mirror of
https://github.com/LouisShark/chatgpt_system_prompt.git
synced 2025-07-07 07:10:39 -04:00
12338 lines
814 KiB
Text
12338 lines
814 KiB
Text
ELON’S WORLD
|
||
DO YOU THINK I’M INSANE?”
|
||
This question came from Elon Musk near the very end of a long dinner
|
||
we shared at a high-end seafood restaurant in Silicon Valley. I’d gotten to
|
||
the restaurant first and settled down with a gin and tonic, knowing Musk
|
||
would—as ever—be late. After about fifteen minutes, Musk showed up
|
||
wearing leather shoes, designer jeans, and a plaid dress shirt. Musk stands
|
||
six foot one but ask anyone who knows him and they’ll confirm that he
|
||
seems much bigger than that. He’s absurdly broad-shouldered, sturdy, and
|
||
thick. You’d figure he would use this frame to his advantage and perform an
|
||
alpha-male strut when entering a room. Instead, he tends to be almost
|
||
sheepish. It’s head tilted slightly down while walking, a quick handshake
|
||
hello after reaching the table, and then butt in seat. From there, Musk needs
|
||
a few minutes before he warms up and looks at ease.
|
||
Musk asked me to dinner for a negotiation of sorts. Eighteen months
|
||
earlier, I’d informed him of my plans to write a book about him, and he’d
|
||
informed me of his plans not to cooperate. His rejection stung but thrust me
|
||
into dogged reporter mode. If I had to do this book without him, so be it.
|
||
Plenty of people had left Musk’s companies, Tesla Motors and SpaceX, and
|
||
would talk, and I already knew a lot of his friends. The interviews followed
|
||
one after another, month after month, and two hundred or so people into the
|
||
process, I heard from Musk once again. He called me at home and declared
|
||
that things could go one of two ways: he could make my life very difficult
|
||
or he could help with the project after all. He’d be willing to cooperate if he
|
||
could read the book before it went to publication, and could add footnotes
|
||
throughout it. He would not meddle with my text, but he wanted the chance
|
||
to set the record straight in spots that he deemed factually inaccurate. I
|
||
understood where this was coming from. Musk wanted a measure of control
|
||
over his life’s story. He’s also wired like a scientist and suffers mental
|
||
anguish at the sight of a factual error. A mistake on a printed page would
|
||
gnaw at his soul—forever. While I could understand his perspective, I could
|
||
not let him read the book, for professional, personal, and practical reasons.
|
||
Musk has his version of the truth, and it’s not always the version of the truth
|
||
that the rest of the world shares. He’s prone to verbose answers to even the
|
||
simplest of questions as well, and the thought of thirty-page footnotes
|
||
seemed all too real. Still, we agreed to have dinner, chat all this out, and see
|
||
where it left us.
|
||
Our conversation began with a discussion of public-relations people.
|
||
Musk burns through PR staffers notoriously fast, and Tesla was in the
|
||
process of hunting for a new communications chief. “Who is the best PR
|
||
person in the world?” he asked in a very Muskian fashion. Then we talked
|
||
about mutual acquaintances, Howard Hughes, and the Tesla factory. When
|
||
the waiter stopped by to take our order, Musk asked for suggestions that
|
||
would work with his low-carb diet. He settled on chunks of fried lobster
|
||
soaked in black squid ink. The negotiation hadn’t begun, and Musk was
|
||
already dishing. He opened up about the major fear keeping him up at night:
|
||
namely that Google’s cofounder and CEO Larry Page might well have been
|
||
building a fleet of artificial-intelligence-enhanced robots capable of
|
||
destroying mankind. “I’m really worried about this,” Musk said. It didn’t
|
||
make Musk feel any better that he and Page were very close friends and that
|
||
he felt Page was fundamentally a well-intentioned person and not Dr. Evil.
|
||
In fact, that was sort of the problem. Page’s nice-guy nature left him
|
||
assuming that the machines would forever do our bidding. “I’m not as
|
||
optimistic,” Musk said. “He could produce something evil by accident.” As
|
||
the food arrived, Musk consumed it. That is, he didn’t eat it as much as he
|
||
made it disappear rapidly with a few gargantuan bites. Desperate to keep
|
||
Musk happy and chatting, I handed him a big chunk of steak from my plate.
|
||
The plan worked . . . for all of ninety seconds. Meat. Hunk. Gone.
|
||
It took awhile to get Musk off the artificial intelligence doom-andgloom
|
||
talk and to the subject at hand. Then, as we drifted toward the book,
|
||
Musk started to feel me out, probing exactly why it was that I wanted to
|
||
write about him and calculating my intentions. When the moment presented
|
||
itself, I moved in and seized the conversation. Some adrenaline released and
|
||
mixed with the gin, and I launched into what was meant to be a forty-fiveminute
|
||
sermon about all the reasons Musk should let me burrow deep into
|
||
his life and do so while getting exactly none of the controls he wanted in
|
||
return. The speech revolved around the inherent limitations of footnotes,
|
||
Musk coming off like a control freak and my journalistic integrity being
|
||
compromised. To my great surprise, Musk cut me off after a couple of
|
||
minutes and simply said, “Okay.” One thing that Musk holds in the highest
|
||
regard is resolve, and he respects people who continue on after being told
|
||
no. Dozens of other journalists had asked him to help with a book before,
|
||
but I’d been the only annoying asshole who continued on after Musk’s
|
||
initial rejection, and he seemed to like that.
|
||
The dinner wound down with pleasant conversation and Musk laying
|
||
waste to the low-carb diet. A waiter showed up with a giant yellow cotton
|
||
candy desert sculpture, and Musk dug into it, ripping off handfuls of the
|
||
sugary fluff. It was settled. Musk granted me access to the executives at his
|
||
companies, his friends, and his family. He would meet me for dinner once a
|
||
month for as long as it took. For the first time, Musk would let a reporter
|
||
see the inner workings of his world. Two and a half hours after we started,
|
||
Musk put his hands on the table, made a move to get up, and then paused,
|
||
locked eyes with me, and busted out that incredible question: “Do you think
|
||
I’m insane?” The oddity of the moment left me speechless for a beat, while
|
||
my every synapse fired trying to figure out if this was some sort of riddle,
|
||
and, if so, how it should be answered artfully. It was only after I’d spent lots
|
||
of time with Musk that I realized the question was more for him than me.
|
||
Nothing I said would have mattered. Musk was stopping one last time and
|
||
wondering aloud if I could be trusted and then looking into my eyes to
|
||
make his judgment. A split second later, we shook hands and Musk drove
|
||
off in a red Tesla Model S sedan.
|
||
ANY STUDY OF ELON MUSK must begin at the headquarters of SpaceX,
|
||
in Hawthorne, California—a suburb of Los Angeles located a few miles
|
||
from Los Angeles International Airport. It’s there that visitors will find two
|
||
giant posters of Mars hanging side by side on the wall leading up to Musk’s
|
||
cubicle. The poster to the left depicts Mars as it is today—a cold, barren red
|
||
orb. The poster on the right shows a Mars with a humongous green
|
||
landmass surrounded by oceans. The planet has been heated up and
|
||
transformed to suit humans. Musk fully intends to try and make this happen.
|
||
Turning humans into space colonizers is his stated life’s purpose. “I would
|
||
like to die thinking that humanity has a bright future,” he said. “If we can
|
||
solve sustainable energy and be well on our way to becoming a
|
||
multiplanetary species with a self-sustaining civilization on another planet
|
||
—to cope with a worst-case scenario happening and extinguishing human
|
||
consciousness—then,” and here he paused for a moment, “I think that
|
||
would be really good.”
|
||
If some of the things that Musk says and does sound absurd, that’s
|
||
because on one level they very much are. On this occasion, for example,
|
||
Musk’s assistant had just handed him some cookies-and-cream ice cream
|
||
with sprinkles on top, and he then talked earnestly about saving humanity
|
||
while a blotch of the dessert hung from his lower lip.
|
||
Musk’s ready willingness to tackle impossible things has turned him
|
||
into a deity in Silicon Valley, where fellow CEOs like Page speak of him in
|
||
reverential awe, and budding entrepreneurs strive “to be like Elon” just as
|
||
they had been striving in years past to mimic Steve Jobs. Silicon Valley,
|
||
though, operates within a warped version of reality, and outside the confines
|
||
of its shared fantasy, Musk often comes off as a much more polarizing
|
||
figure. He’s the guy with the electric cars, solar panels, and rockets
|
||
peddling false hope. Forget Steve Jobs. Musk is a sci-fi version of P. T.
|
||
Barnum who has gotten extraordinarily rich by preying on people’s fear and
|
||
self-hatred. Buy a Tesla. Forget about the mess you’ve made of the planet
|
||
for a while.
|
||
I’d long been a subscriber to this latter camp. Musk had struck me as a
|
||
well-intentioned dreamer—a card-carrying member of Silicon Valley’s
|
||
techno-utopian club. This group tends to be a mix of Ayn Rand devotees
|
||
and engineer absolutists who see their hyperlogical worldviews as the
|
||
Answer for everyone. If we’d just get out of their way, they’d fix all our
|
||
problems. One day, soon enough, we’ll be able to download our brains to a
|
||
computer, relax, and let their algorithms take care of everything. Much of
|
||
their ambition proves inspiring and their works helpful. But the technoutopians
|
||
do get tiresome with their platitudes and their ability to prattle on
|
||
for hours without saying much of substance. More disconcerting is their
|
||
underlying message that humans are flawed and our humanity is an
|
||
annoying burden that needs to be dealt with in due course. When I’d caught
|
||
Musk at Silicon Valley events, his highfalutin talk often sounded straight
|
||
out of the techno-utopian playbook. And, most annoyingly, his worldsaving
|
||
companies didn’t even seem to be doing all that well.
|
||
Yet, in the early part of 2012, the cynics like me had to take notice of
|
||
what Musk was actually accomplishing. His once-beleaguered companies
|
||
were succeeding at unprecedented things. SpaceX flew a supply capsule to
|
||
the International Space Station and brought it safely back to Earth. Tesla
|
||
Motors delivered the Model S, a beautiful, all-electric sedan that took the
|
||
automotive industry’s breath away and slapped Detroit sober. These two
|
||
feats elevated Musk to the rarest heights among business titans. Only Steve
|
||
Jobs could claim similar achievements in two such different industries,
|
||
sometimes putting out a new Apple product and a blockbuster Pixar movie
|
||
in the same year. And yet, Musk was not done. He was also the chairman
|
||
and largest shareholder of SolarCity, a booming solar energy company
|
||
poised to file for an initial public offering. Musk had somehow delivered
|
||
the biggest advances the space, automotive, and energy industries had seen
|
||
in decades in what felt like one fell swoop.
|
||
It was in 2012 that I decided to see what Musk was like firsthand and to
|
||
write a cover story about him for Bloomberg Businessweek. At this point in
|
||
Musk’s life, everything ran through his assistant/loyal appendage Mary
|
||
Beth Brown. She invited me to visit what I’ve come to refer to as Musk
|
||
Land.
|
||
Anyone arriving at Musk Land for the first time will have the same
|
||
head-scratching experience. You’re told to park at One Rocket Road in
|
||
Hawthorne, where SpaceX has its HQ. It seems impossible that anything
|
||
good could call Hawthorne home. It’s a bleak part of Los Angeles County
|
||
in which groupings of rundown houses, run-down shops, and run-down
|
||
eateries surround huge, industrial complexes that appear to have been built
|
||
during some kind of architectural Boring Rectangle movement. Did Elon
|
||
Musk really stick his company in the middle of this dreck? Then, okay,
|
||
things start to make more sense when you see one 550,000-square-foot
|
||
rectangle painted an ostentatious hue of “Unity of Body, Soul, and Mind”
|
||
white. This is the main SpaceX building.
|
||
It was only after going through the front doors of SpaceX that the
|
||
grandeur of what this man had done became apparent. Musk had built an
|
||
honest-to-God rocket factory in the middle of Los Angeles. And this factory
|
||
was not making one rocket at a time. No. It was making many rockets—
|
||
from scratch. The factory was a giant, shared work area. Near the back were
|
||
massive delivery bays that allowed for the arrival of hunks of metal, which
|
||
were transported to two-story-high welding machines. Over to one side
|
||
were technicians in white coats making motherboards, radios, and other
|
||
electronics. Other people were in a special, airtight glass chamber, building
|
||
the capsules that rockets would take to the Space Station. Tattooed men in
|
||
bandanas were blasting Van Halen and threading wires around rocket
|
||
engines. There were completed bodies of rockets lined up one after the
|
||
other ready to be placed on trucks. Still more rockets, in another part of the
|
||
building, awaited coats of white paint. It was difficult to take in the entire
|
||
factory at once. There were hundreds of bodies in constant motion whirring
|
||
around a variety of bizarre machines.
|
||
This is just building number one of Musk Land. SpaceX had acquired
|
||
several buildings that used to be part of a Boeing factory, which made the
|
||
fuselages for 747s. One of these buildings has a curved roof and looks like
|
||
an airplane hangar. It serves as the research, development, and design studio
|
||
for Tesla. This is where the company came up with the look for the Model S
|
||
sedan and its follow-on, the Model X SUV. In the parking lot outside the
|
||
studio, Tesla has built one of its recharging stations where Los Angeles
|
||
drivers can top up with electricity for free. The charging center is easy
|
||
enough to spot because Musk has installed a white and red obelisk branded
|
||
with the Tesla logo that sits in the middle of an infinity pool.
|
||
It was in my first interview with Musk, which took place at the design
|
||
studio, that I began to get a sense of how he talked and operated. He’s a
|
||
confident guy, but does not always do a good job of displaying this. On
|
||
initial encounter, Musk can come off as shy and borderline awkward. His
|
||
South African accent remains present but fading, and the charm of it is not
|
||
enough to offset the halting nature of Musk’s speech pattern. Like many an
|
||
engineer or physicist, Musk will pause while fishing around for exact
|
||
phrasing, and he’ll often go rumbling down an esoteric, scientific rabbit
|
||
hole without providing any helping hands or simplified explanations along
|
||
the way. Musk expects you to keep up. None of this is off-putting. Musk, in
|
||
fact, will toss out plenty of jokes and can be downright charming. It’s just
|
||
that there’s a sense of purpose and pressure hanging over any conversation
|
||
with the man. Musk doesn’t really shoot the shit. (It would end up taking
|
||
about thirty hours of interviews for Musk to really loosen up and let me into
|
||
a different, deeper level of his psyche and personality.)
|
||
Most high-profile CEOs have handlers all around them. Musk mostly
|
||
moves about Musk Land on his own. This is not the guy who slinks into the
|
||
restaurant. It’s the guy who owns the joint and strides about with authority.
|
||
Musk and I talked, as he made his way around the design studio’s main
|
||
floor, inspecting prototype parts and vehicles. At each station, employees
|
||
rushed up to Musk and disgorged information. He listened intently,
|
||
processed it, and nodded when satisfied. The people moved away and Musk
|
||
moved to the next information dump. At one point, Tesla’s design chief,
|
||
Franz von Holzhausen, wanted Musk’s take on some new tires and rims that
|
||
had come in for the Model S and on the seating arrangements for the Model
|
||
X. They spoke, and then they went into a back room where executives from
|
||
a seller of high-end graphics software had prepared a presentation for Musk.
|
||
They wanted to show off new 3-D rendering technology that would allow
|
||
Tesla to tweak the finish of a virtual Model S and see in great detail how
|
||
things like shadows and streetlights played off the car’s body. Tesla’s
|
||
engineers really wanted the computing systems and needed Musk’s sign-off.
|
||
The men did their best to sell Musk on the idea while the sound of drills and
|
||
giant industrial fans drowned out their shtick. Musk, wearing leather shoes,
|
||
designer jeans, and a black T-shirt, which is essentially his work uniform,
|
||
had to don 3-D goggles for the demonstration and seemed unmoved. He
|
||
told them he’d think about it and then walked toward the source of the
|
||
loudest noise—a workshop deep in the design studio where Tesla engineers
|
||
were building the scaffolding for the thirty-foot decorative towers that go
|
||
outside the charging stations. “That thing looks like it could survive a
|
||
Category Five hurricane,” Musk said. “Let’s thin it up a bit.” Musk and I
|
||
eventually hop into his car—a black Model S—and zip back to the main
|
||
SpaceX building. “I think there are probably too many smart people
|
||
pursuing Internet stuff, finance, and law,” Musk said on the way. “That is
|
||
part of the reason why we haven’t seen as much innovation.”
|
||
MUSK LAND WAS A REVELATION.
|
||
I’d come to Silicon Valley in 2000 and ended up living in the Tenderloin
|
||
neighborhood of San Francisco. It’s the one part of the city that locals will
|
||
implore you to avoid. Without trying very hard, you can find someone
|
||
pulling down his pants and pooping in between parked cars or encounter
|
||
some deranged sort bashing his head into the side of a bus stop. At dive bars
|
||
near the local strip clubs, transvestites hit on curious businessmen and
|
||
drunks fall asleep on couches and soil themselves as part of their lazy
|
||
Sunday ritual. It’s the gritty, knife-stabby part of San Francisco and turned
|
||
out to be a great place to watch the dotcom dream die.
|
||
San Francisco has an enduring history with greed. It became a city on
|
||
the back of the gold rush, and not even a catastrophic earthquake could slow
|
||
San Francisco’s economic lust for long. Don’t let the granola vibes fool
|
||
you. Booms and busts are the rhythm of this place. And, in 2000, San
|
||
Francisco had been overtaken by the boom of all booms and consumed by
|
||
avarice. It was a wonderful time to be alive with just about the entire
|
||
populace giving in to a fantasy—a get-rich-quick, Internet madness. The
|
||
pulses of energy from this shared delusion were palpable, producing a
|
||
constant buzz that vibrated across the city. And here I was in the center of
|
||
the most depraved part of San Francisco, watching just how high and low
|
||
people get when consumed by excess.
