Yes, context is also important, since this will be Scout Motors first drop. Some considerations that come to mind:
1. Scout will leverage VW's massive buying power, which should result in strong value
2. Scout has set a bar around ~$60K for entry (and there has been no talk of that being a stripped-down model)
3. Scout will likely offer ~3 or so "packages" at launch and they will all be HIGHLY scrutinized and reviewed, don't see corners being cut
4. Scout would be following other OEM's by providing ~$10K or so pricing tiers between packages
5. Scout can sell all the accessories they want (and offer to have some of them factory-installed) on top of each tier
5. Launch vehicles don't always need generate maximum margins to be successful for the OEM - they can build in more margin after launch perhaps offering products with even more "mass appeal" in the future (think Rivian R2).
My guess is that we will see very high value and compelling vehicles wherever final pricing lands.
1. Scout will leverage VW's massive buying power, which should result in strong value
2. Scout has set a bar around ~$60K for entry (and there has been no talk of that being a stripped-down model)
3. Scout will likely offer ~3 or so "packages" at launch and they will all be HIGHLY scrutinized and reviewed, don't see corners being cut
4. Scout would be following other OEM's by providing ~$10K or so pricing tiers between packages
5. Scout can sell all the accessories they want (and offer to have some of them factory-installed) on top of each tier
5. Launch vehicles don't always need generate maximum margins to be successful for the OEM - they can build in more margin after launch perhaps offering products with even more "mass appeal" in the future (think Rivian R2).
My guess is that we will see very high value and compelling vehicles wherever final pricing lands.