• @nexusband@lemmy.world
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    -311 year ago

    BS, that’s what happens with shit management. They gambled all in with EVs and it failed big time, because nobody wants them. They also gambled all in with touch and screwed their base over and also they pulled everything out of the cars that made them good cars - and also “boring”.

    • @Kiliyukuxima@lemmy.world
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      271 year ago

      Their problem isn’t investing in EVs. Their problem is that their EVs are shit and also expensive so, obviously, no one will buy them. Besides, EV sales are growing more and more each year. I don’t know where you’ve been living dude

      • @gens@programming.dev
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        111 year ago

        It’s probably not just because ev. Golf has become a high end brand even before that. Not really a peoples car if parts cost a lot.

        • @deleted@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          More expensive and less reliable.

          I wonder how their management expected increase in sales. Maybe they trusted Joe’s chart.

        • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Yeah, even back when I liked VW, I understood the car itself might be priced in my range, but the parts cost similar to BMW parts, where there’s certainly some enthusiast gouging going on.

          And then the emissions scandal came out when shit like that was getting more important to me.

          A friend of a friend was offered a general counsel position at VW. They told him something like “the hours are good unless there’s a crisis”. Their timing was bad though because while he was still thinking it over, news broke of another layer to their emissions scandal which would have kept him much busier than expected. And they knew that was coming but couldn’t say, “we need more lawyers to deal with this coming crisis” but had to instead act as if it’s just a normal hire with normal hours. Has much changed from how they were run in the 1930s?