|
||
Stories tracking the insanity of business in these times are well-known.
|
||
You no longer had to make something that other people wanted to buy in
|
||
order to start a booming company. You just had to have an idea for some
|
||
sort of Internet thing and announce it to the world in order for eager
|
||
investors to fund your thought experiment. The whole goal was to make as
|
||
much money as possible in the shortest amount of time because everyone
|
||
knew on at least a subconscious level that reality had to set in eventually.
|
||
Valley denizens took very literally the cliché of working as hard as you
|
||
play. People in their twenties, thirties, forties, and fifties were expected to
|
||
pull all-nighters. Cubicles were turned into temporary homes, and personal
|
||
hygiene was abandoned. Oddly enough, making Nothing appear to be
|
||
Something took a lot of work. But when the time to decompress arrived,
|
||
there were plenty of options for total debauchery. The hot companies and
|
||
media powers of the time seemed locked in a struggle to outdo each other
|
||
with ever-fancier parties. Old-line companies trying to look “with it” would
|
||
regularly buy space at a concert venue and then order up some dancers,
|
||
acrobats, open bars, and the Barenaked Ladies. Young technologists would
|
||
show up to pound their free Jack and Cokes and snort their cocaine in portapotties.
|
||
Greed and self-interest were the only things that made any sense
|
||
back then.
|
||
While the good times have been well chronicled, the subsequent bad
|
||
times have been—unsurprisingly—ignored. It’s more fun to reminiscence
|
||
on irrational exuberance than the mess that gets left behind.
|
||
Let it be said for the record, then, that the implosion of the get-richquick
|
||
Internet fantasy left San Francisco and Silicon Valley in a deep
|
||
depression. The endless parties ended. The prostitutes no longer roamed the
|
||
streets of the Tenderloin at 6 A.M. offering pre-commute love. (“Come on,
|
||
honey. It’s better than coffee!”) Instead of the Barenaked Ladies, you got
|
||
the occasional Neil Diamond tribute band at a trade show, some free Tshirts,
|
||
and a lump of shame.
|
||
The technology industry had no idea what to do with itself. The dumb
|
||
venture capitalists who had been taken during the bubble didn’t want to
|
||
look any dumber, so they stopped funding new ventures altogether.
|
||
Entrepreneurs’ big ideas were replaced by the smallest of notions. It was as
|
||
if Silicon Valley had entered rehab en masse. It sounds melodramatic, but
|
||
it’s true. A populace of millions of clever people came to believe that they
|
||
were inventing the future. Then . . . poof! Playing it safe suddenly became
|
||
the fashionable thing to do.
|
||
The evidence of this malaise is in the companies and ideas formed
|
||
during this period. Google had appeared and really started to thrive around
|
||
2002, but it was an outlier. Between Google and Apple’s introduction of the
|
||
iPhone in 2007, there’s a wasteland of ho-hum companies. And the hot new
|
||
things that were just starting out—Facebook and Twitter—certainly did not
|
||
look like their predecessors—Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Sun Microsystems—
|
||
that made physical products and employed tens of thousands of people in
|
||
the process. In the years that followed, the goal went from taking huge risks
|
||
to create new industries and grand new ideas, to chasing easier money by
|
||
entertaining consumers and pumping out simple apps and advertisements.
|
||
“The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people
|
||
click ads,” Jeff Hammerbacher, an early Facebook engineer, told me. “That
|
||
sucks.” Silicon Valley began to look an awful lot like Hollywood.
|
||
Meanwhile, the consumers it served had turned inward, obsessed with their
|
||
virtual lives.
|
||
One of the first people to suggest that this lull in innovation could signal
|
||
a much larger problem was Jonathan Huebner, a physicist who works at the
|
||
Pentagon’s Naval Air Warfare Center in China Lake, California. Huebner is
|
||
the Leave It to Beaver version of a merchant of death. Middle-aged, thin,
|
||
and balding, he likes to wear a dirt-inspired ensemble of khaki pants, a
|
||
brown-striped shirt, and a canvas khaki jacket. He has designed weapons
|
||
systems since 1985, gaining direct insight into the latest and greatest
|
||
technology around materials, energy, and software. Following the dot-com
|
||
bust, he became miffed at the ho-hum nature of the supposed innovations
|
||
crossing his desk. In 2005, Huebner delivered a paper, “A Possible
|
||
Declining Trend in Worldwide Innovation,” which was either an indictment
|
||
of Silicon Valley or at least an ominous warning.
|
||
Huebner opted to use a tree metaphor to describe what he saw as the
|
||
state of innovation. Man has already climbed past the trunk of the tree and
|
||
gone out on its major limbs, mining most of the really big, game-changing
|
||
ideas—the wheel, electricity, the airplane, the telephone, the transistor. Now
|
||
we’re left dangling near the end of the branches at the top of the tree and
|
||
mostly just refining past inventions. To back up his point in the paper,
|
||
Huebner showed that the frequency of life-changing inventions had started
|
||
to slow. He also used data to prove that the number of patents filed per
|
||
person had declined over time. “I think the probability of us discovering
|
||
another top-one-hundred-type invention gets smaller and smaller,” Huebner
|
||
told me in an interview. “Innovation is a finite resource.”
|
||
Huebner predicted that it would take people about five years to catch on
|
||
to his thinking, and this forecast proved almost exactly right. Around 2010,
|
||
Peter Thiel, the PayPal cofounder and early Facebook investor, began
|
||
promoting the idea that the technology industry had let people down. “We
|
||
wanted flying cars, instead we got 140 characters” became the tagline of his
|
||
venture capital firm Founders Fund. In an essay called “What Happened to
|
||
the Future,” Thiel and his cohorts described how Twitter, its 140-character
|
||
messages, and similar inventions have let the public down. He argued that
|
||
science fiction, which once celebrated the future, has turned dystopian
|
||
because people no longer have an optimistic view of technology’s ability to
|
||
change the world.
|
||
I’d subscribed to a lot of this type of thinking until that first visit to
|
||
Musk Land. While Musk had been anything but shy about what he was up
|
||
to, few people outside of his companies got to see the factories, the R&D
|
||
centers, the machine shops, and to witness the scope of what he was doing
|
||
firsthand. Here was a guy who had taken much of the Silicon Valley ethic
|
||
behind moving quickly and running organizations free of bureaucratic
|
||
hierarchies and applied it to improving big, fantastic machines and chasing
|
||
things that had the potential to be the real breakthroughs we’d been missing.
|
||
By rights, Musk should have been part of the malaise. He jumped right
|
||
into dot-com mania in 1995, when, fresh out of college, he founded a
|
||
company called Zip2—a primitive Google Maps meets Yelp. That first
|
||
venture ended up a big, quick hit. Compaq bought Zip2 in 1999 for $307
|
||
million. Musk made $22 million from the deal and poured almost all of it
|
||
into his next venture, a start-up that would morph into PayPal. As the
|
||
largest shareholder in PayPal, Musk became fantastically well-to-do when
|
||
eBay acquired the company for $1.5 billion in 2002.
|
||
Instead of hanging around Silicon Valley and falling into the same funk
|
||
as his peers, however, Musk decamped to Los Angeles. The conventional
|
||
wisdom of the time said to take a deep breath and wait for the next big thing
|
||
to arrive in due course. Musk rejected that logic by throwing $100 million
|
||
into SpaceX, $70 million into Tesla, and $10 million into SolarCity. Short
|
||
of building an actual money-crushing machine, Musk could not have picked
|
||
a faster way to destroy his fortune. He became a one-man, ultra-risk-taking
|
||
venture capital shop and doubled down on making super-complex physical
|
||
goods in two of the most expensive places in the world, Los Angeles and
|
||
Silicon Valley. Whenever possible, Musk’s companies would make things
|
||
from scratch and try to rethink much that the aerospace, automotive, and
|
||
solar industries had accepted as convention.
|
||
With SpaceX, Musk is battling the giants of the U.S. military-industrial
|
||
complex, including Lockheed Martin and Boeing. He’s also battling nations
|
||
—most notably Russia and China. SpaceX has made a name for itself as the
|
||
low-cost supplier in the industry. But that, in and of itself, is not really good
|
||
enough to win. The space business requires dealing with a mess of politics,
|
||
back-scratching, and protectionism that undermines the fundamentals of
|
||
capitalism. Steve Jobs faced similar forces when he went up against the
|
||
recording industry to bring the iPod and iTunes to market. The crotchety
|
||
Luddites in the music industry were a pleasure to deal with compared to
|
||
Musk’s foes who build weapons and countries for a living. SpaceX has been
|
||
testing reusable rockets that can carry payloads to space and land back on
|
||
Earth, on their launchpads, with precision. If the company can perfect this
|
||
technology, it will deal a devastating blow to all of its competitors and
|
||
almost assuredly push some mainstays of the rocket industry out of business
|
||
while establishing the United States as the world leader for taking cargo and
|
||
humans to space. It’s a threat that Musk figures has earned him plenty of
|
||
fierce enemies. “The list of people that would not mind if I was gone is
|
||
growing,” Musk said. “My family fears that the Russians will assassinate
|
||
me.”
|
||
With Tesla Motors, Musk has tried to revamp the way cars are
|
||
manufactured and sold, while building out a worldwide fuel distribution
|
||
network at the same time. Instead of hybrids, which in Musk lingo are
|
||
suboptimal compromises, Tesla strives to make all-electric cars that people
|
||
lust after and that push the limits of technology. Tesla does not sell these
|
||
cars through dealers; it sells them on the Web and in Apple-like galleries
|
||
located in high-end shopping centers. Tesla also does not anticipate making
|
||
lots of money from servicing its vehicles, since electric cars do not require
|
||
the oil changes and other maintenance procedures of traditional cars. The
|
||
direct sales model embraced by Tesla stands as a major affront to car
|
||
dealers used to haggling with their customers and making their profits from
|
||
exorbitant maintenance fees. Tesla’s recharging stations now run alongside
|
||
many of the major highways in the United States, Europe, and Asia and can
|
||
add hundreds of miles of oomph back to a car in about twenty minutes.
|
||
These so-called supercharging stations are solar-powered, and Tesla owners
|
||
pay nothing to refuel. While much of America’s infrastructure decays,
|
||
Musk is building a futuristic end-to-end transportation system that would
|
||
allow the United States to leapfrog the rest of the world. Musk’s vision, and,
|
||
of late, execution seem to combine the best of Henry Ford and John D.
|
||
Rockefeller.
|
||
With SolarCity, Musk has funded the largest installer and financer of
|
||
solar panels for consumers and businesses. Musk helped come up with the
|
||
idea for SolarCity and serves as its chairman, while his cousins Lyndon and
|
||
Peter Rive run the company. SolarCity has managed to undercut dozens of
|
||
utilities and become a large utility in its own right. During a time in which
|
||
clean-tech businesses have gone bankrupt with alarming regularity, Musk
|
||
has built two of the most successful clean-tech companies in the world. The
|
||
Musk Co. empire of factories, tens of thousands of workers, and industrial
|
||
might has incumbents on the run and has turned Musk into one of the
|
||
richest men in the world, with a net worth around $10 billion.
|
||
The visit to Musk Land started to make a few things clear about how
|
||
Musk had pulled all this off. While the “putting man on Mars” talk can
|
||
strike some people as loopy, it gave Musk a unique rallying cry for his
|
||
companies. It’s the sweeping goal that forms a unifying principle over
|
||
everything he does. Employees at all three companies are well aware of this
|
||
and well aware that they’re trying to achieve the impossible day in and day
|
||
out. When Musk sets unrealistic goals, verbally abuses employees, and
|
||
works them to the bone, it’s understood to be—on some level—part of the
|
||
Mars agenda. Some employees love him for this. Others loathe him but
|
||
remain oddly loyal out of respect for his drive and mission. What Musk has
|
||
developed that so many of the entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley lack is a
|
||
meaningful worldview. He’s the possessed genius on the grandest quest
|
||
anyone has ever concocted. He’s less a CEO chasing riches than a general
|
||
marshaling troops to secure victory. Where Mark Zuckerberg wants to help
|
||
you share baby photos, Musk wants to . . . well . . . save the human race
|
||
from self-imposed or accidental annihilation.
|
||
The life that Musk has created to manage all of these endeavors is
|
||
preposterous. A typical week starts at his mansion in Bel Air. On Monday,
|
||
he works the entire day at SpaceX. On Tuesday, he begins at SpaceX, then
|
||
hops onto his jet and flies to Silicon Valley. He spends a couple of days
|
||
working at Tesla, which has its offices in Palo Alto and factory in Fremont.
|
||
Musk does not own a home in Northern California and ends up staying at
|
||
the luxe Rosewood hotel or at friends’ houses. To arrange the stays with
|
||
friends, Musk’s assistant will send an e-mail asking, “Room for one?” and if
|
||
the friend says, “Yes,” Musk turns up at the door late at night. Most often he
|
||
stays in a guest room, but he’s also been known to crash on the couch after
|
||
winding down with some video games. Then it’s back to Los Angeles and
|
||
SpaceX on Thursday. He shares custody of his five young boys—twins and
|
||
triplets—with his ex-wife, Justine, and has them four days a week. Each
|
||
year, Musk tabulates the amount of flight time he endures per week to help
|
||
him get a sense of just how out of hand things are getting. Asked how he
|
||
survives this schedule, Musk said, “I had a tough childhood, so maybe that
|
||
was helpful.”
|
||
During one visit to Musk Land, he had to squeeze our interview in
|
||
before heading off for a camping trip at Crater Lake National Park in
|
||
Oregon. It was almost 8 P.M. on a Friday, so Musk would soon be piling his
|
||
boys and nannies into his private jet and then meeting drivers who would
|
||
take him to his friends at the campsite; the friends would then help the
|
||
Musk clan unpack and complete their pitch-black arrival. There would be a
|
||
bit of hiking over the weekend. Then the relaxation would end. Musk would
|
||
fly with the boys back to Los Angeles on Sunday afternoon. Then, he would
|
||
take off on his own that evening for New York. Sleep. Hit the morning talk
|
||
shows on Monday. Meetings. E-mail. Sleep. Fly back to Los Angeles
|
||
Tuesday morning. Work at SpaceX. Fly to San Jose Tuesday afternoon to
|
||
visit the Tesla Motors factory. Fly to Washington, D.C., that night and see
|
||
President Obama. Fly back to Los Angeles Wednesday night. Spend a
|
||
couple of days working at SpaceX. Then go to a weekend conference held
|
||
by Google’s chairman, Eric Schmidt, in Yellowstone. At this time, Musk
|
||
had just split from his second wife, the actress Talulah Riley, and was trying
|
||
to calculate if he could mix a personal life into all of this. “I think the time
|
||
allocated to the businesses and the kids is going fine,” Musk said. “I would
|
||
like to allocate more time to dating, though. I need to find a girlfriend.
|
||
That’s why I need to carve out just a little more time. I think maybe even
|
||
another five to ten—how much time does a woman want a week? Maybe
|
||
ten hours? That’s kind of the minimum? I don’t know.”
|
||
Musk rarely finds time to decompress, but when he does, the festivities
|
||
are just as dramatic as the rest of his life. On his thirtieth birthday, Musk
|
||
rented out a castle in England for about twenty people. From 2 A.M. until 6
|
||
A.M., they played a variation of hide-and-seek called sardines in which one
|
||
person runs off and hides and everyone else looks for him. Another party
|
||
occurred in Paris. Musk, his brother, and cousins found themselves awake
|
||
at midnight and decided to bicycle through the city until 6 A.M. They slept
|
||
all day and then boarded the Orient Express in the evening. Once again,
|
||
they stayed up all night. The Lucent Dossier Experience—an avant-garde
|
||
group of performers—were on the luxurious train, performing palm
|
||
readings and acrobatics. When the train arrived in Venice the next day,
|
||
Musk’s family had dinner and then hung out on the patio of their hotel
|
||
overlooking the Grand Canal until 9 A.M. Musk loves costume parties as
|
||
well, and turned up at one dressed like a knight and using a parasol to duel a
|
||
midget wearing a Darth Vader costume.
|
||
For one of his most recent birthdays, Musk invited fifty people to a
|
||
castle—or at least the United States’ best approximation of a castle—in
|
||
Tarrytown, New York. This party had a Japanese steampunk theme, which
|
||
is sort of like a sci-fi lover’s wet dream—a mix of corsets, leather, and
|
||
machine worship. Musk dressed as a samurai.
|
||
The festivities included a performance of The Mikado, a Victorian
|
||
comic opera by Gilbert and Sullivan set in Japan, at a small theater in the
|
||
heart of town. “I am not sure the Americans got it,” said Riley, whom Musk
|
||
remarried after his ten-hour-a-week dating plan failed. The Americans and
|
||
everyone else did enjoy what followed. Back at the castle, Musk donned a
|
||
blindfold, got pushed up against a wall, and held balloons in each hand and
|
||
another between his legs. The knife thrower then went to work. “I’d seen
|
||
him before, but did worry that maybe he could have an off day,” Musk said.
|
||
“Still, I thought, he would maybe hit one gonad but not both.” The
|
||
onlookers were stunned and frightened for Musk’s safety. “That was
|
||
bizarre,” said Bill Lee, a technology investor and one of Musk’s good
|
||
friends. “But Elon believes in the science of things.” One of the world’s top
|
||
sumo wrestlers showed up at the party along with some of his compatriots.
