Re: Finally, we have Jawa's sales figures. And they are not pretty I too like others already expressed, don't think its entirely the product, motorcycle market is quite mod friendly and folks who like their steeds go to every extent to customize to their satisfaction, I believe the execution here was majorly botched and poorly planned from maybe the word go.
The sales campaign was all about bringing folks up to the doorstep and then they lost the plot, it was assumed the buyer, high on nostalgia and thrill will swoon over and walk off with the bike, wrongly assumed.
This is no daily bike nor does it attempt to be an all rounder, their attempt was to make it a cult bike, but there was no marketing strategy or activity to turn it into cult honestly for which even simple you and me, could put a plot in place.
I used to initially follow up on small events or rides that the brand could organize to build up on the initial marketing blitzkrieg, which anyways failed when deliveries were getting delayed resulting in annoyed customers.
These events would act like an endorsement of the brand and culture within the owner community and also broaden the scope to include others. It acts like propaganda and builds that human urge to fit in and feel it in. You walk away with a lot of positive endorsements once those chain links are established.
The brand could easily have capitalized on the existing Yezdi or Java clubs but NO, once they sold the bike to the owner, they made the owner feel it was just another regular daily commuter brand rather than one which has nostalgia, which needs to be felt and kept alive.
I do agree, the bike has some short comings but we have seen products which have been embraced by its following if the brand image coincides with the product sold. Here the company made no attempt to bring in that resemblance and tap into those sentiments.
Good opportunity lost but not completely, if they want to, they still can do it. I once met a Mojo rider from TN at Morjim beach who had rode his Mojo along the length and breadth of the country and was very happy with the product but echoed that Mahindra honestly does not have a marketing strategy or consistency in marketing.
I don't see any adverts today, neither offline nor online. What is the company doing to bring the brand to the prospect customers mind, NOTHING. Then why will the buyer feel a tug towards a product that is close to invisible.
Mahindra need not look too far, they just need to look at their in house advert team which promotes the brand and culture it represents through the great escape propaganda. Heck even Redmi has said it relies on community marketing effort and has proved that's what works in this age.
It's not enough that the company offers a couple of bikes once a year to review, that's just 10 minutes or an hour at max of dedicated attention span in a year that they seek, versus the 8000+ hours that RE smartly bombards both directly or indirectly through their users and advertisements a year, both offline and online.
They can't ignore that brand recollection Indian's have about RE, its there everywhere, so subtly and also loudly, in your face, your neighbors place and even in your friends FB page. That's what you see in the background when you look at places you want to visit, whether its Leh, Amritsar or Alleppey.
They need to revamp their marketing team so they urgently come up with programs that keep the brand alive in the motorcyclists mind constantly in this short attention game. I still believe there is a market and if not for Java, another brand can step in that space if the whole plan is executed well.
By that, not ignoring the equal importance of easy accessibility of spares and economical maintenance, including pleasant service, which then helps sustain the culture and movement. The idea for the bike started of on the basis of accessible nostalgia and cult and that premise the brand should carry forward, I think it failed miserably in that attempt so far.
The customer should be made to buy the feeling and the brand and product should match that extrapolated image in the customers mind. I have seen many appreciating the bike when in their attention and maybe would consider if that image could build up inside them.
Last edited by s_pphilip : 15th August 2020 at 01:28.
Reason: Marketing reasons
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