Vauxhall is a very different place from the one that new managing director Steve Catlin left back in 2015.
Then, as retail sales director, he worked for parent company General Motors at the sizeable Griffin House in Luton, not far from the Vauxhall manufacturing plant and once home to a staff of over 2000. Ten years later, the plant has been shut and Griffin House sold and demolished.
Catlin, having returned to lead the brand this year after stints at the Volkswagen Group and Volvo Financial Services, doesn’t command his empire from a comfortable corner office guarded by a personal assistant. Instead he now mostly works from home with regular visits to parent company Stellantis’s UK headquarters in Coventry.
In fact, he’s hard pressed to say what Vauxhall’s staff count is today, given that much of the brand-agnostic work is handled by Stellantis teams shared with Peugeot, Citroën and the rest of the company’s 14 brands.
This way creates a lot more efficiencies, meaning Vauxhall turned a small profit of £59.4 million in 2024, according to company figures.
“From a corporate perspective, that's where a lot of the organisations are moving to,” Catlin told Autocar in an interview, citing his experience at the Volkswagen Group. “We also have to accept the scale of the brand is different to where it was 10 or 15 years ago.”
Vauxhall’s peak market share in UK came in 1993, at a mammoth 17.6% of the total. Then the Mk3 Astra was the country’s third best-seller, with 6.1% of the market on its own. To the end of October this year, Vauxhall’s entire share was 4.2%.
That’s not enough, however. Catlin has been tasked to carry out the demands of his dissatisfied boss, Opel CEO Florian Huettl. “Vauxhall needs to do more than it does today. Steve has the responsibility to bring a more significant share of the UK market,” Huettl told Autocar in September.
Catlin’s goal is to return Vauxhall to the top three UK brands, up from seventh in October. That will be easier now the market is so fragmented. “Top three in the current climate is very different to how the top three used to look 10 years ago, where you used to have between 9-11% market share,” he said.
Volkswagen was far and away the biggest brand in October, with just a 9.1% share, followed by Audi at 6.4% and Ford at 6.2%.
For Vauxhall, a 6% share means a bump of around 40,000 cars a year from the 79,000 it registered last year. That’s not unachievable, given that 2024 was a "transition year" in terms of product, according to Huettl, in which models on the new Stellantis Smart Car platform, such as the new Opel/Vauxhall Frontera SUV, were delayed.

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