I am not really sure the point you're trying to make. Look there are many companies that suck to work at. I don't complain. I get out of there as soon as possible. I took the insight an inside info I learned working for the corporate A holes and went out on my own and experimented with different businesses of my own- found one 30 plus years ago and I am retiring this year at 65 after 30plus years of being my own boss by giving customers better quality service . Life is hard sometimes, and no place has streets paved with gold. But other companies crappy service is a opportunity for anyone wanting to strike out on their own and give better service than the nightmare dealerships. Many car companies and dealers are in big trouble now from years of terrible customer service.
@StuffOffYouStuff4 ай бұрын
I'm so bored of the "if you don't like it go somewhere else" Victorian industrialist anti-worker mindset. Basically, the under current bringing about American dream idea is that American Corporations can get away with treat workers like shit, so you expect everyone to do it all themselves by setting up their own business? What a dream country.
@Youtube_Sold_Out-c4f10 күн бұрын
So you started up a business of your own in 1995, I'd like to see you do that in today's economy where 90% of startups fail, it costs a million dollars, and the ones that do survive don't turn a profit for 2+ years. When you were 30 years old you could buy a brand new 3,000sqft house in a peaceful neighborhood for $60,000 and support a family of 4 on a single income job but please go on about how your struggles relates to everyone today. Hard work doesn't pay off anymore, you're out of touch.
@sunahamanagai90395 ай бұрын
You say that Toyota and other dealers should do what Tesla did in paying by the hour and providing tools, but where did that get them? They had to lay off their technicians. Maybe that model just isn't sustainable???
@Matthewjo225 ай бұрын
not hourly rate but yes for tools, yeah it was not sustainable because company were losing money due to Ev Car Crises and also the people they fired and laid of were not tech, they were just tesla workers that they learned repair tesla
@Youtube_Sold_Out-c4f10 күн бұрын
It had nothing to do with paying hourly or providing tools, every developed nation in the world does those things except North America. All repair techs should be under salary with paid benefits like any other respectable job, if not the pay needs to be bumped up to $75/hour minimum. That might sound insane to you until you find out that mechanics get no benefits of any kind, 25% of their income goes to insurance and tools.
@darrell36435 ай бұрын
Maybe remove this video and make another one without the layoff number. Your main point is still valid. Oh, and I reported you for misinformation. When someone tells you that you're wrong. Maybe you should do some research. Pride is also admitting when you're wrong.
@Matthewjo225 ай бұрын
Thanks For letting me know, i realized my script typed wrong and i removed that parts
@jeffr8785 ай бұрын
Tesla did NOT layoff 140,000 employees
@biometal7705 ай бұрын
Yes they did
@Matthewjo225 ай бұрын
they did laid 140,000 thousand, go read the news
@Times3975 ай бұрын
Tesla had 140,000 workers. Tesla laid off 10% of its work staff, which is 14,000 employees.
@Matthewjo225 ай бұрын
@@Times397 Thanks For letting me know, i realized my script was typed wrong and i removed those parts, sorry for the misinformation
@mc3337775 ай бұрын
"NO one", really?
@dt25265 ай бұрын
BS
@KirinRise5 ай бұрын
no one wants to work in Tesla? lol...harder to get a job in it than getting into Harvard.
@TedME-j6u5 ай бұрын
Clueless comment. 1.Tesla hires everybody, no previous experience or skills required. 2. Harvard and any American Ivy-league does not have admission exams, just high tuition that you (or your father) need to pay for. Anybody (with money) can get into Harvard. Anybody (without money) can work at Tesla.
@RM-je5qw4 ай бұрын
The cost to attend Harvard is less than a state school for 90% of students. Students whose families make less than $85,000 attended Harvard for free in the most recent academic year.