Hyundai Motor India

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Hyundai Motor India Limited
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryAutomotive
Founded6 May 1996; 27 years ago (1996-05-06)
HeadquartersGurugram, Haryana, India
Key people
Unsoo Kim (MD & CEO)
Tarun Garg (COO)
ProductsAutomobiles
Production output
Increase710,012 units (2018)[1]
RevenueIncrease 47,042.79 crore (US$5.9 billion) (2022)
Increase 2,861.77 crore (US$360 million) (2022)
ParentHyundai
Websitewww.hyundai.co.in
Hyundai Santro Xing (discontinued-2015) was most successful car in India. It is manufactured only by HMIL.
The Hyundai i10 (discontinued-2016) was exclusively manufactured only by HMIL.

Hyundai Motor India Limited (HMIL) is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Hyundai Motor Company headquartered in South Korea. It is the third largest automobile manufacturer in India.[2]

History

Hyundai Motor India Limited was formed on 6 May 1996 by the Hyundai Motor Company of South Korea. When Hyundai Motor Company entered the Indian automobile market in 1996 the Hyundai brand was almost unknown throughout India. During the entry of Hyundai in 1996, there were only five major automobile manufacturers in India, i.e. Maruti, Hindustan, Premier, Tata and Mahindra. Daewoo had entered the Indian automobile market with Cielo just three years back while Ford, Opel and Honda had entered less than a year back.[citation needed]

For more than a decade till Hyundai arrived, Maruti Suzuki had a near monopoly over the passenger cars segment because Tata Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra were solely utility and commercial vehicle manufacturers, while Hindustan and Premier both built outdated and uncompetitive products.[citation needed]

HMIL's first car, the Hyundai Santro was launched on 23 September 1998 and was a runaway success. Within a few months of its inception, HMIL became India's second-largest automobile manufacturer and the largest automobile exporter. Hyundai Motor India Limited (HMIL) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hyundai Motor Company (HMC), South Korea and is the largest passenger car exporter and the second largest car manufacturer in India.[citation needed]

Hyundai started the construction of the plant in the year 1996. December 10, 1996 the groundbreaking ceremony was done for Plant 1. Mr Yang Soo Kim was then the managing director of Hyundai Motor India.[citation needed]

The Indian counterpart leadership team was managed by Mr AP Gandhi, Mr BVR Subbu and Mr G.S. Ramesh. Mr AP Gandhi was the president for a few years of inception. Mr BVR Subbu was the marketing director responsible for dealer development and sales. He resigned from Hyundai Motor India in 2006.[3]

HMC has set up a research and development facility (Hyundai Motor India Engineering – HMIE) in the cyber city of Hyderabad.

As HMC's global export hub for compact cars, HMIL is the first automotive company in India to achieve the export of 10 lakh cars in just over a decade. HMIL currently exports cars to more than 87 countries. It has been the number one exporter of passenger cars in the country for the eighth year in a row.[4]

To support its growth and expansion plans, HMIL currently has a strong 1200 dealer network and more than 1,309 strong service points across India.

In July 2012, Arvind Saxena, the Director of Marketing and Sales stepped down from the position after serving the company for seven years.[5]

In August 2018, Rakesh Srivastava, Director of Sales and Marketing at Hyundai India, resigned from his position after serving for six years.

On 4 December 2018, Hyundai Motor India Ltd, announced the top-level management changes immediately. Seon Seob Kim assumed the responsibilities of MD and CEO from Young Key Koo.[citation needed]

In 2019, Hyundai Motor Company invested around 1.1 trillion KRW in an additional EV production line and began manufacturing Kona Electric.

In 2022, Hyundai Motor India Limited receives about 85% of its electrical power as eco-friendly energy from external power plants. Moreover, it is currently installing a stationary solar power system of 1.9MWp using the module factory's roof with a size of 13,028m².

Hyundai's manufacturing plant near Chennai.
Hyundai Cars at a port.

