I know there is more to the company. But when you have a CEO who’s so visible, he just becomes one with the company. And I really feel bad for Tesla because I like the brand. They were so innovative and new.
I wonder if they can get past this?
I know there is more to the company. But when you have a CEO who’s so visible, he just becomes one with the company. And I really feel bad for Tesla because I like the brand. They were so innovative and new.
I wonder if they can get past this?
back in the early 1990 and 2000s, ‘Jump the Shark’ was used to describe a company (or other entity) that did some egregious thing that just TURNED CONSUMERS OFF of that company/entity’s product.
From that moment on, the company ‘declined’.
I wonder if the recent 6 months are Elon’s Jump the Shark moment?
ralph
{ The phrase was coined in 1985 by radio personality Jon Hein in response to a 1977 episode from the fifth season of the American sitcom Happy Days , in which the character of Fonzie (Henry Winkler) jumps over a live shark while on water-skis. }