Isuzu D-Max: Bucking the trend

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Isuzu Malaysia is currently the seventh best-selling brand in Malaysia, besting more fancied brands.

So, here’s a pop quiz for you. After the two national players (Perodua and Proton), the Japanese big three (Honda, Toyota and Nissan) and fast-growing Mazda, which brand comes next in terms of the total number of vehicles sold this year in Malaysia?

We wouldn’t fault you if you guessed Mercedes-Benz, they are going great guns but are in fact just a rung below in eighth. Maybe your next guesses would involve more fancied brands such as Mitsubishi, Ford, Volkswagen, Hyundai or Kia, but that would be off the mark.

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Styling updates include new headlamps with LED DRL, new grille and fog lamps. Z-Prestige adds 18-inch alloys, overfenders, shark-fin antenna and cargo lid.

For Isuzu Malaysia to rank as the seventh best-selling brand (January to September 2016) with only two models designated as ‘consumer vehicles’ (the D-Max pick-up and mu-X SUV) is a surprise. That they are also on course to buck the downward trend of an industry that had seen a reduction of 14% in overall new vehicle sales (or Total Industry Volume) compared to the corresponding period in 2015 is quite a revelation. Many brands would do well to sell as many cars as they did last year.

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New Z-Prestige grade is available with 2.5-litre or 3.0-litre 4×4 drivetrains (both carryovers); OTR price inclusive of insurance starts from RM120,064.

According to Kenji Matsuoka, CEO of Isuzu Malaysia, the D-Max pick-up range has now assumed 15% of the segment share (an increase of 3.7% this year), and the brand is on course for higher sales compared to last year – a rare occurrence in 2016. Out of the 9,214 units of Isuzu vehicles sold (from January till September this year), D-Max pick-ups accounted for just over 50% of the total (along with a couple of hundred units of the Mu-X SUV), with the rest contributed by Isuzu’s commercial range, namely truck and lorries, of which they are well-established market leaders.

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Refreshed D-Max interior gets new instrument panel, head-units with larger touch displays, even roof-mounted speakers and fancy leather seating depending on chosen variants.

If the posh launch of the updated range of the D-Max is anything to go by, we are going to see Isuzu Malaysia put much more effort in shedding the D-Max’s workhorse image and endearing its best-seller to passenger car buyers, though this ‘lifestyle’ space is increasingly congested with competing products that are all vying for the same urban-centric customers. To this end, Isuzu has freshened up the D-Max range (launched here in 2013) with revised aesthetics and new features inside and out, as well as new premium variants called the Z-Prestige. Isuzu Malaysia is also upping the stakes where their reputation lies by extending the warranty period for both the D-Max and Mu-x from three to five years.

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Art trucks? Student Tan Yi Xuan wins a D-Max pick-up in decal design contest organised by Isuzu Malaysia, The One Academy and Sime Kansai Paints.