Manufacturing facilities

HMIL has two manufacturing plants in Irungattukottai and Sriperumbudur, both in state of Tamil Nadu. To cater to rising demand, HMIL commissioned its second plant in February 2008, which produces an additional 300,000 units per annum, raising HMIL's total production capacity to 600,000 units per annum. Current Production Capacity efficiency, has led to rolling out cars in 31 seconds, with these two plants in Irungattukottai , Sriperumbudur increased to 7,40,000 cars per year.[citation needed]

R&D centre

Hyundai Motor India Engineering (HMIE) is a fully owned subsidiary of Hyundai Motor Company, South Korea, which is located at Hyderabad, Telangana. HMIL established HMIE in November 2006 and contributed to the development of Hyundai Motors' popular new models for the Indian market starting with the Eon and followed now by the "i" series, and also in SUV segments like the Creta. Hyundai Motors' other overseas R&D centres are located in the United States, Germany, Japan, Korea, and China.[citation needed]

Regional headquarters

As of 2 July 2018, as part of organizational restructuring, Hyundai has announced the creation of three regional headquarters – Hyundai Motor India, Hyundai Motor North America and Hyundai Motor Europe. The regional headquarters will have various divisions for planning, finance, products and customer experience. They will work in collaboration with Hyundai Motor Company – the corporate headquarters based in Seoul, South Korea.[citation needed]

Hyundai Motor India led by SS Kim will oversee the operations of the brand in the regional market.[citation needed]

Global Quality Centre

Indian Quality Centre (INQC) is one of five quality centres worldwide, along with those in the US, China, Europe and Middle East.

The India centre located at Faridabad, Haryana will conduct durability studies of existing models and benchmark parts and systems for constant improvement.

The key activity of the centre is to "contribute in new car development from pilot stage to create quality product with zero defect".

The centre will also be responsible for ensuring "top level safety quality" through proactive customer oriented management system and understanding feedback from them to eliminate potential risks. The centre also has an objective to study market conditions and other Asia Pacific regions to develop new cars and adapt strategies for continuous product quality improvement.

The company opened a training centre at the facility. It will have its own body and paint unit. The new service training will ensure overall skill development of entire service profile of dealer manpower.

Models

Current models

Model Indian introduction Current model
Introduction (model code) Update (facelift)
Hatchback
Grand i10 Nios 2007 2019 (AI3) 2023
i20 2008 2020 (BI3) 2023
Sedan
Aura 2020 2020 (AI3) 2023
Verna 2006 2023 (BN7)
SUV/crossover
Exter 2023 2023 (AI3)
Venue 2019 2019 (QXi) 2022
Creta 2015 2020 (SU2i) 2024
Alcazar 2021 2021 (SU2i LWB)
Tucson 2005 2022 (NX4)
Electric
Ioniq 5 2023 2023 (NE)

Discontinued models

[1]

Model Released Discontinued Image
Santro 1998 2022
Accent 1999 2013
Sonata 2001 2014
Terracan 2003 2007
Elantra 2004 2022
Getz 2004 2009
Santa Fe 2010 2017
Eon 2011 2019
Xcent 2014 2020
Kona Electric 2019 2023

Sales and service network

HMIL has 475 dealers and more than 1,300 service points across India.[6][7] HMIL also operates its own dealerships known as Hyundai Motor Plazas in large metros across India. HMIL has the second largest sales and service network in India after Maruti Suzuki.[8]

Sales and exports

Hyundai Motor India Limited annual sales
Year Domestic sales Exports Total
1998 8,447 0 8,447
1999 17,627 20 17,647
2000 82,896 3,823 86,719
2001 87,175 6,092 93,267
2002 102,806 8,245 111,051
2003 120,325 30,416 150,741
2004 139,759 75,871 215,630
2005 156,291 96,560 252,851
2006 186,174 113,339 299,513
2007 200,411 126,749 327,160
2008 245,397 243,919 489,316
2009 289,863 270,017 559,880
2010 356,717 247,102 603,819
2011 373,709 242,330 616,039
2012 391,276 250,005 641,281
2013 380,000 233,260 613,260
2014 410,000 191,221 601,221
2015 476,001 167,268 643,269
2016 500,537 161,517 662,054
2017 527,320 150,901 678,221
2018 550,002 160,010 710,012
2019 510,260 181,200 691,460

HMIL currently exports vehicles to over 92 countries across Africa, Middle East, Latin America, Australia and Asia. It has been India's number one exporter for the last 10 years consecutively.[when?]

