After overseeing sales of the most exclusive JLR models at SVO and then the most exotic McLarens, including the Senna, Solus GT and Speedtail, a switch to running Subaru in the UK may not seem the obvious next move.
But Lorraine Bishton, who took the job in January, saw huge potential in leading a company that at its peak was one of the coolest brands in any industry in the UK – but in recent years had drifted into a state of mere existence.
For car-loving Bishton (pictured below), this was not only a chance to run a car company but also a chance to turn around a brand that, for all its troubles, is still well-loved by consumers.
That harks back to the late 1990s, when rally-bred Imprezas were the must-have performance cars, thanks to the exploits of Colin McRae and Richard Burns in the World Rally Championship.
But all good things eventually come to an end, and as the WRC-era cars gave way to the rise of Germans in the early 2000s, Subaru lost its sparkle and settled back into its other image: a maker of cars for geography teachers who wore jackets with leather arm patches.
That’s not a lazy stereotype on my part: remarkably, a Subaru executive offered that description unprompted at a Car of the Year event for the launch of the Solterra EV in 2022.
Bishton, one of Autocar’s Great Women in the Executive category for 2024, was headhunted for the role and started in January, where she found a “very well-loved brand” but one where “perhaps people are confused” by what it is.
“They speak fondly of Subaru but perhaps don’t know what it stands for,” she told me.
Add your comment