The Timaru Herald

General Motor’s new logo aims to electrify image

- Tom Krisher

General Motors is changing its corporate logo and launching an electric vehicle marketing campaign to reshape its image as a clean vehicle company, rather than a builder of gas-powered pickups and SUVs.

The 112-year-old Detroit automaker has promised to roll out 30 new battery-powered vehicles globally by the end of 2025 and said last week that the new campaign will highlight its progressiv­e vision for the future.

GM said the industry has reached a history-changing inflection point for mass adoption of electric vehicles.

The campaign comes as stock market investors are enthralled with companies that make electric vehicles.

Shares of global EV leader Tesla Incorporat­ed have skyrockete­d more than 800 per cent in the past year, and the company’s market value has passed US$800 billion (NZ$1116b).

GM’s shares are only up slightly in the past year and its value is around US$61b.

GM is scrapping its old square blue logo and replacing it with a lower case ‘‘gm’’ surrounded by rounded corners. The company says it’s the biggest change to its logo since 1964. The ‘‘m’’ in the logo is underlined to make the negative space look more like an electrical plug.

‘‘We felt it was just such a transforma­tive moment that this is the time that we would change again,’’ said Deborah Wahl, GM global chief marketing officer. ‘‘Our message here is that we believe there should be an EV for everyone.’’

GM is hoping the ‘‘Everybody In’’ campaign prepares buyers for a new era of vehicle propulsion.

Wahl said the marketing campaign will be ‘‘very significan­t’’, but she wouldn’t say how much money would be spent or where it will show up.

‘‘You will see it in many places throughout the year,’’ she said last week. She said the campaign will start in the United States but eventually will become global. It will not be in brand ads for vehicles, Wahl said.

Late last year, GM said it was nearing a battery chemistry breakthrou­gh that will make electric vehicles as affordable as those with internal combustion engines in less than five years. Some will be able to go up to

450 miles (724km) per charge and from zero to 60mph (96kmh) in as quickly as three seconds.

The company has promised to spend US$27b on battery vehicles through 2025.

The new logo will go wherever GM now has a logo, including websites and buildings, Wahl said.

The company stopped putting the logo on car bodies about a decade ago as it started to emphasise individual brands. But GM says the new logo eventually will replace the old one on window glass and some other parts.

The marketing campaign will feature celebritie­s including Malcom Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point.

A campaign of ‘‘Everyone In’’ conflicts a bit with GM’s announced plans for electric vehicles such as a GMC Hummer pickup and Cadillac Lyriq SUV, both higher-priced vehicles. But Wahl said lower priced vehicles are among the 30 new electric vehicles that are coming.

GM officials have said previously that they will have a small electric SUV that will cost less than US$30,000 within five years.

The campaign will run ahead of current electric vehicle sales trends in the US.

Last year automakers sold just over 260,000 fully electric vehicles.

Although sales were up nearly 10 per cent over 2019, electric vehicles still were less than 2 per cent of new vehicle sales. – AP

 ??  ?? In the biggest change to its logo since the 1960s, General Motors is going lower case.
In the biggest change to its logo since the 1960s, General Motors is going lower case.

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