Electric Rivilution
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2019
- Threads
- 324
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- 505
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- Location
- Scottsdale
- Vehicles
- 2016 Model X / 2022 R1T
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- #1
You can think of it this way, getting EVs in a place that probably doesn't get outside their bubble much or even touch many EVs and addressing some of their worst concerns (cold weather for instance), while letting them drive it for themselves and see how cool the car is. Fighting disinformation is hard and from what I hear, getting people to drive it does a lot of the lifting in converting people. Sure, might not help sales much, but may get the message out.In Park City Rivians are everywhere. I can’t think of a worse state than Montana to promote EVs… very cold and no charging infrastructure. Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
I enjoyed driving through Montana in my Rivian. Plenty of of chargers on I90 ams I saw a lot of other EVs. Now Wyoming on the other hand is very anti EV.In Park City Rivians are everywhere. I can’t think of a worse state than Montana to promote EVs… very cold and no charging infrastructure. Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
I think it's a great place.In Park City Rivians are everywhere. I can’t think of a worse state than Montana to promote EVs… very cold and no charging infrastructure. Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
Montana has a great charging structure compared to WY and SD. Montana is a huge state and has a pretty temperate climate compared to some places in ND, CO, MI, MN, WI, etc. Anyone with a nice home in Bozeman can afford a couple quads. Lots of Billionaires there.In Park City Rivians are everywhere. I can’t think of a worse state than Montana to promote EVs… very cold and no charging infrastructure. Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
This move made more sense once I realized they opened a SC in Belgrade.You can think of it this way, getting EVs in a place that probably doesn't get outside their bubble much or even touch many EVs and addressing some of their worst concerns (cold weather for instance), while letting them drive it for themselves and see how cool the car is. Fighting disinformation is hard and from what I hear, getting people to drive it does a lot of the lifting in converting people. Sure, might not help sales much, but may get the message out.
I think it's a great place.
Most people's fear of EV's in the cold is greater than the limitations of EV's in the cold. What better place to demonstrate that than Montana?
Ski resorts are also places that get lots of traffic from the same demographics that buy Rivian's. Both locals and tourists.
Ski resorts are such obvious places to install big banks of L2 chargers. I don't know why more don't do it.What's even more funny to me is there are only two Tesla Level 2 chargers at Big Sky Resort for guests at the hotel.
I'm hoping this means the mountain is installing more Level 2 options!
If I was Park City rich, I would absolutely have a Rivian along with ice vehicles for long trips into the wild. The ability to preheat without opening the garage is priceless. Something we experience everyday when my wife does the school run in the morning.In Park City Rivians are everywhere. I can’t think of a worse state than Montana to promote EVs… very cold and no charging infrastructure. Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
Exactly this. Do you think companies on display at Disney World are only selling to Floridians? You would be hard pressed to find something more perfectly aligned with company brand, target customers, income demographics and marketing strategies than an upscale ski resort in the wilds of Montana for Rivian.Ski resorts are also places that get lots of traffic from the same demographics that buy Rivians. Both locals and tourists.
Wait, what? Rivian shouldn’t try and find business in new markets? Seems to contradict a successful business model, since the existing customers have already spent their money on your product.Rivian would be well served to engage more with their existing customers than find new ones where they don’t exist.
The more I think about it, the more I know that the ski crowd is the exact demographic where most Rivian buyers fall.Exactly this. Do you think companies on display at Disney World are only selling to Floridians? You would be hard pressed to find something more perfectly aligned with company brand, target customers, income demographics and marketing strategies than an upscale ski resort in the wilds of Montana for Rivian.
Ironically, this thread is contemporaneous with the "My neighbor thinks I'm rich for driving a Rivian" thread (not exact quote, but you know) when Rivian is touting it's branding somewhere that has something they call " après events " which is not something you're likely going to run across in your nearest Walmart. Just sayin,