The Tesla Cybertruck's Branding Blow-Up
- by MediaPost
- Jun 03, 2025
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Then came the Cybertruck.
Introduced in 2019, the Cybertruck did have Musk’s fingerprints all over it. The WTF design, the sheer
impracticality of a truck in name only, a sticker price nearly double what Musk originally promised, and a host of quality issues (including body panels that have a tendency to fall off) have caused
sales to come in way under projections.
In its first year of sales (2024), the Cybertruck sold 40,000 units, about 16% of what Musk predicted annual sales could be. That makes it a bigger fail
than the Edsel, which sold 63,000 units against a target of 200,000 sales in its introductory year, 1958. The Edsel did worse in 1959 and was yanked from the market in 1960.
The Cybertruck is
sinking even faster. In the first quarter of this year, only 6,406 Cybertrucks were sold, half the number sold in the same quarter a year ago. According to a recent Forbes article, there are
over 10,000 Cybertrucks on Tesla lots in the U.S., waiting for buyers that have yet to show up.
But it’s not just that the Cybertruck is a flawed product. Musk has destroyed
Tesla’s brand in a way we can only marvel at. His erratic actions have managed to generate feelings of visceral hate in a huge segment of the market, and that hate has found a visible target in
the Cybertruck. It has become the symbol of Elon Musk’s increasingly evident meltdown.
I remember my first reaction when I heard that Musk had jumped on the MAGA bandwagon. “How
the hell does that square with the Tesla brand?” I wondered. That brand, pre-Musk-meltdown and pre-Cybertruck, was a car for the environmentally conscious who had a healthy bank account --
excitingly leading-edge, but not dangerously so. Driving a Tesla made a statement that didn’t seem to be in the MAGA lexicon at all. It was all very confusing.
It's starting to make a
little more sense. That brand was built by vehicles that Musk had limited influence over. Sure, he took full credit for the brand, but just like the company he took over, its initial form and future
direction was determined by others.
The Cybertruck was a different story. That was very much Musk’s baby. And just like his biological ones (14 and counting), it shows all the hallmarks
of Musk’s “bull in a China shop” approach to life. He lurches from project to project, completely tone-deaf to the implications of his actions. He is convinced that his genius is
infallible. If the Tesla brand is a reflection of Musk, then the Cybertruck gives us a much truer picture. It shows what Tesla would have been if there had never been a Martin Eberhard and Marc
Tarpenning, and Musk was the original founder.
To say the Cybertruck is “off brand” for Tesla is like saying that the Titanic had a tiny mishap. But it’s not that Musk made a
mistake in his brand stewardship. It’s that he finally had the chance to build a brand that he believed in, with all the problems inherent in that vision.
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