Subaru carved a niche using the firm-footedness of all-wheel-drive instead of the traditional 4×4. The RAV4 and CRV were instant hits when they arrived in the ’90s and set off the sport-utility/crossover market by hitting, along with practicality, those sweet spots – the ability to be rugged, but not big and boxy. The Volkswagen Tiguan crossover recently passed its own Beetle and Eos (those cars had 55 per cent and 56 per cent, respectively, of their sales to women) in popularity amongst women.
The Lexus RX is one of North America’s top-selling luxury vehicles, across all styles.
There are stats – or you can simply eyeball the streets.
“It’s about looks, it’s about safety, it’s about being higher up,” says Shivji. “Finish and quality are important, too. And our not-so-average climate in Northern Alberta. It gives that peace of mind.”
The Caddy Example
Women always loved Cadillacs – but usually from the passenger seat. They were rarely the ones driving.
Cadillac is an example of an old-school brand that is trying to hip itself up. In 2013, to tap into the lucrative Chinese market, a new Cadillac partnership in Asia had its whole advertising strategy helmed by Violet Li. One of the key ads features a Cadillac SRX crossover with a woman in the foreground, promising that the vehicle delivers the American mystique of the Route 66 experience.
Cadillac is trying to revamp its masculine image – that same iSeeCars study shows that men are still twice as likely to buy a Caddy than women.
In North America, Cadillac’s latest TV ad features a female (being stared at by an envious male) getting into their SRX crossover. She’s the driver, not him.
Women have always had their say in the process – to a certain degree, says Dave Mussell, general manager at Don Wheaton Cadillac/GM on Whyte.
“Guy’s in buying a truck; [his] wife, girlfriend, she’s picking colours, picking options,” he says. “Things that impact families.”