Buon Compleanno! - Happy Birthday Ferrari
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED APRIL 23, 2007
By By Marty
Bernstein
Senior Editor-At-Large
The Auto Channel
SAIADA Contributing
Editor
Ferrari. Just say the word softly …
rolling and lengthening the R’s like an Italian does…
Ferrrrrari!
Instantly the mind conjures images and dreams of
a marvelous red machine roaring down the Auto Strade in the Tuscan hills
between
No matter where, when or how this is the
ultimate in auto envy. Ferrari is the quintessential “that’s
the car I’d buy when I win the lottery.” Aspirational –
you bet! Affordable – maybe if you are a hedge funds manager or rock
star. Audible – it’s the auto sound recognized throughout the
world. Addictive – yes, but in a good sense.
To celebrate this memorable occasion in a way
only the Italian’s would, can and do, Ferrari embarked on a year
long, worldwide celebration of its 60th birthday just a few months ago. To
learn more about the famous company I began a research quest gleaning
information from many sources on the web – did you know the word
“Ferrari” generates 105 million Google
hits?
Additionally, while attending the recently
concluded New York International Auto Show, I had the opportunity of
interviewing Maurizio Parlato, president of Ferrari of America. Parlato has
been with Ferrari in a variety of managerial positions throughout the
world, including
Enzo & The Early
Years
The success of Ferrari can be directly
attributed to one man, Enzo Ferrari, the founder and visionary who almost
single-handedly created what is now Ferrari from the ashes and rubble in
An auto racer by vocation and desire, Ferrari
joined Alfa Romeo first as a test and race driver and was later promoted to
head their racing operations and a small factory in the 1930s. It was
during this first time that the famous Prancing Horse Scuderia Ferrari logo
appeared. The war intervened; however, and auto racing was cancelled and
the factory became a victim of circumstances producing machine tools and
airplane parts until it was bombed in 1944.
After the war in 1946, the factory was rebuilt into a facility capable of building road cars. In 1947, 60 years ago, the first Ferrari road car was built – the 125 S powered by a V12 engine. In 1948, the first Ferrari racecar – the 125 F1 – was built. It finished 3rd in the Italian Grand Prix and two years later in 1950, when Formula 1 World Championships began, Ferrari began its formal racing competition.
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Racing – Building the
Ferrari Reputation Quickly
Ferrari and racing are more than a phrase:
together the pair is an automotive racing aristocracy with unrivaled
heritage; their legacy, packed with accomplishments and traditions, remains
unrivaled in F1 racing today.
The list of the red car’s racing success
is lengthy. The ‘50s included 4 wins in F1 and sports car racing.
Even with tough racing competition in the ‘60s and the decades that
followed, even when wins were seldom, Ferrari was acknowledged as the
competition to beat.
Until his death in 1988,
The Business of
Ferrari
Long before leveraged buyouts, mergers and
acquisitions became the currency of international business growth Fiat
became a shareholder and technical partner with Ferrari in 1969.
The investments, made possible by the new
partner, fueled the expansion of facilities in Maranello with test tracks,
engineering facilities, wind tunnels and other improvements. The lackluster
race results were replaced with wins and accolades. Ferrari racing holds
almost every Formula One record, including: 14 world driver championships,
14 World Constructors Championships, 180+ Grand Prix victories, and other
titles.
It is the record of accomplishments, which
continues to propel Ferrari’s sales of vehicles while maintaining a
level of engineering, technical and design excellence that has created more
than a cult of F1 racing aficionados – it has developed a brand
loyalty and mystique even in America, the home of Indy, Champ and Nascar
racing, where F1 is virtually unknown.
To this racing point, I pointedly asked
Ferrari’s U.S. CEO, “How do you account for Americans’
fascination and love of Ferrari, when F1 racing is not even a blip on the
sports radar here?” Responding in fluent, almost unaccented English,
the Italian-born Parlato replied, “The Ferrari reputation and image
has been built on engineering excellence, superb quality, technical
innovation and performance.”
A lot of car envy – as more
American’s had more money to spend – has continued to generate
exceptional growth for Ferrari sales in the
Worldwide, Ferrari’s business is molto buon, or very good. Ferrari SPa’s charismatic
president, Luca di Montezemolo, earlier this year announced the Prancing
Horse brand delivered 5,671cars through a network of 200+ dealers in 52
countries around the world. This amounted to a sales increase of 4.8
percent over 2005. Sales amounted to €1,447 million, or US $1,958
billion, a rise of 12.2 percent, and profits were up 16.4 percent to
€183 million, or US $248 million.
Good, even great numbers, but what’s even
more interesting is the company’s sales and profit growth in products
bearing the Ferrari logo, an expanding chain of international retail
stores, a huge web-based business, and in
Ferrari – A
Merchandising Marvel
If Tiger Woods is the most recognized face on
the planet and Coca Cola the most recognized brand name, then Ferrari must
be the most recognized automobile brand. According to the company, there
are over 1,800 different products licensed to use the Ferrari name. And the
Prancing Horse logo is on almost everything and anything from anoraks to
zabaglione. If they don’t have it… you probably don’t
need or want it.
These licensed products – Ferrari receives
a percentage of every sale – are sold through the Internet at
official Ferrari web stores and in 15 retail locations, including new
stores in
There’s a Ferrari driving school and a
Ferrari experience in the
In a couple of years, a Ferrari theme park
[think Disney on steroids] will open in
Happy Birthday to you. Happy
Birthday Ferrari. Happy Birthday to you.
May 25, 2007 marks the 60th year the very first
Ferrari 125 S won the Rome Grand Prix, an amazing victory when one knows
this was only the second time the car had raced. Equally amazing is the
company’s 60th Anniversary program.
And what better way to recognize this
accomplishment than to stage a year long race – the Ferrari 60 Relay
– and host a series of top notch Ferrari events for the car
company’s heritage of elite customers. The relay involves passing a
specially made baton, encrusted with enamel symbols in honor of 60 of
Ferrari’s most memorable events and is topped by a platinum and
diamond horse logo.
The relay started earlier this year in the
And to add to what is already ultra-exclusive, Ferrari has crafted 60 unique vehicles based on the model 612 Scaglietti, Ferrari’s best Granturismo ever. The special edition combines handcrafted trim with state-of-Ferrari-art accessories, new color options, a glass roof and a grouping of enamels similar to those on the baton. This is the collectors’ car for very few wealthy, passionate Ferrari collectors.
As Ferrari joins the ranks of millions of baby boomers here in