10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

If you fancy working for a car manufacturer or simply want to understand a bit more about the business side of cars, make sure your knowledge of these industry terms is on point!
10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

1. Conquest

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

‘Conquest’ is a word you’ll hear thrown about a lot if you work in a developmental or strategic capacity at a car company - directors, product planners and marketers are examples of these. The term refers to customers who currently own a car made by another brand.

Attracting a high number of conquest customers to a product line-up represents something of a holy grail for car companies, since these are the hardest types of customer to sell to. Often, new car buyers remain loyal to one brand, perceiving the switch to another to be too much hassle and something of a gamble.

2. Grade

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

A vehicle’s grade is a designation applied to determine its position within the range line-up. Outside the industry, grade is sometimes referred to as ‘trim’ or ‘spec’, but these terms are incorrect. Trim refers to the materials used to finish a vehicle’s interior and exterior, while spec is the combination of technological, comfort and convenience features that a vehicle is equipped with. It’s particularly important to know your grades of vehicle if you are working in sales, since higher grades typically make more profit.

3. Mix

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

A mix is the portion of a model’s sales that is accounted for by certain grades, body styles, powertrains, and fleet and retail customers in a year. Commercial directors and sales planners will set mix targets for markets to achieve; for example they might ask for a powertrain mix of 70 per cent diesel, 25 per cent petrol and five per cent plug-in hybrid.

4. Pace

The second-generation Nissan Qashqai is the fastest selling British-built car in history.
The second-generation Nissan Qashqai is the fastest selling British-built…

Pace is the rate at which a particular model is selling. It’s of interest to just about everyone in an automotive business - from those who build cars to those who market them. Pace can be affected by everything from cooling markets to weak exchange rates, or simply the fact that consumers don’t like a certain product enough to buy it.

5. Plan and challenge

This is Ford chief operating officer Barb J. Samardzich talking about sales across Europe
This is Ford chief operating officer Barb J. Samardzich talking about…

Plan and challenge are terms used to measure the sales successes of new cars. Plan is the minimum number of unit sales that a model must achieve in a given year. Challenge is the number of unit sales that a model’s maker would like to achieve in the year - it is always higher than the plan figure.

Occasionally, company directors address staff and media to update them on their plan and challenge figures, where you may hear them say something like: “Achieved plan” or “Almost at challenge”.

6. SOP

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

A simple acronym this one, used by those involved in vehicle production and by public relations specialists. SOP stands for ‘Start of Production’ and is used when informing relevant staff and journalists of when a new model will first come off the line for the commencement of series production.

7. Segment share

The Ford Fiesta and Focus models are the top-selling B- and C-segment cars in the UK.
The Ford Fiesta and Focus models are the top-selling B- and C-segment cars…

Passenger vehicles, as any CTzen will know, sit in size-defined segments. To that end, there’s no prizes for guessing what segment share is - it’s the portion of segment sales that a model accounts for. Segment share is a vitally important success determinate for a model, since it helps see exactly how well a car is fairing against the competition.

8. HP and PCP

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

75 per cent of new cars in the UK are purchased on some sort of finance agreement and HP and PCP are the most common pair. HP stands for ‘hire purchase’. It involves placing a deposit on a vehicle and then making monthly interest-based payments for an agreed term that enable the buyer to own the car. PCP, which stands for ‘Personal Contract Purchase’, allows customers to put down a much lower deposit and make payments for an agreed term. At the end of that term, they then have the choice of making a final ‘balloon payment’ to purchase the car, or can hand it back to the dealer to secure an agreed trade-in price.

9. Walk-up

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

A walk-up is the difference between the monthly payments on lower and higher grades of cars for customers purchasing on a finance payment plan. Finance planners take time to ensure that the walk-ups on new vehicles are low, to enable/encourage consumers to purchase more desirable model grades.

10. Minor model change

10 Terms You Need To Know To Get A Job In The Auto Industry

A minor model change is a suite of revisions that car makers introduce to a model, which are not as extensive a midlife facelift. Minor model changes usually happen yearly and are designed to keep models competitive. They typically involve the introduction of new accessories and changes to powertrains and grades.

Prior to his current job as Motoring Editor at a communications agency, Eliott spent two and a half years working on the Toyota and Lexus social team. The list above is compiled based on the knowledge he gained while employed at Toyota GB’s headquarters - if you have any other questions about working for a major manufacturer, head to the comments and ask!

Comments

Anonymous

Or just be good engineer, they will find you. True story

01/13/2016 - 01:37 |
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Ben Conover

When I saw PCP, I thought of something else… :)

01/13/2016 - 01:51 |
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Jeremy Wilson

I always thought SOP stood for Standard Operating Procedure. Shows how much I know.

01/13/2016 - 01:58 |
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It does mean that as well, but in a slightly different context. The terms here are more around the corporate-side of the industry, hence the line ‘more about the business side of cars’, rather than engineering or manufacturing :)

01/13/2016 - 09:39 |
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Anonymous

Also, I should ad somtehing.If you want to be involved in development: Chose bigger external company, that provides engineering services because:

1) Better sallary
2) More vacation
3) You will work with several automotive manufacturers, not just one
4) This company will likely have branches through the world, so if you are good, you can travell whole world.
5) Your job wont be same everytime
6) You can still have huge impact on design (of parts not of automobile as whole)
7) You wont be involved, when the manufacturer goes down. You will just be reasigned to other company
8) You will still see future projects.
9) If the company has test circuit, you will have chance to visit it! (We have huge one! and other is being built in China :) )
10) And finally: you dont fancy working for BMW? here, we have something for you from Audi!(Last year alone, I was working on Audi, BMW and Skoda…)

There are some negatives though:
1) If car manufacturer is going down, external employees are first to go.
2) You still sign the NDA
3) Lot of overtimes - but thats same for internal employees
4) And thats all I could think off.
Have a great day!

01/13/2016 - 02:06 |
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Ariff Anwar Affanddy

Lol im interviewing to join the technical school right now

01/13/2016 - 03:38 |
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Matt O'Loughlin

I am interested in getting into the product/vehichle design of the automotive industry. I am from Australia and am 16. What should I do to help my chances?

01/13/2016 - 05:25 |
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First of all, I’d do a bit of research to see what manufacturers have design outposts/facilities in Aus. Then, if you wanted to, you could see if they’d be up for you spending a little time with them getting to know how the process works. Spend a little time finding the names of designers too, and reach out to them on Twitter if you’re on it, and share what you’re appreciating in the design world at the moment.

01/13/2016 - 14:23 |
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Anonymous

“8. HP and PCP” may be a UK thing, in the US we just call them a purchase and a lease.

01/13/2016 - 06:04 |
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BobTheDan

Thanks! as an jobless automotive engineer at least this would help me to find a salesman job.. Thanks for sharing your knowledge

01/13/2016 - 14:04 |
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Anonymous

When I applied to be a porter, the only thing I had to know was how to drive a manual transmission. Thus proving there is indeed only one thing you need to know to get a job in the automotive industry. Lol

01/13/2016 - 17:38 |
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Anonymous

Depends on which part of the automotive industry you want to be in ! As a technician you won’t need those words at all ;)

01/14/2016 - 18:48 |
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