States Tesla couldn’t open a store in (but now it doesn’t matter)
#16
Originally Posted by LexsCTJill
I believe this has all been covered before.. Auto manufacturers can sell direct, however, they cannot sell direct and franchise out (at the same time) in the United States. It is either or.
#17
I don't think the rules will change. They are there to protect the dealers from the manufacturer.
#18
Originally Posted by LexsCTJill
I don't think the rules will change. They are there to protect the dealers from the manufacturer.
#19
I am sure they will. Or perhaps Tesla will close up their retail locations and franchise out their retail operations. Tesla would raise an extraordinary amount of capital from franchising out. They can then focus on building cars and getting the cost and price points down. Most manufacturers (in any industry) and most retailers (in any industry) do not do both. Just my thoughts.
#20
Originally Posted by LexsCTJill
I am sure they will. Or perhaps Tesla will close up their retail locations and franchise out their retail operations. Tesla would raise an extraordinary amount of capital from franchising out. They can then focus on building cars and getting the cost and price points down. Most manufacturers (in any industry) and most retailers (in any industry) do not do both. Just my thoughts.
#21
Dealer franchises are a relic of the past that were a necessity when there was no concept of the internet.
Tesla shouldn't be forced to set up a business model that is over a 100 years old!
States will recognize the ridiculousness of the rules soon and change those laws.
#22
OK, just for my own clarity, one can order a Tesla in any State in the US via the web and have it delivered -correct?
We have a member here that just ordered a TM3 after test driving it! He's in Canada though so I suppose things are different there.
I recently found out there is a Tesla Service Center here in Tampa. I googled it and was able to drive by the shop and even look into the service bay and see a mechanic working on Tesla up on a lift. I was surprised to see maybe 30 Tesla's in the parking lot awaiting service.
We have a member here that just ordered a TM3 after test driving it! He's in Canada though so I suppose things are different there.
I recently found out there is a Tesla Service Center here in Tampa. I googled it and was able to drive by the shop and even look into the service bay and see a mechanic working on Tesla up on a lift. I was surprised to see maybe 30 Tesla's in the parking lot awaiting service.
#23
Originally Posted by mmarshall
Actually, Apple selling their products in those store-outlets increases, not decreases competition. I bought my Apple MacBook Air, several years ago, at Best Buy, and got a better deal there than I would have gotten in the Apple store...which, in some ways, is a rip off.The Internet, and buying things on-line, is not the answer to everything.Agreed. No one forces them to stay in that business. If Tesla wants to, they can simply get out of the auto business and concentrate on things like computer and battery hardware. But, if they want to sell autos, then they have to play by the rules.Don't bet on it.
#24
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https://www.tesla.com/en_CA/findus/list/stores/canada
article on this:
https://www.statesman.com/news/20190...sh-in-question
#25
that is, i now read, correct. tesla/musk were sick of trying to get 'dealers' (meaning company owned stores) where you could actually order a tesla in many states that are blocking it, so he went direct. the company owned 'stores' now are basically information only, plus service, and you order the car online.
In either case, I don't see how Tesla can persist with the no-franchise policy forever. Day after day, it is causing no end to the company's problems. Sooner or later, Tesla will have to come out of the Dark Ages, stop being cave-dwellers, forget this direct-delivery nonsense, and get franchises.
#26
Oh the irony of calling a new business model that disrupts the entire industry something from the dark ages while saying the 100 year old business model that is so scared, it has to have government protection to save them is hilarious. Hahaha. To each his own.
#27
When I said "Dark Ages", I was refering to the historical trend (which, BTW, Bob Lutz agrees with) that company-owned sales-outlets have never worked for any auto manufacturer on a large scale. There are reasons why franchises became the norm for auto-sales...it is virtually an economic necessity.
Last edited by mmarshall; 07-28-19 at 06:48 PM.
#30
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The question now arises, though ......will those states that ban direct-company sales, and require official franchises, now allow on-line ordering and delivery in those states? Methinks not, although I will admit that a policy like that could be difficult to enforce without simply banning any more new Tesla registrations, period, in those states.
In either case, I don't see how Tesla can persist with the no-franchise policy forever. Day after day, it is causing no end to the company's problems. Sooner or later, Tesla will have to come out of the Dark Ages, stop being cave-dwellers, forget this direct-delivery nonsense, and get franchises.