In the globe and Mail today, there was an article about if it is possible for GM to recreate its 'golden age'.
Of course, the article is refering to the 1950's and 1960's, when famous GM stylists created legendary GM cars - the 1955 Nomad, the 1957 Chevy, the Corvete, the GTO...etc...
This era is always looked on uber-fondly by GM fans, and is talked about endlessly of how great it was, how the cars defined the generation, how inspired the artistry was, and it is always opinioned that this is what GM needs to get back to - legendary designs.
But forget all that...just forget it.
Car-making is a business, and the goal of a business is to make money, and have marketplace power, pure and simple. It doesn't matter if the cars look good, if they don't sell, you're sunk.
If you want to find GM's TRUE 'golden age'...you need to go to the late 1970's. In the period of about 1977-1982, GM was close to, or just over, 60% of NA market share. That means about 6 of 10 cars on the street were GM's of some kind.
Say all the bad things you want about 1970's cars....they were bland, ugly, underpowered, badge-engineered, but they SOLD. Even IF someone had a horrible experience with a Vega or a Chevette, chances were good he would upgrade to a larger, more expensive GM car. Many people never went outside GM for their cars, working their way from Chevy's to Caddy's.
THIS IS WHAT GM NEEDS TO GET BACK TO, FOLKS!
I'd love to hear somebody say I'm wrong on this.......

Of course, the article is refering to the 1950's and 1960's, when famous GM stylists created legendary GM cars - the 1955 Nomad, the 1957 Chevy, the Corvete, the GTO...etc...
This era is always looked on uber-fondly by GM fans, and is talked about endlessly of how great it was, how the cars defined the generation, how inspired the artistry was, and it is always opinioned that this is what GM needs to get back to - legendary designs.
But forget all that...just forget it.
Car-making is a business, and the goal of a business is to make money, and have marketplace power, pure and simple. It doesn't matter if the cars look good, if they don't sell, you're sunk.
If you want to find GM's TRUE 'golden age'...you need to go to the late 1970's. In the period of about 1977-1982, GM was close to, or just over, 60% of NA market share. That means about 6 of 10 cars on the street were GM's of some kind.
Say all the bad things you want about 1970's cars....they were bland, ugly, underpowered, badge-engineered, but they SOLD. Even IF someone had a horrible experience with a Vega or a Chevette, chances were good he would upgrade to a larger, more expensive GM car. Many people never went outside GM for their cars, working their way from Chevy's to Caddy's.
THIS IS WHAT GM NEEDS TO GET BACK TO, FOLKS!
I'd love to hear somebody say I'm wrong on this.......
