Toyota, maker of the best-known hybrid to date,あannounced today a new family of its Priuses, including a plug-in version slated for release in 2012.

Not unexpectedly, considering that a major industry auto show is happening this week in Detroit, Toyota took the announcement an extra step by using social media as part of its pitch. Executives answered questions about the new models of Priuses via a Twitter chat, and an announcement was also made available via livestream on the company&'s website.

Ita4ぎa4г not the first time Toyota and others have experimented with social media to build hype for new offerings. The carmaker chose to announce its release of six new hybrids by 2012 via aあtweet last year. Nissan has set up a Twitter account for its all-electric Leaf, where it retweets opinions of new Leaf owners and test drivers.あLast year, Ford launched an aggressive, nationwide social mediaあcampaign for its well-reviewed, high gas-mileage Fiesta that had industry watchers declaring it a a4ぎAwinnera4ぎ in social media awareness, ranking it above its competitors.

Earlier this month, electric car company Tesla chose to announce via blog the completion of a working prototype of the company&'s 2012 all-electric Model S sedan. The companyあreleased a trio of high-quality videos that showed a walk-through of the car&'s engineering, rather than opting for a traditional press release. (A Vimeo is worth a thousand words, perhaps)

But social media can also lead to hiccups. VentureBeatあreported the news two days ahead of Tesla&'s announcement because a company employee let the news slip via a comment he penned on a Model S story.

And electric cars appear to still beあtough to produce and sell en masse, as the Prius Plug-In is slated for limited release, like the Nissan Leaf and Ford Focus Electric. The Prius Plug-In will initially be offered in the 14 states where 60 percent of existing Priuses have been sold: Arizona, California, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Virginia and New Hampshire. Toyota says the plug-in Prius will become available to the rest of the U.S. a year after initial rollout.

While social media is clearly an increasingly integral part of car marketing, it doesn&'t change the fact that the Toyota Prius Plug-In will be up against more green car competition than it had when the original Prius launched 10 years ago. The company website states battery range will cover 13 miles of emissions-free driving, less than the 25 to 50 miles of battery-powered driving the partially electric hybrid Chevrolet Volt offers.

[Image via army.mil]

Next Story: Hands on with the Verizon iPhone&'s 3G hotspot (video) Previous Story: Toyota Prius Plug-In: Can it measure up to Chevrolet, Ford and Nissan&'s offerings

Print Email Twitter Facebook Google Buzz LinkedIn Digg StumbleUpon Reddit Delicious Google More&8230'

Tags: Chevrolet Volt, electric cars, electric vehicles, Fiesta, Leaf, Nissan Leaf, Prius, Prius PHEV, Prius Plug-In, Volt

Companies: Chevrolet, ford, Nissan, Tesla, Toyota

Tags: Chevrolet Volt, electric cars, electric vehicles, Fiesta, Leaf, Nissan Leaf, Prius, Prius PHEV, Prius Plug-In, Volt

Companies: Chevrolet, ford, Nissan, Tesla, Toyota

Iris Kuo is the VentureBeat's lead GreenBeat writer. She has reported for The Wall Street Journal in Hong Kong, Houston Chronicle, the McClatchy Washington Bureau and Dallas public radio. Iris attended the University of Texas at Dallas and lives in Houston. Follow Iris on Twitter @thestatuskuo (and yes, that's how you pronounce her last name).

VentureBeat has new weekly email newsletters. Stay on top of the news, and don't miss a beat.


Discuss   Add this link to...  Bury

Comments Who Voted Related Links