http://www.greenbiz.com/article/how-get-people-driving-electric-vehicles
How to get people into the EV driver's seat
Amon Rappaport  October 27, 2014

[images  / All images via Amon Rappaport
http://www.greenbiz.com/sites/default/files/styles/gbz_article_primary_breakpoints_kalapicture_screen-md_1x/public/images/articles/featured/tesla_amonrappaport.jpg
The sleek Tesla Roadster electric vehicle

http://162.209.59.178:15758/sites/default/files/media-inline/102714ev-inline-3a.jpg
John Zayne and Luke Day discuss the virtues of the futuristic BMWi

http://162.209.59.178:15758/sites/default/files/media-inline/102714ev-inline-2.jpg
Bill Payne offers a peek under the hood of a Ford Fusion

http://162.209.59.178:15758/sites/default/files/media-inline/102714ev-inline-1.jpg
Brent Oani dresses the part as he shows off the Fiat 500e
]

I’ve been thinking about getting an electric car, but I haven’t yet. This
made me consider a more important question: What will it take to get people
driving plug-in electric vehicles? Not just me, but the millions of people
the auto industry and environmentalists alike want to see in electric
vehicles.

So I set out recently to answer this question, starting at Electric Vehicle
Day in San Diego, one of many such events held in cities across the U.S. as
part of National Drive Electric Week in September.

Like you, perhaps, my curiosity comes from both the personal and
professional parts of my life: Living in the suburbs of San Diego, I drive
to work, missing the days I commuted on the Bay Area’s B.A.R.T., and want to
swap my fossil-fueled car for one that can save money and the environment. I
also do this stuff for a living. I started my career using social marketing
techniques to change individual behavior on health and environmental issues.
As head of brand purpose at i.d.e.a., I now help our clients, including an
auto industry responsibility group, move people, products and culture in a
way that’s good for business and good for the world.

With that perspective in mind, here’s what I think it will take to move the
needle on mass adoption of electric vehicles:


1. Deliver an authentic value proposition to ‘innovator’ consumers

If you look at electric vehicle advertising and promotion today, it’s all
over the map when it comes to consumer messaging. Some car companies
emphasize environmentalism, with one ad for the Mistubishi i-MiEV going as
far as challenging the reader: “We hear a lot about protecting the
environment these days. But what are you doing about it?”

Others take what I’ll call the “hybrid bandwagon effect,” leveraging that
segment’s familiarity to make electric vehicle adoption seem like a step,
not a leap. “Think of it as two cars in one: hybrid and electric,” said Bill
Payne, electric vehicles sales manager of Kearny Pearson Ford, as we got
into the Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid for a test drive. Or, your family
can have both: “Hybrid for me … plug in for you,” suggests an ad for the
Ford C-MAX, which comes in both options, showing two of the cars parked in
front of a hip, urban loft.

Another approach takes head-on the often diagnosed “range anxiety” that
prevents potential buyers from going electric. By emphasizing technology
advances and charging availability, these messages make electric vehicles
seem like a breeze, or at least not an inconvenience. “Plugs into your
life,” shouts the headline of one Honda ad featuring the Accord plug-in.

Finally, there’s the “innovator” angle. “Be a pioneer,” urges a Blink
charging station ad, with the body copy wisely recognizing, “Being first has
its challenges and its rewards.” This kind of messaging speaks to folks like
Luke Day, a soldier and father of 2-year-old girl, who explained why he and
his wife bought — and love — the futuristic looking BMWi: “It’s kind of
dorky! It pumps up my geek cred.”

There’s certainly room, and maybe a need, for all these messages in the
marketplace. As marketers know, the key to reaching consumers is speaking to
each audience segment, emphasizing the most important benefits and the right
reasons to believe in what you offer. But any brand looking to win in the
electric vehicle sector — whether car, charging station or solar — should be
certain who they’re trying reach, and what will move them to action.

The real win-win comes when the consumer’s truth and the brand’s truth are
aligned. We advise our brand partners to get crystal clear on their
authentic value proposition, which is much more than the traditional unique
selling proposition found in lots of marketing-speak. It’s not enough to
emphasize what’s different —you need to find and articulate your true
purpose. And these days, people expect a brand’s purpose to be about making
a difference, not just making money.

While your brand purpose should remain constant, electric vehicle marketers
will need to change their message for different audiences, and as we move
along different stages of the technology adoption curve, from the
innovators, to the early adopters, to the early majority and beyond. Less
that 1 percent of cars in the U.S. are electric vehicles, which means that
it’s “innovators” who are buying electric vehicles. For now, the best
marketing messages should be geared for these cutting-edge consumers.


