Home » General Motors Seems To Be Sticking To Its Plans These Days

General Motors Seems To Be Sticking To Its Plans These Days

Gm Super Cruise Tmd Ts

I had two interesting conversations this weekend that reminded me of how well General Motors is doing relative to the historical perception of the company. One was from a Tesla owner who asked me which company I thought was doing the best with electrification. Globally, that’s still probably BYD, and Tesla will probably sell the most EVs in the United States for years to come, but GM has positioned itself quite well for the future.

A different Tesla owner asked me what I thought about the Chevy Traverse, specifically because it’s a nice way to get into Super Cruise. I just finished driving a nice RS model (review coming eventually), and so I was able to relay to him that I not only liked the car, but also thought Super Cruise was still the ADAS system I trusted the most among the current offerings. It turns out that Super Cruise isn’t just functional; the company also sees a lot of profits coming from the service in the future.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

While The Morning Dump may start this week with a company preparing well for the future, that seems to be the exception. First Brands allegedly played the long game poorly, and now most of its brands are being sold off before the whole company collapses in on itself. China was supposed to be a growth market for Škoda, but that is clearly not happening. And the Middle East is where luxury carmakers go to reap huge profits, but even delivering cars is dicey right now.

GM’s Playing The Long Game With Super Cruise

Gm Super Cruise Traverse 1
Photo: Author

The bad rap that GM gets is that it abandons technologies and markets right as they’re becoming popular. It’s not entirely unfair, as the company does have a history of doing just that. Though, how much of GM’s current leadership can really be blamed for walking away from airbags or touchscreens a half-century ago?

Recently, the original founder of robotaxi company Cruise accused GM of falling into old habits after abandoning the self-driving startup. That sounds wrong to me. Cruise was a terribly run company, and it would have taken years for GM to recoup its investment, if it ever did. Closing when it did and rolling what it could into its excellent Super Cruise ADAS system seems like the best of a lot of bad choices.

Will GM, having gone so far with Super Cruise, abandon that, too? I don’t think so, and GM CFO Paul Jacobson told a crowd at the Bank of America Global Automotive Summit that the company sees “exponential growth” for subscription services, which is currently a mix of OnStar and Super Cruise.

As Automotive News reports, the GM strategy is to offer new vehicles with eight years of basic OnStar and three years of Super Cruise if the vehicle is so equipped. That gives the owner plenty of time to decide if it’s something they want and use.

About 13 million people are subscribed to GM services, generating about $20 in monthly revenue per person, the company said.

“What I like about it is by giving everyone the basic package for eight years, you’re casting the widest possible net,” said David Whiston, a senior equity analyst for Morningstar. “You almost have to push it to [consumers] rather than hoping they’re going to volunteer or get sold on it at the dealership. You just want to let them have it with no obligation.”

About a third of customers with the basic OnStar subscription upgrade to access additional features, including advanced safety and video streaming services that can be paid for on a monthly or yearly basis. At least 30 percent of the 35,000 GM drivers whose three-year subscription to Super Cruise expired in 2025 renewed.

The article also goes on to point out that subscriptions, while potentially annoying, are high-margin for the automaker. GM isn’t alone here, as plenty of other automakers are pursuing a similar strategy. Ford’s also added a host of workplace subscription services under its Ford Pro banner. I don’t like short trials, and I think basic things, like heated seats, are silly to charge for as they’re not going to get any better with an OTA update. Super Cruise and OnStar offer services that require constant upkeep and can improve over time.

I also think this new attitude also applies to GM’s electrification strategy. While other automakers are in the process of tossing most of their plans either for something entirely new (Ford) or nothing at all (Honda), GM has continued on basically the same path, albeit with some reasonable revisions.

First Brands Sells Fram, Autolite, And Trico For $25 Million

Different Types Of Engine Oil Filters 2
Photo credit: Fram

I remember going to Las Vegas for SEMA and the associated industry-focused show AAPEX and marveling at just how huge the First Brands section was. It made sense, First Brands built a portfolio of most of the recognizable aftermarket brands, including Fram, Autolite, and Trico. Still, it felt like an entire floor.

