Johnologue
Well-Known Member
I was checking The Autopian's mention of the change. I didn't realize Peter was actually from McKinsey and Co. There go most of my hopes that he's not basically the "acquisition that ruins Slate" that I feared.

Essentially it’s a change in title for Barman, not a demotion. No change in salary or benefits. I’ve seen this all the time. Having a new CEO in place frees her up to do what she does best.This is a demotion for Barman, from CEO to President. If she was effective as CEO she would have picked and hired the President of Vehicle Implementation.
The news reports are just spin.
Sad news IMO.
And I think that is the point (and now the concern). Barman was selected as CEO for Slate because she wasn't a business school grad or legacy auto industry executive predisposed to make executive decisions from the norm, legacy perspective (i.e. she can think "out of the box").Like I wrote previously, that would be a helluva switch-a-roo.
I don't think it's likely.
At the launch event Chris Barman something like "We looked a what the industry was doing and did the opposite." That's been their ethos from the beginning.
Yeah, agree. I read his bio on Michigan RossI feel like I can raise concerns about most of the companies on his record, but I do lack some context. Like some particular "era of Ford" where they were trying to "regain profitability"? Way before my time, but doesn't sound great.
I skimmed Wikipedia around "Jacques Nasser" and didn't particularly like what I found, like the "fire the lowest-performing 10%" (that's Jack Welsh's Vitality Curve!), and making profitability by pivoting into connected services.
But I don't know the degree of Faricy's involvement and sounds fairly "of the times".
SunPower went under, but I still can't really say how that reflects on him.
And the one from the article you didn't mention, being on the board for Blue Apron, one of those meal kit subscription companies that does YouTube sponsorships. Every company that does YouTube sponsorships seems to turn out really sketchy.
I'm worried he's going to bring in the "as a service", recurring revenue through subscriptions, "be a technology company instead of a car company" type thinking, and just send everything back in the direction that legacy automakers took.
I personally do believe that social, managerial, and business-leadership skills are valuable; I just also believe that the people and ideas common in those leadership positions haven't been providing that value.
I would have trusted the awkward technical people more than a business school guy.
Eh, we'll see. A CEO position usually comes with a contract with specific terms related to the person's role and performance goals and an exit strategy (if necessary). It would be interesting to know what protections she has under her contract and how it will play out. She might take a buyout and call it good.Essentially it’s a change in title for Barman, not a demotion. No change in salary or benefits. I’ve seen this all the time. Having a new CEO in place frees her up to do what she does best.
Overall, a win-win move for Slate, and for us.
You won't like this, either.But seriously, why do you think that?
None of these have anything to do with gender. The video you linked said nothing about women on the design team not liking the key blade. Maybe you got that from another source but regardless, how about toning down the misogyny.Because she's making decisions that alienate half the buying poblic (men).
Here we learn that bladed keys are a no-go coz some women on the design team didn't like them. So that means the functioality only a blade key can provide (such as entering the vehicle with dead fob battery, dead 12-Volt aux battery, lockable bed gate, lockable frunk), aren't available to anyone.
Other design misses include no DIN mounts for car stereo, no lighter socket, no bed light, no cabin light, no glove box, a fixed rear window, etc.
I was thinking I’d rather have a bladed key to be able to get in the car than the accessory hex bit they were showing that would be built in to the key fob.I'm not convinced there won't be a bladed key. The article doesn't say that, it just explains why they included the 'unnecessary' feature of a fob for lock/unlock. The video shows the key and does not appear to have a slot for a blade.... but we are still 6+ months from delivery. Those fobs could very well be unfinished prototypes.