|
||
A ring had been set up at the castle, and Musk faced off against the
|
||
champion. “He was three hundred and fifty pounds, and they were not
|
||
jiggly pounds,” Musk said. “I went full adrenaline rush and managed to lift
|
||
the guy off the ground. He let me win that first round and then beat me. I
|
||
think my back is still screwed up.”
|
||
Riley turned planning these types of parties for Musk into an art. She
|
||
met Musk back in 2008, when his companies were collapsing. She watched
|
||
him lose his entire fortune and get ridiculed by the press. She knows that
|
||
the sting of these years remains and has combined with the other traumas in
|
||
Musk’s life—the tragic loss of an infant son and a brutal upbringing in
|
||
South Africa—to create a tortured soul. Riley has gone to great lengths to
|
||
make sure Musk’s escapes from work and this past leave him feeling
|
||
refreshed if not healed. “I try to think of fun things he has not done before
|
||
where he can relax,” Riley said. “We’re trying to make up for his miserable
|
||
childhood now.”
|
||
Genuine as Riley’s efforts might have been, they were not entirely
|
||
effective. Not long after the Sumo party, I found Musk back at work at the
|
||
Tesla headquarters in Palo Alto. It was a Saturday, and the parking lot was
|
||
full of cars. Inside of the Tesla offices, hundreds of young men were at
|
||
work—some of them designing car parts on computers and others
|
||
conducting experiments with electronics equipment on their desks. Musk’s
|
||
uproarious laugh would erupt every few minutes and carry through the
|
||
entire floor. When Musk came into the meeting room where I’d been
|
||
waiting, I noted how impressive it was for so many people to turn up on a
|
||
Saturday. Musk saw the situation in a different light, complaining that fewer
|
||
and fewer people had been working weekends of late. “We’ve grown
|
||
fucking soft,” Musk replied. “I was just going to send out an e-mail. We’re
|
||
fucking soft.” (A word of warning: There’s going to be a lot of “fuck” in
|
||
this book. Musk adores the word, and so do most of the people in his inner
|
||
circle.)
|
||
This kind of declaration seems to fit with our impressions of other
|
||
visionaries. It’s not hard to imagine Howard Hughes or Steve Jobs
|
||
chastising their workforce in a similar way. Building things—especially big
|
||
things—is a messy business. In the two decades Musk has spent creating
|
||
companies, he’s left behind a trail of people who either adore or despise
|
||
him. During the course of my reporting, these people lined up to give me
|
||
their take on Musk and the gory details of how he and his businesses
|
||
operate.
|
||
My dinners with Musk and periodic trips to Musk Land revealed a
|
||
different set of possible truths about the man. He’s set about building
|
||
something that has the potential to be much grander than anything Hughes
|
||
or Jobs produced. Musk has taken industries like aerospace and automotive
|
||
that America seemed to have given up on and recast them as something new
|
||
and fantastic. At the heart of this transformation are Musk’s skills as a
|
||
software maker and his ability to apply them to machines. He’s merged
|
||
atoms and bits in ways that few people thought possible, and the results
|
||
have been spectacular. It’s true enough that Musk has yet to have a
|
||
consumer hit on the order of the iPhone or to touch more than one billion
|
||
people like Facebook. For the moment, he’s still making rich people’s toys,
|
||
and his budding empire could be an exploded rocket or massive Tesla recall
|
||
away from collapse. On the other hand, Musk’s companies have already
|
||
accomplished far more than his loudest detractors thought possible, and the
|
||
promise of what’s to come has to leave hardened types feeling optimistic
|
||
during their weaker moments. “To me, Elon is the shining example of how
|
||
Silicon Valley might be able to reinvent itself and be more relevant than
|
||
chasing these quick IPOs and focusing on getting incremental products
|
||
out,” said Edward Jung, a famed software engineer and inventor. “Those
|
||
things are important, but they are not enough. We need to look at different
|
||
models of how to do things that are longer term in nature and where the
|
||
technology is more integrated.” The integration mentioned by Jung—the
|
||
harmonious melding of software, electronics, advanced materials, and
|
||
computing horsepower—appears to be Musk’s gift. Squint ever so slightly,
|
||
and it looks like Musk could be using his skills to pave the way toward an
|
||
age of astonishing machines and science fiction dreams made manifest.
|
||
In that sense, Musk comes off much more like Thomas Edison than
|
||
Howard Hughes. He’s an inventor, celebrity businessman, and industrialist
|
||
able to take big ideas and turn them into big products. He’s employing
|
||
thousands of people to forge metal in American factories at a time when this
|
||
was thought to be impossible. Born in South Africa, Musk now looks like
|
||
America’s most innovative industrialist and outlandish thinker and the
|
||
person most likely to set Silicon Valley on a more ambitious course.
|
||
Because of Musk, Americans could wake up in ten years with the most
|
||
modern highway in the world: a transit system run by thousands of solarpowered
|
||
charging stations and traversed by electric cars. By that time,
|
||
SpaceX may well be sending up rockets every day, taking people and things
|
||
to dozens of habitats and making preparations for longer treks to Mars.
|
||
These advances are simultaneously difficult to fathom and seemingly
|
||
inevitable if Musk can simply buy enough time to make them work. As his
|
||
ex-wife, Justine, put it, “He does what he wants, and he is relentless about
|
||
it. It’s Elon’s world, and the rest of us live in it.”
|
||
2
|
||
AFRICA
|
||
THE PUBLIC FIRST MET ELON REEVE MUSK IN 1984. The South
|
||
African trade publication PC and Office Technology published the source
|
||
code to a video game Musk had designed. Called Blastar, the sciencefiction-
|
||
inspired space game required 167 lines of instructions to run. This
|
||
was back in the day when early computer users were required to type out
|
||
commands to make their machines do much of anything. In that context,
|
||
Musk’s game did not shine as a marvel of computer science but it certainly
|
||
surpassed what most twelve-year-olds were kicking out at the time. Its
|
||
coverage in the magazine netted Musk five hundred dollars and provided
|
||
some early hints about his character. The Blastar spread on page 69 of the
|
||
magazine shows that the young man wanted to go by the sci-fi-authorsounding
|
||
name E. R. Musk and that he already had visions of grand
|
||
conquests dancing in his head. The brief explainer states, “In this game you
|
||
have to destroy an alien space freighter, which is carrying deadly Hydrogen
|
||
Bombs and Status Beam Machines. This game makes good use of sprites
|
||
and animation, and in this sense makes the listing worth reading.” (As of
|
||
this writing, not even the Internet knows what “status beam machines” are.)
|
||
A boy fantasizing about space and battles between good and evil is
|
||
anything but amazing. A boy who takes these fantasies seriously is more
|
||
remarkable. Such was the case with the young Elon Musk. By the middle of
|
||
his teenage years, Musk had blended fantasy and reality to the point that
|
||
they were hard to separate in his mind. Musk came to see man’s fate in the
|
||
universe as a personal obligation. If that meant pursuing cleaner energy
|
||
technology or building spaceships to extend the human species’s reach, then
|
||
so be it. Musk would find a way to make these things happen. “Maybe I
|
||
read too many comics as a kid,” Musk said. “In the comics, it always seems
|
||
like they are trying to save the world. It seemed like one should try to make
|
||
the world a better place because the inverse makes no sense.”
|
||
At around age fourteen, Musk had a full-on existential crisis. He tried to
|
||
deal with it like many gifted adolescents do, turning to religious and
|
||
philosophical texts. Musk sampled a handful of ideologies and then ended
|
||
up more or less back where he had started, embracing the sci-fi lessons
|
||
found in one of the most influential books in his life: The Hitchhiker’s
|
||
Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams. “He points out that one of the
|
||
really tough things is figuring out what questions to ask,” Musk said. “Once
|
||
you figure out the question, then the answer is relatively easy. I came to the
|
||
conclusion that really we should aspire to increase the scope and scale of
|
||
human consciousness in order to better understand what questions to ask.”
|
||
The teenage Musk then arrived at his ultralogical mission statement. “The
|
||
only thing that makes sense to do is strive for greater collective
|
||
enlightenment,” he said.
|
||
It’s easy enough to spot some of the underpinnings of Musk’s search for
|
||
purpose. Born in 1971, he grew up in Pretoria, a large city in the
|
||
northeastern part of South Africa, just an hour’s drive from Johannesburg.
|
||
The specter of apartheid was present throughout his childhood, as South
|
||
Africa frequently boiled over with tension and violence. Blacks and whites
|
||
clashed, as did blacks of different tribes. Musk turned four years old just
|
||
days after the Soweto Uprising, in which hundreds of black students died
|
||
while protesting decrees of the white government. For years South Africa
|
||
faced sanctions imposed by other nations due to its racist policies. Musk
|
||
had the luxury of traveling abroad during his childhood and would have
|
||
gotten a flavor for how outsiders viewed South Africa.
|
||
But what had even more of an impact on Musk’s personality was the
|
||
white Afrikaner culture so prevalent in Pretoria and the surrounding areas.
|
||
Hypermasculine behavior was celebrated and tough jocks were revered.
|
||
While Musk enjoyed a level of privilege, he lived as an outsider whose
|
||
reserved personality and geeky inclinations ran against the prevailing
|
||
attitudes of the time. His notion that something about the world had gone
|
||
awry received constant reinforcement, and Musk, almost from his earliest
|
||
days, plotted an escape from his surroundings and dreamed of a place that
|
||
would allow his personality and dreams to flourish. He saw America in its
|
||
most clichéd form, as the land of opportunity and the most likely stage for
|
||
making the realization of his dreams possible. This is how it came to pass
|
||
that a lonesome, gawky South African boy who talked with the utmost
|
||
sincerity about pursuing “collective enlightenment” ended up as America’s
|
||
most adventurous industrialist.
|
||
When Musk did finally reach the United States in his twenties, it
|
||
marked a return to his ancestral roots. Family trees suggest that ancestors
|
||
bearing the Swiss German surname of Haldeman on the maternal side of
|
||
Musk’s family left Europe for New York during the Revolutionary War.
|
||
From New York, they spread out to the prairies of the Midwest—Illinois
|
||
and Minnesota, in particular. “We had people that fought on both sides of
|
||
the Civil War apparently and were a family of farmers,” said Scott
|
||
Haldeman, Musk’s uncle and the unofficial family historian.
|
||
Throughout his childhood, boys teased Musk because of his unusual
|
||
name. He earned the first part of it from his great-grandfather John Elon
|
||
Haldeman, who was born in 18721 and grew up in Illinois before heading to
|
||
Minnesota. There he would meet his wife, Almeda Jane Norman, who was
|
||
five years younger. By 1902, the couple had settled down in a log cabin in
|
||
the central Minnesota town of Pequot and given birth to their son Joshua
|
||
Norman Haldeman, Musk’s grandfather. He would grow up to become an
|
||
eccentric and exceptional man and a model for Musk.*
|
||
Joshua Norman Haldeman is described as an athletic, self-reliant boy. In
|
||
1907, his family moved to the prairies of Saskatchewan, and his father died
|
||
shortly thereafter when Joshua was just seven, leaving the boy to help run
|
||
the house. He took to the wide-open land and picked up bronco horseback
|
||
riding, boxing, and wrestling. Haldeman would break in horses for local
|
||
farmers, often hurting himself in the process, and he organized one of
|
||
Canada’s first rodeos. Family pictures show Joshua dressed in a decorative
|
||
pair of chaps demonstrating his rope-spinning skills. As a teenager,
|
||
Haldeman left home to get a degree from the Palmer School of Chiropractic
|
||
in Iowa and then returned to Saskatchewan to become a farmer.
|
||
When the depression hit in the 1930s, Haldeman fell into a financial
|
||
crisis. He could not afford to keep up with bank loans on his equipment and
|
||
had five thousand acres of land seized. “From then on, Dad didn’t believe in
|
||
banks or holding on to money,” said Scott Haldeman, who would go on to
|
||
receive his chiropractic degree from the same school as his father and
|
||
become one of the world’s top spinal pain experts. After losing the farm
|
||
around 1934, Haldeman lived something of a nomadic existence that his
|
||
grandson would replicate in Canada decades later. Standing six feet, three
|
||
inches, he did odd jobs as a construction worker and rodeo performer before
|
||
settling down as a chiropractor.*
|
||
By 1948, Haldeman had married a Canadian dance studio instructor,
|
||
Winnifred Josephine Fletcher, or Wyn, and built a booming chiropractic
|
||
practice. That year, the family, which already included a son and a daughter,
|
||
welcomed twin daughters Kaye and Maye, Musk’s mother. The children
|
||
lived in a three-story, twenty-room house that included a dance studio to let
|
||
Wyn keep teaching students. Ever in search of something new to do,
|
||
Haldeman had picked up flying and bought his own plane. The family
|
||
gained some measure of notoriety as people heard about Haldeman and his
|
||
wife packing their kids into the back of the single-engine craft and heading
|
||
off on excursions all around North America. Haldeman would often show
|
||
up at political and chiropractic meetings in the plane and later wrote a book
|
||
with his wife called The Flying Haldemans: Pity the Poor Private Pilot.
|
||
Haldeman seemed to have everything going for him when, in 1950, he
|
||
decided to give it all away. The doctor-cum-politician had long railed
|
||
against government interference in the lives of individuals and had come to
|
||
see the Canadian bureaucracy as too meddlesome. A man who forbade
|
||
swearing, smoking, Coca-Cola, and refined flour at his house, Haldeman
|
||
contended that the moral character of Canada had started to decline.
|
||
Haldeman also possessed an enduring lust for adventure. And so, over the
|
||
course of a few months, the family sold their house and dance and
|
||
chiropractic practices and decided to move to South Africa—a place
|
||
Haldeman had never been. Scott Haldeman remembers helping his father
|
||
disassemble the family’s Bellanca Cruisair (1948) airplane and put it into
|
||
crates before shipping it to Africa. Once in South Africa, the family rebuilt
|
||
the plane and used it to scour the country for a nice place to live, ultimately
|
||
settling on Pretoria, where Haldeman set up a new chiropractic practice.
|
||
The family’s spirit for adventure seemed to know no bounds. In 1952,
|
||
Joshua and Wyn made a 22,000-mile round-trip journey in their plane,
|
||
flying up through Africa to Scotland and Norway. Wyn served as the
|
||
navigator and, though not a licensed pilot, would sometimes take over the
|
||
flying duties. The couple topped this effort in 1954, flying 30,000 miles to
|
||
Australia and back. Newspapers reported on the couple’s trip, and they’re
|
||
believed to be the only private pilots to get from Africa to Australia in a
|
||
single-engine plane.*
|
||
When not up in the air, the Haldemans were out in the bush going on
|
||
great, monthlong expeditions to find the Lost City of the Kalahari Desert, a
|
||
supposed abandoned city in southern Africa. A family photo from one of
|
||
these excursions shows the five children in the middle of the African bush.
|
||
They have gathered around a large metal pot being warmed by the embers
|
||
of a campfire. The children look relaxed as they sit in folding chairs, legs
|
||
crossed and reading books. Behind them is the ruby-red Bellanca plane, a
|
||
tent, and a car. The tranquility of the scene belies how dangerous these trips
|
||
were. During one incident, the family’s truck hit a tree stump and forced the
|
||
bumper through the radiator. Stuck in the middle of nowhere with no means
|
||
of communication, Joshua worked for three days to fix the truck, while the
|
||
family hunted for food. At other times, hyenas and leopards would circle
|
||
the campfire at night, and, one morning, the family woke to find a lion three
|
||
feet away from their main table. Joshua grabbed the first object he could
|
||
find—a lamp—waved it, and told the lion to go away. And it did.*
|
||
The Haldemans had a laissez-faire approach to raising their children,
|
||
which would extend over the generations to Musk. Their kids were never
|
||
punished, as Joshua believed they would intuit their way to proper behavior.
|
||
When mom and dad went off on their tremendous flights, the kids were left
|
||
at home. Scott Haldeman can’t remember his father setting foot at his
|
||
school a single time even though his son was captain of the rugby team and
|
||
a prefect. “To him, that was all just anticipated,” said Scott Haldeman. “We
|
||
were left with the impression that we were capable of anything. You just
|
||
have to make a decision and do it. In that sense, my father would be very
|
||
proud of Elon.”
|
||
Haldeman died in 1974 at the age of seventy-two. He’d been doing
|
||
practice landings in his plane and didn’t see a wire attached to a pair of
|
||
poles. The wire caught the plane’s wheels and flipped the craft, and
|
||
Haldeman broke his neck. Elon was a toddler at the time. But throughout
|
||
his childhood, Elon heard many stories about his grandfather’s exploits and
|
||
sat through countless slide shows that documented his travels and trips
|
||
through the bush. “My grandmother told these tales of how they almost died
|
||
several times along their journeys,” Musk said. “They were flying in a plane
|
||
with literally no instruments—not even a radio, and they had road maps
|
||
instead of aerial maps, and some of those weren’t even correct. My
|
||
grandfather had this desire for adventure, exploration doing crazy things.”
|
||
Elon buys into the idea that his unusual tolerance for risk may well have
|
||
been inherited directly from his grandfather. Many years after the last slide
|
||
show, Elon tried to find and purchase the red Bellanca plane but could not
|
||
locate it.
|
||
Maye Musk, Elon’s mother, grew up idolizing her parents. In her youth,
|
||
she was considered a nerd. She liked math and science and did well at the
|
||
coursework. By the age of fifteen, however, people had taken notice of
|
||
some of her other attributes. Maye was gorgeous. Tall with ash-blond hair,
|
||
Maye had the high cheekbones and angular features that would make her
|
||
stand out anywhere. A friend of the family ran a modeling school, and
|
||
Maye took some courses. On the weekends, she did runway shows,
|
||
magazine shoots, occasionally showed up at a senator’s or ambassador’s
|
||
home for an event, and ended up as a finalist for Miss South Africa. (Maye
|
||
has continued to model into her sixties, appearing on the covers of
|
||
magazines like New York and Elle and in Beyoncé’s music videos.)
