Lexus, Subaru Have Most Loyal Customers Among New-Car Buyers: Study
The customer experience matters
Automakers work hard to keep customers coming back, and increasing competition is only making that job much more difficult. Some brands are better at retaining customers than others. J.D. Power’s 2020 US Automotive Brand Loyalty Study for new cars, released this week, shows which automakers succeed in customer loyalty, and which ones have work to do.
Lexus tops the study for luxury brands with a 48 percent of customers returning to the brand. That’s followed closely by Mercedes at 47.8 percent with BMW, Porsche, and Audi trailing at 45.1 percent, 44.9 percent, and 43.4 percent, respectively. Those automakers squash brands such as Jaguar (20.7 percent), Infiniti (27.7 percent), and Maserati (28.7 percent). For US brands, Lincoln bested Cadillac 37 percent to 33.8 percent.
How Automakers Stack Up:
Mass market automakers that see a high percentage of returning customers include Subaru, Toyota, and Honda. The three Japanese automakers had a 60.5-, 60.3-, and 58.7-percent loyalty rate, respectively. Ram placed fourth at 57.3 percent, ahead of Ford at 54.3 percent and Kia at 51.3. Chevy came in at just under 50 percent – 49.1.
Mainstream brands that suffer from low loyalty includes a trio of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles brands – Fiat, Chrysler, and Dodge, which sees 10.4, 14.1, and 17.8 percent of customers returning. Next is Mini with 26.8 percent brand loyalty. Mitsubishi and Buick are in similar boats at 27.1 and 27.5 percent.
J.D. Power calculated brand loyalty percentages through the Power Information Network, studying the percentage of vehicle owners who chose the same brand when upgrading to a new vehicle. The study calculated the rates based on transaction data from June 2019 through May 2020.
J.D. Power’s Vice President of Data and Analytics Tyson Jominy said there are “many factors that contribute to brand loyalty,” including the purchasing experience and how the car makes owners feel when they’re driving. Jominy pointed to automakers most recent focus on customer retention – the various programs introduced to help customers who may have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic. “Many have gone above and beyond to offer customers financial assistance,” said Tyson. Those sorts of programs build loyalty.
Source: J.D. Power