First Brands has now filed for bankruptcy after it was alleged that the auto parts maker had committed fraud on a grand scale to pay for all those acquisitions. What has been sold, has been shut down, as the company has been unable to get the emergency credit it needs.

Per Bloomberg:

PGI Northstar will also take on certain liabilities related to the 12 brands in the deal — which include Fram, Autolite and Trico — according to court documents dated Thursday.

First Brands, which recently had to shut down more factories, had been trying to sell the units while they were still operating. But potential bidders pulled out as orders dried up and the company ran out of cash to keep the businesses open, court documents show.

“Unfortunately, the high cost and associated funding requirements for resuming operations of these business lines have catalyzed key customer departures,” the company said in the filing. A judge must approve the sale before it can close.

For their part, the company’s founders have plead not guilty to numerous fraud chargers.

The Middle East Might Be More Important Than China For Luxury Carmakers

P90519407 Highres Rolls Royce La Rose
Photo: Rolls-Royce

While there aren’t as many consumers in the Middle East as there are in China, buyers there historically spend big money on wild custom and limited versions of cars from Ferrari, Rolls-Royce, Bentley, and more. Those companies are facing a threat from the Iran War, as delivering a car to a war zone has gotten a little harder, at least according to this Reuters article:

Brands including Lamborghini, Ferrari, Jaguar Land Rover and Porsche are watching nervously. “It’s very high margin,” Volkswagen Group CEO Oliver Blume said of Middle East sales in a media briefing earlier this month, adding of the Iran war: “We will see an impact there for sure.” VW Group owns the Bentley, Lamborghini and Porsche luxury brands.

Most luxury automakers don’t disclose regional profit margins, and some, including Bentley and Rolls-Royce, no longer publish global sales numbers. But Ferrari reported volumes in the Middle East made up 4.6 percent of overall sales last year, more than it sold in China and up from 3.5 percent in 2024. The Italian sports car maker’s sales in the region are stable for now, a spokesperson said.

Former Aston Martin CEO Andy Palmer said during his tenure he would first call wealthy collectors in the Middle East to offer high-margin special editions. Palmer told Reuters the Middle East collectors were so eager for exclusives, ‘You almost didn’t need to ask.’

In this current environment, there’s almost nowhere 100% safe to sell a car. And don’t worry, these buyers are likely to be able to still get around with their 15-20 other cars.

Škoda Is Out Of China

Skoda Favorit Bulbs
Source: Škoda

You blew it, China. You had excellent Czech carmaker Škoda in your country, but you were too busy buying BYDs and Geelys. And now, the South China Morning Post is reporting that the brand is leaving:

Established in 1896, Skoda entered the Chinese market in 2005 through a partnership with SAIC Volkswagen. Following the 2007 launch of its first locally produced model, the Octavia, the brand leveraged Volkswagen’s technical platforms to position itself as an “affordable German-engineered” alternative.

By 2018, the brand reached its peak in China with about 341,000 deliveries, making China its largest market. At that time, it maintained a network of more than 500 dealers selling cars including the Octavia, Superb and Kodiaq.

Despite aggressive price cuts, the brand sold 15,241 vehicles in China last year, according to company data, a 95 per cent plunge from its height and far short of its previous strategic goal of 500,000 annual deliveries.

What a waste.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

The New York Auto Show is happening this week, so I’m going to feature some live performances from New Yorkers. Here’s the incredible Fiona Apple doing “Extraordinary Machine” with her longtime collaborator Jon Brion. Is this my favorite Fiona Apple song? Today, yeah.

The Big Question

What is your best subscription? It doesn’t have to be car-related. What’s your silliest?

Top photo: GM

 

 

 

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Jb996
Member
Jb996
12 days ago

“exponential growth” for subscription services, which is currently a mix of OnStar and Super Cruise.