|
||
Maye and Elon’s father, Errol Musk, grew up in the same neighborhood.
|
||
They met for the first time when Maye, born in 1948, was about eleven.
|
||
Errol was the cool kid to Maye’s nerd but had a crush on her for years. “He
|
||
fell in love with me because of my legs and my teeth,” said Maye. The two
|
||
would date on and off throughout their time at university. And, according to
|
||
Maye, Errol spent about seven years as a relentless suitor seeking her hand
|
||
in marriage and eventually breaking her will. “He just never stopped
|
||
proposing,” she said.
|
||
Their marriage was complicated from the start. Maye became pregnant
|
||
during the couple’s honeymoon and gave birth to Elon on June 28, 1971,
|
||
nine months and two days after her wedding day. While they may not have
|
||
enjoyed marital bliss, the couple carved out a decent life for themselves in
|
||
Pretoria. Errol worked as a mechanical and electrical engineer and handled
|
||
large projects such as office buildings, retail complexes, residential
|
||
subdivisions, and an air force base, while Maye set up a practice as a
|
||
dietician. A bit more than a year after Elon’s birth came his brother Kimbal,
|
||
and soon thereafter came their sister Tosca.
|
||
Elon exhibited all the traits of a curious, energetic tot. He picked things
|
||
up easily, and Maye, like many mothers do, pegged her son as brilliant and
|
||
precocious. “He seemed to understand things quicker than the other kids,”
|
||
she said. The perplexing thing was that Elon seemed to drift off into a
|
||
trance at times. People spoke to him, but nothing got through when he had a
|
||
certain, distant look in his eyes. This happened so often that Elon’s parents
|
||
and doctors thought he might be deaf. “Sometimes, he just didn’t hear you,”
|
||
said Maye. Doctors ran a series of tests on Elon, and elected to remove his
|
||
adenoid glands, which can improve hearing in children. “Well, it didn’t
|
||
change,” said Maye. Elon’s condition had far more to do with the wiring of
|
||
his mind than how his auditory system functioned. “He goes into his brain,
|
||
and then you just see he is in another world,” Maye said. “He still does that.
|
||
Now I just leave him be because I know he is designing a new rocket or
|
||
something.”
|
||
Other children did not respond well to these dreamlike states. You could
|
||
do jumping jacks right beside Musk or yell at him, and he would not even
|
||
notice. He kept right on thinking, and those around him judged that he was
|
||
either rude or really weird. “I do think Elon was always a little different but
|
||
in a nerdy way,” Maye said. “It didn’t endear him to his peers.”
|
||
For Musk, these pensive moments were wonderful. At five and six, he
|
||
had found a way to block out the world and dedicate all of his concentration
|
||
to a single task. Part of this ability stemmed from the very visual way in
|
||
which Musk’s mind worked. He could see images in his mind’s eye with a
|
||
clarity and detail that we might associate today with an engineering drawing
|
||
produced by computer software. “It seems as though the part of the brain
|
||
that’s usually reserved for visual processing—the part that is used to
|
||
process images coming in from my eyes—gets taken over by internal
|
||
thought processes,” Musk said. “I can’t do this as much now because there
|
||
are so many things demanding my attention but, as a kid, it happened a lot.
|
||
That large part of your brain that’s used to handle incoming images gets
|
||
used for internal thinking.” Computers split their hardest jobs between two
|
||
types of chips. There are graphics chips that deal with processing the
|
||
images produced by a television show stream or video game and
|
||
computational chips that handle general purpose tasks and mathematical
|
||
operations. Over time, Musk has ended up thinking that his brain has the
|
||
equivalent of a graphics chip. It allows him to see things out in the world,
|
||
replicate them in his mind, and imagine how they might change or behave
|
||
when interacting with other objects. “For images and numbers, I can
|
||
process their interrelationships and algorithmic relationships,” Musk said.
|
||
“Acceleration, momentum, kinetic energy—how those sorts of things will
|
||
be affected by objects comes through very vividly.”
|
||
The most striking part of Elon’s character as a young boy was his
|
||
compulsion to read. From a very young age, he seemed to have a book in
|
||
his hands at all times. “It was not unusual for him to read ten hours a day,”
|
||
said Kimbal. “If it was the weekend, he could go through two books in a
|
||
day.” The family went on numerous shopping excursions in which they
|
||
realized mid-trip that Elon had gone missing. Maye or Kimbal would pop
|
||
into the nearest bookstore and find Elon somewhere near the back sitting on
|
||
the floor and reading in one of his trancelike states.
|
||
As Elon got older, he would take himself to the bookstore when school
|
||
ended at 2 P.M. and stay there until about 6 P.M., when his parents returned
|
||
home from work. He plowed through fiction books and then comics and
|
||
then nonfiction titles. “Sometimes they kicked me out of the store, but
|
||
usually not,” Elon said. He listed The Lord of the Rings, Isaac Asimov’s
|
||
Foundation series, and Robert Heinlein’s The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress as
|
||
some of his favorites, alongside The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. “At
|
||
one point, I ran out of books to read at the school library and the
|
||
neighborhood library,” Musk said. “This is maybe the third or fourth grade.
|
||
I tried to convince the librarian to order books for me. So then, I started to
|
||
read the Encyclopaedia Britannica. That was so helpful. You don’t know
|
||
what you don’t know. You realize there are all these things out there.”
|
||
Elon, in fact, churned through two sets of encyclopedias—a feat that did
|
||
little to help him make friends. The boy had a photographic memory, and
|
||
the encyclopedias turned him into a fact factory. He came off as a classic
|
||
know-it-all. At the dinner table, Tosca would wonder aloud about the
|
||
distance from Earth to the Moon. Elon would spit out the exact
|
||
measurement at perigee and apogee. “If we had a question, Tosca would
|
||
always say, ‘Just ask genius boy,’” Maye said. “We could ask him about
|
||
anything. He just remembered it.” Elon cemented his bookworm reputation
|
||
through his clumsy ways. “He’s not very sporty,” said Maye.
|
||
Maye tells the story of Elon playing outside one night with his siblings
|
||
and cousins. When one of them complained of being frightened by the dark,
|
||
Elon pointed out that “dark is merely the absence of light,” which did little
|
||
to reassure the scared child. As a youngster, Elon’s constant yearning to
|
||
correct people and his abrasive manner put off other kids and added to his
|
||
feelings of isolation. Elon genuinely thought that people would be happy to
|
||
hear about the flaws in their thinking. “Kids don’t like answers like that,”
|
||
said Maye. “They would say, ‘Elon, we are not playing with you anymore.’
|
||
I felt very sad as a mother because I think he wanted friends. Kimbal and
|
||
Tosca would bring home friends, and Elon wouldn’t, and he would want to
|
||
play with them. But he was awkward, you know.” Maye urged Kimbal and
|
||
Tosca to include Elon. They responded as kids will. “But Mom, he’s not
|
||
fun.” As he got older, however, Elon would have strong, affectionate
|
||
attachments to his siblings and cousins—his mother’s sister’s sons. Though
|
||
he kept to himself at school, Elon had an outgoing nature with members of
|
||
his family and eventually took on the role of elder and chief instigator
|
||
among them.
|
||
For a while, life inside the Musk household was quite good. The family
|
||
owned one of the biggest houses in Pretoria thanks to the success of Errol’s
|
||
engineering business. There’s a portrait of the three Musk children taken
|
||
when Elon was about eight years old that shows three blond, fit children
|
||
sitting next to each other on a brick porch with Pretoria’s famous purple
|
||
jacaranda trees in the background. Elon has large, rounded cheeks and a
|
||
broad smile.
|
||
Then, not long after the photo was taken, the family fell apart. His
|
||
parents separated and divorced within the year. Maye moved with the kids
|
||
to the family’s holiday home in Durban, on South Africa’s eastern coast.
|
||
After a couple of years of this arrangement, Elon decided he wanted to live
|
||
with his father. “My father seemed sort of sad and lonely, and my mom had
|
||
three kids, and he didn’t have any,” Musk said. “It seemed unfair.” Some
|
||
members of Musk’s family have bought into this idea that Elon’s logical
|
||
nature propelled him, while others claim that his father’s mother, Cora,
|
||
exerted a lot of pressure on the boy. “I could not understand why he would
|
||
leave this happy home I made for him—this really happy home,” said
|
||
Maye. “But Elon is his own person.” Justine Musk, Elon’s ex-wife and the
|
||
mother of his five boys, theorized that Elon identified more with the alpha
|
||
male of the house and wasn’t bothered by the emotional aspect of the
|
||
decision. “I don’t think he was particularly close with either parent,” Justine
|
||
said, while describing the Musk clan overall as being cool and the opposite
|
||
of doting. Kimbal later opted to live with Errol as well, saying simply that
|
||
by nature a son wants to live with his father.
|
||
Whenever the topic of Errol arrives, members of Elon’s family clam up.
|
||
They’re in agreement that he is not a pleasant man to be around but have
|
||
declined to elaborate. Errol has since been remarried, and Elon has two,
|
||
younger half sisters of whom he’s quite protective. Elon and his siblings
|
||
seem determined not to bad-mouth Errol publicly, so as not to upset the
|
||
sisters.
|
||
The basics are as follows: Errol’s side of the family has deep South
|
||
African roots. The Musk clan can trace its presence in the country back
|
||
about two hundred years and claim an entry in Pretoria’s first phone book.
|
||
Errol’s father, Walter Henry James Musk, was an army sergeant. “I
|
||
remember him almost never talking,” Elon said. “He would just drink
|
||
whiskey and be grumpy and was very good at doing crossword puzzles.”
|
||
Cora Amelia Musk, Errol’s mother, was born in England to a family famed
|
||
for its intellectual genes. She embraced both the spotlight and her
|
||
grandchildren. “Our grandmother had this very dominant personality and
|
||
was quite an enterprising woman,” said Kimbal. “She was a very big
|
||
influence in our lives.” Elon considered his relationship with Cora—or
|
||
Nana, as he called her—particularly tight. “After the divorce, she took care
|
||
of me quite a lot,” he said. “She would pick me up from school, and I would
|
||
hang out with her playing Scrabble and that type of thing.”
|
||
On the surface, life at Errol’s house seemed grand. He had plenty of
|
||
books for Elon to read from cover to cover and money to buy a computer
|
||
and other objects that Elon desired. Errol took his children on numerous
|
||
trips overseas. “It was an amazingly fun time,” said Kimbal. “I have a lot of
|
||
fun memories from that.” Errol also impressed the kids with his intellect
|
||
and dealt out some practical lessons. “He was a talented engineer,” Elon
|
||
said. “He knew how every physical object worked.” Both Elon and Kimbal
|
||
were required to go to the sites of Errol’s engineering jobs and learn how to
|
||
lay bricks, install plumbing, fit windows, and put in electrical wiring.
|
||
“There were fun moments,” Elon said.
|
||
Errol was what Kimbal described as “ultra-present and very intense.”
|
||
He would sit Elon and Kimbal down and lecture at them for three to four
|
||
hours without the boys being able to respond. He seemed to delight in being
|
||
hard on the boys and sucked the fun out of common childhood diversions.
|
||
From time to time, Elon tried to convince his dad to move to America and
|
||
often talked about his intentions to live in the United States later in life.
|
||
Errol countered such dreams by trying to teach Elon a lesson. He sent the
|
||
housekeepers away and had Elon do all the chores to let him know what it
|
||
was like “to play American.”
|
||
While Elon and Kimbal declined to provide an exact recounting, they
|
||
clearly experienced something awful and profound during those years with
|
||
their father. They both talk about having to endure some form of
|
||
psychological torture. “He definitely has serious chemical stuff,” said
|
||
Kimbal. “Which I am sure Elon and I have inherited. It was a very
|
||
emotionally challenging upbringing, but it made us who we are today.”
|
||
Maye bristled when the subject of Errol came up. “Nobody gets along with
|
||
him,” she said. “He is not nice to anyone. I don’t want to tell stories because
|
||
they are horrendous. You know, you just don’t talk about it. There are kids
|
||
and grandkids involved.”
|
||
When asked to chat about Elon, Errol responded via e-mail: “Elon was a
|
||
very independent and focused child at home with me. He loved computer
|
||
science before anyone even knew what it was in South Africa and his
|
||
ability was widely recognized by the time he was 12 years old. Elon and his
|
||
brother Kimbal’s activities as children and young men were so many and
|
||
varied that it’s difficult to name just one, as they travelled together with me
|
||
extensively in S. Africa and the world at large, visiting all the continents
|
||
regularly from the age of six onwards. Elon and his brother and sister were
|
||
and continue to be exemplary, in every way a father could want. I’m very
|
||
proud of what Elon’s accomplished.”
|
||
Errol copied Elon on this e-mail, and Elon warned me off corresponding
|
||
with his father, insisting that his father’s take on past events could not be
|
||
trusted. “He is an odd duck,” Musk said. But, when pressed for more
|
||
information, Musk dodged. “It would certainly be accurate to say that I did
|
||
not have a good childhood,” he said. “It may sound good. It was not absent
|
||
of good, but it was not a happy childhood. It was like misery. He’s good at
|
||
making life miserable—that’s for sure. He can take any situation no matter
|
||
how good it is and make it bad. He’s not a happy man. I don’t know . . .
|
||
fuck . . . I don’t know how someone becomes like he is. It would just cause
|
||
too much trouble to tell you any more.” Elon and Justine have vowed that
|
||
their children will not be allowed to meet Errol.
|
||
When Elon was nearly ten years old, he saw a computer for the first
|
||
time, at the Sandton City Mall in Johannesburg. “There was an electronics
|
||
store that mostly did hi-fi-type stuff, but then, in one corner, they started
|
||
stocking a few computers,” Musk said. He felt awed right away—“It was
|
||
like, ‘Whoa. Holy shit!’”—by this machine that could be programmed to do
|
||
a person’s bidding. “I had to have that and then hounded my father to get
|
||
the computer,” Musk said. Soon he owned a Commodore VIC-20, a popular
|
||
home machine that went on sale in 1980. Elon’s computer arrived with five
|
||
kilobytes of memory and a workbook on the BASIC programming
|
||
language. “It was supposed to take like six months to get through all the
|
||
lessons,” Elon said. “I just got super OCD on it and stayed up for three days
|
||
with no sleep and did the entire thing. It seemed like the most supercompelling
|
||
thing I had ever seen.” Despite being an engineer, Musk’s father
|
||
was something of a Luddite and dismissive of the machine. Elon recounted
|
||
that “he said it was just for games and that you’d never be able to do real
|
||
engineering on it. I just said, ‘Whatever.’”
|
||
While bookish and into his new computer, Elon quite often led Kimbal
|
||
and his cousins (Kaye’s children) Russ, Lyndon, and Peter Rive on
|
||
adventures. They dabbled one year in selling Easter eggs door-to-door in
|
||
the neighborhood. The eggs were not well decorated, but the boys still
|
||
marked them up a few hundred percent for their wealthy neighbors. Elon
|
||
also spearheaded their work with homemade explosives and rockets. South
|
||
Africa did not have the Estes rocket kits popular among hobbyists, so Elon
|
||
would create his own chemical compounds and put them inside of canisters.
|
||
“It is remarkable how many things you can get to explode,” Elon said.
|
||
“Saltpeter, sulfur, and charcoal are the basic ingredients for gunpowder, and
|
||
then if you combine a strong acid with a strong alkaline, that will generally
|
||
release a lot of energy. Granulated chlorine with brake fluid—that’s quite
|
||
impressive. I’m lucky I have all my fingers.” When not handling
|
||
explosives, the boys put on layers of clothing and goggles and shot each
|
||
other with pellet guns. Elon and Kimbal raced dirt bikes against each other
|
||
in sandlots until Kimbal flew off his bike one day and hurtled into a barbed
|
||
wire fence.
|
||
As the years went on, the cousins took their entrepreneurial pursuits
|
||
more seriously, even attempting at one point to start a video arcade. Without
|
||
any parents knowing, the boys picked out a spot for their arcade, got a
|
||
lease, and started navigating the permit process for their business.
|
||
Eventually, they had to get someone over eighteen to sign a legal document,
|
||
and neither the Rives’ father nor Errol would oblige. It would take a couple
|
||
of decades, but Elon and the Rives would eventually go into business
|
||
together.
|
||
The boys’ most audacious exploits may have been their trips between
|
||
Pretoria and Johannesburg. During the 1980s, South Africa could be a
|
||
terribly violent place, and the thirty-five-mile train trip linking Pretoria and
|
||
Johannesburg stood out as one of the world’s more dangerous rides. Kimbal
|
||
counted the train journeys as formative experiences for him and Elon.
|
||
“South Africa was not a happy-go-lucky place, and that has an impact on
|
||
you. We saw some really rough stuff. It was part of an atypical upbringing
|
||
—just this insane set of experiences that changes how you view risk. You
|
||
don’t grow up thinking getting a job is the hard part. That’s not interesting
|
||
enough.”
|
||
The boys ranged in age from about thirteen to sixteen and chased a mix
|
||
of parties and geeky exploits in Johannesburg. During one jaunt, they went
|
||
to a Dungeons & Dragons tournament. “That was us being nerd master
|
||
supremes,” Musk said. All of the boys were into the role-playing game,
|
||
which requires someone to help set the mood for a contest by imagining and
|
||
then describing a scene. “You have entered a room, and there is a chest in
|
||
the corner. What will you do? . . . You open the chest. You’ve sprung a trap.
