Jeff Bezos-backed Slate Auto has planted multiple concept versions of its EV on the streets of California. Itโs a marketing tactic that teases the secretive startupโs strategy to sell a โTransformerโ-like vehicle, people familiar with the companyโs internal discussions told TechCrunch.
This unconventional real-world tease comes days before Slateโs April 24 launch event at Long Beach Airport, according to an invite viewed by TechCrunch.
The Michigan-based startup, founded in 2022, has operated in relative secrecy until TechCrunch published a report revealing Bezosโ financial involvement, as well as its plan to price its EV at around $25,000 while encouraging buyers to customize the vehicle to their liking. That base model is referred to as the โBlank Slateโ version, according to a trademark application and another person familiar with the companyโs plans. Slate has also filed for a trademark for the phrase: โWe Built It. You Make It.โ
The Autopianโs David Tracy traveled to Venice, California over the weekend where Slate parked a concept version of the truck made to look like a two-door SUV used by a fake business. Similarly, Reddit users posted pictures over the weekend of yet another version of the truck made to look like a hatchback that almost resembles Rivianโs forthcoming R3.
The vehicle Tracy saw up close this past weekend looks just like the two-door pickup truck spotted by a Reddit user earlier this month in Long Beach, but with a hard cover over the bed that gives it more of an SUV shape. The vehicle is covered in a wrap for a fake business called โRockabye Rides,โ which includes a URL that leads to a website that is counting down to Slateโs event later this week.
That makes three different silhouettes weโve seen of Slateโs truck so far โ and that adaptability is something the company has privately touted as it locked down well over $100 million in funding, TechCrunch has learned.
Slateโs leadership focused heavily on the โTransformerโ metaphor as it wooed investors to fill out its Series B funding round last year, according to a person familiar with the pitches. The company carefully choreographed the meetings around the idea, according to another person familiar with how they went.
This involved showing prospective investors a generic version of the truck, and then leading them to another room while a team quickly customized the vehicle. Then the prospective investors would be brought back to the first room only to find the truck looking completely different.
Those efforts appear to have been convincing. Guggenheim Partners CEO (and controlling owner of the LA Dodgers) Mark Walter seemingly invested in the round and joined Slateโs board, TechCrunch has reported.
A spokesperson for the company didnโt respond to a request for comment.
These new photos give a pretty clear view of the exterior of Slateโs truck, and the potential level of customization. The interior remains a mystery, and there is no public knowledge about the vehicleโs specs.
The company has briefed a number of automotive journalists ahead of Thursdayโs event, and Tracy wrote that heโs โunder a strict NDAโ on any of the specifics.
Even still, Tracy wrote that the Slate truck โis unlike any new vehicle Iโve ever seen not just in my decade as a car journalist, but in my entire lifetime.โ


