Amid Management Exodus, Tesla Fires Hundreds Of Workers

Starfcker explains why this is great news for Tesla in 5,4,3,2,1……

Tyler Durden's picture

 

One month after Tesla lost its head of business development who wished to “spend more time with his family”, and just weeks after the EV company’s veteran battery technology director also unexpectedly quit amid a growing senior management exodus (full list at the bottom of this article), Tesla decided to even out the ranks on the bottom as well, and fired “hundreds of workers” this week, including engineers, managers and factory workers even as the company struggles to expand its manufacturing and product line, according to the Mercury News which first reported of the mass layoffs.

Workers estimated between 400 and 700 employees have been fired, although Tesla refused to say how many employees were let go, and added that it expects employee turnover to be similar to last year’s attrition. Tesla employs about 10,000 workers at its Fremont factory; it lost $336 million in the second quarter, and burned through a record $1.16 billion in cash in Q2, or $13 million per day.

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In September, Tesla announced it was cutting 63 positions at SolarCity Corp.’s Roseville, California office; the staff was dismissed after Tesla bought the company, which manufacturers and installs rooftop solar panels, for about $2 billion in 2016.  SolarCity had over 12,200 employees as of the end of 2016.

The dismissals come at a critical point for the company, which is scrambling to increase vehicle production five-fold and reach a broader market with its new Model 3 sedan. The electric vehicle maker missed targets for producing the lower-cost sedan, manufacturing only 260 last quarter despite a wait list of more than 450,000 customers. It was later revealed by the WSJ that Tesla’s “dirty secret” for the unexpected production problem is that it was banging out parts of the Model 3 by hand.

According to the Mercury News, this week’s dismissals have not been reported to the state Employment Development Department, a spokeswoman said. The state generally requires companies to report layoffs of more than 50 employees in a 30-day period. Tesla countered that the performance-based departures were not considered layoffs and not subject to state notifications.

In an absurd demonstration of Musk’s bizarre management style, the company said the mass terminations have “generally boosted worker morale”, as high-performing employees have been rewarded. it was unclear what the 700 layoffs, pardon, exit events did to worker morale.

While the company said this week’s dismissals were the result of a company-wide annual review, claiming some workers received promotions and bonuses, and expects to hire for the “vast majority” of new vacancies, insisting the mass terminations were not layoffs, some critics have noted that these are layoffs “plain and simple” as a company does not fire 700 people at the same time in the middle of the year due to “performance” issues.

“As with any company, especially one of over 33,000 employees, performance reviews also occasionally result in employee departures,” a spokesman said. “Tesla is continuing to grow and hire new employees around the world.”

Still, validating the argument that these were indeed layoffs, in interviews former and current employees told the Mercury News little or no warning preceded the dismissals. The workers interviewed include trained engineers working on vehicle design and production, a supervisor and factory employees.

“Workers spoke on the condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals from the company. Employees said the firings have lowered morale through many departments. Several said Model X, Model S and former SolarCity operations seemed to be targeted.”

Among those fired was Juan Maldonado, a production worker, who felt the tap on his shoulder on Thursday. He worked at Tesla for nearly four years, and said he heard about 60 other workers in his section of the factory were dismissed. Maldonado, 48, said he ran late for work twice in recent months, but thought he had straightened things out with his supervisor. Now, he said, “I’m going to try to find a job.”

The dismissals come after Tesla said it built just 260 Model 3 sedans during the third quarter, less than a fifth of its 1,500-unit forecast. The company has offered scant detail about the problems it’s having producing the car, although the previously noted WSJ report suggests that Tesla is having severe manufacturing bottlenecks forcing workers to build parts of the Model 3 by hand. The vehicle’s entry price starts at $35,000, roughly half the cost of Tesla’s least-expensive Model S sedan. When unveiling the Model 3, Musk joked to employees they would be going through “production hell” to meet demand for the new car.  Little did many the employees know that hell would come in the form of a pink slip.

As Bloomberg notes, a delayed ramp-up risks the ire of some of the almost half million reservation holders who started paying $1,000 deposits early last year. On Oct. 12, Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk posted a video on Instagram of what he said was a stamping press producing body panels for the Model 3.

Musk has told investors the company is focused on Model 3 production and expects to eventually build 10,000 cars a week. The manufacturing will become highly automated, but Musk told investors during the early ramp up he expected high overtime costs.

* * *

Meanwhile, Tesla has faced ongoing discontent from some factory workers, who have complained about work conditions and wages below the auto industry average. Tesla has a hearing before the National Labor Relations Board in November for charges that company supervisors and security guards harassed workers distributing union literature. Tesla denied the accusations.

Openly pro-union workers were among those fired this week. Some believe they were targeted, even as the company denied union activities played a role in the dismissals.

Quoted by the Mercury News, Michael Harley, managing editor at Kelley Blue Book and Autotrader, thought the dismissals could be an effort to improve vehicle production. “It’s no secret that Tesla’s Model 3 development and ramp-up for production has been derailed,” Harley said. “A major change in staff – whether dismissal or layoff – is an indication that there is an upper level movement to put the train back on the tracks.”

Whatever the reason behind the “non-layoffs”, one thing is clear: Tesla has a management exodus problem as demonstrated by this extensive list of recent senior level departures from the company, including two of the most important, non CEO positions in just the past three months.

 

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18 Comments
MN Steel
MN Steel
October 14, 2017 11:35 am

Saw a Tesla yesterday coming out of a Boomer Housing Hive.

