Peter P
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Saw this posted at Mach-E Forum. Also talks about the Lightning
From Bloomberg
Ford’s CEO Sees EVs Helping Carmaker Pare Its $3 Billion Ad Budget
* Carmaker isn’t spending on Mustang Mach-E, since it’s sold-out
* Executive sees dealers shifting focus to service after sale
June 1, 2022
Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley doesn’t see a need for traditional advertising for his company’s electric vehicles -- if they’re good enough to sell themselves.
“We spend $500 to $600 per vehicle on public advertising. Get rid of all of it,” Farley said Wednesday at the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference. “If you ever see Ford Motor Co. doing a Super Bowl ad on our electric vehicles, sell the stock.”
Ford is one of the nation’s biggest advertisers, spending $3.1 billion last year promoting its products. But Farley wants to emulate Tesla Inc., which controls the US market for EVs despite not buying traditional advertising. He said Ford hasn’t needed to advertise its new F-150 Lightning plug-in pickup and that it stopped promoting its electric Mustang Mach-E because “it’s sold out for two years.”
“I’m not convinced we need public advertising for” electric vehicles “if we do our job,” Farley said.
Farley, who is spending $50 billion on EVs through 2026, said his company’s advertising budget would be better spent to improve the customer experience for Ford’s car buyers, giving them special service and treatment at dealers throughout the life of their vehicle.
“Our model’s messed up,” Farley said. “We spend nothing post-warranty on the customer experience.”
Farley said Tesla has a cost advantage of $2,000 a car because the electric automaker has a direct sales model that doesn’t include car dealers.
But Farley isn’t looking to do away with dealers, who he contends could be a competitive advantage. He sees their role changing to focus on service after the sale. He also believes dealers will have to do 100% of sales online, with no-haggle pricing.
“Our dealers can do it, but the standards will be brutal,” Farley said. “Their business will change a lot and there will be a lot of winners and losers and, I believe, consolidation.”
From Bloomberg
Ford’s CEO Sees EVs Helping Carmaker Pare Its $3 Billion Ad Budget
* Carmaker isn’t spending on Mustang Mach-E, since it’s sold-out
* Executive sees dealers shifting focus to service after sale
June 1, 2022
Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley doesn’t see a need for traditional advertising for his company’s electric vehicles -- if they’re good enough to sell themselves.
“We spend $500 to $600 per vehicle on public advertising. Get rid of all of it,” Farley said Wednesday at the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference. “If you ever see Ford Motor Co. doing a Super Bowl ad on our electric vehicles, sell the stock.”
Ford is one of the nation’s biggest advertisers, spending $3.1 billion last year promoting its products. But Farley wants to emulate Tesla Inc., which controls the US market for EVs despite not buying traditional advertising. He said Ford hasn’t needed to advertise its new F-150 Lightning plug-in pickup and that it stopped promoting its electric Mustang Mach-E because “it’s sold out for two years.”
“I’m not convinced we need public advertising for” electric vehicles “if we do our job,” Farley said.
Farley, who is spending $50 billion on EVs through 2026, said his company’s advertising budget would be better spent to improve the customer experience for Ford’s car buyers, giving them special service and treatment at dealers throughout the life of their vehicle.
“Our model’s messed up,” Farley said. “We spend nothing post-warranty on the customer experience.”
Farley said Tesla has a cost advantage of $2,000 a car because the electric automaker has a direct sales model that doesn’t include car dealers.
But Farley isn’t looking to do away with dealers, who he contends could be a competitive advantage. He sees their role changing to focus on service after the sale. He also believes dealers will have to do 100% of sales online, with no-haggle pricing.
“Our dealers can do it, but the standards will be brutal,” Farley said. “Their business will change a lot and there will be a lot of winners and losers and, I believe, consolidation.”
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