|
||
Dozens of goblins are on the loose.” Elon excelled at this Dungeon Master
|
||
role and had memorized the texts detailing the powers of monsters and
|
||
other characters. “Under Elon’s leadership, we played the role so well and
|
||
won the tournament,” said Peter Rive. “Winning requires this incredible
|
||
imagination, and Elon really set the tone for keeping people captivated and
|
||
inspired.”
|
||
The Elon that his peers encountered at school was far less inspirational.
|
||
Throughout middle and high school, Elon bounced around a couple of
|
||
institutions. He spent the equivalent of eighth and ninth grades at Bryanston
|
||
High School. One afternoon Elon and Kimbal were sitting at the top of a
|
||
flight of concrete stairs eating when a boy decided to go after Elon. “I was
|
||
basically hiding from this gang that was fucking hunting me down for God
|
||
knows fucking why. I think I accidentally bumped this guy at assembly that
|
||
morning and he’d taken some huge offense at that.” The boy crept up
|
||
behind Musk, kicked him in the head, and then shoved him down the stairs.
|
||
Musk tumbled down the entire flight, and a handful of boys pounced on
|
||
him, some of them kicking Musk in the side and the ringleader bashing his
|
||
head against the ground. “They were a bunch of fucking psychos,” Musk
|
||
said. “I blacked out.” Kimbal watched in horror and feared for Elon’s life.
|
||
He rushed down the stairs to find Elon’s face bloodied and swollen. “He
|
||
looked like someone who had just been in the boxing ring,” Kimbal said.
|
||
Elon then went to the hospital. “It was about a week before I could get back
|
||
to school,” Musk said. (During a news conference in 2013, Elon disclosed
|
||
that he’d had a nose job to deal with the lingering effects of this beating.)
|
||
For three or four years, Musk endured relentless hounding at the hands
|
||
of these bullies. They went so far as to beat up a boy that Musk considered
|
||
his best friend until the child agreed to stop hanging out with Musk.
|
||
“Moreover, they got him—they got my best fucking friend—to lure me out
|
||
of hiding so they could beat me up,” Musk said. “And that fucking hurt.”
|
||
While telling this part of the story, Musk’s eyes welled up and his voice
|
||
quivered. “For some reason, they decided that I was it, and they were going
|
||
to go after me nonstop. That’s what made growing up difficult. For a
|
||
number of years, there was no respite. You get chased around by gangs at
|
||
school who tried to beat the shit out of me, and then I’d come home, and it
|
||
would just be awful there as well. It was just like nonstop horrible.”
|
||
Musk spent the latter stages of his high school career at Pretoria Boys
|
||
High School, where a growth spurt and the generally better behavior of the
|
||
students made life more bearable. While a public school by definition,
|
||
Pretoria Boys has functioned more like a private school for the last hundred
|
||
years. It’s the place you send a young man to get him ready to attend
|
||
Oxford or Cambridge.
|
||
The boys from Musk’s class remember him as a likable, quiet,
|
||
unspectacular student. “There were four or five boys that were considered
|
||
the very brightest,” said Deon Prinsloo, who sat behind Elon in some
|
||
classes. “Elon was not one of them.” Such comments were echoed by a half
|
||
dozen boys who also noted that Musk’s lack of interest in sports left him
|
||
isolated in the midst of an athletics-obsessed culture. “Honestly, there were
|
||
just no signs that he was going to be a billionaire,” said Gideon Fourie,
|
||
another classmate. “He was never in a leadership position at school. I was
|
||
rather surprised to see what has happened to him.”
|
||
While Musk didn’t have any close friends at school, his eccentric
|
||
interests did leave an impression. One boy—Ted Wood—remembered
|
||
Musk bringing model rockets to school and blasting them off during breaks.
|
||
This was not the only hint of his aspirations. During a science-class debate,
|
||
Elon gained attention for railing against fossil fuels in favor of solar power
|
||
—an almost sacrilegious stance in a country devoted to mining the earth’s
|
||
natural resources. “He always had firm views on things,” said Wood.
|
||
Terency Beney, a classmate who stayed in touch with Elon over the years,
|
||
claimed that Musk had started fantasizing about colonizing other planets in
|
||
high school as well.
|
||
In another nod to the future, Elon and Kimbal were chatting during a
|
||
class break outdoors when Wood interrupted them and asked what they
|
||
were going on about. “They said, ‘We are talking about whether there is a
|
||
need for branch banking in the financial industry and whether we will move
|
||
to paperless banking.’ I remember thinking that was such an absurd
|
||
comment to make. I said, ‘Yeah, that’s great.’”*
|
||
While Musk might not have been among the academic elite in his class,
|
||
he was among a handful of students with the grades and self-professed
|
||
interest to be selected for an experimental computer program. Students were
|
||
plucked out of a number of schools and brought together to learn the
|
||
BASIC, COBOL, and Pascal programming languages. Musk continued to
|
||
augment these technological leanings with his love of science fiction and
|
||
fantasy and tried his hand at writing stories that involved dragons and
|
||
supernatural beings. “I wanted to write something like Lord of the Rings,”
|
||
he said.
|
||
Maye viewed these high school years through a mother’s eyes and
|
||
recounted plenty of tales of Musk performing spectacular academic feats.
|
||
The video game he wrote, she said, impressed much older, more
|
||
experienced techies. He aced math exams well beyond his years. And he
|
||
had that incredible memory. The only reason he did not outrank the other
|
||
boys was a lack of interest in the work prescribed by the school.
|
||
As Musk saw it, “I just look at it as ‘What grades do I need to get where
|
||
I want to go?’ There were compulsory subjects like Afrikaans, and I just
|
||
didn’t see the point of learning that. It seemed ridiculous. I’d get a passing
|
||
grade and that was fine. Things like physics and computers—I got the
|
||
highest grade you can get in those. There needs to be a reason for a grade.
|
||
I’d rather play video games, write software, and read books than try and get
|
||
an A if there’s no point in getting an A. I can remember failing subjects in
|
||
like fourth and fifth grade. Then, my mother’s boyfriend told me I’d be held
|
||
back if I didn’t pass. I didn’t actually know you had to pass the subjects to
|
||
move to the next grade. I got the best grades in class after that.”
|
||
At seventeen, Musk left South Africa for Canada. He has recounted this
|
||
journey quite often in the press and typically leans on two descriptions of
|
||
the motivation for his flight. The short version is that Musk wanted to get to
|
||
the United States as quickly as possible and could use Canada as a pit stop
|
||
via his Canadian ancestry. The second go-to story that Musk relies on has
|
||
more of a social conscience. South Africa required military service at the
|
||
time. Musk wanted to avoid joining the military, he has said, because it
|
||
would have forced him to participate in the apartheid regime.
|
||
What rarely gets mentioned is that Musk attended the University of
|
||
Pretoria for five months before heading off on his grand adventure. He
|
||
began pursuing physics and engineering but put lackluster effort into the
|
||
work and soon dropped out of school. Musk characterized the time at
|
||
university as just something to do while he awaited his Canadian
|
||
documentation. In addition to being an inconsequential part of his life,
|
||
Musk lazing through school to avoid South Africa’s required military
|
||
service rather undermines the tale of a brooding, adventurous youth that he
|
||
likes to tell, which is likely why the stint at the University of Pretoria never
|
||
seems to come up.
|
||
There’s no question, though, that Musk had been pining to get to the
|
||
United States on a visceral level for a long time. Musk’s early inclination
|
||
toward computers and technology had fostered an intense interest in Silicon
|
||
Valley, and his trips overseas had reinforced the idea that America was the
|
||
place to get things done. South Africa, by contrast, presented far less
|
||
opportunity for an entrepreneurial soul. As Kimbal put it, “South Africa
|
||
was like a prison for someone like Elon.”
|
||
Musk’s opportunity to flee arrived with a change in the law that allowed
|
||
Maye to pass her Canadian citizenship to her children. Musk immediately
|
||
began researching how to complete the paperwork for this process. It took
|
||
about a year to receive the approvals from the Canadian government and to
|
||
secure a Canadian passport. “That’s when Elon said, ‘I’m leaving for
|
||
Canada,’” Maye said. In these pre-Internet days, Musk had to wait three
|
||
agonizing weeks to get a plane ticket. Once it arrived, and without
|
||
flinching, he left home for good.
|
||
3
|
||
CANADA
|
||
MUSK’S GREAT ESCAPE TO CANADA WAS NOT WELL
|
||
THOUGHT OUT. He knew of a great-uncle in Montreal, hopped on a flight
|
||
and hoped for the best. Upon landing in June 1988, Musk found a pay
|
||
phone and tried to use directory assistance to find his uncle. When that
|
||
didn’t work, he called his mother collect. She had bad news. Maye had sent
|
||
a letter to the uncle before Musk left and received a reply while her son was
|
||
in transit. The uncle had gone to Minnesota, meaning Musk had nowhere to
|
||
stay. Bags in hand, Musk headed for a youth hostel.
|
||
After spending a few days in Montreal exploring the city, Musk tried to
|
||
come up with a long-term plan. Maye had family scattered all across
|
||
Canada, and Musk began reaching out to them. He bought a countrywide
|
||
bus ticket that let him hop on and off as he pleased for one hundred dollars,
|
||
and opted to head to Saskatchewan, the former home of his grandfather.
|
||
After a 1,900-mile bus ride, he ended up in Swift Current, a town of fifteen
|
||
thousand people. Musk called a second cousin out of the blue from the bus
|
||
station and hitched a ride to his house.
|
||
Musk spent the next year working a series of odd jobs around Canada.
|
||
He tended vegetables and shoveled out grain bins at a cousin’s farm located
|
||
in the tiny town of Waldeck. Musk celebrated his eighteenth birthday there,
|
||
sharing a cake with the family he’d just met and a few strangers from the
|
||
neighborhood. After that, he learned to cut logs with a chain saw in
|
||
Vancouver, British Columbia. The hardest job Musk took came after a visit
|
||
to the unemployment office. He inquired about the job with the best wage,
|
||
which turned out to be a gig cleaning the boiler room of a lumber mill for
|
||
eighteen dollars an hour. “You have to put on this hazmat suit and then
|
||
shimmy through this little tunnel that you can barely fit in,” Musk said.
|
||
“Then, you have a shovel and you take the sand and goop and other residue,
|
||
which is still steaming hot, and you have to shovel it through the same hole
|
||
you came through. There is no escape. Someone else on the other side has
|
||
to shovel it into a wheelbarrow. If you stay in there for more than thirty
|
||
minutes, you get too hot and die.” Thirty people started out at the beginning
|
||
of the week. By the third day, five people were left. At the end of the week,
|
||
it was just Musk and two other men doing the work.
|
||
As Musk made his way around Canada, his brother, sister, and mother
|
||
were figuring out how to get there as well.* When Kimbal and Elon
|
||
eventually reunited in Canada, their headstrong, playful natures bloomed.
|
||
Elon ended up enrolling at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, in
|
||
1989. (He picked Queen’s over the University of Waterloo because he felt
|
||
there were more good-looking women at Queen’s.)2 Outside of his studies,
|
||
Elon would read the newspaper alongside Kimbal, and the two of them
|
||
would identify interesting people they would like to meet. They then took
|
||
turns cold-calling these people to ask if they were available to have lunch.
|
||
Among the harassed was the head of marketing for the Toronto Blue Jays
|
||
baseball team, a business writer for the Globe and Mail, and a top executive
|
||
at the Bank of Nova Scotia, Peter Nicholson. Nicholson remembered the
|
||
boys’ call well. “I was not in the habit of getting out-of-the-blue requests,”
|
||
he said. “I was perfectly prepared to have lunch with a couple of kids that
|
||
had that kind of gumption.” It took six months to get on Nicholson’s
|
||
calendar, but, sure enough, the Musk brothers made a three-hour train ride
|
||
and showed up on time.
|
||
Nicholson’s first exposure to the Musk brothers left him with an
|
||
impression many would share. Both presented themselves well and were
|
||
polite. Elon, though, clearly came off as the geekier, more awkward
|
||
counterpoint to the charismatic, personable Kimbal. “I became more
|
||
impressed and fascinated as I talked to them,” Nicholson said. “They were
|
||
so determined.” Nicholson ended up offering Elon a summer internship at
|
||
the bank and became his trusted advisor.
|
||
Not long after their initial meeting, Elon invited Peter Nicholson’s
|
||
daughter Christie to his birthday party. Christie showed up at Maye’s
|
||
Toronto apartment with a jar of homemade lemon curd in hand and was
|
||
greeted by Elon and about fifteen other people. Elon had never met Christie
|
||
before, but he went right up to her and led her to a couch. “Then, I believe
|
||
the second sentence out of his mouth was ‘I think a lot about electric cars,’”
|
||
Christie said. “And then he turned to me and said, ‘Do you think about
|
||
electric cars?’” The conversation left Christie, who is now a science writer,
|
||
with the distinct impression that Musk was handsome, affable, and a
|
||
tremendous nerd. “For whatever reason, I was so struck by that moment on
|
||
the sofa,” she said. “You could tell that this person was very different. He
|
||
captivated me in that way.”
|
||
With her angular features and blond hair, Christie fit Musk’s type, and
|
||
the two stayed in touch during Musk’s time in Canada. They never really
|
||
dated, but Christie found Musk interesting enough to have lengthy
|
||
conversations with him on the phone. “One night he told me, ‘If there was a
|
||
way that I could not eat, so I could work more, I would not eat. I wish there
|
||
was a way to get nutrients without sitting down for a meal.’ The enormity
|
||
of his work ethic at that age and his intensity jumped out. It seemed like one
|
||
of the more unusual things I had ever heard.”
|
||
A deeper relationship during this stint in Canada arose between Musk
|
||
and Justine Wilson, a fellow student at Queen’s. Leggy with long, brown
|
||
hair, Wilson radiated romance and sexual energy. Justine had already fallen
|
||
in love with an older man and then ditched him to go to college. Her next
|
||
conquest was meant to wear a leather jacket and be a damaged, James Dean
|
||
sort. As fortune would have it, however, the clean-cut, posh-sounding Musk
|
||
spotted Wilson on campus and went right to work trying to date her. “She
|
||
looked pretty great,” Musk said. “She was also smart and this intellectual
|
||
with sort of an edge. She had a black belt in tae kwon do and was semibohemian
|
||
and, you know, like the hot chick on campus.” He made his first
|
||
move just outside of her dorm, where he pretended to have bumped into her
|
||
by accident and then reminded her that they had met previously at a party.
|
||
Justine, only one week into school, agreed to Musk’s proposal of an ice
|
||
cream date. When he arrived to pick up Wilson, Musk found a note on the
|
||
dorm room door, notifying him that he’d been stood up. “It said that she had
|
||
to go study for an exam and couldn’t make it and that she was sorry,” Musk
|
||
said. Musk then hunted down Justine’s best friend and did some research,
|
||
asking where Justine usually studied and what her favorite flavor of ice
|
||
cream was. Later, as Justine hid in the student center studying Spanish,
|
||
Musk appeared behind her with a couple of melting chocolate chip ice
|
||
cream cones in hand.
|
||
Wilson had dreamed of having a torrid romance with a writer. “I wanted
|
||
to be Sylvia and Ted,” she said. What she fell for instead was a relentless,
|
||
ambitious geek. The pair attended the same abnormal-psychology class and
|
||
compared their grades following an exam. Justine notched a 97, Musk a 98.
|
||
“He went back to the professor, and talked his way into the two points he
|
||
lost and got a hundred,” Justine said. “It felt like we were always
|
||
competing.” Musk had a romantic side as well. One time he sent Wilson a
|
||
dozen roses, each with its own note, and he also gifted Wilson a copy of
|
||
The Prophet filled with handwritten romantic musings. “He can sweep you
|
||
off your feet,” Justine said.
|
||
During their university years, the two youngsters were off and on, with
|
||
Musk having to work hard to keep the relationship going. “She was hip and
|
||
dated the coolest guys and wasn’t interested in Elon at all,” Maye said. “So
|
||
that was hard on him.” Musk pursued a couple of other girls, but kept
|
||
returning to Justine. Any time she acted cool toward him, Musk responded
|
||
with his usual show of force. “He would call very insistently,” she said.
|
||
“You always knew it was Elon because the phone would never stop ringing.
|
||
The man does not take no for an answer. You can’t blow him off. I do think
|
||
of him as the Terminator. He locks his gaze on to something and says, ‘It
|
||
shall be mine.’ Bit by bit, he won me over.”
|
||
College suited Musk. He worked on being less of a know-it-all, while
|
||
also finding a group of people who respected his intellectual abilities. The
|
||
university students were less inclined to laugh off or deride his opinionated
|
||
takes on energy, space, and whatever else was captivating him at the
|
||
moment. Musk had found people who responded to his ambition rather than
|
||
mocking it, and he fed on this environment.
|
||
Navaid Farooq, a Canadian who grew up in Geneva, ended up in
|
||
Musk’s freshman-year dormitory in the fall of 1990. Both men were placed
|
||
in the international section where a Canadian student would get paired with
|
||
a student from overseas. Musk sort of broke the system, since he technically
|
||
counted as a Canadian but knew almost nothing about his surroundings. “I
|
||
had a roommate from Hong Kong, and he was a really nice guy,” Musk
|
||
said. “He religiously attended every lecture, which was helpful, since I went
|
||
to the least number of classes possible.” For a time, Musk sold computer
|
||
parts and full PCs in the dorm to make some extra cash. “I could build
|
||
something to suit their needs like a tricked-out gaming machine or a simple
|
||
word processor that cost less than what they could get in a store,” Musk
|
||
said. “Or if their computer didn’t boot properly or had a virus, I’d fix it. I
|
||
could pretty much solve any problem.” Farooq and Musk bonded over their
|
||
backgrounds living abroad and a shared interest in strategy board games. “I
|
||
don’t think he makes friends easily, but he is very loyal to those he has,”
|
||
Farooq said. When the video game Civilization was released, the college
|
||
chums spent hours building their empire, much to the dismay of Farooq’s
|
||
girlfriend, who was forgotten in another room. “Elon could lose himself for
|
||
hours on end,” Farooq said. The students also relished their loner lifestyles.
