| "The cost of the worldwide recall will be "immaterial," the company said. The problem was discovered after a single report to the company in early November of a seatbelt assembly breaking." "A Tesla spokesman said Friday there have been no accidents or injuries related to the problem. Tesla officials emailed owners of the battery powered luxury sedan asking them to bring their cars to one of about 125 Tesla service centers worldwide for an inspection." "Tesla may send service technicians to customers if necessary, a spokesman said. The company sells and services its cars with its own personnel and stores. Other automakers get recall repairs done through networks of dealers." So, they start by mentioning it's an immaterial cost, which eases investor concerns. Then say that they're taking action after a single customer anecdote, which shows driver safety is paramount. Then mention that their have been no injuries/accidents furthering the safety-first narrative. Then they state the number of service centers worldwide to which a customer can go to have the issue addressed. And finally a nice jab at traditional automakers, saying that Tesla will address the issue with its own personnel whereas it would traditionally be outsourced. So, yeah, I think it's fair to call it a marketing ploy. And I don't mean to sound super critical or cynical. I don't have any problem with it at all, it just is what it is. |
There is no way a company like Tesla would open up their brand to such speculation voluntarily if they could avoid it by designing a better product from the start.