7 Ways Ford Did Everything Right With The F-150 Lightning
I wrote some very enthusiastic articles about the Ford F-150 Lightning right after its reveal, and also interviewed Ford’s head of electric vehicles about the truck. More recently, I wrote about one potential Achilles heel (though, feedback from readers tells me it may be more of a normal heel than an Achilles heel). Whether it’s an Achilles heel or not, though, I think Ford made the ideal decision with regards to the overall design of the F-150 Lightning, including the frontal area where the giant-mega-uber-duber power frunk lives.
In fact, thinking on it more after letting the enthusiasm from the opening week settle in, I thought it would be good to point out that I think Ford did basically everything right with the F-150 Lightning, and why.
As we roll through these points, I think there’s one important thing to keep in mind: who does Ford need to appeal to? In other words, who are the most important target customers for this vehicle? In my opinion, Ford doesn’t need to go after Tesla buyers, and shouldn’t even bother going after Tesla buyers. Sure, the F-150 Lightning will attract some Tesla fans who prefer it over the Cybertruck (there are some big Tesla fans who just don’t like how the Cybertruck looks), but that’s not who Ford needed to design the F-150 Lightning for. With that in mind, let’s look at what Ford did right, so right.
1. First of all, the critical first step was that Ford decided to electrify the F-150. Everyone knows the F-150, nearly a million people a year buy a brand spankin’ new F-150, and Ford electrifying the F-150 tells people that it’s happy to bring this model into the new electric era and it’s seriously putting its heart and mind into electric powertrains. It’s not creating some newfangled, funky design for an EV it might drop in a year or two. It’s building on its best selling model and improving it much further.
2. Offering variety, serving different core consumer groups, was a splendid move. Not all truck drivers are the same. Ford designed a low-cost F-150 (the biggest surprise of all for me and many others) and also a higher-trim Lightning that has all kinds of bells and whistles while logging the record of quickest F-150 in history, and Ford offers a trim in between those two. Variety is huge for attracting different buyers, and the spread in options seems pretty much ideal here.
3. Keeping the design very similar to a “normal” F-150 was a splendid move. No matter if there’s a range hit from this or not, I think it was important for Ford to keep the F-150 Lightning’s design almost the same as any other new F-150’s design, because the company needs to convert its million or so annual buyers to electricity, and it most effectively does that at this point buy minimizing the shock and the identity changes consumers have to accept.
4. As part of #3, the Mega Power Frunk itself — using the traditional F-150 design to create an amazing storage unit. Even if it does come with some drawbacks (everything does), this might be the vehicle’s #1 feature separating it from everything else on the market. Since writing the article linked above, I’ve seen another picture of the Mega Power Frunk that makes it look even larger and more useful (see below). Someone also pointed out that there seems to be a mini frunk under the main frunk!