|
||
“We are the kinds of people that can be by ourselves at a party and not feel
|
||
awkward,” Farooq said. “We can think to ourselves and not feel socially
|
||
weird about it.”
|
||
Musk was more ambitious in college than he’d been in high school. He
|
||
studied business, competed in public speaking contests, and began to
|
||
display the brand of intensity and competitiveness that marks his behavior
|
||
today. After one economics exam, Musk, Farooq, and some other students
|
||
in class came back to the dorms and began comparing notes to try to
|
||
ascertain how well they did on the test. It soon became clear that Musk had
|
||
a firmer grasp on the material than anyone else. “This was a group of fairly
|
||
high achievers, and Elon stood way outside of the bell curve,” Farooq said.
|
||
Musk’s intensity has continued to be a constant in their long relationship.
|
||
“When Elon gets into something, he develops just this different level of
|
||
interest in it than other people. That is what differentiates Elon from the rest
|
||
of humanity.”
|
||
In 1992, having spent two years at Queen’s, Musk transferred to the
|
||
University of Pennsylvania on a scholarship. Musk saw the Ivy League
|
||
school as possibly opening some additional doors and went off in pursuit of
|
||
dual degrees—first an economics degree from the Wharton School and then
|
||
a bachelor’s degree in physics. Justine stayed at Queen’s, pursuing her
|
||
dream of becoming a writer, and maintained a long-distance relationship
|
||
with Musk. Now and again, she would visit him, and the two would
|
||
sometimes head off to New York for a romantic weekend.
|
||
Musk blossomed even more at Penn, and really started to feel
|
||
comfortable while hanging out with his fellow physics students. “At Penn,
|
||
he met people that thought like him,” Maye said. “There were some nerds
|
||
there. He so enjoyed them. I remember going for lunch with them, and they
|
||
were talking physics things. They were saying, ‘A plus B equals pi squared’
|
||
or whatever. They would laugh out loud. It was cool to see him so happy.”
|
||
Once again, however, Musk did not make many friends among the broader
|
||
school body. It’s difficult to find former students who remember him being
|
||
there at all. But he did make one very close friend named Adeo Ressi, who
|
||
would go on to be a Silicon Valley entrepreneur in his own right and is to
|
||
this day as tight with Elon as anyone.
|
||
Ressi is a lanky guy well over six feet tall and possesses an eccentric air.
|
||
He was the artistic, colorful foil to the studious, more buttoned-up Musk.
|
||
Both of the young men were transfer students and ended up being placed in
|
||
the funky freshman dorm. The lackluster social scene did not live up to
|
||
Ressi’s expectations, and he talked Musk into renting a large house off
|
||
campus. They got the ten-bedroom home relatively cheap, since it was a frat
|
||
house that had gone unrented. During the week, Musk and Ressi would
|
||
study, but as the weekend approached, Ressi, in particular, would transform
|
||
the house into a nightclub. He covered the windows with trash bags to make
|
||
it pitch black inside and decorated the walls with bright paints and whatever
|
||
objects he could find. “It was a full-out, unlicensed speakeasy,” Ressi said.
|
||
“We would have as many as five hundred people. We would charge five
|
||
dollars, and it would be pretty much all you could drink—beer and Jell-O
|
||
shots and other things.”
|
||
Come Friday night, the ground around the house would shake from the
|
||
intensity of the bass being pumped out by Ressi’s speakers. Maye visited
|
||
one of the parties and discovered that Ressi had hammered objects into the
|
||
walls and lacquered them with glow-in-the-dark paint. She ended up
|
||
working the door as the coat check/money taker and grabbed a pair of
|
||
scissors for protection as the cash piled up in a shoe box.
|
||
A second house had fourteen rooms. Musk, Ressi, and one other person
|
||
lived there. They fashioned tables by laying plywood on top of used kegs
|
||
and came up with other makeshift furniture ideas. Musk returned home one
|
||
day to find that Ressi had nailed his desk to the wall and then painted it in
|
||
Day-Glo colors. Musk retaliated by pulling his desk down, painting it black,
|
||
and studying. “I’m like, ‘Dude, that’s installation art in our party house,’”
|
||
said Ressi. Remind Musk of this incident and he’ll respond matter-of-factly,
|
||
“It was a desk.”
|
||
Musk will have the occasional vodka and Diet Coke, but he’s not a big
|
||
drinker and does not really care for the taste of alcohol. “Somebody had to
|
||
stay sober during these parties,” Musk said. “I was paying my own way
|
||
through college and could make an entire month’s rent in one night. Adeo
|
||
was in charge of doing cool shit around the house, and I would run the
|
||
party.” As Ressi put it, “Elon was the most straight-laced dude you have
|
||
ever met. He never drank. He never did anything. Zero. Literally nothing.”
|
||
The only time Ressi had to step in and moderate Musk’s behavior came
|
||
during video game binges that could go on for days.
|
||
Musk’s longtime interest in solar power and in finding other new ways
|
||
to harness energy expanded at Penn. In December 1994, he had to come up
|
||
with a business plan for one of his classes and ended up writing a paper
|
||
titled “The Importance of Being Solar.” The document started with a bit of
|
||
Musk’s wry sense of humor. At the top of the page, he wrote: “The sun will
|
||
come out tomorrow. . . .”—Little Orphan Annie on the subject of renewable
|
||
energy. The paper went on to predict a rise in solar power technology based
|
||
on materials improvements and the construction of large-scale solar plants.
|
||
Musk delved deeply into how solar cells work and the various compounds
|
||
that can make them more efficient. He concluded the paper with a drawing
|
||
of the “power station of the future.” It depicted a pair of giant solar arrays in
|
||
space—each four kilometers in width—sending their juice down to Earth
|
||
via microwave beams to a receiving antenna with a seven-kilometer
|
||
diameter. Musk received a 98 on what his professor deemed a “very
|
||
interesting and well written paper.”
|
||
A second paper talked about taking research documents and books and
|
||
electronically scanning them, performing optical character recognition, and
|
||
putting all of the information in a single database—much like a mix
|
||
between today’s Google Books and Google Scholar. And a third paper
|
||
dwelled on another of Musk’s favorite topics—ultracapacitors. In the fortyfour-
|
||
page document, Musk is plainly jubilant over the idea of a new form of
|
||
energy storage that would suit his future pursuits with cars, planes, and
|
||
rockets. Pointing to the latest research coming out of a lab in Silicon Valley,
|
||
he wrote: “The end result represents the first new means of storing
|
||
significant amounts of electrical energy since the development of the
|
||
battery and fuel cell. Furthermore, because the Ultracapacitor retains the
|
||
basic properties of a capacitor, it can deliver its energy over one hundred
|
||
times faster than a battery of equivalent weight, and be recharged just as
|
||
quickly.” Musk received a 97 for this effort and praise for “a very thorough
|
||
analysis” with “excellent financials!”
|
||
The remarks from the professor were spot-on. Musk’s clear, concise
|
||
writing is the work of a logician, moving from one point to the next with
|
||
precision. What truly stood out, though, was Musk’s ability to master
|
||
difficult physics concepts in the midst of actual business plans. Even then,
|
||
he showed an unusual knack for being able to perceive a path from a
|
||
scientific advance to a for-profit enterprise.
|
||
As Musk began to think more seriously about what he would do after
|
||
college, he briefly considered getting into the videogame business. He’d
|
||
been obsessed with video games since his childhood and had held a gaming
|
||
internship. But he came to see them as not quite grand enough a pursuit. “I
|
||
really like computer games, but then if I made really great computer games,
|
||
how much effect would that have on the world,” he said. “It wouldn’t have
|
||
a big effect. Even though I have an intrinsic love of video games, I couldn’t
|
||
bring myself to do that as a career.”
|
||
In interviews, Musk often makes sure that people know he had some
|
||
truly big ideas on his mind during this period of his life. As he tells it, he
|
||
would daydream at Queen’s and Penn and usually end up with the same
|
||
conclusion: he viewed the Internet, renewable energy, and space as the three
|
||
areas that would undergo significant change in the years to come and as the
|
||
markets where he could make a big impact. He vowed to pursue projects in
|
||
all three. “I told all my ex-girlfriends and my ex-wife about these ideas,” he
|
||
said. “It probably sounded like super-crazy talk.”
|
||
Musk’s insistence on explaining the early origins of his passion for
|
||
electric cars, solar energy, and rockets can come off as insecure. It feels as if
|
||
Musk is trying to shape his life story in a forced way. But for Musk, the
|
||
distinction between stumbling into something and having intent is
|
||
important. Musk has long wanted the world to know that he’s different from
|
||
the run-of-the-mill entrepreneur in Silicon Valley. He wasn’t just sniffing
|
||
out trends, and he wasn’t consumed by the idea of getting rich. He’s been in
|
||
pursuit of a master plan all along. “I really was thinking about this stuff in
|
||
college,” he said. “It is not some invented story after the fact. I don’t want
|
||
to seem like a Johnny-come-lately or that I’m chasing a fad or just being
|
||
opportunistic. I’m not an investor. I like to make technologies real that I
|
||
think are important for the future and useful in some sort of way.”
|
||
4
|
||
ELON’S FIRST START-UP
|
||
IN THE SUMMER OF 1994, Musk and his brother, Kimbal, took their
|
||
first steps toward becoming honest-to-God Americans. They set off on a
|
||
road trip across the country.
|
||
Kimbal had been working as a franchisee for College Pro Painters and
|
||
done well for himself, running what amounted to a small business. He sold
|
||
off his part of the franchise and pooled the money with what Musk had on
|
||
hand to buy a beat-up 1970s BMW 320i. The brothers began their trip near
|
||
San Francisco in August, as temperatures in California soared. The first part
|
||
of the drive took them down to Needles, a city in the Mojave Desert. There
|
||
they experienced the sweaty thrill of 120-degree weather in a car with no
|
||
air-conditioning and learned to love pit stops at Carl’s Jr. burger joints,
|
||
where they spent hours recuperating in the cold.
|
||
The trip provided plenty of time for your typical twenty-something
|
||
hijinks and raging capitalist daydreaming. The Web had just started to
|
||
become accessible to the public thanks to the rise of directory sites like
|
||
Yahoo! and tools like Netscape’s browser. The brothers were tuned in to the
|
||
Internet and thought they might like to start a company together doing
|
||
something on the Web. From California to Colorado, Wyoming, South
|
||
Dakota, and Illinois, they took turns driving, brainstorming, and talking shit
|
||
before heading back east to get Musk to school that fall. The best idea to
|
||
arise from the journey was an online network for doctors. This wasn’t
|
||
meant to be something as ambitious as electronic health records but more of
|
||
a system for physicians to exchange information and collaborate. “It
|
||
seemed like the medical industry was one that could be disrupted,” Kimbal
|
||
said. “I went to work on a business plan and the sales and marketing side of
|
||
it later, but it didn’t fly. We didn’t love it.”
|
||
Musk had spent the earlier part of that summer in Silicon Valley,
|
||
holding down a pair of internships. By day, he worked at Pinnacle Research
|
||
Institute. Based in Los Gatos, Pinnacle was a much-ballyhooed start-up
|
||
with a team of scientists exploring ways in which ultracapacitors could be
|
||
used as a revolutionary fuel source in electric and hybrid vehicles. The
|
||
work also veered—at least conceptually—into more bizarre territory. Musk
|
||
could talk at length about how ultracapacitors might be used to build laserbased
|
||
sidearms in the tradition of Star Wars and just about any other
|
||
futuristic film. The laser guns would release rounds of enormous energy,
|
||
and then the shooter would replace an ultracapacitor at the base of the gun,
|
||
much like swapping out a clip of bullets, and start blasting away again.
|
||
Ultracapacitors also looked promising as the power supplies for missiles.
|
||
They were more resilient than batteries under the mechanical stresses of a
|
||
launch and would hold a more consistent charge over long periods of time.
|
||
Musk fell in love with the work at Pinnacle and began using it as the basis
|
||
for some of his business plan experiments at Penn and for his industrialist
|
||
fantasies.
|
||
In the evenings, Musk headed to Rocket Science Games, a start-up
|
||
based in Palo Alto that wanted to create the most advanced video games
|
||
ever made by moving them off cartridges and onto CDs that could hold
|
||
more information. The CDs would in theory allow them to bring
|
||
Hollywood-style storytelling and production quality to the games. A team
|
||
of budding all-stars who were a mix of engineers and film people was
|
||
assembled to pull off the work. Tony Fadell, who would later drive much of
|
||
the development of both the iPod and iPhone at Apple, worked at Rocket
|
||
Science, as did the guys who developed the QuickTime multimedia
|
||
software for Apple. They also had people who worked on the original Star
|
||
Wars effects at Industrial Light & Magic and some who did games at
|
||
LucasArts Entertainment. Rocket Science gave Musk a flavor for what
|
||
Silicon Valley had to offer both from a talent and culture perspective. There
|
||
were people working at the office twenty-four hours a day, and they didn’t
|
||
think it at all odd that Musk would turn up around 5 P.M. every evening to
|
||
start his second job. “We brought him in to write some very menial lowlevel
|
||
code,” said Peter Barrett, an Australian engineer who helped start the
|
||
company. “He was completely unflappable. After a short while, I don’t
|
||
think anyone was giving him any direction, and he ended up making what
|
||
he wanted to make.”
|
||
Specifically, Musk had been asked to write the drivers that would let
|
||
joysticks and mice communicate with various computers and games.
|
||
Drivers are the same types of annoying files that you have to install to get a
|
||
printer or camera working with a home computer—true grunt work. A selftaught
|
||
programmer, Musk fancied himself quite good at coding and
|
||
assigned himself to more ambitious jobs. “I was basically trying to figure
|
||
out how you could multitask stuff, so you could read video from a CD,
|
||
while running a game at the same time,” Musk said. “At the time, you could
|
||
do one or the other. It was this complicated bit of assembly programming.”
|
||
Complicated indeed. Musk had to issue commands that spoke directly to a
|
||
computer’s main microprocessor and fiddled with the most basic functions
|
||
that made the machine work. Bruce Leak, the former lead engineer behind
|
||
Apple’s QuickTime, had overseen the hiring of Musk and marveled at his
|
||
ability to pull all-nighters. “He had boundless energy,” Leak said. “Kids
|
||
these days have no idea about hardware or how stuff works, but he had a PC
|
||
hacker background and was not afraid to just go figure things out.”
|
||
Musk found in Silicon Valley a wealth of the opportunity he’d been
|
||
seeking and a place equal to his ambitions. He would return two summers in
|
||
a row and then bolt west permanently after graduating with dual degrees
|
||
from Penn. He initially intended to pursue a doctorate in materials science
|
||
and physics at Stanford and to advance the work he’d done at Pinnacle on
|
||
ultracapacitors. As the story goes, Musk dropped out of Stanford after two
|
||
days, finding the Internet’s call irresistible. He talked Kimbal into moving
|
||
to Silicon Valley as well, so they could conquer the Web together.
|
||
The first inklings of a viable Internet business had come to Musk during
|
||
his internships. A salesperson from the Yellow Pages had come into one of
|
||
the start-up offices. He tried to sell the idea of an online listing to
|
||
complement the regular listing a company would have in the big, fat Yellow
|
||
Pages book. The salesman struggled with his pitch and clearly had little
|
||
grasp of what the Internet actually was or how someone would find a
|
||
business on it. The flimsy pitch got Musk thinking, and he reached out to
|
||
Kimbal, talking up the idea of helping businesses get online for the first
|
||
time.
|
||
“Elon said, ‘These guys don’t know what they are talking about. Maybe
|
||
this is something we can do,’” Kimbal said. This was 1995, and the brothers
|
||
were about to form Global Link Information Network, a start-up that would
|
||
eventually be renamed Zip2. (For details on the controversy surrounding
|
||
Zip2’s founding and Musk’s academic record, see Appendix 1.)
|
||
The Zip2 idea was ingenious. Few small businesses in 1995 understood
|
||
the ramifications of the Internet. They had little idea how to get on it and
|
||
didn’t really see the value in creating a website for their business or even in
|
||
having a Yellow Pages–like listing online. Musk and his brother hoped to
|
||
convince restaurants, clothing shops, hairdressers, and the like that the time
|
||
had come for them to make their presence known to the Web-surfing public.
|
||
Zip2 would create a searchable directory of businesses and tie this into
|
||
maps. Musk often explained the concept through pizza, saying that
|
||
everyone deserved the right to know the location of their closest pizza
|
||
parlor and the turn-by-turn directions to get there. This may seem obvious
|
||
today—think Yelp meets Google Maps—but back then, not even stoners
|
||
had dreamed up such a service.
|
||
The Musk brothers brought Zip2 to life at 430 Sherman Avenue in Palo
|
||
Alto. They rented a studio-apartment-sized office—twenty feet by thirty
|
||
feet—and acquired some basic furniture. The three-story building had its
|
||
quirks. There were no elevators, and the toilets often backed up. “It was
|
||
literally a shitty place to work,” said an early employee. To get a fast
|
||
Internet connection, Musk struck a deal with Ray Girouard, an entrepreneur
|
||
who ran an Internet service provider operation from the floor below the
|
||
Zip2 offices. According to Girouard, Musk drilled a hole in the drywall near
|
||
the Zip2 door and then strung an Ethernet cable down the stairwell to the
|
||
ISP. “They were slow to pay a couple of times but never stiffed me on the
|
||
bill,” Girouard said.
