Toyota Motor
Corporation (TMC) recently announced that cumulative global sales of the Toyota “Corolla”, the world’s most popular car, surpassed
40 million in July, reaching 40.01 million units. This milestone marks another historic
achievement for the Corolla, Toyota’s perennial global car.
In
November 1966, Toyota opened a new plant in Takaoka, Aichi Prefecture,
dedicated solely to Corolla production.
Two years later, with an emphasis on providing region-specific vehicles,
production began in Australia and Malaysia.
From 1965 to 1968, Toyota more than doubled its total annual production
from 480,000 to 1.1 million vehicles—a testament to the Corolla’s significant
contribution to the growth of the company.
The Corolla currently produced at 15 plants worldwide, accounts
for one in five vehicles sold in Toyota’s 76-year history.
Corolla exports
to North America began in 1968 and early sales success in this market helped global
cumulative sales of the car reach 1 million units just four years after launch. In 1997, the Corolla became the world’s best-selling
nameplate, with global cumulative sales exceeding 22.65 million units. More than a million units have been sold each
year since 2002; last year, a total of 3,180 Corollas
were sold every day across more than 150 countries and regions.
Marking
the milestone, Corolla Chief Engineer Shinichi Yasui said: “I feel this car has
been nurtured by people all over the world and I am very proud to have
contributed to its foundation and grateful to all those who have owned and
loved their Corollas. The key to the Corolla’s success is the faithful passing
down of its original development concept from Tatsuo Hasegawa: that the Corolla
must bring happiness and well-being to people around the world.”
The
Corolla was originally designed to meet the changing needs of Japanese
commuters in the mid-1960s. Then-Chief
Engineer Tatsuo Hasegawa recognized that with Japan’s industry expanding, most
consumers’ daily commuting time was increasing.
The need to get around in a personal vehicle was therefore growing and this
insight led Hasegawa to conceptualize the first Corolla, with his guiding
principles defining the vehicle ever since: always evolving and designed to
meet consumer needs in each market.
When the first Corolla rolled off the production
line, many basic safety features were still optional. Later, to meet the needs of families, Toyota
decided to include many of these features as standard. Toyota’s commitment to pursue higher and higher levels of
quality and continue adding new standard features to the affordably priced
Corolla has helped ensure that families around the world continue to choose it
more than any other nameplate.
The history of the ever-evolving Corolla,
filled with examples of technology and quality improvement, is emblematic of
Toyota’s efforts to anticipate customer needs and provide ever-better cars.
source: UMW Toyota Malaysia
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