Vespa Scooter The Ultimate in Positioning
What does Vespa mean in Italian?
Most students don’t give the correct answer. Vespa in Italian means a wasp. An
insect that can string and get away fast.
That was what the original Vespa
was, a nippy beast that aimed and ruled the world of scooters. Made by the
Iconic Piaggio & Company Vespa the scooter was elegant and designed
as a unisex transport option for men and women. The dead giveaway is the design
that allows women especially women who wear skirts and sarees to easily mount
the vehicle and drive it.
The brand started to
popularize itself as a style icon after Audrey Hepburn side saddled Gregory
Pecks Vespa in the movie Roman Holiday. This resulted in catapulting the sales
to over 1,00,000 in that year.
So, the initial ads had mostly
women proclaiming their allegiance and singing paeons of glory about its ease
of usage. Later it slowly started showing both men and women using it with the positioning
tack being a twosome vehicle. Later on, it became a family vehicle.
When Vespa was
introduced in India Bajaj faced a peculiar problem. Not many women rode
scooters (in fact in the initial stages women were not driving any mechanical
contraption except the bicycle).
Bajaj quickly changed tracks
and projected Bajaj as the ultimate vehicle for the “Indian Man”. The
motorcycle was for the rugged Indian and the Bajaj Vespa was the sophisticated urban equivalent
driven by the man of the house and the wide and children demurely sat behind him.
The promotion was so
spot on that Indian men took the persuasion seriously to the heart. And the
product supported their beliefs. Bajaj Vespa was heavy, quite cumbersome, had unwieldy
gears and it was not easy to master. And the master stroke. Bajaj scooter must
be bent and shaken vigorously everyday morning for it to start. Something that
only the akkada trained female wrestlers’ Indian women wrestlers could attempt. It was not for normal women.
Thus, the unisex positioning
was completely abandoned. First, it was Kinetic Honda that took the
position and in later years it was Hero Activa that completely dominated this
mind space.
Today the unisex choice for scooters is firmly the Hero Activa and
in that category, Bajaj has no product offering either in the male scooter
category or in the unisex category.










The framing’s ♥️🤌🏻 Are just mind blowing
ReplyDeletethank you.
ReplyDeleteI like ths blog. It is nice. Great. Even today brand loyality does not part with their vehicles "Hamara Bajaj". "Mera LML". "My Bullet Byke" are common words in our houses.
ReplyDeleteThanks dear Anonymous, please do comment on my other Posta too. Why don't you think of taking my entire set of 8 books. They are a great bargain at Rs 1300/-!!!.
ReplyDeletehi sir, this is really insightful and good to know about the story of Bajaj, like they introduced chetak for men and forgot about Indian women, chetak was heavy, hard to start scooter. but for Indian women they needed an easy scooter which was easy to handle and easy to start. here Bajaj ignored this and where they forgot to evolve and "Kinetic Honda and Hero Activa" took the opportunity and grasped the market and never looked back.
ReplyDeletehere we can clearly say that " when you stop serving the group people , other will"
and lastly i would like say that "Today, Activa owns that space completely. every family, every college girl, every working woman uses Activa.
And Bajaj? They're still trying to figure out their next move with the Chetak electric. but the window they left open has long been shut by someone else.
This is a good example of how branding can change a product image .vespa started as a stylish scooter for everyone but i india bajaj made it more of a family and male. It show how culture can shape brand perception.
ReplyDeleteAnup Dubey
25022