How Jaguar Lost Its Roar – Long Before That Woke Ad Blew Up.
Credit: Yau Ming Low, Shutterstock.
Look, is it a bird? Is it a plane? Nope. It’s a confused jaguar, flapping its wings.
For those lucky enough to have missed the ad that lit the fuse, Jaguar recently unveiled a slick new campaign showcasing pastel-toned electric vehicles without actually showing any vehicles. The ad was meant to launch the brand into its “all-electric luxury” future. Instead, it triggered a backlash so intense it could’ve powered an entire EV lineup. Even Nigel Farage weighed in, calling it “woke nonsense.” And for once, the crowd nodded.
The Silent Swerve
The core issue wasn’t the pastels. Or the fuzzy child-like slogan, “copy nothing.” Or even the absence of any actual car in a car ad. It was the brand’s calculated sidestep away from everything that made Jaguar… Jaguar. No speed. No growl. No British grit. Just soft jazz, gender ambiguous models, and enough pink to make Barbie weep.
The agency behind the ad, Uncommon Creative Studio, has now been dropped like a designer handbag in a mud puddle. Jaguar is back on the hunt for a new team to fix the brand’s image – and fast.
The Numbers Don’t Lie… Yet
Here’s the twist: Jaguar Land Rover (now rebranded as “JLR,” much like KFC distanced itself from the word “fried”) just posted its best profits in over a decade. So what gives?
Well, much of that windfall came from the Range Rover and Defender lines – vehicles that remain unapologetically rugged, yet sleek, and very much in demand. Jaguar, meanwhile, has become the underperforming sibling, desperately trying to reinvent itself while its older brother rakes in cash selling boxy luxury tanks to influencers and oligarchs.
A Crisis of Confidence
This isn’t just a marketing misstep. It’s a case study in corporate identity crisis. Jaguar’s move reflects a broader trend we’ve seen play out across industries: brands trying to modernise by shedding their heritage instead of updating it. Somewhere along the line, ‘modern’ came to mean the same as ‘bland’, and ‘inclusive’ became a license to strip out every ounce of personality and punch.
But here’s the irony. Real luxury doesn’t whisper in pastel. It roars in velvet. It seduces, intimidates, and commands attention. That’s what Jaguar once knew. That’s why it built icons. It’s not generic sedans and SUVs, and it’s definitely not a ‘political people pleaser.’ So what next?
Final Thought: Luxury Has a Spine
If JLR wants to survive the electric age, it must remember this: identity isn’t a liability. It’s leverage.
Let the Defenders defend. Let the Rovers roam. But let Jaguar be that thing that purrs like a jungle cat and tears through the city like it’s on heat.
Because no one wants to drive a political statement. They want to drive a Jag.
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