From Tesla to SpaceX to Twitter, here’s how tech billionaire Elon Musk built his cult following
Whether you hate him or love him, Elon Musk certainly knows how to inspire a meme.
The 50-year old tech billionaire, Tesla Motors and SpaceX founder has developed a cult following mainly through his more than 14,800 tweets where he shares technical insights, answers direct questions and publishes random thoughts and memes.
Recently, he went viral for defending the space world against critics calling out the “billionaires space race.”
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Many believe the money spent funding it would be better served addressing serious societal issues. Virgin Galactic founder, Richard Branson, became the first billionaire to ride his own creation into space on July 11, just before Jeff Bezos will fly with his company, Blue Origin, on Tuesday.
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But Musk’s tweets don’t have to be space-related to cause a stir. From his life views, responses to critics, jokes at business ideas and even his support of the Free Britney movement — advocating for singer Britney Spears to be relinquished of her conservatorship — just about anything he shares has the same effect.
He chimed in on Dogecoin being the future of cryptocurrency and owners benefited.
“My Dogecoin went up because you tweeted. You’re amazing,” can be heard from a fan in a TMZ video.
Musk tweeted about “Baby Shark” and sent the shares of Samsung Publishing, a major shareholder in the producer of the viral children’s song, soaring by more than 10 percent at one point, according to a NBC News report.
If you’re still not convinced, The Wall Street Journal did an in-depth analysis breaking down his Twitter habits showing how his tweets have increased each year since 2015. It showed that among big-company tech CEOs, only Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff tweets more than Musk.
Elon Musk is stuck in an alternate past
Tesla CEO Elon Musk departs after taking the stand to defend Tesla Inc’s 2016 deal for SolarCity in a case before the Delaware Court of Chancery in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S. July 12, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
MELBOURNE, July 13 (Reuters Breakingviews) - For a man who wants to create a better future, Elon Musk seems stuck in the past, and an alternate version at that. During testimony in a shareholder lawsuit over Tesla’s (TSLA.O) 2016 acquisition of SolarCity, the electric-car maker’s billionaire boss gave a version of history that veers from reality – and should give investors pause.
Despite trying “very hard” not to be chief executive, Musk said, “I have to, frankly, or Tesla is going to die.” That may have been true for much of its existence as a public company, when the cult that developed around Musk counterbalanced its precarious financial position in 2017 after the troubled launch of the Model 3. Musk admitted last year that the firm was at one point a month from bankruptcy.
Tesla is not out of the woods; it still relies on selling carbon credits and, last quarter, bitcoin, for much of its profit. But its manufacturing process is on solid footing and, it has $17 billion in cash from selling stock. While the company’s sky-high $633 billion valuation might take a hit if Musk left, the company would survive just fine.
If anything, his courtroom humble brag shows he has failed to do one of the most important tasks a chief executive has: to prepare a successor. To be sure, the board also bears some responsibility for this, but Tesla’s directors have a history of being asleep at the wheel.
At the time of the SolarCity acquisition, just three of the nine directors were free of any links to Musk. The board for SolarCity, where he was also chairman, could only muster two independent directors to assess Tesla’s offer. Musk did stay out of direct negotiations, but his suggestion that directors had the best interests of all shareholders at heart rings hollow. The Securities and Exchange Commission was not convinced, forcing Musk in 2018 to relinquish the Tesla chairmanship and to appoint two independent directors.
Come November he will be able to sit atop the board again. If that happens, his belief in his own indispensability might put even those modest governance improvements at risk.
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CONTEXT NEWS
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Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk on July 12 said that he has tried “very hard not to be the CEO of Tesla, but I have to frankly or Tesla is going to die.” He made the comments while giving testimony in defence of the company’s 2016 acquisition of SolarCity.
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Union pension funds and asset managers brought the lawsuit, alleging the electric-car maker’s board was riddled with conflicts of interest and that its members breached their fiduciary duty in approving the deal. All directors named in the suit except Musk settled the suit last year for $60 million, without admitting responsibility.
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Musk was chairman of SolarCity, which was founded by a couple of his cousins, until the acquisition by Tesla. He was also its largest shareholder with a 22% stake prior to the deal.
