New Year is over, but there were extended celebrations in the Cape after Hyundai N1 City was awarded the 2024 Dealer of the Year prize at Hyundai Automotive South Africa’s annual dealer conference at Sun City.
Share with friends
Hyundai N1 City beat the Northcliff dealership in Johannesburg into second place for the silver award in the category for the bigger dealerships, while Hyundai Germiston received the bronze prize in this group.
In category B, Hyundai Springs walked away with the gold award, and Hyundai Lichtenburg lifted the gold prize in category C for smaller dealerships.
The Sales Dealer of the Year prize in category A went to Hyundai Hillcrest in KwaZulu-Natal, while Hyundai Northcliff distinguished itself as Service Dealer of the Year among the bigger dealers. Hyundai Sandton is the Parts Dealer of the Year for 2024.
The criteria for the overall Dealer of the Year award include the dealership’s performance in terms of sales, service and parts sales. Dealer standards and customer satisfaction index play a role in determining the service score, while market share in the relevant area, customer satisfaction, passenger car and commercial vehicle sales volume are considered, among other things, for the sales performance.
Elric Everson (second from left), Dealer Principal of Hyundai N1 City, receives the certificate for Hyundai Automotive South Africa’s Dealer of the Year for 2024 at the brand’s annual dealer conference. On the left is Ockert Janse van Rensburg, group CEO of Motus Holdings Limited, with Tarek Mosaad (second from right), director of sales and planning group at Hyundai Motor Company’s Middle East & Africa headquarters in Dubai, and Gideon Jansen van Rensburg (far right), CEO of Hyundai Automotive South Africa.
Tarek Mosaad, director of sales and planning at Hyundai Motor Company’s Middle East & Africa headquarters in Dubai, congratulated the dealers. “It is you who represent the brand at the coalface, who sell our cars, service our cars, and ultimately have to keep our customers loyal and happy,” he says.
“You have been doing this successfully in a difficult, disruptive and fast-changing motor industry – here and in the rest of the world – which is causing headaches for a number of global motor brands. It is already leading to new mergers; and some brands are closing production lines in Europe. It is not going to get easier, and we have to adapt, innovate and dedicate ourselves to protect our market share and keep the Hyundai brand relevant.”
Tarek pointed out that the Hyundai brand has built a reputation for quality of design, quality of fit and finish, and it is up to all Hyundai staff to ensure that quality of after-sales service will also make its products attractive.
September 30, 2025 will be remembered as a landmark day for both the South African automotive sector and for Foton globally, says the Chinese manufacturer after its first pre-production Completely Knocked Down (CKD) Foton pickup rolled off the assembly line at its local plant.
Chinese automotive giant, Chery, is engaged in talks with multiple car manufacturers in South Africa about sharing production facilities to build its vehicles locally, the company's regional chief has revealed to Reuters.
Motor industry leaders are anticipating a sharp fall in American electric vehicle sales after the elimination of a vital R135 000 tax incentive for purchasers.
BNA Motors in Cape Town is celebrating its tenth birthday this year with five separate dealerships in Goodwood and Parow and some major expansion plans for the near future.
Nissan Africa’s best dealers from across sub-Saharan Africa are Anciens Comptoirs Ries of Djibouti in the Small National Sales Company of the Year category, Motus Zambia as the best Medium National Sales Company of the Year and Japan Motors in Ghana as the best Large National Sales Company of the Year.