Choosing the South African Car of the Year (COTY) is a long and intricate, but often misunderstood, process.
Indeed, there are many local organisations, websites and publications that run their own Car of the Year competitions, rewarding anything from affordability to popularity. In addition, these competitions are split up in so many categories that there is a winner in almost every market segment, including entry-level vehicles, sedans, SUVs, bakkies and luxury cars.
What makes the WesBank/South African Guild of Motoring Journalists’ Car of the Year competition – run annually since 1986 – different from all of these is that there are no categories and only one winner. The car that walks away with the silverware does so because it represents automotive excellence in every respect.
But how, exactly, is the winner chosen and by whom?
The jury
The Car Of The Year jury consists of members of the SAGMJ (the official representative body of local motoring journalists) and is elected by the full members of the organisation. Jury members are considered to be the cream of motoring crop in this country, so it is quite an honour to be chosen.
Before you become eligible to be a jury member you must have completed a minimum of two years of jury training, while being active in the motor industry for a minimum of five years. You must be an industry-recognised journalist who actively participates in the industry by attending manufacturer launch events and by driving test vehicles during the eligibility period.
This year there were 26 jurors – of which 6 were female – representing a good mix of industry veterans and young blood
Vehicle eligibility
The competition is open to all new vehicles that are primarily used for the transportation of passengers and that are available in South Africa, including multi-purpose vehicles, double cab bakkies, sport utility vehicles, crossover vehicles and two- and four-wheel-drive leisure vehicles.
In recent years the title has been awarded to a vehicle range rather than a specific model. This means that whereas the Hyundai Elantra 1.8 GLS Executive took the crown in 2012, it was the Opel Astra (range) that walked off with the silverware in 2017.
To be considered as new, a vehicle range must have a unique and easily defined body style and be mechanically significantly different from any model launched by the manufacturer or importer during an earlier eligibility period. It must also have been introduced publicly during the eligibility period (which usually runs from the beginning of September of a specific year until the end of August of the next) and at least three-quarters of the SAGMJ’s Car Of The Year jury must have had a reasonable opportunity to drive the vehicle.
Importantly, the vehicle range must sell in sufficient numbers. According to the rules this means that it must sell at least 50% of the volume of at least one of its recognised market competitors during any three months of the eligibility period.
Of importance to consumers, after-sales service and back-up structure must be available on a national level.
Choosing the finalists
Once a list of eligible vehicles has been compiled based on the criteria mentioned, the full membership of the SAGMJ votes for vehicles they believe to be worthy contenders. The ranges with the twenty highest scores will be announced to the membership and to the public as the semi-finalists.
After this process of identifying the semi-finalists has been completed, it is up to the jury to whittle down these favourites and come up with a list of finalists.
The latter might sound like a simple process, but it takes hours of scrutiny and discussion at an officially convened jury meeting before the final choice is made. Each jury member has ten votes to cast and the vehicles with the highest number of votes become the finalists. A minimum of eight and maximum of ten vehicle ranges may be selected as finalists
In the case of the 2018 competition, 10 finalists were chosen from an original list of 35 eligible vehicle ranges.
Evaluating the finalists
The next step in choosing the Car Of The Year is the evaluation of the finalists.
At these evaluation days – the most critical of which are the scheduled procedures held at a dedicated testing facility – the jury assess the finalists independently, with routes and modules designed to test the vehicles in a similar way in which the average consumer would use them.
It is important to remember that finalists are not judged against one another. After all, how can an entry-level runabout compete with a top-of-the-range cruise ship on wheels? In this year’s competition, for instance, the Porsche Panamera was measured against vehicles such as the Mercedes-Benz S-class and the BMW 7 Series, while the Kia Picanto was compared to a vehicle such as the Hyundai i10, as they compete in the same segment.
To this end, the jury members have access to performance test data, comparative pricing and specification data, as well as comparative parts pricing data, which allows them to measure how the finalists stack up against their peers. Comparing apples with apples, so to speak.
Interestingly, the South African competition is the only competition of its kind in the world that uses a purpose-designed digital scoring system.
Choosing the winner
The Car Of The Year is selected by the collective assessment of the jury as reflected in the combined number of points scored by each juror during the evaluation process.
There are 12 key judging categories:
Exterior Design
Interior Environment
Interior Practicality
Technology
Engine
Gearbox / Transmission
Engineering Integrity & Build Quality
Ride Quality
Steering and Handling
Affordability
Value for Money
Overall Excellence
Each jury member scores each finalist against each category on a scale of one to ten and submits this list electronically at the end of the final evaluation day.
In addition, a statistical weighting applies per category. At the evaluation days, jurors rank five of the eight evaluation categories in order of importance in a secret ballot. The weighting is then calculated and applied by an independent firm of auditors, before any penalty applications are applied to finalists equipped with optional performance, or dynamic enhancements. The vehicle with the highest number of points and the end of the evaluation days is deemed the winner.
In recent years, the competition has had many historic moments, as in 2012 when Hyundai Automotive SA won the title for the first time in its history and became the first Korean vehicle brand to win the title. In 2011, the competition caused an even bigger stir when, for the first time in history, the BMW 530d and Volkswagen Polo 1.6 TDI shared the crown. In 2015, the Porsche Macan became the first SUV to win.
What it means for consumers
Because the competition awards excellence, finalists – and even semi-finalists to an extent – can already be considered to be exceptional vehicles in their market segments. They have been found to be prime examples of automotive engineering and measured against their segment competitors, these cars were considered to be superior.
And let’s be honest, who wouldn’t relish the bragging rights of owning the South African Car Of The Year?
Interesting Facts:
BMW has won the SA Car Of The Year title a record six times (1988, 1990, 1993, 1997, 2001 and 2011).
Opel is the only manufacturer to have won the SA Car Of The Year title for two consecutive
years, and has ultimately won the competition four times.
Audi, Volkswagen and Porsche have all won the SA Car Of The Year title three times, with
Honda, Renault, Toyota and Volvo taking the crown twice.
Alfa Romeo, Ford, Hyundai, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, and Nissan have won the title once each.
Porsche is the only manufacturer in the history of the SA Car Of The Year competition to win the title for three consecutive years.
Previous winners of the WesBank/SAGMJ Car Of The Year competition:
1986 Toyota Corolla Twin Cam
1987 Mercedes-Benz 260E
1988 BMW 735i
1989 Toyota Corolla GLi Executive
1990 BMW 525i
1991 Opel Monza 160 GSi
1992 Nissan Maxima 300 SE
1993 BMW 316i
1994 Opel Kadett 140
1995 Opel Astra 160iS
1996 Audi A4 1.8
1997 BMW 528i
1998 Ford Fiesta Fun
1999 Alfa Romeo 156 T-Spark
2000 Renault Clio 1.4 RT
2001 BMW 320d
2002 Audi A4 1.9 TDI
2003 Volkswagen Polo TDI
2004 Renault Mégane 1.9 dCi
2005 Volvo S40 2.4i
2006 Audi A3 Sportback 2.0T
2007 Honda Civic 1.8 VXi Sedan
2008 Mazda2 1.5 Individual
2009 Honda Accord 2.4 Executive
2010 Volkswagen Golf 6 1.4 TSI
2011 BMW 530d and Volkswagen Polo 1.6 TDI
2012 Hyundai Elantra 1.8 GLS Executive
2013 Porsche Boxster
2014 Porsche Cayman S
2015 Porsche Macan Diesel S
2016 Volvo XC90
2017 Opel Astra