In February 2010 HMIL achieved a record export of 1 million units.[9]

HMIL has been consecutively awarded "Top Exporter Of The Year" for 10 years by EEPC.The Highest Exported volume was 2,70,017 in year 2009. Now, it has moved down as fourth largest car exporter following Maruti Suzuki, Volkswagen and Nissan.[10]

Awards and achievements

  • Indian Car of the Year (ICOTY)[citation needed]
    • 2008 — Hyundai i10
    • 2014 — Hyundai Grand i10
    • 2015 — Hyundai Elite i20
    • 2016 — Hyundai Creta
    • 2018 — Hyundai Verna
    • 2020 — Hyundai Venue
    • 2021 - Hyundai i20
  • J D Power Appeal Awards 2016 demonstrating excellence of 'Made In India' Products as per global standards for Grand i10, Elite i20 & Creta.[citation needed]
  • JD Power Indian Customer Satisfaction Award 2017 – For Ranking Number 1 in After Sales Customer satisfaction.[citation needed]

Brand ambassador

The carmaker got Shah Rukh Khan on board as its brand ambassador for the Hyundai Xcent, the company's recently launched sub-compact sedan in India. 1998, SRK shot his first TVC for the Hyundai Santro, and his association with the car brand has now turned 23.[citation needed]

In 2010 Khan won the "Brand Ambassador of the Year" for Hyundai i10 at NDTV Profit Car and Bike Awards.[citation needed]

Khan also promotes the "Be The Better Guy" road safety campaign for Hyundai.[citation needed]

In July 2017, Hyundai India extended Khan's contract for two years.[11][12]

In 2024 Hyundai Motor India appointed Deepika Padukone as brand ambassador along with Shah Rukh Khan ahead with Hyundai Creta Facelift.

Charging Network

Hyundai Motor India has added 11 ultra-fast charging stations strategically located across major highways and cities in India. And have plans to install 100 more charging stations by 2027[13]

Hyundai Motor India Foundation

In 2021, the Hyundai Motor India Foundation (HMIF), the philanthropic arm of Hyundai Motor India Ltd., announced a new initiative, Art for Hope. It will work towards encouraging artists across various domains like digital arts, crafts, multidisciplinary arts, performance arts and visual arts. The project is scheduled to begin October 2021. Selected artists will get an opportunity to exchange ideas, complete an art project and be mentored by key industry people. The final projects will be displayed in art shows across India.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hyundai India Crosses 8 Million Cars Production Milestone".
  2. ^ "Tata Motors overtakes Hyundai as India's second largest car maker in March". www.businessinsider.in. Retrieved 26 October 2023.
  3. ^ "B V R Subbu quits Hyundai".
  4. ^ "Eight Years & Counting, Hyundai India is the 'Top Exporter' of the Year". motorbash.com. 26 September 2013.
  5. ^ "Arvind Saxena resigns from Hyundai". 23 July 2012.
  6. ^ "Hyundai Motors launches service campaigns – ET Auto". ETAuto.com.
  7. ^ "Hyundai launches anniversary edition of Santro priced up to Rs 5.75 lakh". Connect Gujarat. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  8. ^ Mukherjee, Sharmistha (12 March 2014). "Hyundai's price jolt for Maruti" – via Business Standard.
  9. ^ "Who We Are – HYUNDAI MOTOR INDIA – NEW THINKING. NEW POSSIBILITIES". www.hyundai.com.
  10. ^ "Maruti is top passenger car exporter from India". The Hindu. 22 October 2017 – via www.thehindu.com.
  11. ^ "Shah Rukh Khan as brand ambassador for Hyundai Xcent in India". CarAndMe.com. Archived from the original on 22 June 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
  12. ^ "Shah Rukh Khan as brand ambassador for Hyundai Xcent in India". ZigWheels.com. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
  13. ^ "Hyundai Motor India Added 11 New High-Speed EV Charging Network Across India. 100 More by 2027". Motorlane. 18 February 2024.
  14. ^ "Hyundai's 'Art for Hope' to aid artists". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 30 September 2021.

External links