Top Indian automaker Tata says it plans to reposition the Nano as a “smart city car” after its marketing pitch as the world's cheapest car resulted in disappointing sales.
The Nano was launched in 2009 as a budget solution for millions of aspirational lower-middle class Indian families wanting to change from two to four-wheel vehicles. But status-conscious consumers largely shunned the “cheap” tag.
Tata chairman Cyrus Mistry told shareholders at its annual meeting on Wednesday in Mumbai: “We are now focusing on increasing the features and the perceived value of the Nano with every subsequent model launch.
“We are making it a smart city car and targeting the young customers.”
The jellybean-shaped Nano, which sold for about $2200 (R22 700) when its first edition went on the market, saw sales drop by more than 27 percent in the year to March, and former Tata chairman Ratan Tata - the driving force behind the Nano - admitted the car had an image problem.
New boss Mistry said added features would include power steering options, an improved interior and exterior and better fuel efficiency.
He also said the company would launch the much-delayed compressed natural gas-powered variant this year.
Tata's dedicated Nano plant in the western state of Gujarat is currently running at less than half its capacity and Tata, which owns Jaguar and Land Rover, reported a 23 percent dive in net profit in the April to June quarter as higher sales for its British luxury brands failed to offset weak domestic demand.
Amid an economic slump, India's car market has recorded a fall in sales for an unprecedented nine consecutive months, with a slide of more than seven percent in July.
Mistry said Tata's Indian operations were “impacted heavily by the slowdown in the domestic auto sector, high interest rates and stagnation of industrial growth in sectors such as mining and infrastructure”. - AFP