Second one outside the Twin Shitties I’ve seen, still have a long ways to go to get to cat-lady Prius levels…

starfcker
starfcker
October 14, 2017 11:56 am

Sounds like they had some pro-union infiltration mucking things up, and they sent them packing. What else you going to do? The local paper shows a little more perspective. Tesla fires hundreds from headquarters, factory

Tesla fires hundreds after company-wide performance reviews

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 7:02 pm

Isn’t it, like, super-illegal to fire people for trying to organize a union?

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Iska Waran
October 14, 2017 7:48 pm

Iska – Yes, it is. But you have to prove it. That is not so easy.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
October 14, 2017 12:31 pm

What else can a company do you ask ??? A company that without several thousand dollars in tax incentives per unit produced would be on the skids before it ever got off the ground . With average line work paying less than $20 bucks an hour in California , what tax payer subsidized programs do under paid workers from companies qualify for due to the low wage downward spiral in America . The lack of a high paid union wage is part of the infrastructure problem in America today . The stock market is up while 100 MILLON plus working people are qualifying for food stamps .
The heavy industry is gone and the corporate pirates like Musk talk shit about morale improving with layoffs and going to Mars .
Time to wake up people , it’s a big club and average Americans are not in it at all !

c1ue
c1ue
  Boat Guy
October 14, 2017 12:38 pm

I think you mean “small club”, or perhaps “exclusive club”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Boat Guy
October 14, 2017 12:55 pm

There are fewer than 46 million on food stamps (the numbers have been decreasing this year) and I doubt they’re all working people since most of them are Democrats.

starfcker
starfcker
October 14, 2017 12:49 pm

Boatguy, you’re all over the map with that rant. “The heavy industry is gone.” Well, Tesla is about as heavy an industry as you’re going to get. Designed and built right here in the good old USA. Do you see Musk buying Chinese batteries? No. He built a giant battery factory in Nevada. You don’t like that either. Do you want them to fail? Why? Line pay is 20 bucks an hour? Do we need to pay line workers like neurosurgeons in your world, Boatguy? 20 bucks an hour is 40 grand a year. That’s chickenshit to you? What do you really want?

unit472/
unit472/
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 2:14 pm

$20 dollars per hour in the Bay Area is starvation wages. Move the plant to Tennessee or New Mexico and those wages would buy entry into the middle class. That’s the problem with all these ‘tech’ companies putting their operations in the most expensive housing markets in America. The ‘chiefs’ like living there but their Indians can’t afford to.

starfcker
starfcker
  unit472/
October 14, 2017 3:49 pm

Unit, the median income in Freemont where Tesla has their factory is $40,815. This is what Llpoh used to go off on, and it took me awhile to understand what he was saying, but he was exactly right. What is a line worker in a factory owed?

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 5:27 pm

The factory wouldn’t even be open if Musk weren’t benefitting from huge subsidies, and also if he couldn’t finance his burn rate with money borrowed from investors who obviously aren’t familiar with physics or the laws of thermodynamics….

starfcker
starfcker
  pyrrhus
October 14, 2017 5:30 pm

But he can. So what’s your point?

Ed
Ed
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 5:50 pm

You are an idiot…. Star shill idiot

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 4:40 pm

Starfck how old are you , because you obviously have not experienced the destruction of middle America . I did well with education skill and ability . My complaint is all over the map because the bull shit from corporate America and government is nationwide . My concern is for young people entering the work force today and regardless of education levels too few can afford to support what was an average American lifestyle . As for food assistance going down , that’s what happens in a nation spiraling down First the ones closest to the edge are bumped off then you or your family member . Things are fine for me but as a whole our nation is financially fucked . Pensions bankrupt medical care out of touch in reality and the hits just keep coming ! We may get some more bull shit war on blah blah . Look what $6 trillion got us in Iraq and Afghanistan “NOTHING” bu a load of dead young people another load of injured and a shit load of HERION on our streets . Check the figures , it’s not worth it .
You also leave out the tax payer subsidy for every solar panel and car Musk the welfare queen turns out . Yes I want all to succeed in America but through Free market capitalism not subsidized socialism or crony capitalism . There is a huge difference

starfcker
starfcker
  Boat Guy
October 14, 2017 5:43 pm

Boat Guy, 57. So, no, I’ve watched the whole thing unravel. I agree with your observations, I disagree with how we fix it. Robert has a terrific article up right now, predicting collapse. I’m going to try to put an article together next week rebutting his, not because he may be wrong, time will tell on that, but because I think the country has allowed itself to be sold on orthodoxy that leaves most people believing their particular dogma will solve everything, and that they are the smart ones for seeing that. And it doesn’t matter which flavor of dogma you prefer, as long as you buy one or the other, you have served your purpose as a useful dolt. Should be fun, lots of my opinions run counter to the conventional wisdom around here, but it’s a good time to do it, and Robert has served up a nice template, because he touched so many things. Stay tuned.

Ed
Ed
  starfcker
October 14, 2017 5:47 pm

You are an idiot….

starshill
starshill
  Ed
October 14, 2017 6:21 pm

I strongly disagree.

starshill
starshill
October 14, 2017 7:21 pm

And Ed, I will do this once. If Tesla did employee evaluations on it’s 33,000 employees, and decided 400 of them sucked, what should they have done, other than fire them? Bet you got nothing.