ENERGIES
Week of March 21, 1999
SELLING THE WORLD. Of all the things America does, the thing it does
best is marketing. As those in the corporate world know, marketing is
much more than advertising. Marketing is all the combined actions and
events initiated by a company to bring a product to market, convince
people to buy and then deliver it on time.
To the consumer sometimes marketing is obvious, like catchy
advertising or good salesmanship. Sometimes it's inconspicuous. For
example, in the automotive industry corporations spend big dollars
determining which paint colors consumers prefer. A pretty paint job is
marketing and can sell many cars.
Step in Lee Iacocca - perhaps the grand master of automotive
marketing. At Ford he takes a humdrum economy car, the Falcon, gives it
a flashy body and a spirited name and sells millions of Mustangs. At
Chrysler he takes another economy car platform, the K-car (itself a
life-saver for Chrysler), puts a square box on top and invents the
Mini-Van.
Now he's back. Having seen the light and bored with retirement he
wants the world to buy clean, efficient electric vehicles. His first
effort from EV Global Motors is the E-Bike introduced to the public this
week.
At a retail price of $995 it is one of the most expensive electric
bikes on the market. Performance seems no better than other e-bikes. But
is it attractive? Yes. Is it full of features? Yes. Is it more a product
of good marketing than engineering? Probably so. Will Lee be successful
again? Could be.
If selling the world clean and efficient transportation is nothing
more than savvy marketing, so be it. Visit EV Global Motors at
http://www.evglobal.com/ .
RENEWABLE POWER SALES. Pulling ahead in marketing renewable power
under deregulation appears to be Green Mountain Energy. More than having
a company name appealing to environmentally conscious consumers, the
company appears dedicated to its mission.
On the celebration of the first year of power deregulation in
California, Green Mountain has introduced two new electricity blends for
California consumers. Wind for the Future 2.0 supports the construction
of new wind turbines which will produce 25% of the power for this blend
- the rest will come from small hydro, biomass and/or geothermal. The
other product, 100% Renewable Power 2.0, promises a slight (5% below
California Power Exchange pricing) rate reduction. This blend includes
100% renewable power, 5% of that new.
According to industry and advocacy group claims, of the 100,000
consumers in California who have switched power suppliers under
deregulation, more than half have chosen a power blend or all their
power from renewable sources. Visit Green Mountain Power at
http://www.greenmountain.com .
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ENERGIES...the free weekly e-letter of products, innovation, issues
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News Inc. 3/27/99 vol.3 no.51.
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