|
||
Musk did all of the original coding behind the service himself, while the
|
||
more amiable Kimbal looked to ramp up the door-to-door sales operation.
|
||
Musk had acquired a cheap license to a database of business listings in the
|
||
Bay Area that would give a business’s name and its address. He then
|
||
contacted Navteq, a company that had spent hundreds of millions of dollars
|
||
to create digital maps and directions that could be used in early GPS
|
||
navigation-style devices, and struck a masterful bargain. “We called them
|
||
up, and they gave us the technology for free,” said Kimbal. Musk merged
|
||
the two databases together to get a rudimentary system up and running.
|
||
Over time, Zip2’s engineers had to augment this initial data haul with more
|
||
maps to cover areas outside of major metropolitan areas and to build custom
|
||
turn-by-turn directions that would look good and work well on a home
|
||
computer.
|
||
Errol Musk gave his sons $28,000 to help them through this period, but
|
||
they were more or less broke after getting the office space, licensing
|
||
software, and buying some equipment. For the first three months of Zip2’s
|
||
life, Musk and his brother lived at the office. They had a small closet where
|
||
they kept their clothes and would shower at the YMCA. “Sometimes we ate
|
||
four meals a day at Jack in the Box,” Kimbal said. “It was open twenty-four
|
||
hours, which suited our work schedule. I got a smoothie one time, and there
|
||
was something in it. I just pulled it out and kept drinking. I haven’t been
|
||
able to eat there since, but I can still recite their menu.”
|
||
Next, the brothers rented a two-bedroom apartment. They didn’t have
|
||
the money or the inclination to get furniture. So there were just a couple of
|
||
mattresses on the floor. Musk somehow managed to convince a young
|
||
South Korean engineer to come work at Zip2 as an intern in exchange for
|
||
room and board. “This poor kid thought he was coming over for a job at a
|
||
big company,” Kimbal said. “He ended up living with us and had no idea
|
||
what he was getting into.” One day, the intern drove the Musks’ battered
|
||
BMW 320i to work, and a wheel came off en route. The axle dug into the
|
||
street at the intersection of Page Mill Road and El Camino Real, and the
|
||
groove it carved out remained visible for years.
|
||
Zip2 may have been a go-go Internet enterprise aimed at the
|
||
Information Age, but getting it off the ground required old-fashioned doorto-
|
||
door salesmanship. Businesses needed to be persuaded of the Web’s
|
||
benefits and charmed into paying for the unknown. In late 1995, the Musk
|
||
brothers began making their first hires and assembling a motley sales team.
|
||
Jeff Heilman, a free-spirited twenty-year-old trying to figure out what to do
|
||
with his life, arrived as one of Zip2’s first recruits. He’d been watching TV
|
||
late one night with his dad and seen a Web address printed at the bottom of
|
||
the screen during a commercial. “It was for something dot-com,” Heilman
|
||
said. “I remember sitting there and asking my dad what we were looking at.
|
||
He said he didn’t know, either. That’s when I realized I had to go find me
|
||
some Internet.” Heilman spent a couple of weeks trying to chat up people
|
||
who could explain the Internet to him and then stumbled on a two-by-twoinch
|
||
Zip2 job listing in the San Jose Mercury News. “Internet Sales Apply
|
||
Here!” it read, and Heilman got the gig. A handful of other salespeople
|
||
joined him and worked for commissions.
|
||
Musk never seemed to leave the office. He slept, not unlike a dog, on a
|
||
beanbag next to his desk. “Almost every day, I’d come in at seven thirty or
|
||
eight A.M., and he’d be asleep right there on that bag,” Heilman said.
|
||
“Maybe he showered on the weekends. I don’t know.” Musk asked those
|
||
first employees of Zip2 to give him a kick when they arrived, and he’d
|
||
wake up and get back to work. While Musk did his possessed coder thing,
|
||
Kimbal became the rah-rah sales leader. “Kimbal was the eternal optimist,
|
||
and he was very, very uplifting,” Heilman said. “I had never met anyone
|
||
quite like him.” Kimbal sent Heilman to the high-end Stanford shopping
|
||
mall and to University Avenue, the main drag in Palo Alto, to coax retailers
|
||
into signing up with Zip2, explaining that a sponsored listing would send a
|
||
company to the top of search results. The big problem, of course, was that
|
||
no one was buying. Week after week, Heilman knocked on doors and
|
||
returned to the office with very little to report in the way of good news. The
|
||
nicest responses came from the people who told Heilman that advertising
|
||
on the Internet sounded like the dumbest thing they had ever heard of. Most
|
||
often, the shop owners just told Heilman to leave and stop bothering them.
|
||
When lunchtime came around, the Musks would reach into a cigar box
|
||
where they kept some cash, take Heilman out, and get the depressing status
|
||
reports on the sales.
|
||
Craig Mohr, another early employee, gave up his job selling real estate
|
||
to hawk Zip2’s service. He decided to court auto dealerships because they
|
||
usually spent lots of money on advertising. He told them about Zip2’s main
|
||
website—www.totalinfo.com—and tried to convince them that demand was
|
||
high to get a listing like www.totalinfo.com/toyotaofsiliconvalley. The
|
||
service did not always work when Mohr demonstrated it or it would load
|
||
very slowly, as was common back then. This forced him to talk the
|
||
customers into imagining Zip2’s potential. “One day I came back with
|
||
about nine hundred dollars in checks,” Mohr said. “I walked into the office
|
||
and asked the guys what they wanted me to do with the money. Elon
|
||
stopped pounding his keyboard, leaned out from behind his monitor, and
|
||
said, ‘No way, you’ve got money.’”
|
||
What kept the employees’ spirits up were the continuous improvements
|
||
Musk made with the Zip2 software. The service had morphed from a proofof-
|
||
concept to an actual product that could be used and demoed. Ever
|
||
marketing savvy, the Musk brothers tried to make their Web service seem
|
||
more important by giving it an imposing physical body. Musk built a huge
|
||
case around a standard PC and lugged the unit onto a base with wheels.
|
||
When prospective investors would come by, Musk would put on a show and
|
||
roll this massive machine out so that it appeared like Zip2 ran inside of a
|
||
mini-supercomputer. “The investors thought that was impressive,” Kimbal
|
||
said. Heilman also noticed that the investors bought into Musk’s slavish
|
||
devotion to the company. “Even then, as essentially a college kid with zits,
|
||
Elon had this drive that this thing—whatever it was—had to get done and
|
||
that if he didn’t do it, he’d miss his shot,” Heilman said. “I think that’s what
|
||
the VCs saw—that he was willing to stake his existence on building out this
|
||
platform.” Musk actually said as much to one venture capitalist, informing
|
||
him, “My mentality is that of a samurai. I would rather commit seppuku
|
||
than fail.”
|
||
Early on in the Zip2 venture, Musk acquired an important confidant,
|
||
who tempered some of these more dramatic impulses. Greg Kouri, a
|
||
Canadian businessman in his mid-thirties, had met the Musks in Toronto
|
||
and bought into the early Zip2 brainstorming. The boys had showed up at
|
||
his door one morning to inform Kouri that they intended to head to
|
||
California to give the business a shot. Still in his red bathrobe, Kouri went
|
||
back into the house, dug around for a couple of minutes, and came back
|
||
with a wad of $6,000. In early 1996, he moved to California and joined
|
||
Zip2 as a cofounder.
|
||
Kouri, who had done a number of real estate deals in the past and had
|
||
actual business experience and skills at reading people, served as the adult
|
||
supervision at Zip2. The Canadian had a knack for calming Musk and
|
||
ended up becoming something of a mentor. “Really smart people sometimes
|
||
don’t understand that not everyone can keep up with them or go as fast,”
|
||
said Derek Proudian, a venture capitalist who would become Zip2’s chief
|
||
executive officer. “Greg is one of the few people that Elon would listen to
|
||
and had a way of putting things in context for him.” Kouri also used to
|
||
referee fistfights between Elon and Kimbal, in the middle of the office.
|
||
“I don’t get in fights with anyone else, but Elon and I don’t have the
|
||
ability to reconcile a vision other than our own,” Kimbal said. During a
|
||
particularly nasty scrap over a business decision, Elon ripped some skin off
|
||
his fist and had to go get a tetanus shot. Kouri put an end to the fights after
|
||
that. (Kouri died of a heart attack in 2012 at the age of fifty-one, having
|
||
made a fortune investing in Musk’s companies. Musk attended his funeral.
|
||
“We owe him a lot,” said Kimbal.)
|
||
In early 1996, Zip2 underwent a massive change. The venture capital
|
||
firm Mohr Davidow Ventures had caught wind of a couple of South African
|
||
boys trying to make a Yellow Pages for the Internet and met with the
|
||
brothers. Musk, while raw in his presentation skills, pitched the company
|
||
well enough, and the investors came away impressed with his energy. Mohr
|
||
Davidow invested $3 million into the company.* With these funds in hand,
|
||
the company officially changed its name from Global Link to Zip2—the
|
||
idea being zip to here, zip to there—moved to a larger office at 390
|
||
Cambridge Avenue in Palo Alto, and began hiring talented engineers. Zip2
|
||
also shifted its business strategy. At the time, the company had built one of
|
||
the best direction systems on the Web. Zip2 would advance this technology
|
||
and take it from focusing just on the Bay Area to having a national scope.
|
||
The company’s main focus, however, would be an altogether new play.
|
||
Instead of selling its service door-to-door, Zip2 would create a software
|
||
package that could be sold to newspapers, which would in turn build their
|
||
own directories for real estate, auto dealers, and classifieds. The newspapers
|
||
were late understanding how the Internet would impact their businesses,
|
||
and Zip2’s software would give them a quick way of getting online without
|
||
needing to develop all their own technology from scratch. For its part, Zip2
|
||
could chase bigger prey and get a cut of a nationwide network of listings.
|
||
This transition of the business model and the company’s makeup would
|
||
be a seminal moment in Musk’s life. The venture capitalists pushed Musk
|
||
into the role of chief technology officer and hired Rich Sorkin as the
|
||
company’s CEO. Sorkin had worked at Creative Labs, a maker of audio
|
||
equipment, and run the business development group at the company, where
|
||
he steered a number of investments in Internet start-ups. Zip2’s investors
|
||
saw him as experienced and clued in to the Web. While Musk agreed to the
|
||
arrangement, he came to resent giving up control of Zip2. “Probably the
|
||
biggest regret the whole time I worked with him was that he had made a
|
||
deal with the devil with Mohr Davidow,” said Jim Ambras, the vice
|
||
president of engineering at Zip2. “Elon didn’t have any operational
|
||
responsibilities, and he wanted to be CEO.”
|
||
Ambras had worked at Hewlett-Packard Labs and Silicon Graphics Inc.
|
||
and exemplified the high-caliber talent Zip2 brought on after the first wave
|
||
of money arrived. Silicon Graphics, a maker of high-end computers beloved
|
||
by Hollywood, was the flashiest company of its day and had hoarded the
|
||
elite geeks of Silicon Valley. And yet Ambras used the promise of Internet
|
||
riches to poach a team of SGI’s smartest engineers over to Zip2. “Our
|
||
attorneys got a letter from SGI saying that we were cherry-picking the very
|
||
best guys,” Ambras said. “Elon thought that was fantastic.”
|
||
While Musk had exceled as a self-taught coder, his skills weren’t nearly
|
||
as polished as those of the new hires. They took one look at Zip2’s code and
|
||
began rewriting the vast majority of the software. Musk bristled at some of
|
||
their changes, but the computer scientists needed just a fraction of the lines
|
||
of code that Musk used to get their jobs done. They had a knack for
|
||
dividing software projects into chunks that could be altered and refined
|
||
whereas Musk fell into the classic self-taught coder trap of writing what
|
||
developers call hairballs—big, monolithic hunks of code that could go
|
||
berserk for mysterious reasons. The engineers also brought a more refined
|
||
working structure and realistic deadlines to the engineering group. This was
|
||
a welcome change from Musk’s approach, which had been to set overly
|
||
optimistic deadlines and then try to get engineers to work nonstop for days
|
||
on end to meet the goals. “If you asked Elon how long it would take to do
|
||
something, there was never anything in his mind that would take more than
|
||
an hour,” Ambras said. “We came to interpret an hour as really taking a day
|
||
or two and if Elon ever did say something would take a day, we allowed for
|
||
a week or two weeks.”
|
||
Starting Zip2 and watching it grow imbued Musk with self-confidence.
|
||
Terence Beney, one of Musk’s high school friends, came to California for a
|
||
visit and noticed the change in Musk’s character right away. He watched
|
||
Musk confront a nasty landlord who had been giving his mother, who was
|
||
renting an apartment in town, a hard time. “He said, ‘If you’re going to
|
||
bully someone, bully me.’ It was startling to see him take over the situation.
|
||
The last time I had seen him he was this geeky, awkward kid who would
|
||
sometimes lose his temper. He was the kid you would pick on to get a
|
||
response. Now he was confident and in control.” Musk also began
|
||
consciously trying to manage his criticism of others. “Elon is not someone
|
||
who would say, ‘I feel you. I see your point of view,’” said Justine.
|
||
“Because he doesn’t have that ‘I feel you’ dimension there were things that
|
||
seemed obvious to other people that weren’t that obvious to him. He had to
|
||
learn that a twenty-something-year-old shouldn’t really shoot down the
|
||
plans of older, senior people and point out everything wrong with them. He
|
||
learned to modify his behavior in certain ways. I just think he comes at the
|
||
world through strategy and intellect.” The personality tweaks worked with
|
||
varying degrees of success. Musk still tended to drive the young engineers
|
||
mad with his work demands and blunt criticism. “I remember being in a
|
||
meeting once brainstorming about a new product—a new-car site,” said
|
||
Doris Downes, the creative director at Zip2. “Someone complained about a
|
||
technical change that we wanted being impossible. Elon turned and said, ‘I
|
||
don’t really give a damn what you think,’ and walked out of the meeting.
|
||
For Elon, the word no does not exist, and he expects that attitude from
|
||
everyone around him.” Periodically, Musk let loose on the more senior
|
||
executives as well. “You would see people come out of the meetings with
|
||
this disgusted look on their face,” Mohr, the salesman, said. “You don’t get
|
||
to where Elon is now by always being a nice guy, and he was just so driven
|
||
and sure of himself.”
|
||
As Musk tried to come to terms with the changes the investors had
|
||
inflicted on Zip2, he did enjoy some of the perks of having big-money
|
||
backing. The financiers helped the Musk brothers with their visas. They
|
||
also gave them $30,000 each to buy cars. Musk and Kimbal had traded in
|
||
their dilapidated BMW for a dilapidated sedan that they spray-painted with
|
||
polka dots. Kimbal upgraded from that to a BMW 3 Series, and Musk
|
||
bought a Jaguar E-Type. “It kept breaking down, and would arrive at the
|
||
office on a flatbed,” Kimbal said. “But Elon always thought big.”*
|
||
As a bonding exercise one weekend, Musk, Ambras, a few other
|
||
employees and friends took off for a bike ride through the Saratoga Gap
|
||
trail in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Most of the riders had been training and
|
||
were accustomed to strenuous sessions and the summer’s heat. They set up
|
||
the mountains at a furious pace. After an hour, Russ Rive, Musk’s cousin,
|
||
reached the top and proceeded to vomit. Right behind him were the rest of
|
||
the cyclists. Then, fifteen minutes later, Musk became visible to the group.
|
||
His face had turned purple, and sweat poured out of him, and he made it to
|
||
the top. “I always think back to that ride. He wasn’t close to being in the
|
||
condition needed for it,” Ambras said. “Anyone else would have quit or
|
||
walked up their bike. As I watched him climb that final hundred feet with
|
||
suffering all over his face, I thought, That’s Elon. Do or die but don’t give
|
||
up.”
|
||
Musk continued to be a ball of energy around the office as well. Ahead
|
||
of visits by venture capitalists and other investors, Musk would rally the
|
||
troops and instruct them all to get on the phone to create a buzzy
|
||
atmosphere. He also formed a video-game team to participate in
|
||
competitions around Quake, a first-person-shooter game. “We competed in
|
||
one of the first nationwide tournaments,” Musk said. “We came in second,
|
||
and we would have come in first, but one of our top players’ machine
|
||
crashed because he had pushed his graphics card too hard. We won a few
|
||
thousand dollars.”
|
||
Zip2 had remarkable success courting newspapers. The New York Times,
|
||
Knight Ridder, Hearst Corporation, and other media properties signed up to
|
||
its service. Some of these companies contributed $50 million in additional
|
||
funding for Zip2. Services like Craigslist with its free online classifieds had
|
||
just started to appear, and the newspapers needed some course of action.
|
||
“The newspapers knew they were in trouble with the Internet, and the idea
|
||
was to sign up as many of them as possible,” Ambras said. “They wanted
|
||
classifieds and listings for real estate, automotive, and entertainment and
|
||
could use us as a platform for all these online services.” Zip2 acquired a
|
||
trademark for its “We Power the Press” slogan and the influx of cash kept
|
||
Zip2 growing fast. Company headquarters were soon so crowded that one
|
||
desk ended up directly in front of the women’s bathroom. In 1997, Zip2
|
||
moved into flashier, more spacious digs at 444 Castro Street in Mountain
|
||
View.
|
||
It irritated Musk that Zip2 had become a behind-the-scenes player to the
|
||
newspapers. He believed the company could offer interesting services
|
||
directly to consumers and encouraged the purchase of the domain name
|
||
city.com with the hopes of turning it into a consumer destination. But the
|
||
lure of the media companies’ money kept Sorkin and the board on a
|
||
conservative path, and they decided to worry about a consumer push down
|
||
the road.
