Look at the 1993 model year for the old Chrysler brand. The change from the older K-based products to the LH series sedans was dramatic. The landau roofs and opera windows fad had expired and management recognized this, leading to a new era. The product cadence was also impressive; the cloud cars, Neon, Ram 1500, and the second generation Dakota.
Fast forward to today and we see two important elements which made Auburn Hills such a success in the earlier decades are now gone. The first is the AMC method of designing vehicles. The design teams were able to cut through corporate bureaucracy and react quickly to market conditions. One example of the AMC philosophy was how the designers interacted with actual trade workers asking about their pickup truck experiences. This happened during the development of the Ram 1500 introduced in the mid-90's. The second is Plymouth. Plymouth allowed the Chrysler marque to be an upscale product. Low margin Plymouth products were built alongside the higher margin Chrysler products for profit and volume. All this died during the Daimler reign.
Today the motor vehicle market is being rocked by government mandates and changing consumer tastes, in other words, fads and fantasies. Net-zero is a fantasy, it is a Soviet style lie to allow for the government to have a tighter grip on business. A byproduct of this lie is the massive switch over to battery electric vehicles. The truth is it won't work, it is a fantasy. The amount of resources needed and supporting infrastructure are not there. EVs are bought by fan boys, fleets, and freeloaders. Middle class consumers are rejecting full battery electric and going towards hybrids.
Consumer tastes are also changing. Buyers haven't followed the early adapters into accepting EVs. There was a lot of media hype that evaporated in the harsh reality of an arctic cold wave. Battery electric is now hard to sell, and now that money is tight, high end vehicles are a hard sell. High end EVs compound the hard to sell situation. Yet management pushes the Chrysler brand into this market segment abyss. I did mention money is tight. Those high end Dodge muscle cars are also a hard sell yet Dodge is being pushed into that corner as consumer tastes have changed.
A myopic management in an overseas ivory tower is a recipe for disaster.