Ford Buyers Guide
Toyota and Honda take back seat to Ford in safety, quality and value
YONKERS, N.Y., Jan. 5, 2011; Consumers
believe the Ford brand has gained considerable ground as perennial leader
Toyota has declined over the past two years, according to Consumer
Reports' 2011 Car Brand Perception Survey. While the two car companies
are in a statistical dead heat, Ford excels in the factors that consumers
say matter most: safety, quality and value.
Over a two-year period, Ford has climbed by 35 percentage points as
Toyota has plummeted by 46 points, with total scores of 144 and 147,
respectively. A year ago, Toyota retained a substantial lead over Ford
and Honda, the No. 2 and No. 3 makes in terms of the strongest or most
favorable car brand. In 2010, however, Toyota finished only slightly ahead
of Ford, which widened its advantage over Honda. Honda has continued to
lose ground, sliding 28 points since 2008.
The scores in the survey reflect how consumers perceive each brand in
seven categories: safety, quality, value, performance, design/style,
technology/innovation, and environmentally friendly/green. Measuring across
those categories provides the total brand perception and does not directly
represent the actual qualities of any brand's vehicles.
Ford built on the momentum seen in last year's study, likely the result
of a model lineup with improving performance, reliability and styling. At
the same time, the massive recalls announced by Toyota earlier this year
contributed to the tarnishing of its public image as measured in the
poll.
One area where Toyota maintained a significant lead is in a category
that continues to become less important to consumers: environmentally
friendly/green. Toyota leads the category by a large margin, with a score
of 46, compared to second-place Ford at 18. Without that big Toyota victory
in the green category, Ford would have clearly claimed the top overall
score.
The survey also found that the environmentally friendly/green factor
continues to drop with only 28% of consumers finding it to be an important
factor, down by 4 percentage points since last year and by 12 points since
2008. This drop is likely a sign of the leaner economic times and
unwillingness to spend more for green technologies.
The ten most recognizable brands based on the perception of car owners
are: Toyota (147), Ford (144), Honda (121), Chevrolet (102), BMW (93),
Mercedes-Benz (90), Volvo (84), Lexus (69), Cadillac (66), and Subaru (50).
Honda and Chevrolet retained their third and fourth place finishes, while
BMW leapt over Volvo and Mercedes-Benz to capture fifth place.
The four brands with a double-digit drop in brand perception are Toyota
(-49 points), Subaru (-31 points), Chevrolet (-22 points) and Lexus (-11
points). After a 23-point jump last year, Subaru went in reverse to dip
below its 2008 number.
THE MOST IMPORTANT NEW-CAR-BUYING FACTORS:
Safety (65%), quality (57%), and value (51%) continued to be the most
important factors for consumers who are considering the purchase of a new
car. These categories maintain more weight than performance (47%),
environmentally friendly or green (28%), design or style (25%) and
technology or innovation (17%). The only significant change was the
continued decline of environmentally friendly/green, down a dozen
percentage points from 2008.
For more results from Consumer Reports' 2011 Car Brand Perception
Survey and more information on how to choose a new vehicle, visit
www.ConsumerReports.org/cars
.
SAFETY:
Volvo (70%) is the undeniable leader in the minds of consumers in the
safety category, with a dramatic 50-point advantage over second-place Ford
(20%). This margin elevates the Chinese-owned brand to top ten status
overall. Without leadership in this factor, Volvo would blend in with
second-tier brands in consumers' minds. Still, Volvo slid a bit in the
safety category this year. The movement may be because Volvo has not played
the safety drumbeat as loudly as in the past during the transition to new
ownership.
Other brands lost ground, but only slightly and without statistical
significance. It is possible that in the year ahead, the results from the
more-stringent government crash test rating system may influence future
perceptions. Among the 2011 models tested thus far, only the Honda Accord
has earned five stars across the board – a feat that was
commonplace just a year ago.
QUALITY:
Recalls over the past 18 months have put a major dent in Toyota's
hard-won public reputation as a leader in quality. Honda (25%) and Ford
(23%) accelerated past Toyota (19%), as the previous year's leader dropped
11 percentage points. Chevrolet (16%) and Mercedes-Benz (15%) rounded out
the top five.
The brand perception survey mirrors the recent Consumer Reports'
vehicle reliability study that ranked Toyota as sixth, down three places
from the prior year. The study ranked Honda and Ford higher than Toyota,
each without a single model showing reliability below or merely at the
industry average.
Aside from Toyota, the quality leaders in the survey remain consistent.
Of those top five, only Mercedes-Benz's appearance among them contrasts how
perception differs from reality. While most Mercedes models fare well in
Consumer Reports' tests and are enjoyable to drive, the brand ranks
22nd in predicted reliability – down four spots from the
previous year.
VALUE:
While the term "value" can be open to personal interpretation, it is
clear that car buyers are looking to get the most for their money,
including a good car at a good price. In terms of value, Ford (25%) edged
out Honda (24%) and Toyota (23%), as the brand moved up from third place
last year. Consistent with elsewhere in the survey, consumers' perception
of Toyota has dropped, while their perception of Ford has risen as Honda
pulls a respectable second-place finish.