Counterpoint: Immediately after purchasing my Volt, in a WalMart parking lot before driving the 600 miles home, I installed a 50Ohm terminator on the OnStar box under the dash, disabling the antenna and thereby GM’s default location tracking.
It’s a nice car, but they’re not getting anything from me!

Last edited 12 days ago by Jb996
Johnny Ohio
Member
Johnny Ohio
12 days ago

My best subscription outside of The Autopian? I’ll have to say YouTube Premium. You get zero ads and YouTube Music with the sub.YouTube is unusable on free tier imo. Silliest sub would probably be Playstation network seeing how I get to play my PS5 about 20 total hours a year.

Jb996
Member
Jb996
12 days ago
Reply to  Johnny Ohio

uBlockOrigin (desktop) or AdBlockBrowser (Android) also work really well on YouTube, and are free. I don’t get the music I guess.

OverlandingSprinter
Member
OverlandingSprinter
12 days ago
Reply to  Jb996

Pi-hole is quite effective at blocking unwanted content, too. Best use of a Raspberry Pi I’ve found so far.

Blocking unwanted content at a network level makes client plugins unnecessary.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
12 days ago

I’ve yet to find a pihole list that blocks youtube ads & amazon prime ads (that only gets blocked if I go through a browser to those sites)

Johnny Ohio
Member
Johnny Ohio
12 days ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

I’ve tried working on using my pihole to block ads on Prime and other streamers but it always seemed to break the service so I stopped messing with it.

Last edited 12 days ago by Johnny Ohio
OverlandingSprinter
Member
OverlandingSprinter
11 days ago
Reply to  Johnny Ohio

Agree with you about Amazon. For other streamers including YT, blocks seem to work for some clients such as Apple devices, but not others such as Roku devices. It’s weird.

Johnny Ohio
Member
Johnny Ohio
12 days ago

I use a pihole as well but I deem the cost worth it for youtube premium/music.

David Lorengo
Member
David Lorengo
12 days ago

#1 – Autopian The first website I’ve ever paid for and the *only* internet based content that I subscribe to.

#2 – Amazon Prime The blue truck stops at our house almost every day, sometimes more than once a day. The free shipping and expedited delivery are paid for by the end of the first month of the term. Prime streaming is the only other benefit we use occasionly.

#3 – Costco Not sure if this counts as a subscription but we renew every year. We have a costco 5 min away and shop there about once a month.

#4 – Sirius XM Mainly for no commercials. Have you tried listening to commercial FM lately?

Jb996
Member
Jb996
12 days ago
Reply to  David Lorengo

My only paid subscriptions/memberships are The Autopian and Amazon.

and I feel dirty about Amazon.

Sackofcheese
Sackofcheese
12 days ago
Reply to  David Lorengo

SXM is the jam, it’s just annoying to haggle annually for the cheap price.

Uncle Willard
Member
Uncle Willard
12 days ago
Reply to  Sackofcheese

I’ve found the automated haggling via the cancel bot screen flow to be far less annoying and just as effective.

Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
12 days ago
Reply to  David Lorengo

Ditto! I use my Sirius XM phone app all the time when I am not in my car. Have subscribed since 2004.

Amazon Prime keeps me out of the stores, plus there’s quick shipping and video. I use it almost daily.

Of could the Autopian is the best subscription.

DaChicken
Member
DaChicken
12 days ago

My silliest subscription is obviously The Autopian. Like, have you seen this place?!

Most useful is probably a tie between Prime and YT Premium. I buy a lot of stuff from Amazon and I like Prime Video. I also spend way too much time watching various repair, fab, and other similar vids on YT so skipping the ads is nice.

It's Pronounced Porch-ah
Member
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
12 days ago

My best subscription is probably a toss-up between Spotify and The Autopian, I access both daily and Spotify still gets me a “free” version of Hulu w/ads. Aside from those I support MPR and Radio K….so I guess Radio K and The Autopian are tied for silliest.

