Aug 31, 2009 12:40 ET
Tesla Motors Hires Google Strategist to be Vice President of Communications
Ricardo Reyes, Director of Communications for YouTube, Will Join Leading
Electric Vehicle Manufacturer
SAN CARLOS, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- Aug 31, 2009
Google executive Ricardo Reyes will join Tesla
Motors as vice president for communications, starting in
mid-September.
Reyes, 35, is head of global communications and public affairs at
YouTube, one of the premier destinations online and a subsidiary of
Google. He previously handled litigation, competition and
policy communications for the online search, services and products
company.
Before that, Ricardo spent a decade working on public policy and
communications in Washington, D.C., including two years at law firm
Bracewell and Giuliani LLC, where he led crisis consulting and
communications management services. Among the corporate and political
clients he advised, Reyes worked with automotive suppliers as they faced
major changes to their business structure.
Reyes has served as Deputy Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for
Public and Media Affairs. From 2001 to 2004, he was a spokesman for
international trade policy and an adviser to U.S. Trade Representative
Robert Zoellick.
“Ricardo has deep expertise in both the public and private sectors in
managing complex communication issues. He has a well earned reputation
for being forthright, possessing a nuanced understanding of the facts
and adapting quickly to a rapidly changing landscape, making Ricardo the
perfect person for a fast-paced, high-profile company like ours,” said
Tesla CEO Elon Musk. “This is further evidence that Tesla is aggressively
recruiting from both Silicon Valley and the traditional automotive
industry to build the best possible team.”
Tesla announced a significant financial milestone in July, when it
achieved overall
corporate profitability and shipped a record 109 vehicles to
customers. The company – which remains the only automaker producing and
selling highway capable electric vehicles – has enjoyed a surge in new
Roadster purchases this summer. The Department of Energy recently
announced that Tesla will receive a $465 million loan for Model S and
powertrain production. Initial fund disbursements from the loan are
expected to begin in the fall.
Reyes will start Sept. 14 and immediately travel to Frankfurt, Germany
for the 63rd International Motor Show, one of the auto
industrys premier events. Tesla executives will be available throughout
the media preview, Sept. 15-16, and they will be keynoting a leading
industry conference on Sept. 18.
“Despite its small size, Tesla has become a significant player in the
automotive industry and has already served as a powerful catalyst for
other automakers to develop green vehicles,” Reyes said. “The
opportunity to join Tesla and help make a difference to the world is the
only thing that could have enticed me to leave Google.”
In 1996, Reyes worked as an observer for national elections in his
birth country, Nicaragua. As a kid, Ricardo spent his summers pumping
gas, checking fluid levels, and changing oil filters at gas stations run
by his dad. Reyes is a graduate of Rice University in Houston, Texas.
About Tesla
Tesla sells
cars online and operates
showrooms in New York, Seattle, London, West Los Angeles and
Californias Silicon Valley. Tesla will open stores in Chicago and
Munich in the upcoming weeks, and it also plans stores in South Florida,
Washington, D.C., Toronto and Monaco this year.
Tesla
Motors is the only automaker worldwide that is manufacturing and
selling highway-capable electric vehicles. Tesla, which achieved
overall corporate profitability last month, has delivered about 700
Roadsters to customers so far. The company's goal is to produce
increasingly affordable cars to mainstream buyers – relentlessly driving
down the cost of EV technology. Tesla also sells patented power train
components to other automakers, including the battery pack and charger
for the electric Smart, built by German luxury carmaker Daimler.
The Roadster beats nearly every other car for acceleration yet is twice
as energy efficient as a Toyota Prius. With an EPA-estimated range
of nearly 250 miles per charge, it costs less than $5 to refuel and is
faster than street-legal Porsches and Ferraris.
Teslas consume no gasoline whatsoever, never need routine oil changes
and require far less maintenance than internal combustion engine
vehicles or complicated hybrids. They qualify for numerous incentives,
including a $7,500 federal tax credit nationwide, and sales tax waivers
in several states, leading to a dramatically lower total cost of
ownership than conventional sports cars.

Tesla Motors
Rachel Konrad, 650-701-2664
rachel@teslamotors.com