Tata Nano |
Tata said the branding of the jelly-bean shaped vehicle as the world's cheapest car was a mistake. "It became termed as a cheapest car by the public and, I am sorry to say, by ourselves," Tata said, calling the branding 'unfortunate'. Rather than embracing the Nano, the poorer but still status-conscious customer base the car was targeting largely shunned the "cheap" tag and opted for slightly pricier rivals. The base model initially sold for a price of 100,000 rupees ($1,600). "The Nano should have been marketed towards the two-wheeler owner," said Tata, who trained as an architect and worked closely on the design. It was "conceived to give people who rode on two wheels with the whole family an all-weather safe form of affordable transportation, not the cheapest", he said.
Families of four and five are regularly seen balancing precariously on motorcycles weaving through India's notoriously lethal congested traffic. "Maybe it could get launched in another country like Indonesia, where it doesn't have the (cheap) stigma and the new image comes back to India," Tata said. "Or maybe it could be launched as a changed product that gets marketed in Europe. There's a lot of interest in the Nano outside India," Tata said. Tata Motors, which also produces the successful British luxury Jaguar and Land Rover marques, had aimed to sell around 25,000 Nanos a month. But between April and October, it sold just 12,322 units. The base model, sold without air conditioning, now costs 145,000 rupees.
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