Did anyone figure out how to jailbreak/work around BMW to get heated seats without the subscription? At the end of the day, you just need to send 12v to the heater element, right?

Rich Mason
Rich Mason
12 days ago

Sirius XM.
Except for about once per year when my sub comes up for renewal and they jack the price up to about 30 bucks per month.

Then it’s an hour on the phone with their fucked up customer service dept, talking to someone for who English is not their “preferred language.”
Exhausting…eventually I get my monthly charge back to a somewhat normal rate.

CivoLee
CivoLee
12 days ago
Reply to  Rich Mason

Not meant to be an attack on you, but why does anyone still pay for SXM’s tiers above the basic app-only subscription? You can play it through your car’s Bluetooth and now they include all of the extra music channels. Unless you’ve moved to another city and you want to hear your old city’s sports teams…

Rich Mason
Rich Mason
12 days ago
Reply to  CivoLee

Here’s my thing. I have an old portable Sirius unit in my 2009 Scion. Sadly the factory unit has no bluetooth.

I actually had it turned off a couple times because I only drive maybe 200 miles per month.

In the house I have an extra dock for it to run it through my home stereo in “emergencies.”

Usually I just bluetooth the Sirius into the home stereo from the iPad.
But my rural OTA Internet sucks so bad that it crashes a dozen times per day, frustrating for sure. BTW the only wired net service in my area is AT&T at an obscene cost. None other is allowed…local politics.

But when the Internet is out I can just grab my mobile unit from the car and bring it inside if needed. I could just bring in the mobile unit each time, but they will get sloppy from wear and eventually not want to work in their docks.

I worked in FM radio for decades and acquired enough CDs to fill a damn room. But I detest hauling even more than a couple of them around in the car with me.
Just the same I left commercial broadcasting in 1993 as it was obvious radio as we knew it was dying for good.

Currently pay $10 bucks per month total now.

And no worries about possible offense.
I probably unintentionally offend more people here than any other commenter.

Last edited 12 days ago by Rich Mason
MrLM002
Member
MrLM002
12 days ago

What is your best subscription? It doesn’t have to be car-related. What’s your silliest?

Ting Mobile. Most months I pay $10 for unlimited talk and text, the flex plan I’m on just charges me $5 for every gig of data I use.

I used to have “unlimited” plans that cost me over $100 each month just because with a regular plan I’d end up using all my data on road trips I’d take once or twice a year, and what sucks even more about the “unlimited” plans is that they throttle your data speeds past a certain amount of data usage, so it’s not unlimited, it’s “unlimited”.

As for the silliest I’m a Patron of Steve1989MREInfo.

I used to buy foreign MREs to sample foreign cuisine on a budget, and found my favorite tea in one of them (Russian black tea that comes in the Russian MREs) that I still use to make iced tea regularly.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
12 days ago

A positive story about GM? Oh boy, Torch is going to be pissed.

Always broke
Always broke
12 days ago

Not sure if it counts, but setting up auto ordering for things I need rarely but do need like furnace filters is really nice. Not only to I get the thing I need but also the reminder to do the work

Jb996
Member
Jb996
12 days ago
Reply to  Always broke

It is nice on Amazon, but watch the price!
They do local demand pricing, so I found I was paying a lot more for a re-order. But if I cancelled and just bought the same product from a different vendor (and re-initiated auto-order), it was alot cheaper. But I’ll have to monitor that one too.

M SV
M SV
12 days ago

VW had to do something in China. The Chinese liked VW because they got there early. That might be the skota problem in markets that look at vw as a cheap car something under a cheap car is a tough sell. Add in actual cheap cars that do things your allegedly cheap car can’t and where is the market.

GM is always trying to figure out subscriptions they did onstar and xm now super cruise. With the way both of those have gone. It makes me think the aftermarket guys like comma.ai are really on to something.

