Editorial: Why Tesla Needs To Sell Cars Through The Franchised Dealer Network

Virgil Hilts
by Virgil Hilts

Tesla founder Elon Musk recently announced that it was feasible to build a giant vacuum tube from Los Angeles to San Francisco and transport people the 400 miles between the two cities in 35 minutes. There is a better chance of this so-called “Hyperloop” ever happening than Musk being allowed to sell his electric vehicles directly to the public through his own stores in more than a handful of states. Musk must face reality and stop trying to change franchise dealer laws if he wants Tesla to sell cars through a dealer network that has a true presence in the marketplace. He must embrace the current system and start signing up existing stores.

Let us be clear: we are rooting for Tesla to succeed. The $70,000 to $100,000 Model S electric car is a ground-breaking automobile and has won about every award extant today. Musk is the darling of the analysts and the media, and who wouldn’t root for a man who is a combination of P.T. Barnum, Soichiro Honda and Bill Gates, producing the most politically correct green machine ever, and hates car dealers? What’s not to love?

I am also not shilling for automobile dealers, I simply do not see an alternative. Musk is trying to overturns state laws that prohibit manufacturers from selling cars directly to customers. Other carmakers, including Porsche and Ford, have tried and failed at this mission in the United States. Say what you will about American car dealers, but they have lobbied for and won state laws that will be nearly impossible to change. Musk has other pressing problems to occupy his time – possible battery shortages, and a nationwide charging network to establish – and even if he could build a dealer body, it would cost a half a billion dollars to construct and staff 100 dealerships.

Musk wants to sell 40,000 cars a year worldwide by 2015. We say he can sell 80,000 annually in the US alone through established dealers, particularly with the lower priced X Model arriving in 2014. As Tesla’s units in operation grow, customers will start to have problems that the salaried kid in the Tesla kiosk at the mall and his service center down the street and a voice on the phone from Fremont will not be able to solve. Transaction prices will certainly drop and the fickle public may move on to other brands. Crises will occur, like this week’s possible first sudden-acceleration claim against the company. What if Tesla’s bold promise of a guaranteed future value of their cars start costing them $10,000 a unit? You need experienced car dealers to help take care of these problems, nurture the customers and move the iron.

Tesla vehicles need to be on sold on showrooms alongside other luxury makes. The company could choose to hook up with select dealers of the same brand, preferably Lexus, BMW or Mercedes-Benz, or simply choose the best dealership in each market in terms of having genuine long-term success in customer satisfaction. Being a new car company, they could write a dealer agreement with teeth, as Lexus did back in 1989, mandating facility and client handling standards. Musk will certainly have to share some of his 25% markup with the chosen stores which will be painful at first, but better than a factory parking lot full of unsold Teslas.

Word came this week that Tesla has been quietly selling vehicles to rental car companies Hertz and Enterprise, indicating their retail sales may be softening and thus the need for dealerships to be established sooner rather than later.

Elon Musk must concentrate on what he does best and let car dealers do what they do best. Without a dealer network, Tesla is setting themselves up to fall short in important areas like after-sales service and distribution. While Musk currently has the tech-obsessed media wrapped around his pinky with talk of “disruption” and emissions-free motoring, few have examined the downsides of forgoing the traditional franchise dealer model. It’s one worth exploring.

Virgil Hilts
Virgil Hilts

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  • Marman Marman on Oct 01, 2013

    whether or not franchised dealerships make business sense for Tesla is certainly debatable. Personally, i think the franchised model is useless and does nothing but increase cost. The manufacturer needs its cut and then the middle man needs his cut. The real problem is the laws forcing Tesla to do so. These laws should be stripped from the books. Let Tesla decided for itself what the best way to sell cars is. If for their money they want to run all the dealerships, that is their choice. If they want to put franchise dealerships between them and their customers, so be it. It is their money. Laws should not be protecting a middle man business model. We already suffer from the three tier alcohol model, which should also be stripped from the books as it adds no value.

  • Trail Rated Trail Rated on Oct 04, 2013

    Dave Ruggles uses "Whine" or "Whining" nine times, as in "Stop whining and show us". "Polyanna"; Three times as in "I’d suggest Pollyanna stay home and hide under her mama’s skirts." It's my fault that I'm in a small bracket of consumers that can't man up and stare down the salesman, peer deep into the fault lines of his soul, flesh out his lowest number and bring him to his knees grovelling for my business. He is lucky to practice his trade in the west. Unlike the US, dealers in my country have fixed margins. I'm guessing this is probably to save the dealer's skin as people here are known to haggle and driving a hard bargain is a rite of passage. Wheeling and dealing is also unnecessary because dealerships aren't interested in used cars. They offer lesser than the actual market rate and leave that messy business to small, specialized, individual owned and reputation backed used car businesses.

  • SCE to AUX Sure, give them everything they want, and more. Let them decide how long they keep their jobs and their plant, until both go away.
  • SCE to AUX Range only matters if you need more of it - just like towing capacity in trucks.I have a short-range EV and still manage to put 1000 miles/month on it, because the car is perfectly suited to my use case.There is no such thing as one-size-fits all with vehicles.
  • Doug brockman There will be many many people living in apartments without dedicated charging facilities in future who will need personal vehicles to get to work and school and for whom mass transit will be an annoying inconvenience
  • Jeff Self driving cars are not ready for prime time.
  • Lichtronamo Watch as the non-us based automakers shift more production to Mexico in the future.
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