Rivian Automotive said it has hired Porsche’s former North America CEO Kjell Gruner as chief commercial officer and president of business growth for the EV startup, overseeing sales, marketing and service.
His appointment is effective immediately, Rivian said Friday.
Automotive News had reported in July that Gruner was jumping to Rivian after a relatively short tenure with the German luxury brand. Porsche said then that Gruner was leaving “at his own request” after less than three years. Gruner steered Porsche’s U.S. business through the pandemic and put it on track to hit a three-year sales high this year.
“We will rely on Kjell’s talent and experience as we position ourselves for growth domestically and internationally, the launch of a new platform in R2 at a new facility and the continued success of our commercial vehicle line,” said Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe, referring to lower-cost vehicles to be built at a future Georgia assembly plant in 2026.
Gruner said in a statement that he will take Rivian into new markets.
“Rivian has built an exceptional brand with two incredible consumer vehicles, the R1T and R1S, as well as category-defining commercial vans at its core,” he said. “I look forward to chart paths into new markets, build new partnerships and customer experiences.”
The startup’s prospects have improved in recent months after it struggled following its 2021 launch to meet production goals amid supply chain shortages and other manufacturing headaches.
In the second quarter this year, Rivian said it produced 13,992 vehicles at its Normal, Ill., assembly plant and delivered 12,640. Those numbers were significantly better than production of 9,395 vehicles and sales of 7,946 in the first quarter.
The company’s stock price is up nearly 50 percent over the past six months amid growing optimism about its prospects for success after burning through billions in cash since the start of production in September 2021.
Rivian said that Gruner serves on the board of Livewire, an electric motorcycle manufacturer, the German American Chamber of Commerce of the Southern United States and the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce.
Gruner joined Porsche in 1999 from Boston Consulting Group. In 2004, he left Porsche for Daimler, where he rose to director of strategy for Mercedes-Benz Cars before returning to Porsche in 2010.
A Porsche retailer told Automotive News in July that Gruner is well-suited to a public company because of his background in marketing.
—Urvaksh Karkaria contributed to this story.