Hopefully the ecogaurd people can get to manufacturing and make less junk. Mann has been hit hard by the scammer nonsense. Only seem to be making the premium filters that they make more money. Good time to be mann I guess. Ironically I always see plenty fram on the shelves. Good luck turning that cluster around.

Zipn Zipn
Member
Zipn Zipn
12 days ago

Best subscription? My library card – also includes HOOPLA free streaming!

No fan of Bezos but paying a little from above Prime for the extra Amazon Music option is worth it to me. It has a very large catalog, with nearly everything at least CD quality and quite a bit streaming in ultra-high-def (2x-10x better than CD digital resolution!). No commercials or ads. We listen to it all the time. Full albums as well as stations based on a song, album or artist. It has nearly every artist or group we’ve searched for.

Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
12 days ago
Reply to  Zipn Zipn

Love my Libby app for library books on my devices.

Really No Regrets
Member
Really No Regrets
11 days ago
Reply to  Zipn Zipn

Thanks for the HOOPLA comment. Appreciate it.

RidesBicyclesButLovesCars
Member
RidesBicyclesButLovesCars
12 days ago

The Autopian is my best subscription.

The silliest is the MyQ garage door opener subscription for our Tesla’s. The garage door opens and closes automatically when we arrive or leave. 85% of the time it works 100% of the time. I’m not sure if I will be renewing it since we can use the app on our phones for free. Or, go old school and keep a traditional garage door opener in the car.

3WiperB
Member
3WiperB
12 days ago

So, I had a 3 month trial of Supercruise on our Bolt EUV, and wasn’t all that impressed. I realize it is not as good as the version on other GM vehicles, but it disengaged a lot and in areas around me that have had construction in the last year, the roads haven’t been remapped, so I can’t use it on a stretch of about 30 miles of I75 near me. It also costs $80 a month for Onstar One with Supercruise.

I do appreciate that at least you get 3 years included when you buy it from new.

I have the Comma 4 installed on my truck and it’s vastly better than Supercruise IMHO. Since it’s vision based, it works on all roads and the only time it needs some help is when the curves are too sharp. And no monthly subscriptions! And I love the Sunnypilot feature of the lane centering always being on, regardless of the adaptive cruise control being on. The ability to still operate the gas and brake while having the car do the steering is really neat.

My best subscription is also the Autopian membership.

My silliest is probably SiriusXM. The wife insists on having it for her short commute, but as a vehicle subscription. I don’t mind some of their streaming channel options, since they just play music, but most of the base music channels have annoying DJ’s or play dumb station ID bumpers all the time.

Last edited 12 days ago by 3WiperB
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
Member
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
12 days ago

“What is your best subscription?”

Why, The Autopian…of course!

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
12 days ago

If I lived in China, there’s a zero percent chance that I would prefer a Skoda over a BYD

Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
12 days ago

I don’t really do subscriptions. If you don’t count utilities for my apartment, and car insurance, I think that leaves my $19 CAD phone plan? So that’s both the best and the silliest, I guess

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
12 days ago

Damn, how lean is that plan? I have a corpo discount and my plan is $38/mo.

Mind you, that has unlimited talk/text and 150GB of full speed data across Can/US/Mex.

Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
12 days ago

Unlimited talk/text, and 1 GB of data, within Canada, from Public Mobile. I used to have an even cheaper 250 MB plan, but then they stopped offering it! I have been thinking about changing to the No Name plan, which is the same $19, but with 2GB of data, though.
So yeah, pretty low data, but I never seem to run out in a month

Last edited 12 days ago by Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
11 days ago

Yeah, when I worked nights on the shop floor I burned data, now I think I average about 5GB a month.

Space
Space
10 days ago

If you are in the US Mint mobile is $15 USD and gives 5gb/mo.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
10 days ago
Reply to  Space

Canada, currently with Rogers again after about a 12 year hiatus. They have the signal I need in the places I go.

