Featured Article

Inside EV startup Fisker’s collapse: how the company crumbled under its founders’ whims

Comment

An illustration of Henrik and Geeta-Gupta Fisker
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Update: Fisker has since filed for bankruptcy, after last-ditch efforts to rescue the company failed.

An autonomous pod. A solid-state battery-powered sports car. An electric pickup truck. A convertible grand tourer EV with up to 600 miles of range. A “fully connected mobility device” for young urban innovators to be built by Foxconn and priced under $30,000. The next Popemobile.

Over the past eight years, famed vehicle designer Henrik Fisker suggested his electric vehicle startup would deliver on all of these promises.

None came true.

Instead, Fisker Inc. is on the brink of bankruptcy after having delivered just a few thousand electric Ocean SUVs. As the company grasps for an improbable rescue, employees who spoke to TechCrunch say the blame largely rests on the shoulders of two people: the husband-and-wife team whose name is on the hood.

Taking Fisker’s first and only model, the Ocean SUV, from the sketchbook to the assembly line was no small feat. One look at the wreckage left by other EV startups that tried to recreate Tesla’s success illustrates how difficult it can be.

The road to Fisker’s ultimate ruin may start and end with its flawed Ocean SUV, which has been riddled with mechanical and software problems. But it was paved with hubris, power struggles, and the repeated failure to set up basic processes that are foundational for any automaker.

“The lack of processes and procedures was kind of mind-blowing,” Sean O’Grady, a former regional sales manager at Fisker, told TechCrunch. “The same excuse that I kept hearing all the time was, well, if you’ve never worked for a startup before, this is what it’s like, it’s chaotic.”

That chaos may be what ultimately dooms the company, according to O’Grady and seven other employees, who have spoken to TechCrunch on the condition of anonymity over the last few months. It persisted throughout the company, seeping into seemingly every division.

There was inadequate customer service, no properly functioning warranty system, and a dearth of spare parts, four of the employees said. Fisker had trouble keeping track of money it collected, at one point losing around $16 million, according to O’Grady and several other employees who were directly involved in finding the payments.

Employees say they were drowning from this lack of process while the leadership team focused on protecting Fisker’s reputation. Every wrong decision took the company further from its goal of making and selling a mass-market EV.

The fallout from all this: Customers have been saddled with dying cars, faulty brakes, stuck doors and more, and often had to wait weeks or months for fixes. The company has been hit with dozens of lemon law lawsuits. It’s also mired in other legal trouble involving employee complaints and unpaid bills that TechCrunch has previously reported.

Fisker employees, meanwhile, often slogged through 18-hour days to field concerns, fix problems, find the missing payments and properly document the SUVs, often going far beyond the duties typically associated with the roles they were hired to perform.

Many, if not most, have now been laid off.

Driven by “cool”

Chaotic episodes were a constant at Fisker, and that made it all the more difficult to build, sell and ship cars, the employees say.

A year before Henrik Fisker handed over the first 22 Ocean SUVs in the U.S., the founder and CEO made an unusual change in the auto industry: he wanted wheel spacers installed on the vehicles.

Wheel spacers go in between the wheel and the wheel hub, making the tires look more pronounced. They are also uncommon. Two people familiar with the decision said Henrik Fisker wanted to do this to make the cars look “cool.” He also wanted to sell them as accessories, they said.

But it was already pretty late in the process to make a change like this, and the spacers had not gone through the typical internal approvals. The spacers had no internal part number, meaning they couldn’t be easily tracked if something went wrong. Some employees felt there had not been enough internal testing done to validate that the spacers were safe.

The decision eventually rocked Fisker’s engineering team. The lead chassis engineer at the time, Brent Demers, sent an email in March 2023 to a group that included the VP of engineering, William Stinnett, saying Fisker’s Design and Studio team was “acting alone” installing the spacers “without proper validation and regard for previous engineering recommendations,” according to a copy viewed by TechCrunch. Demers asked to “introduce the spacers into the project by means of proper channels” instead.

As word continued to spread that the spacers had been installed, Henrik Fisker agreed to abandon the idea. Both Demers and Stinnett left the company in July, after the first deliveries. (Demers declined to comment. Stinnett did not respond to emailed requests for comment.)

Fisker vice president of communications Matthew DeBord told TechCrunch in an email that the company used wheel spacers “only on demonstration vehicles,” but declined to define that term. He also said “Fisker has never sold spacers” and that it “made a business determination not to sell spacers in the aftermarket.”

DeBord told TechCrunch the spacers were supplied by Claus Ettensberger Corporation, a luxury aftermarket wheel company, and said it “provided validation in the US for spacers that were made with dimensions provided by Fisker engineers.”

Ettensberger was one of the first 22 customers to receive an Ocean SUV, according to documents viewed by TechCrunch. He did not respond to a voicemail seeking comment.

