Tesla's North American Sales Chief Exits Amid Declining Deliveries

Deep News
16 Jul

Tesla's North American sales chief Troy Jones has departed the company, marking the latest executive exit as the automaker confronts significant delivery declines. Jones, who served as Vice President overseeing sales, service, and delivery operations in Tesla's largest market, leaves after 15 years with the electric vehicle manufacturer.

This leadership change follows a series of high-profile departures. Less than a month prior, Elon Musk's senior aide Omead Afshar exited the company. Afshar had been promoted less than a year ago to oversee all sales and manufacturing across North America and Europe. In June, Tesla's North American HR director Jenna Ferrua also left her position. Earlier this year, engineering VP Milan Kovac—who spearheaded development of Tesla's humanoid robot Optimus—departed as well.

Tesla faces intensifying delivery challenges globally. The company reported second-quarter deliveries of 384,122 vehicles through June, representing a 13% year-over-year decline. Combined first-half delivery figures show Tesla falling approximately 110,000 vehicles short of its 2024 mid-year target. If this deficit persists through December, the EV giant will record declining annual deliveries for the second consecutive year.

Amid mounting competition and political controversies surrounding Musk, Tesla is implementing multiple strategies to reignite consumer interest. Recent initiatives include: - March launch of the upgraded Model Y midsize SUV - April introduction of a simplified, lower-cost Cybertruck variant - June refresh of premium Model S and Model X vehicles

Company executives have recently shifted focus from Wall Street's concerns about shrinking deliveries and margins toward highlighting potential gains from investments in autonomous driving software (branded "Full Self-Driving") and the Optimus robotics program. On June 22, Tesla debuted its long-promised robotaxi service in limited Austin test zones, offering rides in autonomous Model Y vehicles to select influencers through a new ride-hailing application.

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