RC:
Boyko23:
Regions, well said! In addition, for almost half the price of the C-class you we can buy Cadilac CTS-V with 560 h.p.! Does it mean, that BMW, Mercedes and so on, has to reconsider their price policy? Porsche has always been more expensive, than the brans mentioned above. So what is the problem in the recent times here? I don't get it...
The Cadillac CTS-V is another good example, thank you that you mention it.
No, Porsche always had products in a higher price range but the customer had most of the time the feeling that he got what he's paying for.
Things changed recently, the Panamera but even more the 911 Sport Classic for example are good examples on how this is going the wrong way.
Nowadays, people started to look for value when spending money and another problem might be that Porsche has a lot of new competition now.
I'm missing products like the former 993 Turbo for example. When Porsche put the 993 Turbo on the market, the competition was under shock.
Even the Cayenne Turbo is a good example but not the best one.
Right now, Porsche has two products worth the money: the 997 GT3 FL and the 997 Turbo FL. In my opinion, both products deliver good value for the money.
Just my personal opinion, nobody has to agree.
I'm just a humble customer who owned three Porsche at a time and who bought 9 Porsche in the past 13 years, so why would Porsche care what I think ?! 
If this type of "value for money logic" was applied across thew whole car industry, then Germany wouldn't sell a single car from VW, Audi, Mercedes and BMW because in cold figures all their cars look like poor value next to Ford, Skoda, Volvo and never mind the Japanese and mostly Korean. Why pay more for a normal Golf than a Huyndai for example?
People's consumption behaviour doesn't necessarily follow this logic. Consumers are willing to pay a premium over and above the "logical" price if they feel good about it. I accept that a lot is down to successful marketing communication, but whatever the reason that's how it is.
For a very large proportion of consumers around the world the E-class is a boring taxi so their superfast AMG version cannot compare to the Panamera.
If SAAB could charge as much as BMW for their respective equally optioned models, they might still be in business.
Coming back to Porsche, the fact that they manage to sell above or near 100k units is a huge achievement IMO if you consider that mainstream brands like SAAB, Volvo, Jaguar etc struggle to sell as many. So they must be doing something right.
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It's not where you're going, it's how you get there that counts