The five brands that lead the list also include Hyundai (17%) and
Chevrolet (15%), which traded positions from the previous study. The
year-to-year movement for most brands in the survey suggests that the
rollout of new models and their associated marketing campaigns can affect
consumer perception.
PERFORMANCE:
BMW (27%) and Porsche (21%) again claimed the top spots in the
performance category. Experiencing a major improvement, climbing 8
percentage points over last year, this year the fifth spot is claimed by
Audi (17%). A growing portfolio with high-performance S model variants and
an R8 supercar flagship is clearly communicating that there is another
performance-focused German automaker.
Ford (19%) claims third place in performance, with Toyota falling from
the top five. Ford's score has remained unchanged as Toyota has tumbled to
15 percentage points. Toyota's high scores in past years suggest that
survey respondents were reacting to more than track-based performance
characteristics in their strong support for the brand. It has been a long
time since the Toyota brand had a true performance car. Chevrolet (19%)
again claimed the fourth position, just half a percentage point behind
Ford.
ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY/GREEN:
Given the attention the Chevrolet Volt, Nissan Leaf, and other
electrified cars are getting, one might think that environmentally friendly
cars would be a market force; however the Consumer Reports' green
car survey showed that while Americans want better fuel efficiency, they
are not willing to pay extra for it.
Consumers are aware that all automakers are striving to improve the fuel
economy in their models, and expectations are high for the next new car
purchase. This year the survey shows that leader Toyota (46%) and No. 3
Honda (17%) no longer own the "green" space. While both companies provide
several hybrid models and offer other fuel-efficient vehicles, the
competition is making significant strides.
Taking the second spot from Honda is Ford (18%). With the Fusion
hybrid sedan and by spreading its turbocharged "EcoBoost" engines across
several model ranges, Ford is delivering more power and efficiency than
before. Chevrolet (12%) remained mostly unchanged year-over-year as it
makes its fuel-economy push with the Cruze, Equinox, Volt, and upcoming
Sonic. The fifth spot was claimed by Scion (9%), keeping Subaru out of the
top five by a slight margin.
Surprisingly, Hyundai remained in the seventh spot, barely climbing 1
percentage point over last year. Based on official EPA fuel economy
ratings, Hyundai would be a green factor leader. As Hyundai rolls out the
Sonata hybrid, redesigned Elantra, and eventually the small Veloster, it
may capture more green awareness.
DESIGN/STYLE:
Luxury brands dominated the top spots in the design/style category. Up
from fifth place last year, BMW (22%) claimed the top spot, followed by
Porsche (20%), Cadillac (20%) and Mercedes-Benz (18%). Interestingly,
Lexus (17%) came in at the fifth spot, having dropped 6 percentage points
in two years. Cadillac also took a hit, dropping 4 points from last
year.
Last year, Toyota had 17%, and this year it came in with just 10%. The
drop in perceived styling leadership contributes to that brand's reduced
overall score. Just off our leader chart, Ford claimed 17% this year,
followed by Chevrolet with 16%.
TECHNOLOGY/INNOVATION:
Toyota (22%) barely stayed at the top, despite losing 10 points from
last year, leaving Mercedes-Benz (22%), Ford (21%), Lexus (18%) and BMW
(17%) all clustered with similar scores. In the past, Toyota had a
commanding advantage in technology, likely fueled by its hybrid powertrains
and related marketing.
It would seem that consumers now take the Prius for granted and
potentially are not impressed with the Honda CR-Z and Insight. Ford has
inched up this year, with numerous recent innovations to its credit beyond
hybrid that include EcoBoost powertrains, the SYNC driver interface system
and the MyFord Touch touch-screen display.
Lexus and BMW make the list, with each offering powerful, modern
powertrains and advanced safety features. Just off this list is Chevrolet
at 11%. With the upcoming Volt and new models in the pipeline, this is a
brand to watch for next year.
Despite their focus on engineering and marketing efforts heavily on
high-tech features, two prestige brands that weren't close were Infiniti
(8%) and Acura (5%).
METHODOLOGY:
To learn about consumers' car brand perceptions, the Consumer Reports
National Research
Center conducted a random, nationwide telephone survey on December 2-6, 2010, contacting 2,019 adults,
collecting data from 1,721 adults in households that had at least one
car.
Overall brand perception is an index calculated as the total number of
times that the particular make was mentioned as an exemplar across all
seven categories, divided by the total unaided mentions. This approach
adjusts for awareness level, ensuring every brand has an equal chance of
leading a category, not just the best-selling or most well-known
brands.
Category scores reflect the number of times that the particular make was
mentioned as an exemplar of the particular attribute, again adjusted for
awareness.
Consumer Reports'
Auto Pulse Survey Series:
Throughout the year, Consumer Reports conducts Auto Pulse surveys
that track current opinions, perceptions, and buying trends —
the pulse — of the American consumer automotive marketplace.
Results are announced to the media and posted to
www.ConsumerReports.org
, the largest paid Web publication.
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