Exclusive: Tesla hunts for design chief to create cars
for China - sources
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[January 11, 2021] By
Norihiko Shirouzu
BEIJING (Reuters) - Tesla Inc is searching
for a design director in China, part of efforts to open a
"full-function" studio in Shanghai or Beijing and design electric cars
tailored to Chinese consumer tastes, according to three people with
knowledge of the matter.
The U.S. carmaker's human resources managers, as well as several
headhunters, have been trawling the industry over the past four months,
the sources said.
They are looking for "bi-cultural" candidates with 20 or more years of
experience who are familiar with Chinese tastes and can bridge the gaps
between China and the United States, they added.
Some candidates have been interviewed by Tesla's global design chief
Franz von Holzhausen, according to the people, though it was not clear
how many potential candidates had been approached by the company and
recruiters.
All three sources spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity due to the
sensitivity and confidential nature of the matter.
Tesla and von Holzhausen did not respond to emailed requests for
comment.
China is the world's biggest auto market, plus the largest for
all-electric vehicles with sales volumes expected to reach roughly 1.5
million vehicles there this year, according to consultancy LMC
Automotive. It is also Tesla's No.2 market after the United States.
The carmaker's plans for the design studio are not fully developed, and
the sources believe Tesla will likely wait for more clarity on strained
U.S.-China relations under a new U.S. president before making a final
decision on the move and all its details.
The talent search, which the sources said was mainly focused within
China, fits with comments from Tesla boss Elon Musk early last year.
"I think something that would be super cool would be ... to create a
China design and engineering centre to actually design an original car
in China for worldwide consumption. I think this would be very
exciting," he said at a media event in Shanghai.
FLURRY OF ACTIVITY
Musk's interest in developing cars in China is part of a broader push by
Tesla to boost the company's global sales volume well past the
500,000-vehicle-a-year mark, which it came just 450 short of hitting in
2020.
All three sources said Tesla's search for a China studio director began
around September, and that there was a flurry of activity as recently as
December when a number of headhunters used LinkedIn and other means to
approach candidates.
One of the sources, who has knowledge of Tesla's headhunting activities
in China, said that once a design director was hired, Tesla would
recruit the director's team which would likely be around 20-strong and
include designers plus modellers who help turn design renderings into
clay models.
All the sources said the planned centre aimed to be a comprehensive
design outfit, with one describing it as a "full-function studio", which
would not only help conceptualize the design of a car but also come up
with the final shape – digital three-dimensional data - of a model.
The data could then be handed over to Tesla's vehicle engineers, who are
mostly based in northern California.
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Visitors wearing face
masks check a China-made Tesla Model Y sport utility vehicle (SUV)
at the electric vehicle maker's showroom in Beijing, China January
5, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo
Two of the sources said Tesla's China studio would likely also carry out
research on Chinese consumer tastes, as well as work for cars expected to be
produced at Tesla's vehicle assembly plant in Shanghai, where designs are
tweaked to make sure specific components fit within engineers' specifications.
"They want to give vehicle design a lot more bias toward China; they have
already done a lot here, setting up a major manufacturing site and having sold a
ton of EVs, but it seems Tesla's ready to put roots down," said one of the
sources.
This push might lead to a more independent Tesla China, added the person, who
has spent more than a decade in the country working at design centres run by
global automakers, among other places.
Chinese consumers bought around 145,000 Tesla vehicles last year, accounting for
roughly a third of the company's overall global volumes, LMC said.
$25,000 ELECTRIC CAR
Two of the sources said one likely "China-specific" model was a lower-cost
volume generator such as a $25,000 electric car that Musk referred to at a
Battery Day event in September, which he said Tesla might aim to bring to market
in about three years.
Musk said Tesla was confident it would be able to hit the market with "a very
compelling $25,000 electric vehicle that's also fully autonomous".
At that price, according to two of the sources as well as industry experts, it
was likely to be a compact car, smaller than Tesla's Model 3, which would be as
affordable as some mainstream gasoline-fueled vehicles.
Compact cars are not big sellers in the United States where bigger, taller
vehicles such as Ford's F-150 pickup truck and SUVs, as well as midsize sedans,
rule the road.
They account for about 10% of America's overall vehicle market. By contrast,
compacts make up 25% of sales in China, or around 5-6 million cars a year,
according to consultancy LMC Automotive.
That's why the planned $25,000 car Musk has discussed would be better suited to
the China marketplace, according to the two sources and industry experts.
"A compact Tesla car would do well in China, as well as the rest of Asia and
Europe," said Yale Zhang, head of Shanghai-based consultancy Automotive
Foresight. "It could potentially put a serious dent in sales of cars like
Toyota's Corolla and the Volkswagen Golf."
(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu; Additional reporting by Paul Lienert in
Detroit; Editing by Pravin Char)
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