| > Tesla is playing a different game than the rest of the auto industry - it's playing against a different set of customer values (electric might be part of it, but only part). In this way it is similar to the iPhone coming in and basically killing Nokia, Motorola and Blackberry. Can you expand on this? When the iPhone came out there was literally nothing like it on the market. It genuinely redefined what could be done with a phone, and it doing so, completely changed the category. Nothing that Tesla is doing rises to that level of disruption/innovation, at least as far as I can tell. What, exactly, are they doing that brings you to this conclusion? > But I guess only time will tell. I find this so strange. Tesla has been around for... let's see... 20 years. The S is over 10 years old now (production started in late 2010). The iPhone came out in 2007. A blink of the eye later and the smartphone was ubiquitous. You say "time will tell", but... how much more time, exactly? |
What nobody expected is the power of: people just loving the device. Enterprise IT departments were approached by C-suite folks demanding to use the device. Consumers decided they did want to fork out big bucks for one, and carriers found a way to finance them.