(Note: As a new feature for SeniorMarketAdvisor.com – and an expanded companion to the vehicle featured in our " Top Tech Tools and Toys" feature in the December 2010 issue of the magazine – we offer you a more in-depth automotive profile. Look for more stories, each with a particular advisor focus, to appear periodically online.)
I recently interviewed a pair of top advisors who admit that they feel like their automobiles serve as their second office, one driving approximately 1,000 miles a week between appointments in his state, and the other racking up nearly 30,000 miles a year as he heads off to meet with clients and conduct seminars.
Both agreed that if you're going to be spending that amount of time on the road, equipping yourself with a comfortable automobile is absolutely important.
And as advisors who deal exclusively with high-net-worth clients, they also recognize the importance of making the right impression. A $200,000 Bentley might be saying the wrong thing, but a vehicle like the very impressive Cadillac CTS-V coupe might be the right kind of approach.
The $69,890 (as tested) CTS-V is pricey by Cadillac standards, considering that the basic CTS starts at $45,000, but the differences are quite stunning, perhaps even borderline outrageous.
While the CTS has been popular in its own right, the V models (including a four-door sedan, the coupe and a new Sport Wagon version) offer a mix of super-tuned engine and steering and ride enhancements that put the domestic autos right in the range of some very expensive European imports.
The V editions all share a 556-horsepower, supercharged V-8 engine that's a variation of the motor found in the top-of-the-line Corvette ZR1.
That's the kind of power once associated with an exotic like a Ferrari, but this particular, American machine blends that astounding boost with a user-adjustable magnetic ride suspension system that can be brutally sporty when required, or electronically scaled back for more civil, day-to-day use.
There's also massive Brembo brakes, high-performance 19-inch tires and even optional Recaro race seats that are as stiff and supportive as those found in a jet fighter.
The result is an automobile that looks as wicked as the Batmobile – especially in the sexily angular coupe version – and can be pushed to 190 mph on the track, with handling to match the best that BMW and Mercedes have to offer.