battery, interior upgrades and EV9-inspired facelift
2024 Kia EV6 GT Line - front static
News

Kia EV6 gets bigger battery, interior upgrades and EV9-inspired facelift

The facelifted EV6 should arrive in UK showrooms before the end of the year
14 May 2024
‘Vauxhall listened to criticism and cut its electric car prices, now other brands need to follow suit’
Opinion - Vauxhall Corsa Electric
Opinion

‘Vauxhall listened to criticism and cut its electric car prices, now other brands need to follow suit’

Mike Rutheford thinks electric car prices are still far too expensive
12 May 2024