2. It’s more important for salespeople to be smart than cool

One of the biggest obstacles to electric vehicle adoption is salespeople. As
one study from UC Davis notes, salespeople are not well informed about
electric vehicles, creating a huge chasm between consumer expectations and
the reality of buying an electric vehicle. Or in other words, the result is
lots people who are unhappy with the electric vehicle buying experience —
even more than your average car shopper.

As Payne, the Ford salesman, described the likely interaction: “You have a
consumer coming in, they’ve been online, they’ve researched it. Now they
walk into a dealership and they have a salesperson in front of them that’s
like a deer in the headlights.” (Payne, it seems, is the exception: He’s
stayed up on the latest electric vehicle info for all four years he’s been
selling them.)

And if you’re smart, you don’t have to be cool — as some of the salespeople
at Electric Vehicle Day were trying to be. In fact, like good brand
ambassadors, many of them looked like the cars they were selling, with
messaging to match. The BMWi sales team was dressed with German efficiency
in matching polo shirts, though the “BMW Genius” stitched on the backs read
“We’re trying to be cool like Apple” to me.

“It’s a mindset,” said John Zayne of BMW of San Diego, describing the
motivations of the eco-conscious customers who are drawn to the BMWi.

The guy talking up the bright blue Fiat 500e, Brent Oani of Bob Baker Fiat,
had a swarthy complexion and thoughtful outfit to match the car’s Italian
styling: skinny black jeans, white shirt and shiny brown leather shoes, with
a hat and aviator glasses that Brad Pitt might wear. “It’s a lifestyle. It’s
hip to be green,” said Oani, who could equally have been talking about his
customers and himself.

The Tesla team also conveyed the cool factor and exclusivity of the Model S
with their no test-drives policy — the only car there that day with a “You
can look but you can’t drive” message.

And Payne, the Ford salesman? Well, let’s just say he fit with a Midwestern
car company: straightforward and no frills.


3. Happy customers are the best salespeople

Word-of-mouth marketing is important for anyone trying to move a product or
service. But it’s especially important with the still-novel electric
vehicles, because the innovators driving them around can be the best
salespeople. I saw this happening at EV day: Luke Day was eagerly talking up
the BMWi to folks checking it out. But when he later moved to the Fiat booth
so his wife could try the 500e, Day continued to be a BMW brand ambassador,
telling would-be Fiat customers why he loved his BMWi.

Nissan knows that happy customers are responsible for a majority of its Leaf
sales. Brendan Jones, who directs marketing for the Nissan Leaf, told a
crowd of electric vehicle enthusiasts at the 2012 National Plug In Day event
in San Francisco, “More of our sales come from you guys than come from our
sales and marketing efforts.” Smart car companies will leverage this
phenomenon for maximum effect.

Whether your marketing electric vehicles, charging stations, solar or
similar green technologies at the front end of the adoption curve, I suggest
you follow the roadmap above: deliver an authentic value proposition to the
right audience with messaging to match; make sure your salespeople are
smart, not just cool; and use your happy customers to spread the word.

We’ve just started the electric vehicles adoption journey, and it’s a long
road ahead.
[© 2014 GreenBiz ]




For EVLN posts use:
http://www.evdl.org/archive/index.html#nabble+template%2FNamlServlet.jtp%3Fmacro%3Dsearch_page%26node%3D413529%26query%3Devln+-re%26sort%3Ddate

http://www.businessgreen.com/bg/news/2377931/lord-mayor-blazes-a-trail-with-electric-limousine
Pattison Newcastle.uk Lord Mayor 1st to switch2 a Leaf e-limousine
...
http://www.nextgreencar.com/news/6825/Newcastle-Mayor-leads-way-with-LEAF

http://www.timescolonist.com/green-vehicle-briefs-electric-bike-has-room-for-cargo-too-1.1465509
FEDDZ Electric cargo bike has room for 23L of carrying space
...
http://images.glaciermedia.ca/polopoly_fs/1.1465493.1414176552!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_563/new-feddz-jpg.jpg

http://blog.sfgate.com/energy/2014/10/20/ev-charging-comes-to-s-f-apartment-buildings/
EV charging comes to S.F. apartment buildings
...
http://www.multihousingnews.com/news/powertree-and-panasonic-bringing-ev-charging-to-sf-apartment-buildings/1004109598.html
+
EVLN: The state of EV charging is a bit of a mess


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-How-to-get-people-into-the-plugin-driver-s-seat-tp4672334.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to