10 years ago, it was cheaper to buy a US plan with unlimited Canadian roaming than it was to get data up here.

Andreas8088
Member
Andreas8088
12 days ago

I just hope they don’t stick to the stupid “no android auto” thing.

RallyMech
RallyMech
10 days ago
Reply to  Andreas8088

GM? They’re going to. I haven’t seen anything suggesting otherwise. Too much data to scrape and sell.

Andreas8088
Member
Andreas8088
10 days ago
Reply to  RallyMech

It’s losing them sales. Also, on a personal level, it sucks because I was really interested in the new bolt, but not with that level of sacrifice.

RallyMech
RallyMech
3 days ago
Reply to  Andreas8088

Wouldn’t be so bad if you could just retrofit whatever infotainment system you wanted after purchase.

TK-421
TK-421
12 days ago

Best: My Grassroots Motorsports magazine subscription. The only print magazine I still read regularly, and only subscription. I just renewed for another year and checked the auto-renewal box this time.

Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
12 days ago

Matt will never let China live this down. Although Skoda is a gem, given the incredibly flamboyant car options there now and VW’s non-existent marketing in that market, this is no surprise. I mean, hell, even Volvo is struggling a bit there.

Mrbrown89
Member
Mrbrown89
12 days ago

My best subscription is the $10 internet plan I got with Comcast during Covid for remote learning for kids. Still active, they havent change the plan. I dont even complain if the internet goes down for whatever reason, I keep my mouth shut lol

Andreas8088
Member
Andreas8088
12 days ago
Reply to  Mrbrown89

Dang. And here I was thinking I was doing well for getting my comcast internet for $40/month.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
12 days ago

Best subscription, beyond utilities and internet, is probably YouTube Premium for the no ads.

Silliest…probably a tie between my Gaijin Goombah and Failrace Twitch subs. GG has gone all-in on 40k Orks, and Alex and the filming crew have been quite entertaining.

V10omous
Member
V10omous
12 days ago

What is your best subscription?

Why, it’s the membership to this very site of course. What else would you expect me to say?

Ben
Member
Ben
12 days ago
Reply to  V10omous

Also my silliest subscription, as it happens.

Big Tree
Big Tree
12 days ago

My best subscription is Old School Runescpe, the only game I play. Never miss a chance to plug it!

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Member
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
12 days ago

Let’s be honest, a General Motors that actually keeps progressing and updating its good ideas instead of looking for the quick quarterly profit is going to be capable of amazing things.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
12 days ago

My best subscription is probably my home internet plan.

My silliest is my Patreon subscription to The Beaverton. Cause supporting satire news is sadly one of the few ways left to get honest journalism.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
12 days ago

Actually, that’s a lie. The gym membership that is logistically difficult to cancel because the one I signed up for no longer exists and I have to drive across the city to cancel at another location.

Younork
Younork
12 days ago

Planet Fitness recently opened a franchise in my town. I fully intended to get a membership, but when I went to sign up, they wouldn’t accept credit card or debit card; they wanted to do auto payments through my checking account. Maybe that’s normal, but I noped out of there real quick.

Rad Barchetta
Member
Rad Barchetta
12 days ago
Reply to  Younork

It is normal for gyms to do that. But that doesn’t mean its ok. Good on you for telling them to pound sand.

Username Loading....
Member
Username Loading....
12 days ago

I was also thinking home internet, although it remains stupid I have to call and threaten to cancel every 2 years to keep the price at a somewhat reasonable number, what kind of business model is that!?

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
12 days ago

Capitalism, baby!

Space
Space
10 days ago

One of the internet providers (DSL) I’m my area offeres price for life and they have kept that promise for over 10 years. Maybe there is a better provider available?

Bryan McIntosh
Member
Bryan McIntosh
12 days ago

I love how The Beaverton’s links kept getting blocked by Facebook as a “Canadian News Site,” and their response was “Hey, we are NOT a news site! We work hard to make up funny bullshit!”

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