Wednesday 16 October 2013

Honda Brio - Need for Interior Designer

Brio is Honda’s first small car in India.  First and till date the only small car from Honda in India. It came here in 2011 and since then two years have passed but it could never be a car selling in decent numbers.  It has almost everything that can make it buyer’s choice.  It has the best petrol engine that is refined, silent, fuel efficient and powerful. It has with it the name of Honda reliability which is so famous worldwide and a service network that is small but expending in India. Honda was never considered by car users as a brand whose service and maintenance costs are sky high, unlike some European brands (Volkswagen, Skoda etc) nor its cars require too much maintenance and repairs (unlike Ford, Fiat etc). 


Brio looks futuristic from outside and has a design that will not be considered outdated for quite a long time. 



In contradiction to this, Ford’s Figo looked outdated on the very day of its launch. Brio looks spacious inside and it is actually spacious inside. Some of its competitors like Swift from Suzuki and i10 from Hyundai give a claustrophobic feeling for the rear seat occupants, although Hyundai has tried to correct that feeling to some extent in the new Grand i10.  And these two cars, i10 and Swift are selling in very good numbers, Swift around 17,000 units per month and i10 around 6,000 units. We can safely assume that out of these 17,000 units for Swift, around 5000 are petrol units as the ratio between diesel units and petrol units is about 5:2.  i10, on the other hand, had only petrol model till recently when Grand i10 joined it.  

So, against 5000 Swifts and 6000 i10s being sold per month, Brio manages around 1600.  One reason, we may say, is the very small network of Honda dealerships compared to Hyundai and Suzuki in India. But that is not the reason as has been proved by the success of Ford’s Ecosport and Duster from Renault, both of which are having network smaller than that of Honda.


The problem with Brio is that it has a small boot, quite small.  But most of the people would not mind it.  The major problem with Brio lies inside. It has a dashboard that is good in quality but does not look like so.  For many people, it is kind of cheap although it is not.  There is no symmetry in the structure of the dashboard. 

   Brio


When we compare it with that of Toyota Liva’s dashboard, none of them is pleasing to eyes. Although Honda’s dashboard’s quality is good, it looks like an eye-sore. On the contrary, when we sit in i10 or Grand i10, a sense of richness fills the eyes. 

   i10

   
Grand i10

Swift dashboard also is good. Then why so much cost cutting, Mr Honda? Does it save some money by making the dashboard asymmetrical? Moreover, changing the dashboard is not that difficult like changing the engine or changing the length, width etc of the car. If there is just one small negative thing, remove it rather then continuing with it and saying that petrol only cars do not sell well in India. Another model from Honda in India, Amaze is selling well although having the same dashboard but it sells because it has a diesel heart. And it is priced quite competitively with a very large boot. So, to avoid Brios dusting in the dealership yards, please hire a good interior designer, Mr Honda.

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