When Great Engineering Isn't Enough
Gary Black, investor and managing director of The Future Fund LLC, is sounding the alarm again about Tesla Inc. (TSLA): the company has an engineering problem that's actually a marketing problem.
In a Monday post on X, Black brought out the heavy hitters to make his point. First up was Apple Inc. (AAPL) co-founder Steve Jobs, who famously insisted that customer experience should drive technology development, not the other way around. Then he quoted Stephen King, who observed that customers buy brands, not products, since anyone can manufacture something in a factory.
The issue? Tesla's Full Self-Driving technology has a measly 15% adoption rate despite what Black calls "huge advances in unsupervised autonomy in 2025." That's a problem when you're betting your company's future on autonomous vehicles and robotics.
"Many bullish Tesla investors and supporters forget that a product with great engineering won't sell itself," Black wrote. It's a pointed reminder that even the most sophisticated technology needs someone to explain why customers should care about it.




