Etios is Toyota's bid to break into the mass market in India. Will it work? Find out

Numbers do matter. Volkswagen wants to dislodge Toyota as the world's largest car maker by 2018. The gap between the two is not huge. In 2009, Volkswagen sold 6.29 million cars against Toyota's 7.81 million cars. India could well decide who wins finally. Volkswagen has launched the Polo hatchback and sedan (Vento), and invested `3,200 crore in a new factory at Chakan near Pune that can roll out 110,000 cars in a year. The Etios could be Toyota's answer. So far, Toyota has been present in just 15 per cent of the Indian market with the Altis, Camry, Innova, Fortuner, Prius, Prado and Land Cruiser. The Etios will expand it to around 50 per cent. It will compete against the likes of Maruti Suzuki Swift, Hyundai i20, Nissan Micra, Volkswagen Polo and Ford Figo. Toyota has spent over `3,000 crore in a production facility for the car near Bangalore. Its capacity will be 100,000 cars per annum, which can be doubled in the future. It wants to sell 70,000 Etios, hatchback as well as sedan, in 2011, which could double its sales in the country. By 2015, Toyota wants to sell 300,000 in India. Rivals say Toyota is a little late to hit the market. Still, much is at stake. Nothing can be left to chance.

Fuel efficiency and the cost of ownership, experts will tell you, make or break acar in India. This is why Maruti Suzuki has done so well in the country. Singh says that the life of all Toyota parts is long, which reduces the need for replacements. "We have proved that Toyota cars require very low maintenance. That's why their resale value is the highest. For a five-year old Innova, the erosion in value is just 30 to 40 per cent. A 10-year old Qualis fetches 50 per cent of the original value; a fiveyear old Qualis can get 70 to 80 per cent."


But even Toyota knows that there are limits to strategic pricing. That's what deters it from launching a small car in India, though it does have in its portfolio the Yaris and the Daihatsu range. "Toyota is not looking to develop a low-cost car for India at this moment because it believes that, given the standards it wants to maintain, it is very difficult to develop acar at those prices," says Singh. Toyota knows this means that it will have to play second fiddle to rivals like Maruti Suzuki for several years. But it is willing to wait.

It showed that in the top ten cities, Toyota came third after Maruti Suzuki and Honda in cars. In multi-purpose vehicles, it was on top. But in semi-urban markets, it fell to the fifth or sixth slot. Many people, in those markets, weren't even aware that Toyota made cars; they thought it only made multi-purpose vehicles. So, the company decided to take the Etios, along with the entire Toyota range, to ten cities that account for 70 per cent of the car sales in the country under the Q (quality) World programme. The list was then expanded to 20 and finally 24. The gains? Singh says that a recent survey has shown that Toyota's brand recall in the top ten cities has jumped to number two, at par with Honda; two, feedback was obtained from 1,200 customers on the car, which has led to some last-minute tweaks; and three, 54,000 of the 150,000 people who saw the car have registered their interest in it. Some of them could end up buying the car.
Harping on quality At the same time, Toyota has launched a campaign called Q Promise along with its agency, Dentsu. "We are working on an emotional connection with the customer. We are not talking about products; we are talking about what goes into the high-quality product we give you. We have talked about manufacturing and safety, and will talk about dealers, vendors etc," says Singh. In another departure from the convention, Toyota may rope in a brand ambassador for the Etios. Singh rules out the possibility of a cricketer or a film star because "they have been the Etios gameplan is the Toyota dealer. The company has raised the number of dealers from 40 to 60 and the number of sale and service points from 82 to 150 in the last two years.

Also, conversion of footfalls in Toyota dealerships is 32 per cent, way above the industry average of 20 per cent. All prospective customers are required to take atest drive, though 70 to 80 per cent actually do that -- this way customers can feel the difference in the drive quality. Still, claims Singh, this is better than the industry practice of 30-40 per cent. All cars meant for test drives are replaced within two years. "We train everybody in the dealership, even the doorman and the attendant who serves tea," says Singh.
Still, Singh says that breakeven for a Toyota dealer can take up to seven years, higher than the industry norm of four to five years. The missing link here, according to Singh, is the appreciation in the value of the asset. Most of the initial Toyota dealers were encouraged to set up large dealerships in the fringes of the city, away from downtown, to keep the real estate cost down. Many of them, Singh says, have now come inside the fast-expanding city. "So far, only one dealer has left us, and 99 per cent of our dealers have expanded," says Singh. The dealers are important for another reason: Till date, Toyota has sold 460,000 vehicles in India to around 320,000 customers. This base will be tapped for the Etios. "We hope to get 50 per cent of the Etios volumes from our existing customers," says Singh.
The customer, says Singh, is central in Toyota's worldview. The company therefore no longer talks about market share targets. It clearly is a long-term player.
Source: Business Standard