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Hyundai aims to Challenge German Luxury Car Makers

come on Asia :) all the best to Hyundai.

Interior wise I have found Audi build quality is robust and has a solid feel to it but when it comes to reliability the Japs do it the best with Lexus being number 1 in the J.D. Power quality ranking and Honda make those excellent VTEC engines that seem to never breakdown!

Honda accord and Honda civic are almost unbeatable in their respective categories.

come on Asia :) all the best to Hyundai.



Honda accord and Honda civic are almost unbeatable in their respective categories.



And anyone up for Mitsubishi Lancer ? My fav :smitten:
 
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Brand perception matters a lot.

Indeed, it does.

Totally agree. In fact the Japanese are crazy for the Beemers and Mercs. They know the Lexus are just suited Toyotas. Lexus models are sold as Toyota models in many places, including Pakistan.

Lexus are typically targeted at older and more affluent consumer segments.

Undoubtedly, the Koreans have come a long way since the era of bad quality cars back in the 80's and 90's. I think they can make it, but it'll take time.

But, I suggest them to try to overpower Toyota with their distinct and innovative designs. And of-course, quality. Toyota's designs are getting increasingly bland and boring. Also, their ads are......WEIRD.
 
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Hyundai Equus found to be most appealing new car in J.D. Power study

ndai Equus found to be most appealing new car in J.D. Power study

For years, consumers have given either the BMW 7-Series, Lexus LS or Mercedes-Benz S-Class the highest score in J.D. Power’s APEAL survey, but the 2011 award went to a South Korean upstart in the large luxury-sedan category.

"The Equus has the distinction of being the highest-performing model in the 2011 APEAL Study," said J.D. Power and Associates. "The Hyundai Equus has achieved an impressive introduction into the marketplace from a performance, execution and layout perspective."

In the J.D. Powers Automotive Performance, Execution and Layout (APEAL) Study, customers rate their level of “gratification” on a variety of vehicle attributes. Unlike J.D. Power’s Initial Quality Study, which measures short-term quality, the APEAL Study identifies consumer likes and dislikes about their vehicle during the first 90 days of ownership, particularly regarding vehicle design, content, layout and performance. On the study's 1,000 point rating scale, the score of the Equus exceeded 900 points, with particularly high marks in the categories of vehicle exterior, storage, and audio/entertainment/navigation.

While a full-size premium car nearly always takes home top honors in the study, it defied expectations for the Hyundai Equus to receive the crown in a segment that typically attracts extremely traditional, loyal customers.

The product is already there, the perception isn't.
 
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Back in the mid 90's to mid 2000's I used to look down at Hyundai. They truly made crappy cars. But then around mid 2000 they started to improve their cars and by 2010 it got to the point where I was actually thinking of buying one. Hyundai of the past are not the same as Hyundai of the present, they are infinitely better.

As for German cars, I just feel they are way over engineered, over priced, and for a while they had really bad build quality. Especially the VW built in Mexico.

The Japanese know how to build cars for the masses. They build really good quality, for a good price.
 
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It was on a rare occasion that Hyundai Motor’s design center opened its doors to the media.

To enter the guarded facility, visitors are required to pass through two checkpoints. At the first one, all identification cards and laptops are submitted, while security stickers seal shut the cameras, including those in mobile phones.

Security seems air-tight at this Gyeonggi Province-based facility, more so at this time as the next generation Genesis is poised to hit the markets.

A fleeting glimpse of a wing-shaped badge ― Genesis’ trademark logo ― suggested that the new Genesis may be one of sedans spotted racing down the roads for test-drives on the center grounds, shrouded under black covers.

Oh Suk-geun, head of the carmaker’s design center and senior executive vice president at Hyundai Motor Group, would not comment on what rested beneath the sheets.

“This is going to be a game changer in the premium segment” was all Oh would reveal, adding that finishing touches were in the making to launch the vehicle late next year.

