A chaotic way of looking at, as well as dealing with, things are certainly not to everyone's taste. Most people need detailed plans in their lives so they could get from one goal to another. There are others, of course, who can plow through their day-to-day affairs without the slightest idea of how to go about the things they need to accomplish or even what these matters are that they must see to. But unless these individuals are robots or people with genetically altered human DNA that make them supremely resistant to the aches and pains typical to the human body, it's a sure bet that they will almost always find themselves frazzled, irritable and definitely exhausted by the end of the day.
Which was why the idea of organization made its way into corporate life. Put into the context of automotive construction, the perspective that managed to incorporate this trait gave free rein to precise planning techniques and definitive strategies that auto companies like Volkswagen invested considerable amounts of their time and energy into. Take the Cabrio for instance. That sensation of driving with the wind in your hair and in your eyes-well perhaps not in the eyes-has often been a constant draw for consumers so that integrating this design into one's one line-up of production cars was a reasonable move-except, Volkswagen didn't just incorporate it. The automotive company successfully stamped their look onto the resulting model that the VW Cabrio was born. Even the matching VW Cabrio Parts schematic conveyed a sense of a design that was so wonderfully fused with the Volkswagen gene pool that it couldn't have been mistaken for anything else.
Like a number of industries at that time, schematics became the glorified presentation medium. Revolutionary automotive designs were made and broken with their schematics. It all boiled down to one question: does the schematic look good? Does it bear a long hard second look, a third, a fourth? In the absence of computers and other techie devices available to us today, the schematic of a car was the only means through which a team of determined automotive engineers and designers would have been able to exhibit the intended model they wished to build. These drawings, like the schematics for the VW Cabrio that determined VW Cabrio part placements, rendered a sense of much needed professionalism as well as formality to the designs that were big time winners at the time with conservative board members and high ranking suits of most automotive companies.
Incidentally, the earliest Type 1 Cabriolet appeared during the late 1940's, in the midst of the spoils and miseries of the second world war. Despite such an inauspicious beginning, the sales of the Volkswagen Cabrio variants that followed were more than promising, they were favorable to the extreme.
In the end, though schematics of the kind used for those VW Cabrio parts may have been supplanted with computer printouts and multi-media presentations, they did manage to pave the way for a new level of professionalism to enter corporate presentation mediums.