So was MS just returning the favor to Bridgestone when he was moaning about the Pirrelis?
Where is Don when you need him???
Than the June 13, 2010 was a very very short day I assume.Cam wrote:Here's an interesting thought - would you buy Pirelli tyres for your personal car or race car?
Bridgestone supplied a tyre that ran all day long. There was no mystery. As a consumer I was so impressed by that, the decision to put them on my car is a no brainer. Get performance, get miles, I don't have to 'nurse' them.Bridgestone's primary reason for its F1 entry was to enhance its brand awareness, and for this to be effective, Bridgestone's Formula 1 tyres had to demonstrate strong performance........."We concentrated on our quality control to ensure that the tyres supplied to all teams were the same, allowing these close championship battles, which provided a fantastic spectacle for Formula 1 fans around the world." (http://www.bridgestone.com.au/media/art ... st_f1.aspx)
I seriously will never put Pirelli tyres on my personal car - let alone a race car. They may be the best in the world but it doesn't come across like that and it's divided people like never before. Bridgestone never had to worry about brand damage.
O/T but I'd give the Dunlop Z1 Star Specs a go. They are the real deal. Goodyear GS-D3's were as well.strad wrote:I think it depends on the car but on my Mustang Cobra NOTHING works as well in the real wet/dry, warm/cold real world as my Pirelli P-Zeros. Not the Goodyear Eagle F1, not Dunlops or Michelins.
The question is, what IS the public perception? How IS it influencing consumer purchasing? Very difficult questions to answer concretely, which is why such motorsport contracts can be a challenge to justify. "How do we prove our return on investment?"Cam wrote:The success of your business, to a reasonable extent, relies on the public perception and investment made with a supplier deal to F1?
Pirelli IMO is not marketing the product - they're marketing the brand. Most sensible people understand that the tyres are entirely different to what you'll get on your road car. The advertised product doesn't have to match the sold product. Ever seen LEGO or toy ads where the action figure punches their way out of a box or some such? People understand that the ad does not entirely reflect reality. The ad just gets the juices going, and THEN people buy. A LOT - and I mean a LOT - of marketing campaigns are not product-driven or feature-driven (as in advertising a specific feature). Show me where Pirelli says the exact same technology of their F1 tyre is on their road tyre?Cam wrote:It is interesting that some think designing a product which is contentious won't hurt the brand. I guess it's probably easier when it's not you writing the cheques and responsible to the board.
It's not their only marketing. I don't in any way think Pirelli's success is at all dependent on it being in F1. Public perception of Pirelli in itself is already very strong - especially in the upmarket segments it tries to reach.Any business owners out here - would you put yourself in Pirellis situation? The success of your business, to a reasonable extent, relies on the public perception and investment made with a supplier deal to F1?
They don't. No company every draws a direct line. That's the magic of marketing, otherwise we'd all know the dirty little bits in every product, the child workers putting it together etc. The line is 1 + 1, where the consumer forms the 2. See my pic from their website above, it clearly tyres to link the F1 tyres to consumer products.raymondu999 wrote: Show me where Pirelli says the exact same technology of their F1 tyre is on their road tyre?.
It does?richard_leeds wrote:What they don't realise is that the tyre that comes with your car will often vary depending which assembly line produced that car.
There was one time I remember three or four years ago - I was buying new tyres, and coincidentally a different brand too. My older tyres (Bridgestones) I felt a bit of understeer, though I didn't mind that much - it wasn't a sports car anyways, nor even a sporty car. When I first drove the car with the new tyres on (coincidentally, Pirellis) and there was less understeer in the car - a bit more balanced. Of course it could also be due to the older Bridgestones having less front bite in them.richard_leeds wrote:Talking of subliminal, can anyone really tell the performance difference in tyres in day to day road use on a conventional car, its not as if you can drive on the limit of adhesion.