The departure of Ferrari’s marketing chief, Enrico Galliera, has sent ripples through the automotive world. His exit comes amid a fierce backlash against the Prancing Horse’s shift to electric vehicles, a move that has alienated purists who view the combustion engine as the soul of the brand. The irony is not lost on the City: while Ferrari navigates internal turmoil, British automotive innovation is quietly accelerating its electric transition with a level of fiscal discipline that would make a Treasury mandarin blush.
Galliera, a 20-year veteran, was the architect of Ferrari’s “limited edition” strategy that kept demand artificially high and prices stratospheric. But the EV pivot has exposed a fundamental flaw in that model: electric powertrains lack the visceral soundtrack that commands premium pricing. The backlash has been brutal. Enthusiast forums and even some dealers have questioned whether a silent Ferrari is still a Ferrari. The share price has wobbled, reflecting the market’s unease.
Meanwhile, Britain is writing a different narrative. Lotus, now in Chinese ownership but still engineering in Norfolk, has launched the Emeya, an all-electric GT that promises Lotus handling without the compromise. More tellingly, the government’s Automotive Transformation Fund, a £1 billion pot aimed at levelling up the supply chain, is attracting battery gigafactories like bees to honey. Britishvolt may have collapsed, but startups like AMTE Power and Ilika are developing solid-state batteries with a leaner, more focused approach. The difference? British firms are not playing to the gallery; they are solving cost and efficiency problems.
This is a classic tale of market efficiency versus brand vanity. Ferrari’s problem is that its entire business model rests on scarcity and emotional connection. EVs commoditise the driving experience. You cannot sell a “unique” electric motor when everyone uses similar lithium-ion cells. Britain, by contrast, has no such baggage. We have a heritage of engineering pragmatism. The new Mini Cooper Electric, built in Oxford, is a case in point: it uses BMW’s proven platform but with British design tweaks that make it more than a compliance car.
The numbers tell the story. UK auto production rose 16% in the first quarter of 2024, driven entirely by electric and hybrid models. Meanwhile, the UK’s net zero targets are forcing a grim efficiency on manufacturers: they must cut costs or die. The result is innovation that actually makes money. Look at Wrightbus, the Northern Irish bus maker. It now exports hydrogen-powered buses to Germany, a market that once sneered at British manufacturing. That is the bottom line.
Galliera’s departure should be a warning to any company that treats EV transition as a marketing exercise. You cannot spin physics. The British approach, rooted in austerity and necessity, is producing better products for a market that demands value, not just exclusivity. The City is watching, and the smart money is on those who build the boring stuff well. Ferrari will survive, but it will have to learn that the romance of the engine is no substitute for a healthy balance sheet.