Customer service, a chatbot and unpaid bills

Geeta Gupta-Fisker’s decisions also gave employees whiplash. As the chief financial officer and chief operating officer — and also Henrik’s wife and co-founder — she has held considerable sway at the company.

In 2021, as the company was still working its way toward entering production, one employee recalled Gupta-Fisker’s reticence to use a customer service call center once vehicles were launched.

Instead, Gupta-Fisker wanted customer service requests to be handled digitally, including via a chatbot on the company’s website. That decision would prove problematic years later as the first SUVs were delivered to customers.

Problems cropped up within weeks of the first U.S. deliveries, which began in June 2023. Customers struggled to contact the company for help. Documents previously reviewed by TechCrunch show the company scrambling to triage incoming requests. Sales representatives were getting calls on their personal cell phones from owners stuck on the roadside, or unable to get into their Oceans.

It wasn’t until then that Gupta-Fisker reversed course, according to former employees. To help address the influx of customer service calls, Fisker hired a company in October 2023 called Prelude Systems, which promised to provide a mix of on- and off-shore service representatives.

That fix didn’t last long, though. By January 2024, the call center workers had vanished from Fisker’s internal Salesforce system, according to two of the employees.

Most workers didn’t know it at the time, but Fisker had stopped paying the company, according to a new lawsuit filed in federal court in May. Prelude alleges in the lawsuit that Fisker owes at least $660,000.

DeBord declined to comment on the lawsuit. He told TechCrunch that Fisker “always planned for the Customer Relations team to have multiple ways to communicate with customers, including email, chatbots and telephone.” But he also said the “Marketing, Sales, and Service department requested outside support” after the launch of the Ocean because “internal headcount was insufficient to deal with incoming customer inquiries.”

Parts shortage

Gupta-Fisker also turned down requests to build out a large stockpile of service parts, according to two of the employees. It’s a crucial buffer that automakers usually build up to handle repairs and other fixes as they iron out the kinks in the initial run of cars.

According to employees, Gupta-Fisker’s resistance to the idea was driven by an effort to save money. Fisker leadership supported the decision by pointing to a McKinsey survey that showed EVs require less service and fewer parts, according to one of the employees.

The employees said Gupta-Fisker pinned too much hope on the quality of the cars. They recall her saying the build quality at Magna, Fisker’s contract manufacturer, was “superior” and therefore the Ocean would not run into many problems. (Magna declined to comment for this story.)

The company accumulated some spare parts, according to the employees. However, they struggled with the quality and supply cadence. The employees say this was exacerbated because Fisker waited too long to stand up a proper supplier quality team – a group typically tasked with auditing suppliers to make sure their parts and processes are up to snuff.

Magna had its own supplier quality team but it was only responsible for the parts it directly sourced. DeBord told TechCrunch that Fisker’s “Service department made its own forecast for parts, based on their sector knowledge” and that the “Purchasing department supported those requests.”

The spare parts issue became problematic as Fisker’s Ocean SUV ran into myriad mechanical and software issues. There were problems with the door-locking mechanisms and door handles. The key fobs didn’t regularly work. The bolts on the Ocean’s hood had a tendency to come loose, which led to some flying up and cracking the windshield, or doing damage to the body.

As Fisker became inundated with customer service requests, the employees found themselves struggling to provide the right replacement parts thanks to the lack of a service stockpile.

In an attempt to alleviate this, Fisker started “pinching” parts from Magna’s production line in Austria, multiple employees told TechCrunch. The list of parts approved for pinching included electronic control units, locking mechanisms, windshields, hoods and exterior panels, among others.

But even that wasn’t enough, since those parts would still have to make it all the way to the U.S. before Fisker could fix some of the affected cars.

So the company started cannibalizing cars that had been returned, or ones that the company had on hand for marketing purposes, according to multiple employees. This included the Ocean SUV that Henrik Fisker used. Employees removed his car’s steering wheel, some interior panels, and even his driver’s seat cushion for use in customer cars.

Employees also salvaged parts from the Ocean that former Chief Accounting Officer John Finnucan used, weeks before he left the company.

DeBord told TechCrunch that all these claims are false. Finnucan did not respond to a request for comment.

In a few desperate moments, according to two employees, Fisker had Magna employees bring parts to the U.S. in their luggage so that the company could service customer cars. (DeBord said Fisker “cannot comment on another company’s employees or that company’s travel policies.”)

Even if Fisker had built up a proper stockpile of spare parts, the employees say, the company never put a proper warranty process in place, which created more headaches.

Fisker was relying on its technicians not only to repair its vehicles, often in the field, but also to fill out work orders – which is not typically a job that vehicle technicians do. This left many work orders incomplete, sitting in Fisker’s Salesforce system. For completed requests, employees often had to manually transfer data from Salesforce to the company’s accounting software, provided by SAP.

