- April 22, 2024
Elon Musk is quite possibly the poster child of entrepreneurship. With a following that verges almost into a cult-like stature, Musk is notorious for doing things that people say can’t be done. The most futuristic entrepreneur yet, he has (to date) launched a record 64 satellites into orbit, is digging a tunnel deep underground to deal with traffic congestion and plans on setting a human colony on Mars by 2030.
A titan, in his own rights, Elon Musk’s success can be attributed to anything but luck. Here’s what makes Elon stand apart from the rest of the crowd and what enables him to dominate the four major sectors (automobile, space, construction, solar energy):
For Musk, his ultimate goal is to make human beings an interplanetary species. Everything else is just stepping stones to his one significant life’s purpose. As the below snapshot from Elon’s diary (way back in 2006) exhibits, Musk isn’t afraid of putting his all power, resources, focus, and determination into accomplishing his goals.
Here’s the thing about Musk, when he decides to go after a goal, he puts a lot of effort and time into understanding the goal. Once he has set the goal, he decides to learn everything about it that there is to know. Before founding SpaceX, he had no idea how to go about building rockets. So he decided to hire people who actually knew about rockets and read all that there is to know about space travel.
Musk’s visions might be too great but the fact is that he works incredibly hard. He cannot conceive the idea of not achieving what he set out to do and perhaps this kind of optimism is required to truly succeed as he eventually does.
Musk: So, as a startup, a car company, it is far more difficult to be successful than if you’re an established, entrenched brand. It is absurd that Tesla is alive. Absurd! Absurd.”
Interviewer: What do you credit that to?
Musk: Excruciating effort.
This excerpt from an interview portrays the levels Elon Musk goes to make his companies stay profitable. For Musk, failure is not a reason to stop doing what he loves. From Tesla being almost bankrupt to the Cybertruck, Musk has taken more risks than the average founder. Call it an unshakeable optimism or sheer foolishness, this tactic seems to have worked well with him.
For Elon Musk failure at the beginning of his ventures are inevitable and is necessary to succeed. Musk demonstrates the ability to take failure at a face value and doesn’t let things like the glass of the Cybertruck shattering in a globally televised event as a particular reason to stop.
For future and present entrepreneurs, Musk’s attitude towards obstacles is the outlook towards life that you should have. It’s extremely necessary to build a thick skin as well as having the grit to progress beyond the failures.
An alleged copy of Tesla’s “Anti-Handbook Handbook” for new hires was leaked recently. It reflected the high standards that Musk holds up to Tesla’s new hires:
The main theme behind the handbook seems to be ideal that Musk holds to every employee: as invested in Tesla as Musk is. Tesla hires people not based on their resume but skills. If you are a Tesla employee, you are expected to do everything in your power to give your best performance. That includes directly reaching out to Musk to share any new ideas and knowledge.
While top employees will certainly be with you during your highs, you need dedicated employees to ride out the lows. And that’s what Tesla does perfectly.
Elon Musk’s work ethic is near-impossible to follow. But it is certainly something to take inspiration from. Musk reportedly clocked in a whopping 100 hours a week for 15 years. When a week is particularly hard, he exceeds up to 120 hours a week and is also found sleeping on the factory’s floor. According to Musk:“There are way easier places to work, but nobody ever changed the world on 40 hours a week.”
While this lifestyle is not feasible for everyone, the key factor in this is Musk’s determination to get things done. You don’t need to invest crazy hours at work (unless you are running four companies like Elon Musk) but you do need to do things when they need to be done. It’s about keeping your priorities straight and implementing things that’ll propel your company forward.
People like to actively complain about things. Not Elon Musk. When Musk grew frustrated about the traffic problems that he faced, he started The Boring Company. The Boring Company aims to solve the traffic congestion problem by building a tunnel system.
To become a successful entrepreneur, find problems that need to be solved. Seeking out problems that need to be solved is a great way to find ideas about problems that people actually need some solution to.
While Musk’s incredible work ethic plays a great role in his success, it is his ability to solve difficult problems. In other words, the recipe for success is not in how hard you work but is actually about how you think.