If the CEO of Hertz trusted a salesman (Musk) who had a personal stake in making the sale, and did not do any due diligence at all, which of the two was the fool here?
I wonder at some point once they realized the costs, maybe they were better off discouraging their EV rentals and pulling the plug on building up its charging network, with the theory the more on the road the more costly and might have just stopped knowing they will be done with them soon.
More or less not wanting to throw more money after a failure that was already costing them to much money. At some point they knew they made a mistake and let's be honest, the CEO directly called Elon Musk out on the carpet for misleading and in-accurate statements. It's a pretty strong statement when you trash another CEO in public with strong statements like that. I am sure they have the documentation to back it up.
So strong a statement that he pretty much admitted that they put too much trust in Musk. Granted, they are idiots for doing that, to bad Hertz didnt call me on the phone for advice, they would have saved a lot of money and grief. These boards and CEOs (including Musk) are so wealthy and out of touch with the American family it becomes a handicap at times if they dont know how to read the "public" at large.
So while others were trashing Toyota as late to the party, seems they were the smart ones and GM and Ford at least learned very fast to start scaling back before ruin.
CEOs don’t last in that company if it did happen. Less than legal practices seem to be the norm.I can't read the article, did they boot the Hertz CEO? If not clear the launch pad, time for a new Hertz CEO.
LOL. Trusting a salesman. Then that go broke or go home mentality of investing that kind of money should clear the launch pad.If the CEO of Hertz trusted a salesman (Musk) who had a personal stake in making the sale, and did not do any due diligence at all, which of the two was the fool here?
Absolutely, did anyone say any different? But you do know, you must know, when a CEO or anyone of a nationally known brand (no less) looking to sell you millions in dollars in a product> CEOs and Boards rely on some of their statements. You have to and you know that company wants to build a relationship with you to keep selling products to you.If the CEO of Hertz trusted a salesman (Musk) who had a personal stake in making the sale, and did not do any due diligence at all, which of the two was the fool here?
I can't read the article, did they boot the Hertz CEO? If not clear the launch pad, time for a new Hertz CEO.
I have to pay to read the article, I won't. Call me old and cheap. I wish them well, a 25% commitment imo will dig the hole deeper, even if it takes longer than a year. Opinions will vary.It's worth reading the article because the CEO although laying out where losses were, didnt actually say either of the two quotes attributed to him in the opening post.
Since they aren't in this article, and we haven't seen a source for them actually linked, one can only conclude they were made up to push a narrative.
IF they were so bad for Hertz they probably wouldn't stay committed to them? (from the article)
Fortunately for Tesla, the rental agency remains committed to eventually expanding the 10% share of its fleet that are EVs to a milestone target of 25%, even if it is no longer committed to achieving that by the end of next year.
I have to pay to read the article, I won't. Call me old and cheap. I wish them well, a 25% commitment imo will dig the hole deeper, even if it takes longer than a year. Opinions will vary.
No idea. I'll take your word for what you wrote earlier.Maybe I can read it for free because I have a mac?
Well good for them. Just seems to have failed literally everywhere else other than major population centers.You obviously haven’t been to any of the MANY inner ring Enterprise locations around here-when we used them there would be a line of people paying for their weekly rentals-ALL in cash…
Maybe that's what you did. When I used to get rental cars for work we drove the hell out of them.This is a fairly ridiculous assertion. Most business travelers rent a car at the airport to drive locally. They visit customers, make sales calls, visit branch offices/main offices, etc.
I can read it with Windows 11 and Edge, no paywall.Maybe I can read it for free because I have a mac?
I'm sure that wasn't Musk's original goal and I would have to assume he wanted it to be a long and lucrative relationship. I will say making such a stink in the way that the Hertz CEO has trying to blame Tesla for poor figures looks extremely unprofessional. It's kind of Musk-like.Absolutely, did anyone say any different? But you do know, you must know, when a CEO or anyone of a nationally known brand (no less) looking to sell you millions in dollars in a product> CEOs and Boards rely on some of their statements. You have to and you know that company wants to build a relationship with you to keep selling products to you.
SO yes, Musk made a fool of him and Musk further cemented himself as someone who can not be trusted. Ummmm... hate to tell anyone but that is not the successful formula for world recognition to have CEOs around the world not trust a word you say.
If the CEO of Hertz trusted a salesman (Musk) who had a personal stake in making the sale, and did not do any due diligence at all, which of the two was the fool here?
Used Teslas have never soared. Tesla sells to Hertz, and everyone else, because they are in the business of selling cars.They're both fools. Hertz saw the values of used Teslas soaring, thought they could hold them for a year and sell at a profit. And for Tesla, why would you want your "exclusive" cars being rented out when someone reserves a Corolla or similar or being picked used to pick up passengers by an Uber driver?
Used Teslas have never soared. Tesla sells to Hertz, and everyone else, because they are in the business of selling cars.
My guess is Hertz thought they could lure customers in with EVs and perhaps save a little on maintenance costs. That's what I don't get.
On top of that, Hertz typically gets a fleet discount on their purchases but Tesla does not offer fleet sales. Hertz pays the same as you or me.
Of course you are entitled to speculate, but there is no evidence to back that up. The Hertz purchase was big news at the time because Tesla's stock jumped. The fact that Hertz paid full price was big news.When they entered into this agreement, the price of used Teslas was appreciating. I would bet there was a discount given to Hertz.