Jaguar Land Rover’s Reimagine plan in February 2021 outlined a bold, brave new future for Jaguar as an all-electric luxury car brand. Shortly after that, JLR CEO Thierry Bolloré exclusively revealed to Auto Express that luxury meant prices in the region of £100,000, while news of new Jaguar models also crept out.
Since then, the silence on the intentions for Jaguar – still one of Britain’s best-loved car brands – has been deafening. Now, though, Auto Express can reveal details of the plans to transform Jaguar and how it will transition to its luxury future, starting with the current line-up. In an exclusive interview, Nick Collins, JLR board member and Executive Director of Vehicle Programmes, told us how the current Jaguar range will move upmarket, that new Jaguars will sit on a bespoke architecture and that development mules will be on the road in weeks.
First, though, we asked him why there had been such silence from Jaguar since February 2021. “We recognise that we’ve been quiet, we’ve been secret – deliberately so,” said Collins. “The core Jaguar words are ‘a copy of nothing’. Think of that in every element of the business; there may be some traditional ways of doing things and untraditional ways of doing things – we’re using that in all our thinking around Jaguar.
“We will now start to curate the journey from here until 2024 – exactly how that manifests itself, we’re reconsidering how we do that, too.” It’s not as though JLR hasn’t had a busy 12 months, though, as Collins explains. “If you think of us as a total business, over the past year we’ve just gone through this massive activity with Range Rover, Range Rover Sport and Defender 130 – from a public perspective we wanted those cars to have their moment. That doesn’t mean we’ve not been working intensively on the Jaguar plan and the execution of that.”
According to Collins, Jaguar has been working at a pace never before seen at JLR, with plans in place and a clear definition of what the brand will be.
“We are on track and in a considerably faster timeline than we’ve ever operated to before,” he said. “That’s something we’re doing across the business, not just at Jaguar.”
“We’re reimagining the development process, not just in engineering but as cross-functioning teams – we’re operating in a fundamentally different way through our development process that is allowing us to go considerably faster.
“Where we sit right now is [that] we’ve defined what the new Jaguar will represent,” he said. “It’ll be a brand that’s respectful of its rich past, but not bound to it – we’ve used that formula in the past with the Defender.
“We are engineering a bespoke architecture for Jaguar. That’s the only way we’re going to ensure we meet our design vision for the brand that Gerry [McGovern, Chief Creative Officer of JLR] and his team have created, which will be a copy of nothing.”
The ‘copy of nothing’ approach
Collins wouldn’t be drawn on whether a concept car might give us any hints at Jaguar’s new design language, but he did confirm that the new models had been signed off and that they had been tested, but not in traditional customer clinics.
“We’ve tested in certain circumstances; we’ve tested elements, but not using the traditional methods – again, it’s the copy of nothing approach. We’re deliberately doing things quite differently.”
Collins revealed how Jaguar staff were working in unique ways to come up with a new interpretation of modern luxury, too. “We have a very diverse team working on the future of the brand and we’ve deliberately locked them away in a different part of the building here in Gaydon,” he told us. “They act, behave, think and live differently – this is about clean sheet of paper thinking.”
“We’ve put them in a different environment to allow that diversity to come to the fore to make sure we don’t constrain them by any traditional thinking – of the business or the industry.”
With designs signed off, technical work is very much under way. “We’re going to have some of the earliest prototype mules running within two months from now,’ said Collins. “You’re going to see the first of the new Jaguars before the end of 2024, and those cars will be with customers in 2025.
“These new Jaguars will sit firmly in the luxury sector and we’ll establish new benchmarks in standards for client relationships and transform the brand journey with multiple touch points during the life of their cars.”
Electrification and the end of ICE
One of the biggest challenges Jaguar has is the transition from the current range to the new, all-electric line-up in less than three years. Thierry Bolloré had previously told us that the recently refreshed all-electric I-Pace would be the only model that would overlap the two generations of Jaguars, so what about the rest of the range?
“If you think about the words ‘firmly in luxury’ you can then think about where we’re going with the current portfolio,” said Collins. “You saw the F-Pace 1988 Edition that we recently announced – it’s cementing F-Pace into a really bespoke positioning; exquisite in detail and limited in numbers. That’s the start of a journey that we’re going on with the current portfolio.
“We’re going to position each of the current cars within the Jaguar portfolio in a very curated way as we go towards the end of today’s Jaguars and the start of the new ones; curated towards a more luxurious positioning.”
That starts with a special version of the F-Type, as Collins revealed: “The first name plate you’re going to see that on is the F-Type later this year. As we move towards 2023, we’ll be celebrating 75 years of Jaguar sports cars, and the F-Type will be the last internal combustion engine Jaguar sports car. It’ll be a wonderful celebration of what has been.”
Arguably furthest away from Jaguar’s future positioning as a luxury brand are the XE and XF models, neither of which are currently in production as JLR focuses scarce components on the cars that will make it the most cash. Will we see the XE and XF return before 2025?
“You will,” said Collins. “Like everyone else in the industry we’ve been struggling with Covid and then microchip-related supply issues. They’re great cars and we’re working tirelessly to stabilise supply – as soon as we’ve done that, we will restart those cars. We’ve an order bank for them and customers we’ll fulfil those orders for.”
There’s also a word of reassurance for existing owners from Collins that they won’t be forgotten. “We want to change the customer experience,” he said, “But we’ve got a responsibility to the customers who’ve been loyal to the brand for many years – we’re not going to abandon them.”
So how would Collins sum up the coming couple of years as we head towards a very different Jaguar? “We recognise the responsibility we’ve got here to absolutely nail this and we’re completely determined to do it,” he said. “Everyone’s asking whether the plan is on track. Yes, it is on track – and it’s going like a train.”
What do you think of Jaguar’s bold bid for a slice of the luxury car market? Let us know in the comments…