The Samurai Sell: Lexus Dealers Bow To Move Swank Cars

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

Toyota only introduced its high-end Lexus line to Japan a couple years ago, and they’re resorting to The Samurai Sell to differentiate themselves from other, foreign, luxury autos:

Kengo Kubo, a sales consultant who sells Lexus cars in Tokyo, has a special way of opening a car door. He points with all five fingers to the handle, right hand followed by left. Then, he gracefully opens the door with both hands, in the same way Japanese samurais in the 14th century would have opened a sliding screen door.

“The most important thing is to make the motion look beautiful,” says Mr. Kubo, standing in a gleaming Lexus show room with live orchids growing out of trickling waterfalls.

The screen-door technique is part of an unusual tactic under way in Japan’s luxury-car wars. No. 1 car maker Toyota, behind in the luxury market, wants to fight back by plunging deep into the world of ancient Japanese hospitality traditions.

At Lexus showrooms, sales consultants lean five to 10 degrees forward and assume a warrior’s “waiting position” when a customer is looking at a car. When serving customers coffee or tea, employees must kneel on the floor with both feet together and both knees on the ground. The coffee cup must never make a noise when it is placed on the table.

Leave a Reply