Editing by Pete Sweeney and Katrina Hamlin
How Elon Musk put the ‘sex’ into Tesla’s cars — and conquered America
Breaking into the car industry is so difficult that the last company to do it was Chrysler — in 1925. Of the established American auto brands, only Ford has never gone bankrupt.
And by 2018, it appeared that the auto industry might chew up and spit out startup Tesla, as it had done to so many others before.
Tesla was eternally behind schedule, short of cash and facing thorny production issues. To make matters worse, its mercurial frontman, Elon Musk, seemed to be increasingly unstuck, losing his temper and firing off problematic tweets.
“2018 was make or break for Tesla,” said author and Wall Street Journal tech reporter Tim Higgins.
But Tesla, improbably, did survive its year of hell, and would soon go on to become the most valuable carmaker on the planet. How Musk did it can be found in Higgins’ new book, “Power Play: Tesla, Elon Musk, and the Bet of the Century” (Doubleday), out now.
The idea for Tesla Motors actually didn’t originate with Musk. It came from Martin Eberhard, an engineer who believed early on in the potential for electric vehicles. He soon joined with a friend, software engineer Marc Tarpenning, and launched Tesla, registering the company in Delaware in July 2003.
Elon Musk, in the early days of the company, poses with a Tesla during a visit to Amsterdam in 2014. AFP via Getty Images
The headwinds facing the young company were immense. Charging stations were then scarce across the country, and the cost of batteries added tens of thousands to the price of a vehicle.
Rather than mass-produce boring, affordable electric cars, such as GM’s discontinued EV, Tesla hoped to take a page out of the tech world’s playbook, where the latest stuff (like the new iPhone) sold at a premium price to early adopters before eventually becoming cheap enough for the mainstream.
The plan was to first release a sporty roadster with all the bells and whistles — and a price tag to match.
But first they needed money. And that’s where Musk came in.
Musk, now 50, grew up in South Africa, where he became fascinated by computers at a young age. He later came to the US for higher ed and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. By 2004, Musk was already a millionaire, having gotten rich off tech startups, including a payment service called x.com. After a 2-and-a-half-hour pitch meeting, Musk agreed to invest in Tesla — with the stipulation that he become chairman. The deal was done.
The idea for Tesla Motors originally came from engineers Martin Eberhard (left) and Marc Tarpenning (right), who later left the company as Musk’s power grew. ZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy; LinkedIn
Musk through the years would slowly seize more and more power, eventually forcing out Eberhard, with Tarpenning resigning soon after.
Musk had a vision and would not be moved. And he proved to be especially hands-on for a top executive. Early on in the Roadster’s development, Musk came with a long list of changes.
He thought the seats were uncomfortable, demanding a custom redo at the cost of $1 million. He wanted the door lip lowered two inches (cost: $2 million), and insisted on electronic door latches instead of the usual mechanical ones (another $1 million).
That tweaking, along with the sky-high cost of batteries and unexpected production costs, soon pushed the price of Tesla’s first vehicle from the $49,000 target to ultimately well over $100,000 with options.
Rather than mass-produced, boring electric cars like GM’s now defunct EV1 (above), Tesla originally wanted exclusive, sexy sports cars with all the bells and whistles. Sygma via Getty Images
Customers still lined up. By the middle of the Roadster’s 2006 launch party, Musk had already secured 20 $100,000 deposits.
Tesla quickly developed an almost cult-like allegiance, and its customers proved to be among its best sales tools. When the company went public in 2010, Musk set aside shares to be sold to early Tesla customers as a thank you for their loyalty.
But the pricey Roadster was not the future. Musk recognized that the long-term success of the company hinged on its ability to create a mass-market car that the average consumer would want.
‘Main thing I wanted to be sure of was that our guys know that most American cars suck.’ Elon Musk, internal Tesla email, 2007
That vehicle would be Tesla’s fourth release. The car was originally going to be called the Model E, because Musk liked that Tesla already had models S and X, and the combo would spell “sex.” But when the company discovered Ford held the trademark to Model E, they flipped the E to a 3.
