‘Inside the Rather Bizarre Relaunch of Jaguar’
James Baggott, writing for Car Dealer Magazine:
Jaguar unveiled a new look, logo and direction for its cars at
what was quite possibly the most bizarre automotive media launch
I’ve ever attended — here’s what happened.
Embargoed until today, the event felt like a hallucinogenic sci-fi
movie where the presenters were only allowed to speak in marketing
babble. Unveiling a new concept car — the details of which are
still under embargo until December 3 — Jaguar’s passionate team
spoke for most of the day about how they plan to ‘delete ordinary’
and ‘live vivid’. Whatever that means…
In what, at times, felt like a drunken dream, Jaguar personnel
walked journalists through its plans to ‘reimagine’ the much-loved
brand over the next few years. Calling it a ‘complete reset’,
McGovern at one point told journalists that his team had ‘not been
sniffing the white stuff — this is real’.
Translation: they’ve all been sniffing a metric ton of the white stuff. This looks like the identity for a women’s razor brand or something. Certainly not the identity for a longstanding British sports car company.
Lulu Cheng Meservey:
Jaguar already nailed their marketing decades ago, and given the
demand for nostalgia, now would’ve been the perfect time to
revive it.
Instead, the sad irony is that their “Copy nothing” campaign
abandons their own originality in favor of a fad that peaked
during the pandemic.
★
James Baggott, writing for Car Dealer Magazine:
Jaguar unveiled a new look, logo and direction for its cars at
what was quite possibly the most bizarre automotive media launch
I’ve ever attended — here’s what happened.
Embargoed until today, the event felt like a hallucinogenic sci-fi
movie where the presenters were only allowed to speak in marketing
babble. Unveiling a new concept car — the details of which are
still under embargo until December 3 — Jaguar’s passionate team
spoke for most of the day about how they plan to ‘delete ordinary’
and ‘live vivid’. Whatever that means…
In what, at times, felt like a drunken dream, Jaguar personnel
walked journalists through its plans to ‘reimagine’ the much-loved
brand over the next few years. Calling it a ‘complete reset’,
McGovern at one point told journalists that his team had ‘not been
sniffing the white stuff — this is real’.
Translation: they’ve all been sniffing a metric ton of the white stuff. This looks like the identity for a women’s razor brand or something. Certainly not the identity for a longstanding British sports car company.
Jaguar already nailed their marketing decades ago, and given the
demand for nostalgia, now would’ve been the perfect time to
revive it.
Instead, the sad irony is that their “Copy nothing” campaign
abandons their own originality in favor of a fad that peaked
during the pandemic.