Fisker also did not set aside money to cover warranty repairs, according to the employees – marking another departure from a standard industry practice.

DeBord said any claims that Fisker’s warranty system was a mess are false, and that “the information flow from Salesforce to SAP is seamless.”

Inside the winding down

The chaos has continued to haunt the company in its declining months. On March 27, employees received alarming news: the company was immediately leaving its headquarters in Manhattan Beach. Dozens scurried to the glass-and-steel building in a panic, gathering their belongings to bring home or move to the company’s engineering facility in La Palma.

Hours later, after some moving trucks had come and gone, employees were told that Fisker actually still had another month before it would lose access to the headquarters. Those who remained were told to sit down and get to work.

Many were told at the time to tackle the backlog of unprocessed title and registration paperwork, which had left hundreds of customers without permanent license plates.

The company had already scrambled to perform an internal audit to track down the missing $16 million in customer payments. Its external auditor, PwC – which said this month that it will not stand for reappointment – was constantly peppering the startup with document requests in the run-up to the release of its annual financial report.

O’Grady told TechCrunch that Fisker leadership also asked employees to contact owners of the Ocean One, a special version of the SUV limited to 5,000 units. The company had promised a “benefits package” that included a warranty extension, special tires, a more advanced computer to run the infotainment system and $1,000 worth of charging credits. The total value was promoted to be around $7,500, making it a sort of stand-in for the federal EV tax credit, which Fisker vehicles weren’t eligible for since they’re built in Austria.

Owners had not yet received any of those benefits. And as the company was looking to cut costs, it wanted to track down who it owed the benefits to, and whether they had flipped the car or not. If they had, Fisker would essentially be off the hook for that value. (DeBord said benefits packages will be “appropriately managed as Fisker restructures.”)

“If you’re talking about 5,000 Ocean Ones, then you’re talking about $37.5 million in benefits that you owe to these customers. And to this point in time not a single customer has seen a penny,” O’Grady said.

Fisker’s push to sell its remaining cars hasn’t been cheap. Earlier this month, the company told some sales staff it would pay out $1,000 bonuses for every Ocean sold directly (versus at a dealership), according to two of the employees. While this energized some, it was a sign of how much – and how quickly – the company wanted to offload its remaining assets. Fisker has also since waived the destination and handling fees for each vehicle, which typically ran over $2,000.

Fisker was eager to sell the remaining Oceans because it was losing access to the largest places where the SUVs were stored. In early May, the company lost access to the so-called vehicle processing center in Atlanta, according to two of the employees. That meant it might have to find new homes for hundreds of cars.

Some of those EVs have gone to “dealership partners.” The company has claimed a “growing roster” of around 15 of these partners. But Fisker has been sending those vehicles on consignment, according to O’Grady and others – meaning the company does not get paid until the dealers sell the vehicles. Even then, it’s unclear how much money Fisker is recouping.

“​​The company cares too much about their reputation,” O’Grady told TechCrunch. “It’s almost like that’s the first thing on their mind all day, every day.”

Correction: The original version of this article stated that Geeta Gupta-Fisker is Fisker’s chief financial officer and chief commercial officer. She is the chief financial officer and chief operating officer. The article has been corrected to reflect this. 

More TechCrunch

The European Union has designated adult content website XNXX as subject to the strictest level of content regulation under the bloc’s Digital Services Act (DSA) after it notified the bloc…

XNXX joins handful of adult sites subject to EU’s strictest content moderation rules

Months after Microsoft gained an observer seat on OpenAI’s board, the company is leaving the position of the non-voting seat. In a letter sent to OpenAI on Tuesday, Microsoft said…

As Microsoft leaves its observer seat, OpenAI says it won’t have any more observers

SaaS founders trying to figure out what it takes to raise their next round can refer to Point Nine’s famous yearly SaaS Funding Napkin. (The term refers to “back of…

Deep tech startups with very technical CEOs raise larger rounds, research finds

Iceland’s startup scene is punching above its weight. That’s perhaps in part because it kept the 2021 hype in check, but mostly because its tech ecosystem is coming of age.…

Iceland is dodging the VC doldrums as Frumtak Ventures lands $87 million for its fourth fund

Index Ventures is announcing $2.3 billion in new funds to finance the next generation of tech startups globally. These new funds are spread across different stages with $800 million dedicated…

Index Ventures raises $2.3 billion for new venture and growth funds

Prompt engineering became a hot job last year in the AI industry, but it seems Anthropic is now developing tools to at least partially automate it. Anthropic released several new…

Anthropic’s Claude adds a prompt playground to quickly improve your AI apps

Hebbia, a startup that uses generative AI to search large documents and respond to large questions, has raised a $130 million Series B at a roughly $700 million valuation led…

AI startup Hebbia raised $130M at a $700M valuation on $13 million of profitable revenue

NovoNutrients has raised a $18 million Series A round from investors to build a pilot-scale facility to prove that its fermentation process works at scale.

