TOP NEWS

April 14, 2008

BMW’s March Sales Rise 8.2% on Demand for Mini Model

ARTICLE TOOLS        | E-MailPrint

MUNICH, GERMANY – Bayerische Motoren Werke AG said global sales rose
a record 8.2 percent in March on the Mini small car. BMW Group deliveries advanced to 153,184 vehicles last month from 141,576 cars and SUVs a year earlier. First-quarter sales climbed 5.7 percent to 351,787 vehicles, according to www.bloomberg.com.

The Mini brand’s deliveries increased 24 percent in March to 26,693 cars, while the main BMW brand rose 5.3 percent to 126,406 vehicles. Roll-Royce brand sales climbed 70 percent to 85 cars.

BMW expects record sales this year, after selling 1.5 million vehicles last year, helped by the X5 and Mini models that went on sale at the end of 2006. The carmaker expects Mini sales to reach 240,000 vehicles this year for the first time, the manufacturer said.

 

 

 

 

RATE THIS STORY

Average Rating: Not yet rated

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

Please log in to write comment.

New user? Sign up for new membership now!

NEWS ARCHIVE SEARCH

Sponsored Links

6 Ways to Go Green and Save
By analyzing driving patterns and historical location reports from Networkfleet®, fleets can reduce miles and optimize schedules. Click here to download our free Green paper.

BLOG

Fleet Becomes an Epicenter for Interdepartmental Encroachment

By Mike Antich
Interdepartmental conflicts are common in the medical and IT industries, and at most companies between sales and operations. However, for many years, fleet existed as a realm of its own. Management in other departments often didn’t fully understand the nuances of fleet management other than they got a new vehicle every 36 months. Fleet managers of that era (not that long ago) were the “kings” and “queens” of their own realms. However, that reality is rapidly changing.

Strategic Fleet Management Focuses on Management by Objective

By Mike Antich
The greatest challenge facing the future of fleet management is how we see ourselves as a profession. Are we administrators of a fleet or are we managers? Do we manage from a tactical level – putting out day-to-day fires – or from a strategic level focusing on specific long-term objectives using metrics to benchmark progress? In the future, you will need a strategic focus to succeed in fleet management; otherwise you run the risk of fading into irrelevancy.

When Fleet Collides With HR

By Mike Antich

Fleet Safety Must be Your No. 1 Job Priority

By Mike Antich

STORE

$5.00

Work Truck - January/February 2008

In This Issue
Hino Trucks Ready To Run Cleaner, How to Maximize Fuel Efficiency, Materials of Trade: Guide to Comparing Truck Fuel Economy and much more…