Wheels Australia - June 2018

(Ben Green) #1

@wheelsaustralia 21


Agent of change


BRITTA SEEGER has 30,000 staff,


and three children. She sits on the


board of one of the world’s largest


companies and has travelled


extensively as part of her role, but


her most memorable moment


occurred in an airport, in Istanbul,


after a tank crushed her car. She


was forced to lie on the ground


by armed soldiers who were busy


conducting a military coup, but


not too busy to point a machine


gun at her head. At that exact


moment, her son rang, to tell


her he was watching the Turkish


uprising on the news and he was


worried about her.


“Everything’s fine, darling, I’m


just very busy at the moment, can


I call you back when I’ve got a bit


more time?” she asked.


Clearly, Seeger is cool in a crisis.
And she’s not afraid of making

big decisions, either. As the board


member in charge of sales and


marketing for Mercedes-Benz,


she was the one who made the


call to take the company out of


its decades-long sponsorship of


German football, to pour those


many millions into... E-Sports. Yes,


gaming. She believes the future


is millions of people paying to sit


and watch other people play video


games. Apparently huge stadia in


China sell out, for multiple days,


with people willing to watch this


live. And these, Seeger believes, are


her future customers.


“We have to get rid of the


thinking that eSport is not a sport,”


she tells me. “We see hundreds of


millions of people playing these


games and it’s a very interesting


target audience for us. This is


where we want to invest.”
Seeger’s minders later whisper
in my ear that there are more
than 100 million people taking
part in “competitive gaming”,
or eSports, and 500m watching
it. The move away from a safe,
traditional sponsorship like
soccer to something as youth-
focused as eSports is just one
of many changes Seeger, 48,
has campaigned for, including
swapping suits and ties for jeans
and sneakers amongst her staff,
and pushing them to make Benz
the number-one car brand on social
media (100m followers, including
26m on Instagram alone).
Ask Seeger whether she thinks
all this is actually going to sell any
more cars and she looks at you like
the simple, living-in-the-past fool
you clearly are. The future, you see,
is about selling mobility, not cars.
“There has never, ever been
a more challenging time to be
working in this industry, certainly

not in my 28 years at Mercedes.
I don’t think even in 130 years,
except maybe our founding fathers,
with the shift from the horse and
carriage, faced change on the scale
that we are now,” she enthuses.
“But if you consider change as
something positive, not to fear,
then these are very interesting
times. I’m not afraid, and my job is
to unlock the pioneering spirit in
my people, because we are entering
uncharted waters.
“You have to adapt, quickly. The
product will still be essential, and
the design, the desire for our cars,
but the change will be, how do you
have these cars?
“Today, buying or leasing is very
common but having and owning
a car will change, and tomorrow
it could be a flat rate, or sharing.
Some people are now ready to pay
a monthly fee, like a mobile phone.
“I’m sure retail will play a role,
but the digital experience will
dramatically increase.

“What people want above all
is convenience, and the most
successful businesses today – like
Amazon – are those that can save
people time.”
Reading that, if you’re a
Mercedes-Benz dealer, you might
want to have a close look at what
happened to the German soccer
team’s sponsorship dollars.
So, Seeger believes car ownership
is changing, and that many of those
eSports-loving youngsters will never
actually own one, the way we do
now. But she also believes that
some things will stay the same;
backing both petrol and diesel
engines to be the dominant motive

forces for some time, even as Benz
invests frantically in EVs, launching
10 of them between now and 2022
(she’s a big fan of plug-in hybrids).
Fortunately, she also predicts that
what people are now calling “legacy
vehicles” – cars driven by humans


  • will be with us forever, and that
    Benz will keep making them.
    “I truly believe you will still have
    people who want to drive their
    cars in the future, and we will offer
    that,” Seeger says.
    “We are still at a crossroads;
    we have cars that can drive fully
    autonomously, but will they have
    a steering wheel that you can
    grab and take over? This is still
    in discussion.
    “But I do not believe that
    everyone will go in the autonomous
    direction, just as I don’t believe that
    everyone will go for car-sharing.
    But people will want these mobility
    choices, so we have to be ready to
    offer all of these options.”
    STEPHEN CORBY


She was the one who made the call to end the company’s


decades-long sponsorship of German football


The future will favour the brave, says this Mercedes exec


3M has announced an additive for its sheet
moulded composites that will help car
manufacturers shave weight from plastics while
retaining strength. ‘Glass Bubbles S32HS’ is a
development from established technology used
in sealants and injection moulded parts that


has now been translated to vehicle applications.
Promising a 40 percent reduction in weight, the
technology aims to pare back the average 300kg
weight of composites in cars and can be used on
Class A paintable surfaces like body panels as
well as cabin plastics and light reflectors.

BUBBLE ECONOMY

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