CORP/BIZ Tesla to lay off everyone working on Superchargers, new vehicles

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
"Shocking" developments after a bad quarterly report.

Fair Use Cited
----------------
Tesla to lay off everyone working on Superchargers, new vehicles

Tesla is also getting rid of its public policy team, despite robotaxi ambitions.

JONATHAN M. GITLIN - 4/30/2024, 8:20 AM

There's more chaos at Tesla this week. The Information reports that last night, the company's erratic CEO Elon Musk emailed workers with news that he has dismissed a key pair of executives—one responsible for the Supercharger network and the other head of new vehicle development.

The electric car maker posted its quarterly results last week, and they paint a poor picture, with shrinking sales and plummeting profit margins. While Tesla once had a strong first-mover advantage and benefited from Musk's marketing savvy, the company has frequently ignored the many hard-learned lessons of the auto industry.

Customers not turned off by Musk's antics instead are losing interest with a product lineup of two EVs that are ancient in car years (the Models S and X) and two EVs that are merely old (the Models 3 and Y). The Models 3 and Y are also the only two vehicles that Tesla sells in volume. Any other automaker would have a second-generation Model 3 ready to go either this year or next, but at Tesla, the product pipeline is empty.

And yet, Tesla is not just laying off Daniel Ho, director of vehicle programs and new product introduction, but also his entire team.

“Hard-core about headcount”

Even Tesla's harshest critics must concede that the company's Supercharger network is its star asset. Tesla has more fast chargers in operation than anyone else, and this year opened them up to other automakers, which are adopting the J3400 plug standard.

All of which makes the decision to get rid of senior director of EV charging Rebecca Tinucci—along with her entire team—a bit of a head-scratcher. If I were the driver of a non-Tesla EV expecting to get access to Superchargers this year, I'd probably expect this to result in some friction. Musk told workers that Tesla "will continue to build out some new Supercharger locations, where critical, and finish those currently under construction."

Many Tesla fans had been holding out hope that Musk would debut a cheap Model 2 EV in recent weeks. Instead, the tycoon promised that robotaxis would save the business, even as both of its partially automated driver assistance systems face recalls and investigations here in the US and in China.

Delivering on that goal is more than just a technical challenge, and it will require the cooperation and approval of state and federal authorities. However, Musk is also dissolving the company's public policy team in this latest cull.

"Hopefully these actions are making it clear that we need to be absolutely hard-core about headcount and cost reduction. While some on exec staff are taking this seriously, most are not yet doing so," Musk wrote to employees. Musk also told staff that he would ask for the resignation of any executive "who retains more than three people who don't obviously pass the excellent, necessary and trustworthy test."

Earlier this month, Tesla engaged in another round of layoffs that decimated the company and parted ways with longtime executive Drew Baglino, who was responsible for Tesla's battery development.

 

West

Senior
Saw a idiot texting with both hands off the steering wheel in downtown traffic. Granted we was only going about 45mph at the high end, but I didn't see him grab the steering wheel threw at least 3 blocks or 3 traffic lights.

Yes he was in a Tesla.
 

amarilla

Veteran Member
Thinking people would say, "Where is the electricity to charge all these vehicles going to come from?" I do a lot of long hauls and electric vehicles aren't something I'm interested in for that reason but also how will I charge it? "They" aren't building new power plants. Hundreds of thousands of illegals are coming in and using electricity. It's total fantasy that you will be able to charge them.
 

Elza

Veteran Member
It would be nice to have an EV as a second/backup car. When we can't buy gas I could still get to the store, get granddaughter to and from school, and make doctors appointments. However:

A) I wouldn't trust one as far as I can throw it.
B) The cost of the car plus the insane price of replacement batteries.
C) Even though I can do the work myself the cost of a charging station is pretty steep.

Sorry Elon, I'll pass.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
"Shocking" developments after a bad quarterly report.

