Can someone explain to me why the overwhelming interest and flood of deposits is an excuse for how Lotus is rolling out the Emira?
Are you saying that when they first revealed the Emira at Goodwood that they had no intention of even doing a US tour. That it was all put together last minute due to the huge US demand?
The lack of communication and changes in spec and timeline has changed because so many people want it? If they already had a set number they wanted to or were able to produce when they first planned this car, why try to change that for the FE? Why not stick to their original plan (they did have one right?), their original allotment number for each country (they've always called this a world car) so that they can handle it better.
People who want the car can wait, plain and simple. The cars where people who did get an initial allocation, but changed their minds, can go to the dealer's lot for sale where the dealer can call the next person on the list. Why are we all waiting to see if we even get an FE when Lotus can't even tell anyone know how many cars they're going to send?
Why scramble to try to meet demand? How about concentrate on what you can do with what you have, make a quality product and make people wait if need be. If they do this, and the car is everything they say it will be, the demand will be there. Don't over promise and under deliver.
If they DIDN'T have the overwhelming interest and flood of deposits, would the way they're rolling out the Emira be an issue? It's only an "issue" because a record number of people want it now, and they're not used to dealing with a small company like Lotus.
When they first revealed the Emira at Goodwood, they probably were planning to show it in the U.S., but what they were not expecting was the staggering level of demand that occurred at that show just in the U.K.. About 500 deposits a day for 5 days? They were used to producing around 1,600 cars a year spread across 3 models,
for the entire world. The U.K. reaction caught them completely by surprise, and that was just the beginning. Dealing with a global pandemic and its after-effects weren't part of the original plans and projections either. Every automobile manufacturer is dealing with this right now.
The lack of communication and changes in spec are not unusual for a pre-production prototype where it always says "specifications and features subject to change without notice." That covers the "changes" and "lack of communication" part. It is probably due to the fact that so many DO want it, that they're now being extremely careful about what they say. They're not used to being in the hotspot center of the spotlight, where every single thing is scrutinized and either praised or damned as some kind of subterfuge. In that kind of spotlight, you're damned if you do and damned if you don't. In that environment, "don't" is the lesser of two evils.
You have no idea how difficult things are for manufacturers right now, for anybody, not just Lotus. Everybody is struggling with supply lines, parts, time lines and pricing. Trying to forecast through all this has to be a complete nightmare. Go ahead and try and order a new car from anybody right now, it's a mess all across the industry.
They want to meet demand IF they can meet demand, and they're trying to see if they can. If they can't, they'll stick to their original plan of one shift producing cars for one year. That would be about 5,000 cars at the most with their new facility. If they simply fed China the 2,000 cars they want, and the rest of the production run to the over 3,000 deposits they already have for the U.K., then nobody else in the world would get a single car. You think they want that? THAT would be an absolute disaster, and they know it. Although they CAN add a 2nd or 3rd shift, that's not the same as actually doing it. It's a huge amount of work and logistics both for parts and labor. They're not promising that though, which is why all we're getting is the original forecast of one production shift run right now. If they're getting this kind static now, you can imagine what would happen if they did say "Yeah, we're going to produce 10,000 cars next year" and then find out they can't. They're not stupid. They're wisely being cautious and taking it one step at a time.
They're going to do as fair a job as they can to allocate cars around the world, assuming they're only able to run one production shift, but I have no doubt they're doing everything they can right now to see if they can increase production, albeit without compromising quality.
A little understanding and patience on our part is going to be rewarded with a great car, it's going to take longer than we'd like, but that's just the way it is right now.