Having returned recently from a Hydrogen Fuel Cell conference in Vancouver, where I spoke on branding, I’ve been thinking about how I might go about branding a car for the consumer
market that runs on this emissions-free fuel. It’s an interesting challenge, given the head start that gas-powered cars have in branding their fuels and technology. Ads that urged us to
“put a tiger in our tank” or drive with “V Power” have always been with us, and today we don’t think twice about filling up at the pump with our usual brand. It will take
a few more years, but this is going to change.
Hyundai, as just one example, showed off a hydrogen-fuel cell-powered SUV that it plans to mass produce. I saw it in Vancouver, and I
can tell you it’s pretty slick. The cost will be about the same as a gas-powered car, it runs for hundreds of miles on a tank of gas (hydrogen), it’s on par with a gasoline car in terms of
safety, and there’s no pollution.
You can put your face over the exhaust and breathe deep: the only thing coming out of the engine is water vapor. That doesn't mean people will buy
it. The technology is new, and it takes time for consumer acceptance. Plus, the car companies need to have hydrogen added as a choice at your local filling station. This dream technology will make it
big only if it’s really well branded. So, what should a company call its car and how should the brand look?
Given this branding challenge, I’d focus on three main
things. First, this car brings together great economy and no pollution, without the compromise of an all-electric engine. Nobody wants to deal with range anxiety, worrying if their car is going to run
out of power before they get home. The paradigm of filling up at the pump is deeply engrained in our culture, and the hydrogen fuel car fits perfectly with this. It’s not so alien to us
that we won’t buy into it. The other thing I would do is explore branding that highlights the fact that the only exhaust is water.
The perfect name for this car is the Aqua.
Wouldn’t you want a Toyota Aqua? Volkswagen almost got it right. It has a very futuristic vehicle on the drawing boards called the Aqua that runs on hydrogen. Unfortunately,
it’s designed to go on land, water or sand. It’s something the Jetsons would use.
This is all wrong. The Aqua brand should be the everyday peoples’ car brand, the car you
use in the city or in the country. Not something to buy years down the road, but a car that works right now. Water is a fundamental part of nature. We all want clean water. The name
is also simple and easy to
remember. And it fits in a graphic of a water droplet. All the prototype vehicles in Vancouver were labeled “Hydrogen Fuel Cell Powered” or some other
engineering-driven mouth-full.
But nobody buys cars that are named “Powered by Gasoline.” We buy the Toyota Prius and the Ford Focus. Volkswagen still has time to get
it right and switch its naming architecture so its new hydrogen-fuel cell-powered car (which is in the works) is called the Aqua, while its Jetsons vehicle is given a name that implies it can go
anywhere.
Consumers right now don’t want to go anywhere, zipping over sand dunes to get to grandma’s house. They’ll stick with the road and buy an Aqua. I would.