By Saumya Tewari| Sep 5, 2022
Brands focus on awareness creation and myth-busting exercises, community building, influencer engagement and mainstream promotions
[CAPTION]Martin Schwenk (L), MD and CEO Mercedes-Benz India Pvt. Ltd., and vice president-sales and marketing Mercedes-Benz India pose for pictures during the launch event of the Mercedes AMG EQS 53 4MATIC+ sedan electric vehicle in Mumbai on August 24, 2022. Image: INDRANIL MUKHERJEE / AFP[/CAPTION]
For 28-year-old Shreyas Sharma, buying an electric scooter was a big decision, especially with multiple incidents of vehicles catching fire. He did extensive research and decided only after an EV owner shared his personal experience.
“I decided only after my friend who owns an EV himself answered various queries and shared his positive personal experience,” he tells Storyboard18.
Sharma belongs to a bandwagon of consumers who are extremely curious and interested in electric vehicles but are often deterred by negative news and perception, myths, and lack of reliable information available to them. This is exactly what electric vehicle makers in India are trying to solve through various marketing efforts which include awareness creation and myth-busting exercises, community building, influencer engagement and mainstream promotions.
_RSS_There is a huge marketing push by major brands in two and four-wheeler categories. Tata Motors, Ola Electric, Ather Energy, Audi India, and Mercedes-Benz India are fuelling up their marketing tanks. These companies are taking over every possible media platform ranging from digital and social media to television commercials, to create awareness and intent and dispel myths around owning an electric vehicle.
Unlike regular automotive advertising, which heavily focuses on the brand and the product, when it comes to EVs, brands have to also take the responsibility of educating the customers as they are trying to shift consumption patterns.
Also read: India's EV boom is built on mopeds and rickshaws. Not Teslas
Vivek Srivatsa, head of marketing, sales and service strategy, Tata Passenger Electric Mobility, tells us that when the Tata Sons company launched the Nexon EV, it roped in Milind Soman and Ankita Konwar to drive the car from Manali to Leh to demonstrate its capabilities.
He goes on, “When we launched the ‘Evolve to Electric’ campaign, we activated multiple touch points, right from a stunt activity—The Electric Ascent—to social media communication that busted myths. We were also recently present at the TCS Marathon in Bangalore.”
Srivatsa tells us that owner experiences are also amplified regularly to offer an authentic opinion of owning an EV, adding that “this adds to our overall credibility.”
Also read: Auto sector needs to focus on safety, design, electric for success
Also read: EVolve 2022: Decoding the Indian EV consumer
“For a luxury EV customer, the marketing approach combines offering sustainable mobility with an emotional appeal and luxury brand experience synonymous with Mercedes-Benz. With our brand campaign and retail marketing approach, we showcased the EV with its world-class product attributes along with an EQ ecosystem that promises hassle-free ownership devoid of issues like range anxiety, charging infra etc,” shares Santosh Iyer, vice president of sales and marketing for Mercedes-Benz India. Iyer was recently announced as the next MD and CEO of Mercedes-Benz India and will take over the luxury carmaker’s operations in India.
All leading players are pushing their boundaries when it comes to branding and marketing. The focus is on supplying reliable products and quashing fears and anxiety around owning EVs, which will push its adoption in a big way.
Also read: Debunking 3 myths about electric cars
In an interview with Storyboard18, Chandra says, “Rather than pointing fingers at how things are blown up in the EV category, which might be true, the industry needs to focus on measures to make reliable products. Once consumers see evident action being taken by all players, then half of the problem will be solved, and we could do myth-busting exercises. At this stage, there’s no substitute to having good reliable products with an intent to be an industry for a long haul and not running after selling certain volumes.”
Note to readers: The last decade has witnessed significant advances in mobility and transport. New technologies and opportunities have brought a dramatic change to our societies. Planet and people-friendly transportation is more relevant than ever in the history of humankind, with everything from health to climate crises hitting us at warp speed. Storyboard18’s Month In This - EVolve 2022: Building an electric future, is an opportunity to bring to the forefront conversations around charging up marketing and brand building, to exchange and share new ideas, challenges and solutions in the field of clean transportation and mobility. Catch this Storyboard18 special on Moneycontrol, CNBC-TV18 and Forbes India.