Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
Kia’s rise was never a straight line. It is a story of manufacturing roots forged under constraint, hard lessons learned through licensing and partnerships, and a relentless push to earn credibility in markets that once treated the badge as shorthand for 'cheap.' From bicycles and two-wheelers to export-era compacts, Kia’s early identity was shaped as much by industrial policy and supply-chain realities as by product ambition.Then the rules of survival changed. The Asian Financial Crisis forced a restructuring that reordered Korea’s automotive landscape and locked Kia into a new corporate relationship that offered stability while demanding differentiation. Over the next two decades, Kia built its global footprint plant by plant, fought for dealership credibility one transaction at a time, and learned that brand trust is earned through quality systems, not marketing noise.The modern era brought a second reinvention: design as strategy, SUVs as the profit engine, and electrification as the defining competitive test. As regulation tightened and software became part of the ownership experience, Kia moved from being a value brand that had to be tolerated to a design-led challenger that had to be taken seriously.This book follows the company from its industrial foundations to its present-day identity-mapping the pivots, the governance politics, the manufacturing logic, and the product decisions that turned Kia into one of the most closely watched mass-market automakers in the electrified decade.