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Software as the New Strategic Lever in Automotive: How GM, Ford and Tesla Compete
The automotive industry is undergoing a fundamental shift. Legacy automakers are no longer solely dependent on vehicle sales—a revenue stream inherently tied to economic cycles and market volatility. Instead, a new business lever is emerging: software and subscription services. Connected vehicles, over-the-air updates, and digital services are unlocking higher-margin recurring revenue streams that provide stability and predictability. Three major players—General Motors, Ford, and Tesla—are pursuing distinctly different strategies to capitalize on this transformation, each demonstrating how software has become a critical growth lever for the industry.
General Motors: Betting on Scale and Ecosystem Integration
General Motors is methodically constructing a comprehensive software and subscription platform centered on OnStar, the company’s flagship in-vehicle connectivity and safety service. This strategy is beginning to demonstrate tangible financial benefits. By 2024, OnStar reached a record 12 million subscribers, including more than 120,000 Super Cruise users, representing approximately 80% year-over-year growth. The OnStar Fleet subscription segment expanded to 2 million subscribers—exceeding any competitor’s offering—positioning GM with significant scale in recurring, higher-margin revenues.
The strategic advantage is clear: unlike traditional vehicle sales, which fluctuate with economic conditions, OnStar generates stable, subscription-based cash flows. GM management projects software and services revenues will increase by roughly $400 million in the coming year, with deferred revenues from these offerings projected to reach $7.5 billion—a 40% year-over-year increase. This deferred revenue provides visibility into future cash flows and supports long-term profitability.
Super Cruise, GM’s advanced hands-free driver assistance system, remains central to this software-first strategy. The company plans to expand Super Cruise across North America while launching it in South Korea, the Middle East, and Europe. More significantly, GM intends to introduce second-generation software-defined vehicle architecture in 2028, applicable to both internal combustion and electric vehicles. This centralized computing platform will consolidate powertrain, infotainment, and safety functions with 10 times greater over-the-air capacity. The platform will eventually support autonomous highway driving capabilities—positioning software as the cornerstone of GM’s long-term strategy.
Ford: Targeting the Commercial Segment Through Ford Pro
Ford has taken a markedly different approach by concentrating its software expansion on commercial fleet operators through Ford Pro. Rather than pursuing consumer-focused services, Ford Pro delivers tools and services designed to reduce fleet downtime, minimize operating costs, and enhance vehicle maintenance efficiency. The offering encompasses telematics, fleet management solutions, EV charging infrastructure, and integrated maintenance services.
This targeted strategy is gaining traction. Paid software subscriptions grew 30% in 2025, while total paid subscriptions—combining software and physical services—exceeded 1.3 million, climbing 53% year-over-year. Notably, software and physical services combined contribute 19% to Ford Pro’s operating earnings (EBIT), with software gross margins exceeding 50%. Although these high-margin streams represent a modest portion of overall company earnings today, the trajectory suggests substantial growth potential as adoption expands.
The commercial focus offers a distinct advantage: fleet customers prioritize reliability and cost efficiency, making them more likely to commit to integrated service platforms and remain loyal subscribers. As Ford deepens relationships with fleet operators, Ford Pro becomes an increasingly important earnings lever and a mechanism for improving overall profitability stability. The subscription model helps smooth revenue volatility inherent in traditional vehicle sales cycles.
Tesla: Monetizing Full Self-Driving Through Subscriptions
Tesla’s software strategy centers on Full Self-Driving (FSD) and a deliberate transition toward subscription-based revenue models. In 2025, monthly FSD (Supervised) subscriptions more than doubled sequentially. Beginning in mid-February 2026, Tesla eliminated the one-time $8,000 purchase option, transitioning exclusively to subscription access. This shift reflects changing economics: purchasing FSD outright would require years of continuous use to break even compared to subscription costs—a proposition most buyers found unattractive unless they anticipated FSD becoming fully autonomous in the near term.
The shift to subscriptions aligns with Tesla’s broader financial objectives. One-time purchases create uneven revenue spikes tied to new vehicle deliveries, while subscriptions generate predictable, steady cash flows—a characteristic investors typically value more highly. The transition also benefits from Elon Musk’s personal incentive structure. His compensation package, approved by shareholders in November 2025, ties rewards to long-term operational milestones rather than short-term profits. One critical target is reaching 10 million active FSD subscriptions over the next decade. By eliminating one-time purchases, Tesla channels all new FSD users toward subscriptions—a metric that directly impacts Musk’s compensation.
Operationally, FSD (Supervised) users have accumulated more than 8 billion cumulative miles. Following its 2025 expansion, Tesla launched FSD in South Korea, where users drove over 1 million kilometers in a single month. Regulatory approvals in China and Europe remain pending, though the company has begun offering test drives in Italy, Germany, France, and Switzerland, signaling aggressive international expansion intentions.
Why Software Serves as the Strategic Lever
The three companies illustrate how software and subscriptions function as a powerful lever for transforming automotive economics. Each player addresses different market segments—GM pursues consumer adoption through integrated vehicle features, Ford targets commercial efficiency and cost reduction, and Tesla focuses on autonomous capability monetization. Yet all three recognize that higher-margin recurring revenues provide superior cash flow predictability compared to cyclical vehicle sales.
Software subscriptions also offer strategic flexibility. As vehicles become more connected and software-dependent, companies can continuously add features, improve functionality, and justify sustained customer engagement—creating durable competitive advantages that extend beyond hardware alone. The transition from vehicles-as-one-time purchases to vehicles-as-platforms represents a fundamental business model evolution in the automotive sector.