I think they're just having as much difficulty hiring as they are selling.
I've noticed a few billboards on the S-Bahn lines in Berlin currently advertising jobs at the Gigafactory.
The sales pitches are exactly the kind of tone-deaf I'd expect from an American company operating in Berlin. Translated, they read: "we have regular busses and trains" (ja, und?), "lunch for €3.90" (genau, der Arbeitsplatz ist in Brandenburg), "we will teach you German for free" (but the job advert is in German so you already have to speak German in order to know that's on offer).
Plus the main call to action looks like the same font as the Cybertruck branding. Cybertruck, which isn't even for sale in Europe because it's not road legal here.
I think they're just having as much difficulty hiring as they are selling.
I've noticed a few billboards on the S-Bahn lines in Berlin currently advertising jobs at the Gigafactory.
The sales pitches are exactly the kind of tone-deaf I'd expect from an American company operating in Berlin. Translated, they read: "we have regular busses and trains" (ja, und?), "lunch for €3.90" (genau, der Arbeitsplatz ist in Brandenburg), "we will teach you German for free" (but the job advert is in German so you already have to speak German in order to know that's on offer).
Plus the main call to action looks like the same font as the Cybertruck branding. Cybertruck, which isn't even for sale in Europe because it's not road legal here.