Survey says, the Chevy Volt failed — and surveys are always right, always

A new consumer survey questions consumer interest in the Chevy Volt. I say consumer surveys are pretty much meaningless when it comes to hybrids, plug-ins and new car sales.

Consumers are just realizing the cost of the Volt?

Consumers are losing interest according to CNW Marketing Research

I hate automotive surveys. According to numerous surveys, for instance, somewhere between 60 and 80 percent of new car consumers are interested in hybrid cars, yet less than 3 percent of new car consumers actually purchase hybrids. So, I’d say that when it comes to new automotive technologies, consumer surveys aren’t worth the paper they are published upon.

Thus, when a survey suggests that consumers are losing interest in the Chevy Volt, I say whatever.

According to CNW interest in the Volt is dropping because it’s too expensive. Seriously? That alone makes the survey meaningless.

Inevitably, the technology powering the Volt will almost certainly experience numerous breakthroughs as it evolves over the next decade, and that means cost-cuts. Besides, GM knew full well that the Volt was going to cost too much for most consumers for at least the first few generations. Therefore, anybody that was expecting a far cheaper Volt today just hasn’t been paying attention, and probably never was a very serious Volt consumer in the first place.

Granted, GM over-hyped the Volt far too much and far too early, and coupled with bankruptcy, there is a lot of interest in Volt success and failure. Nevertheless, whether the Volt fails, achieves modest success, or rewrites the future of the automobile, is still to be determined, and it’ll probably many years, even a decade or more, before we’ll really know anything.

And, finally and most importantly, until consumer surveys start better correlating to actual auto sales, they should be deemed irrelevant and basically worthless.

Source: MotorTrend

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6 Comments.

  1. You have to remember that the Volt was designed from the ground-up to be a different kind of hybrid. Whereas the Prius and Insight run on a hybridized combination of gasoline and electricity, what powers the Volt is a hybridized combination of unsustainable hype and truckloads of taxpayer cash.

  2. What do you expect from the same group that tried to show that a Prius causes more pollution than a Hummer?

  3. well.. the “survey” would have been a little more informative if they had added a question like: ” Would you buy a Chevy Cruz Hybrid for 22K”?

    or perhaps:

    would you chose a 22K car that got 50mpg over a 18K car that got 35mpg….

    so much of the discussion seems to me to seriously conflated… and seriously about people’s prejudices with respect to brands (and styling).

    A little notice thing that is going on is how well Chrysler is doing with popular styled cars even though they are bottom rung cars on value and reliability… they still sell….well..

    Chrysler was also a bailout auto company but hardly any criticism like that that is leveled at GM…

  4. Interest is not dropping. The survey is just becoming “more accurate” now that the Volt and Leaf are on the market…

    When the Volt and Leaf were just “pipe dreams” it was much easier for folks to say they were willing to pay the higher price for these vehicles…. Now that the Volt and Leaf are actually on the market, people have to put their money where their mouth is. That’s a little tougher…..

    I think the survey is “more” accurate today than it was previously. The survey “is” saying that the price is still too high for most Americans.

    But, as this survey has become more accurate, the percentage of people that said “yes” in the survey who will actually buy a Volt or Leaf will be higher than from previous surveys…

  5. I’m not surprised. Most people will make the calculation that a more fuel-efficient car with no worse compromises can be had for far less.

    their only interest in the technology that is in the Volt is if that technology will benefit them in some way …usually financially.

    there’s a lot of talk about people who are concerned about pollution, energy independence, “green”, etc… but the vast majority of people, it simply comes down to how much they can afford either as a cash-buy sale or a monthly payment and when the money comes into the equation – a lot of other things they say they care about… just fall away.

    A 10K or 20K car that goes 50 miles on a charge and re-charges in 30 minutes (and has a “get-me home capability) would, in my estimation, blow the other hybrids out of the water….especially if it had all the cool technology that many people crave….

    the only real benefit of the Volt – was to get an American contender in to the EV competition.

    It’s served that purpose well in my view but people are looking for Version 2.0 from GM – perhaps a Cruz Hybrid ….

    On the Version 2.0 issue.. Nissan needs to do that also with the LEAF.

    if neither GM nor Nissan move the ball forward then Toyota will win by default.

  6. Plug-ins are still not practical. In most of the country, their coal-powered electricity is even more dirty than petroleum. The proverbial three strikes would be cost, actual environmental impact, and lack of quick electrical refueling.

    Gas still isn’t expensive enough for most Americans to give a rats ass.

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