- 13 Jan 14, 08:50#387007
2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44
The only thing that matters is that Merc, despite hiring Lewis and letting him design gangster clothing and promoting their cars, achieved record sales and caught up with their rivals. Which was one of the objectives they stated when employing Lewis
The Lewis factor did not work against them like some suggested when declaring Merc had made a mistake because Lewis and his ilk would put off Mercs traditional customer base
Mercs investment in the F1 team has already paid off for Daimler - thats the only recorded fact
The Lewis factor did not work against them like some suggested when declaring Merc had made a mistake because Lewis and his ilk would put off Mercs traditional customer base
Mercs investment in the F1 team has already paid off for Daimler - thats the only recorded fact

2014 Monster 26x Bookie Mugger
2015, 2016 WDC: LH44


Just like what Redbull does with their sporting activities, flying jets around the skies with Red Bull painted on it....all this has nothing to do with canned drinks, but it plays a part in turning your head around when you actually see the product on the shelf. The same way with Hamilton, if you like the guy as a driver and the next time you pass a Mercedes (or get passed by one) on the highways you associate the car with the new driver the race team has acquired....and slowly it could turn you to think something along the lines of 'a Mercedes could look good in my garage'...see what I'm getting at? All these gimmicks are subtle, but they play a role in expanding the fan base.
My point is I can't see Lewis being used in some of Merc marketing campaigns as the main reason for the sale boost in the US market. I don't think (even if he is known by non F1 fans) that he would make a perspective buyer swing towards Merc over BMW.