BBC
Two
years after Fiat rescued Chrysler from bankruptcy, the Italian
automotive company is using its control of the Detroit automaker to sell
its own vehicles to American drivers.
The modern version of Fiat's iconic small car - the 500 -
is proving a winner, but re-launching the sporty Alfa
Romeo
brand in the United States could prove a tougher test, because it will
have to compete with rival European vehicles, especially BMW or
Audi.
The Image of a Sporty Italian
Car
Ask people to
conjure up an image of Italian culture and they might recall the
beautiful Bay of Naples, or perhaps scenes of scooters zipping through
the traffic of Rome past the Vatican City, not to forget Hollywood
images of gladiators doing battle in the ancient Coliseum. However,
people with octane fueled minds are more likely to think of stylish,
powerful Italian sports cars.
Kings of their
imaginary hometown drag strip, but Main Street in the real world, are
drivers who hanker after a car that will stand out from others. Those
who blip the gas pedal, waiting for the stop light to turn green, might
be just the kind of customer Fiat Chrysler is targeting for its Alfa
Romeo brand.
The Giulia
model is due across the Atlantic soon and the rear-wheel drive sedan
will probably have a price tag to match the BMW 3 Series and the
Mercedes C-Class.
Fiat knows
that image matters to sports car drivers and even though it is beyond
the wallet of most, the sleek lines of Alfa Romeo 8C will be used to
help sell the brand.
BBC Top Gear's outspoken Jeremy Clarkson has a unique
take on Alfa's top car:Â "The 8C is horrid. It feels wayward,
it feels uncouth, it feels like an American car and sounds like one as
well."
That review might
be sweet music to the Fiat Chrysler marketing team in
Detroit.
Fiat
plus Chrysler: Who is in control?
The company's
chief executive, Sergio Marchionne, knows control of Chrysler could make
the group more competitive with General Motors and Ford in the American
market.
"Chrysler has
done a tremendous job of opening the door to make sure the American
market was sufficiently attuned to receive Fiat," he said recently.
"Jeep and Alfa Romeo are the true international brands of the Fiat
Chrysler Group and we need to leverage their huge
potential."
Automobiles
with Alfa badges first arrived in the U.S. in the 1950s, but by the time
Fiat took control of the company in 1986 its fortunes were stalling and
after acquiring an unfortunate reputation for poor quality and
reliability the Turin based firm pulled the plug on the
brand.
But now Fiat Chrysler's Alfa Romeo marque is back in the
US, but are the Italian suits really in control in the Motor
City?
"People
essentially thought this was going to be a Fiat takeover and in some
ways it's almost like a surreptitious Chrysler takeover", says Paul
Eisenstein, the publisher of the Detroit Bureau.
"Chrysler is
now the more successful side of the company and it seems like the Fiat
management is more and more leaning towards being an American company,"
he said.
Will There Be Sales
Success?
Success in the
U.S. for Alfa Romeo will depend on a network of dealers and people like
Silvana Gulla,
whose family-run business, Fiat of Larchmont, has been
selling Italian cars in New York since the
1960s.
"We're looking
forward and really anticipating more news from the people in Italy and
the people in Detroit, as far as to the timing and what models are going
to be introduced," she
said.
She is also confident that getting Alfa Romeo cars in
their showroom will lead to more sales.
"It will
because Alfa Romeo does have that racing prestige. It is perceived as a
bit more upscale than the Fiat, so we are going to be more competitive
with people that are buying in the luxury sporty segment, such as BMW or
Audi," she said.
Fiat's compact
500 is becoming a familiar sight on America's freeways and now the
company's marketing team is going into overdrive to sell Americans a
sporty Italian alternative.
Control of
Chrysler is giving Fiat a second shot for Alfa Romeo in the United
States and pretty soon the guy blipping the gas pedal of the sporty
European model, waiting next to you at the stop light, might be driving
an Italian car, not a German one.