Blue highway
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Steve
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2021
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 2,700
- Reaction score
- 4,249
- Location
- Oregon
- Vehicles
- Mach E Premium SR RWD
uh huh... you change direction by changing leadership. That has nothing to do with what just happened. When you fire an entire division of worker bees it's nothing more thought through than a temper tantrum.Whatever else he is, Musk is at his core a startup CEO. He makes decisions and moves decisively. He freely slays sacred cows. Those things are often necessary at a scrappy upstart that has a razor thin path to success. The startups that make all of the right choices survive, and the ones that don't, don't. See: Fisker Automotive (the one that went in 2013, not the one that's going bankrupt later this year), Aptera Motors (same story - liquidated in 2011, then reformed) Nikola Motors (technically not dead yet, but...... yeah), and if we're honest, probably eventually every US EV startup besides Tesla and Rivian.
Tesla is no longer such a startup. You can't act like that when you have a scaled enterprise with complex systems in-place. At that point, the sacred cows you're slaying are your own.
I have no doubt the supercharger group needed change. The V4 supercharger rollout has been a disaster. Cybertruck, despite being several years delayed, launched months ago. There isn't a single supercharger capable of charging it at its native voltage. The few "V4" superchargers that are installed are just the new dispensers with V3 cabinets. Tesla has to be embaressed that their shiny new trophy charges faster at Electrify America, but that doesn't mean you burn it all down. Poorly performing teams that have performed well in the past (superchargers are still BY FAR the best charging network) usually just need new leadership and a targeted trimming of dead weight.
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