Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
ROLLS-ROYCE REVEALS WHAT THE FIRST GOODWOOD GHOST TAUGHT THE MARQUE
Tue Aug 04 01:01:00 CEST 2020 Press Release
Before Rolls-Royce created the first Goodwood Ghost in 2009, significant time was invested in understanding the group of clients it was tailored to. These were men and women who held the marque’s relentless pursuit of perfection in high esteem and sought a slightly smaller, less ostentatious entry to the Rolls-Royce brand.
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Helen Wilson
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
This article in other PressClubs
- Second of four animated films offering insight into the substance of new Ghost goes live
- Examines what the first Goodwood Ghost taught Rolls-Royce about its clients
- New episode of Podcast series exploring more super-luxury intelligence available now
#rollsroyceghost
Before Rolls-Royce created the first Goodwood Ghost
in 2009, significant time was invested in understanding the group of
clients it was tailored to. These were men and women who held the
marque’s relentless pursuit of perfection in high esteem and sought a
slightly smaller, less ostentatious entry to the Rolls-Royce brand.
The result was a motor car smaller in scale, less overt in
design and obsessively simple. Its success fulfilled Rolls-Royce’s
most ambitious expectations and it became the best-selling product in
the marque’s 116-year history.
Additionally, as more Ghosts entered the world, the brand’s
Luxury Intelligence Specialists were able to identify developing
behaviours in how this particular layer of clients used their motor
car, the manner in which they commissioned it and how they perceived
Rolls-Royce in a more general sense. This vital data would inform the
design and engineering direction of the new Ghost.
As with all primary research conducted by the marque’s
specialists, these experts were asked to present their findings
internally, offering a rare insight into this consumer group. In this
short film, Rolls-Royce shares some of these insights to demonstrate
the underlying substance of the highly progressive new Ghost ahead of
its official unveiling in autumn this year.
The four-part series continues with Rolls-Royce Product Manager,
Stephen Finch, who was responsible for charting a global picture of
these changes in age and attitude. Finch says, “The success of the
first Goodwood Ghost taught Rolls-Royce a huge amount about itself. We
became aware of an entirely new group of people who used and
commissioned their cars in ways that we hadn’t seen before. The new
Ghost meets their demands with alacrity, and we look forward to
learning what this exceptional car will teach us about this layer of
clients in the future.
The marque chose the popular and aesthetically appealing medium
of animated illustrations to convey these insights. Rendered first by
renowned illustrator, Charlie Davis, they were animated using the
latest modelling technology to cohesively and beautifully represent
these findings in a fashion that befits new Ghost.
In addition to these insights presented in animation form, a
series of five podcasts have been launched that reveal the marque’s
findings, as well as insights into the underlying material and
engineering substance of new Ghost in long form. Hosted by Johanna
Agerman Ross, Curator of Twentieth Century and Contemporary Furniture
and Product Design at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the
podcasts are available on Apple,
Google,
Spotify
and Deezer.
CO2 EMISSIONS & CONSUMPTION.
NEDCcorr (combined)*CO2 emission: 343 g/km ; Fuel consumption: 18.8 mpg / 15.0 l/100km (*)
WLTP (combined)#CO2 emission: 347-359 g/km ; Fuel consumption: 17.9-18.6 mpg / 15.2-15.8 l/100km (#)