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Goodbye, ‘Maximim Bob’ Lutz!

What to make of the departure of Bob Lutz [wiki], the septuagenarian marketing guru from General Motors, and what does the move say about the future?

Bob Lutz (second from left) examines Fisher Automotives Electrical Concept with other GM executives.

Lutz, a former Marine and jet fighter pilot has a resume encompassing nearly every major manufacturer in the North American and European segments of the industry  and a fair number of hits.  Lutz is credited as having an instrumental role in the creation of the original Dodge Viper, the Plymouth Prowler, Neon, Chrysler LH sedans, as well as “the Cadillac Sixteen Concept; Saturn Sky and Pontiac Solstice; Pontiac G8; Chevrolet Malibu; Cadillac CTS; Buick Enclave; Cadillac Converj Concept; Cadillac CTS Coupe Concept; Chevrolet Camaro Concept; Chevrolet Camaro (production version); Chevy Beat, Groove and Trax Concept Studies; and 2010 Buick Lacrosse, Chevrolet Equinox, and Cadillac SRX” (via Wikipedia).

As of last year, he was talking directly to the customer via GM’s Fastlane blog.  Lutz – who occasionally steered onto the shoulder while speaking publicly, such as his dismissal of both electric vehicles and global warming – also had a firm grasp on the wheel and a strong sense of direction.

There are two GMs – the Old GM, and the New GM.   The old GM was a manufacturing behemoth who enjoyed a period of dominance in both style and sales, which eventually culminated in the misreading and mismatch of product to consumer needs, a much lamented attempt use marketing to compensate for bland product, and a vicious spiral of legacy costs, quality deficiencies – both real and perceived – and an addiction to market share over profit, punctuated by the occasional hit.

The New GM casted off the chains of the past (as Motors Corp), shed the sick, lame, and lazy divisions (initially Oldsmobile, followed by Saturn, Pontiac, Saab, and Hummer), and shed thousands of white and blue collar jobs and unviable dealerships.

GM is enjoying somewhat of a nascent recovery with competitive offerings such as the current Chevrolet Malibu, Cadillac CTS, and Buick Lacrosse as well as forthcoming product like the Chevrolet Cruze, Buick Regal, and others.  The fear is that the bean-counters, bankers, and marketing guys of old – responsible for such ‘hits’ as the Cadillac 4-6-8 engine, the X-cars, badge-engineering, and of course, the Aztec – will have resumed control after the latest management putsch, most notably of car guy CEO Fritz Henderson by former-AT&T Executive Ed Whitacare.  GMs greatest weakness is its culture – without strong leadership – as exemplified by Lutz – it will be far too easy for the company to fall back on old habits.

More Christmas TV

December 20th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

The blog of radio station WFMU has a ridiculous list of classic Christmas television specials here.

Snow Day TV via Comcast Xfinity Beta

December 19th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

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Comcast ‘TV Anywhere – launched as Xfinity TV beta – has gone live.

If you are a Comcast customer with a Comcast login, you can browse and view an expanded collection of videos, including a sizable holiday list as well as content from premium channels (if subscribed).  Being at snowbound at home with three little girls may make this ‘must see TV’ in my house.






Begun the Tablet Wars Have

December 9th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments
End the speculation (maybe) – here comes the Apple tablet (analyst Yair Reiner of Oppenheimer, quoted at Apple Insider, found via Clusterstock):

A Very Special Christmas Episode of ‘Newsradio’

December 6th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

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A Very Special Christmas Episode of ‘Doogie Howser, M.D.’

December 5th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

A Very Special Christmas Episode of ‘Silver Spoons’

December 4th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

Yes, Virginia, print is in trouble.

December 4th, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

As evident in these charts for newspapers and magazines, is that circulation revenue has fallen of a cliff.   The analysis and consensus by the newspaper industry is that 1) the decline is all Google’s fault then 2) the dirty effing bloggers steal their content and that 3) the product that they produce is of sufficient quality that people will pay.  This requires totally ignoring a secular trend away from print that likely started with cable news and has worsened since the internet’s inception and will accelerate as mobile use increases.  This analysis in turn has resulted in moves to place content behind a walled garden,  accessed via paywall.

Throwing up a pay wall might not be Rupert Murdoch’s worst idea, provided that #3 is true.  Read more…

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A Very Special Christmas Episode of ‘the Addams Family’

December 3rd, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

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A Very Special Christmas Episode of ‘ALF’

December 2nd, 2009 Ronald C. Burkhardt No comments

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