The US already lags far behind China and Europe, but we're going too fast, dealers say.
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"And then not only are EVs more expensive, but their own salespeople are untrained. They don't even know how to answer most of the questions they get. A lot of them have 100–200 percent turnover of their sales staff in a given year," Reigersman told me.
If only there was some group of people whose job it was to sell cars. Maybe they can put their heads together and figure out how to move all this inventory.Today, the supply of unsold BEVs is surging, as they are not selling nearly as fast as they are arriving at our dealerships—even with deep price cuts, manufacturer incentives, and generous government incentives.
You may say it's due to "ignorance", but there's much more nuance to that.
Having worked in the car dealer world once upon a time, salespeople at lower end brands are almost uniformly and constantly engaged in a competitive environment that makes your head swim. There’s little room for learning and understanding why a particular model may be better for a customer - the onus is on the sales people and sales manager to move product as quickly as possible.I mean, I would just train my salespeople and offer the salespeople incentives to not quit so quickly, but that's just me.
A decent number of Americans (compared to Europeans) certainly would experience some limitations with an EV as their sole vehicle, but just about every household with more than a single car should ideally be bulking out that fleet of vehicles with EVs, especially for vehicles that are commuter centric rather than needing to haul a bunch of people or equipment.
The Nissan Leaf and VW ID.4 are both in the $25k-$35k range.Aren't most manufacturers selling $60K - $150K electric vehicles? They chased after the whales; GM discontinued the Chevy Bolt, their best selling EV and decided to offer more expensive vehicles. Of course demand plummeted - we call can't afford driving F150 lightnings around.
You may say it's due to "ignorance", but there's much more nuance to that.
Take my situation. I live in an area where the closest next city is 300km drive, and the closest place I'd call a metropolis is maybe 600km away?
An EV would not be a great choice "at the moment". Once battery tech improves not only for range, but winter driving, I'll consider buying one for sure. Until then, I cannot own an EV as my only vehicle, and I cannot afford 2 vehicles.
Aren't most manufacturers selling $60K - $150K electric vehicles? They chased after the whales; GM discontinued the Chevy Bolt, their best selling EV and decided to offer more expensive vehicles. Of course demand plummeted - we call can't afford driving F150 lightnings around.
Right?If only there was some group of people whose job it was to sell cars. Maybe they can put their heads together and figure out how to move all this inventory.
"And then not only are EVs more expensive, but their own salespeople are untrained. They don't even know how to answer most of the questions they get. A lot of them have 100–200 percent turnover of their sales staff in a given year," Reigersman told me.
We're going to need a big wall, there's A LOT of different categories of people that are queued for time slot 1 during the revolution.Car dealers are a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first against the wall when the revolution comes.
I think the problem is that many dealers see the handwriting on the wall with regards to reduced EV service requirements and are opting to slow-walk this transition to the best of their abilities. Dealers make a lot on service, and it makes sense that they'd view a transition to a more reliable breed of vehicle as a business disaster.If only there was some group of people whose job it was to sell cars. Maybe they can put their heads together and figure out how to move all this inventory.
"And then not only are EVs more expensive, but their own salespeople are untrained. They don't even know how to answer most of the questions they get. A lot of them have 100–200 percent turnover of their sales staff in a given year," Reigersman told me.