YW
you have no clue what youre talking about. how about you shut your trap and save us all the trouble
so what if the 3 series is the number one selling executive. i can think of probably ten nameplates that are non executive that sell in higher quantities than the 3 series.
GMs problems lie mostly in the UAW and the perception of its products. GMs vehicles are certainly competitive with pretty much anything in thier respective sectors but thier perceieved quality is lacking relative to thier competitors mostly the asian ones.
i but the legacy payments for past UAW contracts means that GM pays about $2000 in health care costs for its PAST employees and thier families, and another $2-3000 on top of that for thier pensions. for each car sold
toyota does not have that burden. that money goes straight into their coffers. so GM is at a competitive disadvantage over a contract that some dumb CEO signed back when they were making money hand over fist. not toyotas fault. not posrches fault.
incidentally, porsche very nearly went under in the 80s/ early nineties. after making a replacement (928) that was larger, had better handling, more room, more trunk space etc for their vaunted 911 they nearly went bankrupt when people didnt buy it and continued to buy the 911, albeit at lower and lower volumes. they had to keep reengineering it and refining it while they thought of a suitable replacement or substitute. that substitute/ alternative was the boxster. they did save a lot of money by using a lot of the same components (suspension, switches, gauges, headlights) and that is their #1 volume seller now. that they were able to make it a lower price meant it would be the volume car, but using teh same components on the more expensive car meant that its profits were much higher.
the cayenne was simply a manouvre to reduce "thier reliance on sports cars, which are a luxury commodity, and whose sales decline in recessions and so on."