and dont forget Little Anthony and the Imperials- that rock and roll group from the 1950's. Steve 65 LeBaron claxton,ga. >From: John Meyer <donkiyoti@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >Subject: IML: The name: Imperial >Date: Thu, 22 Jan 2004 19:25:17 -0700 > >Hi Everyone, > >I think we all agree that Chrysler failed to market the Imperial >effectively, and also failed to separate Imperial as a separate marque from >the Chrysler name. Imperial started out and ended up as "Chrysler Imperial" >and that's how nearly everybody refer to our cars today, never mind that >most of them don't carry the word "Chysler" anywhere. The design and >engineering of the cars wasn't the problem. I think also that (nearly) all >of us agree Elwood Engel wasn't at fault. > >But what about the name Imperial itself? > >We know that Chrysler's use of the name Imperial was meant to connote the >best of the best, the top, the pinnacle, etc. But many many other companies >and entrepreneurs had exactly the same idea. Think of Imperial Margarine, >etc. I look in the yellow pages today and I see Imperial Gem & Jewelry and >Imperial Transportation services. How many plumbers, roofers, dry cleaners, >barber shops, etc. do you want to bet used the name Imperial all through >the 50s, 60s & 70s? I'd bet there were thousands. The name was really >watered down to the point of being meaningless and having no real identity. > >GM certainly never had that problem with Cadillac. Cadillac meant Cadillac >and that meant prestige. The name Imperial just didn't have the power to >lend much prestige to Chrysler's top of the line. The beautiful (and now >highly sought after) Chrysler Imperials of the 30s helped doom Chrysler's >efforts to establish Imperial as a separate marque: it would always be >"Chrysler Imperial." The name "300" was much more successful. People never >forgot that 300 meant a snazzy Chrysler car. The association stayed strong >enough for Chrysler to revive that name. > >Imperial has a lot of meanings, and in the 30s it was just fine to be >imperialistic. Imperial Navy, British Empire, and so on. Studebaker even >sold a car named the Dictator. Nowadays using Imperial would be a marketing >disaster. These days more people would connect "Imperial" to Star Wars and >Darth Vader than to any kind of car. > >All the same, I always just say "It's an Imperial" when someone asks what >kind of car I'm driving. > >Best, >John Meyer >1965 Crown >Tucson > > >