Tesla Is on a Hiring Spree to Try to Reach 500,000 Annual Car Deliveries
The carmaker is also recruiting part-time staff because it doesn’t have to buy them laptops, according to a report.
This story originally appeared on
Tesla has hired about 1,000 sales and delivery staff across North America over the past two months, sources familiar with the matter told , as it works towards its 500,000 annual deliveries target.
Tesla is also using a new recruitment strategy, the sources said, focusing on hiring part-time sales and delivery workers. This allows the company to save costs, the source added, because part-time employees have fewer benefits and Tesla doesn’t have to supply them with laptops and cellphones.
Tesla didn’t reply to Business Insider’s request for comment.
Related: 61 Books Elon Musk Thinks You Should Read
In October, Tesla blew past analyst estimates as it . This marked Tesla’s fifth consecutive profitable quarter, and put it on track to turn its first-ever annual profit.
The automaker wants to reach 500,000 deliveries this year. To achieve this, Tesla needs to deliver 181,000 electric vehicles in the final three months of the year — 30% more than the third quarter. In an earnings call in October, Tesla acknowledged that the goal has “become more difficult,” but said it could reach the target it if produces more Model Y and Shanghai vehicles, as well as making its logistics and delivery more efficient.
During the pandemic, Tesla has sparked criticism over the way it treats its employees. In May, the company defied local shelter-in-place orders to restart manufacturing. Soon after, reportedly tested positive for Covid-19.
In June, the company at its factory in California for staying home amid the pandemic. CEO Elon Musk had previously told staff they were not obligated to come to work. One employee told he was fired after staying home because his one-year-old son had a respiratory condition.
Throughout the pandemic, Musk has been a vocal opponent of lockdown measures. He and even , California, for making the company temporarily stop manufacturing at its Fremont factory.
Tesla has hired about 1,000 sales and delivery staff across North America over the past two months, sources familiar with the matter told , as it works towards its 500,000 annual deliveries target.
Tesla is also using a new recruitment strategy, the sources said, focusing on hiring part-time sales and delivery workers. This allows the company to save costs, the source added, because part-time employees have fewer benefits and Tesla doesn’t have to supply them with laptops and cellphones.
Tesla didn’t reply to Business Insider’s request for comment.
Related: 61 Books Elon Musk Thinks You Should Read
In October, Tesla blew past analyst estimates as it . This marked Tesla’s fifth consecutive profitable quarter, and put it on track to turn its first-ever annual profit.
The automaker wants to reach 500,000 deliveries this year. To achieve this, Tesla needs to deliver 181,000 electric vehicles in the final three months of the year — 30% more than the third quarter. In an earnings call in October, Tesla acknowledged that the goal has “become more difficult,” but said it could reach the target it if produces more Model Y and Shanghai vehicles, as well as making its logistics and delivery more efficient.
During the pandemic, Tesla has sparked criticism over the way it treats its employees. In May, the company defied local shelter-in-place orders to restart manufacturing. Soon after, reportedly tested positive for Covid-19.
In June, the company at its factory in California for staying home amid the pandemic. CEO Elon Musk had previously told staff they were not obligated to come to work. One employee told he was fired after staying home because his one-year-old son had a respiratory condition.
Throughout the pandemic, Musk has been a vocal opponent of lockdown measures. He and even , California, for making the company temporarily stop manufacturing at its Fremont factory.