Musk had high hopes for the sedan. “Main thing I wanted to be sure of was that our guys know that most American cars suck and how to change that,” he wrote in an internal email in 2007.
To produce their cars, Tesla bought a former GM and Toyota factory in Fremont, Calif., in 2010. Musk predicted that 500,000 vehicles would roll off the assembly line in 2018 — a tenfold increase from the amount it had previously done.
“The drama that played out in Fremont was in a lot of ways life or death for Tesla and Musk’s dream of the company,” Higgins said.
Elon Musk pushed design changes at Tesla that raised its first Roadster price — and cachet. It cost well over $100,000, far above the $49,000 target. Alamy
The stress took a personal toll on Musk. Higgins visited him in June 2018 to find him sleeping in the factory, unkempt, bleary-eyed and having worn the same T-shirt for three days.
“Musk sat at an empty desk. His pillow from a few hours’ sleep rested on a chair next to him,” Higgins writes. “A salad went half-eaten. A bodyguard stood nearby. The company teetered on the verge of bankruptcy.”
And yet, Musk was in “surprisingly good spirits,” assuring the author “everything would work out.”
Even so, the CEO became known for being difficult to work with, setting near-impossible goals and leaving it to his employees to figure out how to reach them. Staffers who told him “no” were sometimes fired on the spot.
Introduced in 2012, the Model S sedan (left) costs $69,420. The Model X (right) came in 2015 and is now priced at $97,000. Alamy (2)
In the spring of 2018, Musk summoned his assembly-line engineers to a conference room. After telling them their work was “complete s–t,” he ordered each person in the room to tell him “who the f–k you are and what the f–k you’re doing to fix my goddamn line,” Higgins writes.
(Musk refused to be interviewed for the book, giving just this statement: “Most, but not all, of what you read in this book is nonsense.”)
His public interactions also got more erratic. During a 2018 investment call, an analyst asked him about missing targets for the Model 3. “Boring, bonehead questions are not cool,” Musk snapped. “Next.”
He also ramped up his use of Twitter, posting a flurry of messages each day — so much so that the company’s PR head took to wearing an Apple Watch to alert her to Musk’s tweets. One particularly problematic tweet came in July 2018 when Musk called one of the divers helping to free a Thai soccer team trapped in a cave “pedo guy.” The tweet touched off lawsuits, shaved $2 billion off Tesla’s public value and proved to be a “Category 5 hurricane,” Higgins writes.
In 2018, Musk raised eyebrows when he smoked a joint on the Joe Rogan podcast. YouTube
In August, Musk, increasingly frustrated with the limitations of being publicly traded, caused another hurricane by tweeting that he was planning to take Tesla private for $420 a share — the dollar value a reference to pot.
The tweet ultimately led to big fines for Tesla and Musk from the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A few weeks later, Musk raised eyebrows again when he lit up a joint on Joe Rogan’s podcast.
“The frustration among Tesla’s leadership team was that Elon would have had no compunction firing someone if they were seen to be damaging the company and here he was damaging the company,” Higgins said.
Musk survived, of course, perhaps with the board (rightly) concluding his value to Tesla’s brand was incalculable. Tesla’s manufacturing also improved, as Musk backed off his automation goals and cars began being assembled by more workers. “Humans are underrated,” Musk tweeted.
Tesla was also able to secure a deal with China to open a factory in Shanghai, increasing their scale and lowering their costs. “These things created momentum and turbo-charged the stock in investors’ minds and allowed them to raise cash to give themselves something they never had before: a cash cushion,” the author said.
Today, the troubles of 2018 seem to be in the rearview mirror. Tesla’s Model 3 was successful with a price starting at $39,990. The company delivered nearly half a million cars in 2020, and last month it reported more than $1 billion in net income for the latest quarter — a tenfold increase from a year ago. Tesla, worth more than $700 billion, is the world’s most valued automaker.
But Musk, not content with dominating the auto industry, recently predicted that Tesla could become the most valuable name in the entire world, overtaking Apple, Facebook and others.
“Tesla could be the biggest company,” he tweeted in March, “probably within a few months.”