Seeking an image overhaul as it struggles to recover from an ongoing
emissions scandal, Volkswagen is giving its iconic "Das Auto" tagline
the boot.
The global slogan, which has been around for nearly a decade and
translates to, simply, "The Car," won't appear in marketing campaigns
moving forward. Instead, upcoming ads will use the "Volkswagen" moniker
itself as a tagline.
"Wherever our logo appears in future, it will be backed by the new brand slogan 'Volkswagen,'" a VW representative told Reuters. "The slogan will be rolled out in stages across the world."
VW stopped short of saying "Das Auto" was gone forever. Even so,
company executives apparently believe it is too pretentious given the
brands current travails, and favor a more modest approach for the
forseeable future.
Of course, VW has taken a beating since September, when news broke that
the German automaker concealed the level of emissions in its diesel
models by using a sensor and software that reported false data. The
scandal soon spread to its Audi nameplate as well. Overall, VW has been
roundly panned for its handling of the crisis, and sales in some markets
have also begun to slide.
Will scrapping "Das Auto" help VW regain some traction?
"Not sure it matters all that much," said Edward Boches,
a Boston University advertising professor and former Mullen Lowe chief
creative officer who occasionally writes for Adweek. Any new tagline or
repositioning will come under intense scrutiny, evaluated in light of
the emissions debacle, he said.
Robert Passikoff, founder and president of consultancy Brand Keys,
dismissed VW's move away from "Das Auto" as "Not much of an idea at all
-- cosmetic at best," adding that they "blew the believability tire"
regardless of how the company attempts to rebrand.
Even so, keeping a slogan that readily inspires parody wouldn't help
matters. "'Das Auto' sure lends itself to a meme of 'Das auto that
(blanks) its customers,'" said Boches. "Fill in whatever profane verb
you want."
In recent years, VW has spent approximately $400 million in U.S.
measured media alone. Deutsch L.A. is its lead domestic agency.
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