To bring Genesis up to par with its European competition, Oh ― who oversees six design centers located in Korea, the United States and Europe ― hinted that Hyundai may diversifying lineups for the Genesis models, similar to the series classification adopted by BMW.

Hyundai, still regarded by many as a carmaker of only cheap and compact cars, has a reason for being so “hell-bent” on cultivating a premium image, Oh said.

“Hyundai needs a dramatic shift in key capabilities for future growth and gaining a premium image is the most important solution,” he said.

He admitted that many of Hyundai’s competitors have made failed attempts to break into the upscale segment that is largely dominated by German carmakers BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Audi.

Japan’s Toyota Motor still sells its Lexus vehicles in limited markets, while European carmakers such as Renault and Peugeot have yet to be successful in selling high-end cars.

“It may sound hopeless. But we know that the audacity of Koreans sometimes creates a new opportunity,” he said, citing the earlier skepticism about the Genesis that now sells some 2,000 units every month in the North American market.

Oh entered Hyundai in 1984, right after graduating from Seoul National University where he studied industrial design. He was the 13th car designer at the then “small company,” he said.

At the time, Hyundai was working on the next generation of Pony, the first Korean passenger car designed by the legendary car designer Giorgetto Giugiaro.

“Hyundai was largely dependent on the Italian designer. Because his agency was doing projects for other carmakers as well, its car design had no unique color until then,” he recalled.

A turnaround in Hyundai’s car design came in 1990 when a team of Korean designers unveiled the nation’s first coupe Scoupe after a fierce competition with an Italian design team. The car later affected the design of Hyundai’s first sports car Tiburon.

“I had never imagined Hyundai would become a global company as it is now. We used to hope to grow big enough to compete with Mitsubishi that supported us at the time,” he said.

In the 1980s, Japan’s Mitsubishi was selling 1 million cars, while Hyundai’s car deliveries remained at less than 100,000 units.

Now Hyundai, which owns Hyundai and Kia brands, has become the world’s fifth-largest company selling 6 million cars last year, gobbling up the global market share of Toyota and Volkswagen.

And the carmaker has become a workplace where talented car designers are willing to work, with the number of designers surging from 30 in the 1980s to 450 today.

Hyundai’s design center in the U.S. is currently led by former BMW designer Christopher Chapman, while its sister unit Kia Motors has Peter Schreyer, the former design chief at Volkswagen, as the design chief since 2006.

“I’m proud that many former Hyundai designers are now working for other global carmakers. Their working experience at Hyundai is highly recognized across industries,” Oh said.

“I believe design has played a pivotal role in elevating Hyundai’s global presence. Of course, the company’s advanced engineering prowess has met the designers’ vision.”

Since Oh took office as the design center chief in 2007, Hyundai has carried out diverse experiments in car design, ranging from the voluminous transformation of its flagship models Avante, Sonata and Grandeur to the three-door compact Veloster and the best-selling hatchback i30.

Under the existing philosophy of “Fluidic Sculpture,” Oh said that Hyundai’s future car design would become less “talkative” than it is now.

“So far, we have taken a very dramatic approach to express our identity and impress consumers. I think it’s time to introduce more defined design with more value added,” he said.

“We will continue efforts to maintain the dynamic and aggressive image of Hyundai cars. In the longer term, I hope design will become Hyundai’s key competitiveness.”

Hyundai seeks premium ranks with new design

Good news.Hope they manufacture those cars in India.
 
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Every brand in Korea is crap.

Samsung is crap.
Hyundai is crap.
KIA is crap.

Look who is talking

Do you have and brand in your country which is close to Samsung and Hyundai
I have never heard of a Chinese brand in Automobiles even TATA & Mahindra have presence in International auto industry
 
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I like Hyundai Sonata, but there is noway it is comparable to Toyata Mark X, what to speak of BMW.:woot:
 
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Actually Hyundai has improved their design so much in the last two revisions that their cars look better than their Japanese rivals.

Hyundai Sonata is actually a very beautiful car. Their reliability has also gone up.

If we stop comparing them to German cars, they are very good cars indeed.
 
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