Hi All: First off, the following opinions about the recent Collectable Automobile article are just that - my opinions (so feel free to contribute your own perspective, but no angry personal emails, please… LOL). In spite of a few discrepancies such as that regarding the real wood veneer, I’m elated about the lengthy, and largely positive article about the 67-68 Imperials in the October, 2002 issue of Collectable Automobile. Like Mike and Andy mentioned in their thoughtful observations, it does seem that most articles do ‘miss the point’ about Imperials. However, I think writer Jeffrey Godshall is largely pretty fair to our beloved marque. Let us remember that he is currently Senior Design Manager for Product Design at Daimler-Chrysler, and a long-time champion of Imperials (back when the old car press seldom printed anything about Imperials, many of the handful of articles that appeared were by Godshall). In our passion for this great nameplate, we also should be realistic: overall, the Imperial line didn’t sell well. Sadly, American culture focuses on sales as a direct reflection of merits (the assumption being that people make purchasing decisions based on whether something is good or not). But QUALITY is something quite separate from the myriad of societal factors that drive SALES. Witness the high CD sales of Eminem…. (LOL)! I think the part that comes across as being less than flattering about the cars really pertains to the marketing of the Imperial Division by Chrysler Corporation. Sadly, I would have to agree. >From it’s ‘cannibalistic’ history of pitting divisions against each other (witness Dodge being permitted to sell the Dodge Dart for the price as a Plymouth…. let alone Chrysler being allowed to move down-market and kill the DeSoto Division…), it is my opinion that Chrysler Corp. made some serious marketing missteps when it decided to create the Imperial Division to compete against Cadillac, Lincoln and (initially) Packard. Andy mentioned that he felt that “Chrysler had slightly different plans for the Imperial.” I agree. I believe that with the Imperial, Chrysler Corporation created what we would now call a “luxury sport sedan”. Unfortunately, they made this decision before there was a substantial market for such cars in the U.S. And that was, from a business standpoint, a mistake. It’s not that the Imperial was bad – it’s just that not enough people wanted such a car… yet. The motoring press consistently selected the Imperial as the most ‘competent’ luxury car in the American market. It’s not that Chrysler ‘could not’ produce a more ‘tame’ luxo-barge: they CHOSE not to. But in an age when the ‘standard’ was Cadillac’s whisper-quiet, floaty ride, I think the average luxury car buyer perceived Imperial’s ‘athleticism’ as a deficiency. Secondly (and again, this is just my opinion) Chrysler Corporation made serious mistakes in marketing the Imperial from the moment it became a separate marque in 1955. Then as now, what sells a luxury cars is IMAGE. Going back to a landmark book called “The Hidden Persuaders” (Vance Packard, David McKay Co., Inc., 1957., NYC), countless studies have shown that the luxury car buyer wants other drivers to recognize immediately that they have purchased a ‘superior automobile’. This is most successfully done via two methods: a) STYLING, and b) BRAND IDENTITY. A. STYLING (Exclusivity & Continuity): 1) Exclusivity – It’s a well known fact that Chrysler Corp. designed the elegant ‘split grille’ expressly for the Imperial line, and then ‘stole’ it for use on the Chrysler 300. If, for example, they had used blacked-out mesh within the twin openings (instead of the Imperial’s ‘toothy’ egg-crate pattern), they might have been able to pull it off. But by lifting the entire ‘egg-crate’ grille directly from the Imperial, Chrysler Corp. immediately began to erode their own efforts to establish Imperial’s exclusivity. 2) Continuity -- Design continuity is key to establishing a luxury marque with the public. Although it took years of commitment for Ford Motor Company to reap the rewards, in establishing the ’61 slab-sided look as Lincoln’s theme, they realized that design continuity was CENTRAL to the long-term health of the Lincoln Division. Ideally, Virgil Exner should have found a way to continue with some variation on Imperial’s much-admired split-grille theme into the ‘Forward Look’ Era. Indeed, the front end of the 1957 showed signs of the ‘dual’ theme in the dramatic bi-plane bumpers. This striking flourish could have been made into a very distinctive ‘reference’ to the ‘dual’ theme. But, in an effort to save money, the bi-plane bumpers were dropped after one year. True, Imperial did achieve some degree of continuity with the fins and, especially, the various incarnations of the ‘microphone’ taillights of 1955 – 1962. But Cadillac had proven with it’s famed ‘dollar grin’ that the front end was what made the all- important first impression. And in this regard, after 1956, Imperial grilles were all over the map (very attractively so, but all over the map nonetheless). Let’s take a tour, shall we?: fine-textured bars (’57); sleek modern rectangles (’58); bold projectile ‘teeth’ (’59); early-aero/ ‘cow-catcher’ (’60); classic ‘coffin-nose’ (’61); back to a split grille (’62); back to rectangles (’63). This offers us collectors a delightful range of Exner’s talent to chose from today, but it did not win customers when it counted. 3) BRAND IDENTITY - Who would have thought 15 years ago that anybody would spend $50,000 on a luxury Toyota product. Lexus has succeeded because their marketers have been unrelenting and steadfast in giving Lexus a separate and distinct identity both in design and marketing. Rarely if ever does print ad for Lexus make any mention whatsoever of there being a connection to Toyota. As the Imperial had been a Chrysler model before becoming a separate make, Chrysler Corporation needed to completely ‘divorce’ the name Imperial from it’s close association with Chrysler. In my opinion, the most glaring miscalculation was in introducing the 1955-56 Imperials with no series names (ie: ‘Plaza’, ‘Savoy,’ ‘Belvedere’, and ‘Fury’). In an era when cars were defined by evocative series names, to introduce a division with no series’ (ie: Imperial ‘Sovereign’. ‘Monarch,’ or ‘Regency’…) was a major mistake. Earlier, I mentioned the mistake of appropriating the 1955 Imperial grille for the Chrysler 300. Taking this a step further, I’ve always felt that Chrysler Corporation would have been better served if the Chrysler 300 had been marketed as the Imperial “Three Hundred”. If Chrysler had marketed an Imperial “Three Hundred” as an Eldorado-fighter (one with REAL sports-car capabilities), it would have accomplished two things. First, it would have added credibility and prestige to the entire Imperial line from the outset – giving the new marque a truly distinctive, championship-calibre product offering. It also would have better-established the 300 as a ‘prestige’ performance car (and justified it’s already high price), rather than it being a really expensive, well appointed ‘ executive hot-rod’ wearing the ‘mid-priced’ Chrysler badge. In my opinion, Chrysler Corp. missed a real opportunity by ‘waffling’ very early in it’s commitment to establishing the Imperial as a separate luxury division. Anybody who knows me knows that I’m an “Imperialist” through and through. However, I think we collectors need to recognize that the very qualities that we admire in post-war Imperials were completely at odds with the tastes and desires of the vast majority of the American luxury car buyers in the 1950’s through the mid-‘70’s. And therein lies the magic of these great machines – Imperial’s were quite literally ‘too good’ for mass consumption! As hobbyists, I think that’s something, to take quite a bit of pride in! Jim Byers, W, DC Currently I.S.O.: 1960 LeBaron Southampton or Crown Coupe (Condition #2 or 3)