Fair Use Cited
----------------
Tesla to lay off everyone working on Superchargers, new vehicles

Tesla is also getting rid of its public policy team, despite robotaxi ambitions.

JONATHAN M. GITLIN - 4/30/2024, 8:20 AM

There's more chaos at Tesla this week. The Information reports that last night, the company's erratic CEO Elon Musk emailed workers with news that he has dismissed a key pair of executives—one responsible for the Supercharger network and the other head of new vehicle development.

The electric car maker posted its quarterly results last week, and they paint a poor picture, with shrinking sales and plummeting profit margins. While Tesla once had a strong first-mover advantage and benefited from Musk's marketing savvy, the company has frequently ignored the many hard-learned lessons of the auto industry.

Customers not turned off by Musk's antics instead are losing interest with a product lineup of two EVs that are ancient in car years (the Models S and X) and two EVs that are merely old (the Models 3 and Y). The Models 3 and Y are also the only two vehicles that Tesla sells in volume. Any other automaker would have a second-generation Model 3 ready to go either this year or next, but at Tesla, the product pipeline is empty.

And yet, Tesla is not just laying off Daniel Ho, director of vehicle programs and new product introduction, but also his entire team.

“Hard-core about headcount”

Even Tesla's harshest critics must concede that the company's Supercharger network is its star asset. Tesla has more fast chargers in operation than anyone else, and this year opened them up to other automakers, which are adopting the J3400 plug standard.

All of which makes the decision to get rid of senior director of EV charging Rebecca Tinucci—along with her entire team—a bit of a head-scratcher. If I were the driver of a non-Tesla EV expecting to get access to Superchargers this year, I'd probably expect this to result in some friction. Musk told workers that Tesla "will continue to build out some new Supercharger locations, where critical, and finish those currently under construction."

Many Tesla fans had been holding out hope that Musk would debut a cheap Model 2 EV in recent weeks. Instead, the tycoon promised that robotaxis would save the business, even as both of its partially automated driver assistance systems face recalls and investigations here in the US and in China.

Delivering on that goal is more than just a technical challenge, and it will require the cooperation and approval of state and federal authorities. However, Musk is also dissolving the company's public policy team in this latest cull.

"Hopefully these actions are making it clear that we need to be absolutely hard-core about headcount and cost reduction. While some on exec staff are taking this seriously, most are not yet doing so," Musk wrote to employees. Musk also told staff that he would ask for the resignation of any executive "who retains more than three people who don't obviously pass the excellent, necessary and trustworthy test."

Earlier this month, Tesla engaged in another round of layoffs that decimated the company and parted ways with longtime executive Drew Baglino, who was responsible for Tesla's battery development.

What wonderful news.............just as Tesla's supercharger system is quickly becoming a de facto industry EV charging standard.
That along with Hertz dumping even MORE EV's into the used car market tells me NHTSA might be getting ready to fine Tesla for either the self driving problems and deaths; or making the company take care of their millions of cars out there with cracked strut towers.

With the EV market literally cratering expect more bad news for Tesla. Oh, in case you didnt' know, one EV maker is maybe a week or two from bankruptcy right now. The Fisker company, makers of the Fisker Ocean EV SUV. They recently had a recall on rear doors that wouldn't stay shut. It was the recall that drained their coffers.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Rivian is having it's share of concerns, layoffs mounting from what I here from within...
 

Tex88

Veteran Member
Without a different battery technology available, EVs are doomed to be a niche product.


On a different note, I saw one of those Tesla “trucks” on the road a few days ago. Ugliest damn thing I ever saw.
Here, this better?

VZEQfhW.png
 

Scrapman

Veteran Member
Ford lost billions making ev cars because there woke ceo listened to the government, which brings up the question since when does the government dictate what a private company should have been selling. So know there going into the the hybrid vehicle market . There only 10 years behind Toyota in that technology. CEO continues to work there making millions.
Someone said the USA now is like a retarded version of the soviet union.
 
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