NovoNutrients tweaks its bugs to turn CO2 into protein for people and pets

Seven years ago, Uber and Lyft blocked an effort to require ride-hailing app drivers to get fingerprinted in California. But by launching Uber for Teens earlier this year, the company…

Uber for Teens has reignited an old debate over fingerprinting drivers

Fast-food chain Whataburger’s app has gone viral in the wake of Hurricane Beryl, which left around 1.8 million utility customers in Houston, Texas without power. Hundreds of thousands of those…

Whataburger app becomes unlikely power outage map after Houston hurricane

Bumble’s new reporting option arrives at a time when, unfortunately, AI-generated photos on dating apps are common

Bumble users can now report profiles that use AI-generated photos

The concept of Airchat is fun, especially if you’re someone who loves to send voice memos instead of typing out long paragraphs on your phone keyboard.

Talky social app Airchat gets a major overhaul, making it more like an asynchronous Clubhouse

Featured Article

The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Here is a timeline of the events that led fledgling automaker Fisker to file for bankruptcy.

18 hours ago
The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Ahead of these potential competitors comes Openvibe, a simple aggregator for the open social web.

Openvibe combines Mastodon, Bluesky and Nostr into one social app

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! Last week was a holiday in the United States, so news was a bit lighter than normal. But there was still fintech-related items to report, including…

Should venture capitalists be held accountable when startups screw up?

Fisker Inc. co-founders Henrik Fisker and his wife, Geeta Gupta-Fisker, are lowering their salaries to $1 in order to keep their failed EV startup’s bankruptcy proceedings funded, as lawyers work…

Henrik Fisker drops salary to $1 to keep Fisker Inc. bankruptcy case alive

After announcing a whopping $20 million seed last year, Unlikely AI founder William Tunstall-Pedoe has kept the budding U.K. foundation model maker’s approach under lock and key. Until now: TechCrunch…

Alexa co-creator gives first glimpse of Unlikely AI’s tech strategy

We’re excited to invite Jesse Pollak to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 to talk about the future of decentralization.

Jesse Pollak will tell us why Coinbase is launching its own Base blockchain at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

The tech layoff wave is still going strong in 2024. Following significant workforce reductions in 2022 and 2023, this year has already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies, according to independent layoffs tracker Layoffs.fyi. Companies like Tesla, Amazon, Google, TikTok, Snap and Microsoft have conducted sizable layoffs in the…

21 hours ago
A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

Infactory is a kind of fact-checking search engine that will be focused exclusively on data at launch.

Humane execs leave company to found AI fact-checking startup

In a first, the Federal Trade Commission is banning an app from serving users under the age of 18. The agency announced on Tuesday that it’s banning NGL, an anonymous…

FTC bans NGL from offering its anonymous social app to minors

When people start navigation on Google Maps, the vehicle’s speed is shown in miles or kilometers, depending on the region.

Google Maps is rolling out speedometer, speed limits on iPhone and CarPlay globally

Design and animation are core to the Duolingo experience, which makes learning a new language or skill more like a game rather than a task to be dreaded.

Duolingo acquires Detroit-based design studio Hobbes

Two of my friends died within the last three years. By some coincidence, both of their birthdays fall in the beginning of July. So, twice this week, Facebook has reminded…

Facebook keeps asking me to say ‘happy birthday’ to dead people

Running a small business means doing more with less. AI agents can help, but building custom agents for specific workflows remains challenging, even with today’s low-code/no-code tools. The idea behind…

With $6M in seed funding, Enso plans to bring AI agents to SMBs

The feature puts Spotify in more direct competition with YouTube as a place where creators can interact with their listeners.

Chasing YouTube, Spotify adds comments to podcasts

A new iOS app called Wayther wants to help you better plan your road trips by giving you real-time road conditions and weather forecasts along your route. Created by indie…

Meet Wayther, an iOS weather forecast app designed specifically for road trips

Evolve has confirmed that the personal data of at least 7.6 million people was accessed during LockBit’s ransomware attack.

Evolve Bank says ransomware gang stole personal data on millions of customers

Etsy has been grappling with an influx of generic “junk” and AI-generated products on its platform. The service revised its seller policy on Tuesday, introducing new labels that clarify whether…

Etsy adds AI-generated item guidelines in new seller policy 

Seae Ventures is acquiring Unseen Capital after the death of founder Kayode Owens in 2021. The combined firm will continue to invest in healthcare for minorities and underserved populations. Owens,…

Seae Ventures acquires Unseen Capital after founder death