|
||
In April 1998, Zip2 announced a blockbuster move to double down on
|
||
its strategy. It would merge with its main competitor CitySearch in a deal
|
||
valued at around $300 million. The new company would retain the
|
||
CitySearch name, while Sorkin would head up the venture. On paper, the
|
||
union looked very much like a merger of equals. CitySearch had built up an
|
||
extensive set of directories for cities around the country. It also appeared to
|
||
have strong sales and marketing teams that would complement the talented
|
||
engineers at Zip2. The merger had been announced in the press and seemed
|
||
inevitable.
|
||
The opinions on what happened next vary greatly. The logistics of the
|
||
situation required the two companies to go over each other’s books and to
|
||
figure out which employees would be fired to avoid a duplication of roles.
|
||
This process raised some questions about how frank CitySearch had been
|
||
with its financials and rankled some executives at Zip2 who could see their
|
||
positions being diminished or erased altogether at the new company. One
|
||
faction inside Zip2 argued that the deal should be abandoned, while Sorkin
|
||
demanded that it go through. Musk, who had been an early advocate of the
|
||
deal, turned against it. In May 1998, the two companies canceled the
|
||
merger, and the press pounced, making a big deal of the chaotic bust-up.
|
||
Musk urged Zip2’s board to oust Sorkin and reinstate him as CEO of Zip2.
|
||
The board declined. Instead, Musk lost his chairman title, and Sorkin was
|
||
replaced by Derek Proudian, a venture capitalist with Mohr Davidow.
|
||
Sorkin considered Musk’s behavior through the whole affair atrocious and
|
||
later pointed to the board’s reaction and Musk’s demotion as evidence that
|
||
they felt the same way. “There was a lot of backlash and finger-pointing,”
|
||
Proudian said. “Elon wanted to be CEO, but I said, ‘This is your first
|
||
company. Let’s find an acquirer and make some money, so you can do your
|
||
second, third, and fourth company.’”
|
||
With the deal busted, Zip2 found itself in a predicament. It was losing
|
||
money. Musk still wanted to go the consumer route, but Proudian feared
|
||
that would take too much capital. Microsoft had mounted a charge into the
|
||
same market, and start-ups with mapping, real estate, and automotive ideas
|
||
multiplied. The Zip2 engineers were deflated and worried that they might
|
||
not be able to outrun the competition. Then, in February 1999, the PC
|
||
maker Compaq Computer suddenly offered to pay $307 million in cash for
|
||
Zip2. “It was like pennies from heaven,” said Ed Ho, a former Zip2
|
||
executive. Zip2’s board accepted the offer, and the company rented out a
|
||
restaurant in Palo Alto and threw a huge party. Mohr Davidow had made
|
||
back twenty times its original investment, and Musk and Kimbal had come
|
||
away with $22 million and $15 million, respectively. Musk never
|
||
entertained the idea of sticking around at Compaq. “As soon as it was clear
|
||
the company would be sold, Elon was on to his next project,” Proudian said.
|
||
From that point on, Musk would fight to maintain control of his companies
|
||
and stay CEO. “We were overwhelmed and just thought these guys must
|
||
know what they’re doing,” Kimbal said. “But they’ didn’t. There was no
|
||
vision once they took over. They were investors, and we got on well with
|
||
them, but the vision had just disappeared from the company.”
|
||
Years later, after he had time to reflect on the Zip2 situation, Musk
|
||
realized that he could have handled some of the situations with employees
|
||
better. “I had never really run a team of any sort before,” Musk said. “I’d
|
||
never been a sports captain or a captain of anything or managed a single
|
||
person. I had to think, Okay, what are the things that affect how a team
|
||
functions. The first obvious assumption would be that other people will
|
||
behave like you. But that’s not true. Even if they would like to behave like
|
||
you, they don’t necessarily have all the assumptions or information that you
|
||
have in your mind. So, if I know a certain set of things, and I talk to a
|
||
replica of myself but only communicate half the information, you can’t
|
||
expect that the replica would come to the same conclusion. You have to put
|
||
yourself in a position where you say, ‘Well, how would this sound to them,
|
||
knowing what they know?’”
|
||
Employees at Zip2 would go home at night, come back, and find that
|
||
Musk had changed their work without talking to them, and Musk’s
|
||
confrontational style did more harm than good. “Yeah, we had some very
|
||
good software engineers at Zip2, but I mean, I could code way better than
|
||
them. And I’d just go in and fix their fucking code,” Musk said. “I would be
|
||
frustrated waiting for their stuff, so I’m going to go and fix your code and
|
||
now it runs five times faster, you idiot. There was one guy who wrote a
|
||
quantum mechanics equation, a quantum probability on the board, and he
|
||
got it wrong. I’m like, ‘How can you write that?’ Then I corrected it for
|
||
him. He hated me after that. Eventually, I realized, Okay, I might have fixed
|
||
that thing but now I’ve made the person unproductive. It just wasn’t a good
|
||
way to go about things.”
|
||
Musk, the dot-com striver, had been both lucky and good. He had a
|
||
decent idea, turned it into a real service, and came out of the dot-com tumult
|
||
with cash in his pockets, which was better than what many of his
|
||
compatriots could say. The process had been painful. Musk had yearned to
|
||
be a leader, but the people around him struggled to see how Musk as the
|
||
CEO could work. As far as Musk was concerned, they were all wrong, and
|
||
he set out to prove his point with what would end up being even more
|
||
dramatic results.
|
||
5
|
||
PAYPAL MAFIA BOSS
|
||
THE SALE OF ZIP2 INFUSED ELON MUSK WITH A NEW BRAND
|
||
OF CONFIDENCE. Much like the video-game characters he adored, Musk
|
||
had leveled up. He had solved Silicon Valley and become what everyone at
|
||
the time wanted to be—a dot-com millionaire. His next venture would need
|
||
to live up to his rapidly inflating ambition. This left Musk searching for an
|
||
industry that had tons of money and inefficiencies that he and the Internet
|
||
could exploit. Musk began thinking back to his time as an intern at the Bank
|
||
of Nova Scotia. His big takeaway from that job, that bankers are rich and
|
||
dumb, now had the feel of a massive opportunity.
|
||
During his time working for the head of strategy at the bank in the early
|
||
1990s, Musk had been asked to take a look at the company’s third-world
|
||
debt portfolio. This pool of money went by the depressing name of “lessdeveloped
|
||
country debt,” and Bank of Nova Scotia had billions of dollars of
|
||
it. Countries throughout South America and elsewhere had defaulted in the
|
||
years prior, forcing the bank to write down some of its debt value. Musk’s
|
||
boss wanted him to dig into the bank’s holdings as a learning experiment
|
||
and try to determine how much the debt was actually worth.
|
||
While pursuing this project, Musk stumbled upon what seemed like an
|
||
obvious business opportunity. The United States had tried to help reduce the
|
||
debt burden of a number of developing countries through so-called Brady
|
||
bonds, in which the U.S. government basically backstopped the debt of
|
||
countries like Brazil and Argentina. Musk noticed an arbitrage play. “I
|
||
calculated the backstop value, and it was something like fifty cents on the
|
||
dollar, while the actual debt was trading at twenty-five cents,” Musk said.
|
||
“This was like the biggest opportunity ever, and nobody seemed to realize
|
||
it.” Musk tried to remain cool and calm as he rang Goldman Sachs, one of
|
||
the main traders in this market, and probed around about what he had seen.
|
||
He inquired as to how much Brazilian debt might be available at the 25-
|
||
cents price. “The guy said, ‘How much do you want?’ and I came up with
|
||
some ridiculous number like ten billion dollars,” Musk said. When the
|
||
trader confirmed that was doable, Musk hung up the phone. “I was thinking
|
||
that they had to be fucking crazy because you could double your money.
|
||
Everything was backed by Uncle Sam. It was a no-brainer.”
|
||
Musk had spent the summer earning about fourteen dollars an hour and
|
||
getting chewed out for using the executive coffee machine, among other
|
||
status infractions, and figured his moment to shine and make a big bonus
|
||
had arrived. He sprinted up to his boss’s office and pitched the opportunity
|
||
of a lifetime. “You can make billions of dollars for free,” he said. His boss
|
||
told Musk to write up a report, which soon got passed up to the bank’s
|
||
CEO, who promptly rejected the proposal, saying the bank had been burned
|
||
on Brazilian and Argentinian debt before and didn’t want to mess with it
|
||
again. “I tried to tell them that’s not the point,” Musk said. “The point is
|
||
that it’s fucking backed by Uncle Sam. It doesn’t matter what the South
|
||
Americans do. You cannot lose unless you think the U.S. Treasury is going
|
||
to default. But they still didn’t do it, and I was stunned. Later in life, as I
|
||
competed against the banks, I would think back to this moment, and it gave
|
||
me confidence. All the bankers did was copy what everyone else did. If
|
||
everyone else ran off a bloody cliff, they’d run right off a cliff with them. If
|
||
there was a giant pile of gold sitting in the middle of the room and nobody
|
||
was picking it up, they wouldn’t pick it up, either.”
|
||
In the years that followed, Musk considered starting an Internet bank
|
||
and discussed it openly during his internship at Pinnacle Research in 1995.
|
||
The youthful Musk lectured the scientists about the inevitable transition
|
||
coming in finance toward online systems, but they tried to talk him down,
|
||
saying that it would takes ages for Web security to be good enough to win
|
||
over consumers. Musk, though, remained convinced that the finance
|
||
industry could do with a major upgrade and that he could have a big
|
||
influence on banking with a relatively small investment. “Money is low
|
||
bandwidth,” he said, during a speech at Stanford University in 2003, to
|
||
describe his thinking. “You don’t need some sort of big infrastructure
|
||
improvement to do things with it. It’s really just an entry in a database.”
|
||
The actual plan that Musk concocted was beyond grandiose. As the
|
||
researchers at Pinnacle had pointed out, people were barely comfortable
|
||
buying books online. They might take their chances entering a credit card
|
||
number but exposing just their bank accounts to the Web was out of the
|
||
question to many. Pah. So what? Musk wanted to build a full-service
|
||
financial institution online: a company that would have savings and
|
||
checking accounts as well as brokerage services and insurance. The
|
||
technology to build such a service was possible, but navigating the
|
||
regulatory hell of creating an online bank from scratch looked like an
|
||
intractable problem to optimists and an impossibility to more level heads.
|
||
This was not dishing out directions to a pizzeria or putting up a house
|
||
listing. It was dealing with people’s finances, and there would be real
|
||
repercussions if the service did not work as billed.
|
||
Undaunted, Musk kicked this new plan into action before Zip2 had even
|
||
been sold. He chatted up some of the best engineers at the company to get a
|
||
feel for who might be willing to join him in another venture. Musk also
|
||
bounced his ideas off some contacts he’d made at the bank in Canada. In
|
||
January 1999, with Zip2’s board seeking a buyer, Musk began to formalize
|
||
his banking plan. The deal with Compaq was announced the next month.
|
||
And in March, Musk incorporated X.com, a finance start-up with a
|
||
pornographic-sounding name.
|
||
It had taken Musk less than a decade to go from being a Canadian
|
||
backpacker to becoming a multimillionaire at the age of twenty-seven. With
|
||
his $22 million, he moved from sharing an apartment with three roommates
|
||
to buying an 1,800-square-foot condo and renovating it. He also bought a
|
||
$1 million McLaren F1 sports car and a small prop plane and learned to fly.
|
||
Musk embraced the newfound celebrity that he’d earned as part of the dotcom
|
||
millionaire set. He let CNN show up at his apartment at 7 A.M. to film
|
||
the delivery of the car. A black eighteen-wheeler pulled up in front of
|
||
Musk’s place and then lowered the sleek, sliver vehicle onto the street,
|
||
while Musk stood slack-jawed with his arms folded. “There are sixty-two
|
||
McLarens in the world, and I will own one of them,” he told CNN. “Wow, I
|
||
can’t believe it’s actually here. That’s pretty wild, man.”
|
||
CNN interspersed video of the car delivery with interviews with Musk.
|
||
The whole time he looked like a caricature of an engineer who had made it
|
||
big. Musk’s hair had started thinning, and he had a closely cropped cut that
|
||
accentuated his boyish face. He wore an all-too-big brown sport coat and
|
||
checked his cell phone from his lavish car, sitting next to his gorgeous
|
||
girlfriend, Justine, and he seemed spellbound by his life. Musk rolled out
|
||
one laughable rich-guy line after another, talking first about the Zip2 deal
|
||
—“Receiving cash is cash. I mean, those are just a large number of Ben
|
||
Franklins”—next about the awesomeness of his life—“There it is,
|
||
gentlemen, the fastest car in the world”—and then about his prodigious
|
||
ambition—“I could go and buy one of the islands in the Bahamas and turn it
|
||
into my personal fiefdom, but I am much more interested in trying to build
|
||
and create a new company.” The camera crew followed Musk to the X.com
|
||
offices, where his cocksure delivery led to another round of cringe-worthy
|
||
statements: “I do not fit the picture of a banker,” “Raising fifty million
|
||
dollars is a matter of making a series of phone calls, and the money is
|
||
there,” “I think X.com could absolutely be a multibillion-dollar bonanza.”
|
||
Musk purchased the McLaren from a seller in Florida, snatching the car
|
||
away from Ralph Lauren, who had also inquired about buying it. Even very
|
||
wealthy people like Lauren would tend to reserve something like a
|
||
McLaren for special events or the occasional Sunday drive. Not Musk. He
|
||
drove it all around Silicon Valley and parked it on the street by the X.com
|
||
offices. His friends were horrified to see such a work of art covered with
|
||
bird droppings or in the parking lot of a Safeway. One day, Musk e-mailed
|
||
fellow McLaren owner Larry Ellison, the billionaire cofounder of the
|
||
software maker Oracle, out of the blue to see if he wanted to go race cars
|
||
around a track for fun. Jim Clark, another billionaire who liked fast things,
|
||
caught wind of the proposal and told a friend that he needed to rush over to
|
||
the local Ferrari dealership to buy something that could compete. Musk had
|
||
joined the big boys’ club. “Elon was super-excited about all of this,” said
|
||
George Zachary, a venture capitalist and close friend of Musk’s. “He
|
||
showed me the correspondence with Larry.” The next year, while driving
|
||
down Sand Hill Road to meet with an investor, Musk turned to a friend in
|
||
the car and said, “Watch this.” He floored the car, did a lane change, spun
|
||
out, and hit an embankment, which started the car spinning in midair like a
|
||
Frisbee. The windows and wheels were blown to smithereens, and the body
|
||
of the car damaged. Musk again turned to his companion and said, “The
|
||
funny part is it wasn’t insured.” The two of them then thumbed a ride to the
|
||
venture capitalist’s office.
|
||
To his credit, Musk did not fully buy in to this playboy persona. He
|
||
actually plowed the majority of the money he made from Zip2 into X.com.
|
||
There were practical reasons for this decision. Investors catch a break under
|
||
the tax law if they roll a windfall into a new venture within a couple of
|
||
months. But even by Silicon Valley’s high-risk standards, it was shocking to
|
||
put so much of one’s newfound wealth into something as iffy as an online
|
||
bank. All told, Musk invested about $12 million into X.com, leaving him,
|
||
after taxes, with $4 million or so for personal use. “That’s part of what
|
||
separates Elon from mere mortals,” said Ed Ho, the former Zip2 executive,
|
||
who went on to cofound X.com. “He’s willing to take an insane amount of
|
||
personal risk. When you do a deal like that, it either pays off or you end up
|
||
in a bus shelter somewhere.”
|
||
Musk’s decision to invest so much money in X.com looks even more
|
||
unusual in hindsight. Much of the point of being a dot-com success in 1999
|
||
was to prove yourself once, stash away your millions, and then use your
|
||
credentials to talk other people into betting their money on your next
|
||
venture. Musk would certainly go on to rely on outside investors, but he put
|
||
major skin in the game as well. So while Musk could be found on television
|
||
talking like the rest of the self-absorbed dot-com schmucks, he behaved
|
||
more like a throwback to Silicon Valley’s earlier days, when the founders of
|
||
companies like Intel were willing to take huge gambles on themselves.
|
||
Where Zip2 had been a neat, useful idea, X.com held the promise of
|
||
fomenting a major revolution. Musk, for the first time, would be
|
||
confronting a deep-pocketed, entrenched industry head-on with the hopes of
|
||
upending all of the incumbents. Musk also began to hone his trademark
|
||
style of entering an ultracomplex business and not letting the fact that he
|
||
knew very little about the industry’s nuances bother him in the slightest. He
|
||
had an inkling that the bankers were doing finance all wrong and that he
|
||
could run the business better than everyone else. Musk’s ego and
|
||
confidence had started heading toward the levels that would inspire some
|
||
and leave others thinking of him as pompous and unscrupulous. The
|
||
creation of X.com would ultimately reveal a great deal about Musk’s
|
||
creativity, relentless drive, confrontational style, and foibles as a leader.
|
||
Musk would also get another taste of being pushed aside at his own
|
||
company and the pain that accompanies a grand vision left unfulfilled.
|
||
Musk assembled what looked like an all-star crew to start X.com. Ho
|
||
had worked at SGI and Zip2 as an engineer, and his peers marveled at his
|
||
coding and team-management skills. They were joined by a pair of
|
||
Canadians with finance experience—Harris Fricker and Christopher Payne.
|
||
Musk had met Fricker during his time as an intern at the Bank of Nova
|
||
Scotia, and the two really hit it off. A Rhodes scholar, Fricker brought the
|
||
knowledge of the banking world’s mechanics that X.com would need.
|
||
Payne was Fricker’s friend from the Canadian finance community. All four
|
||
men were considered cofounders of the company, while Musk emerged as
|
||
the largest shareholder thanks to his hefty up-front investment. X.com
|
||
began, like so many Silicon Valley operations, at a house where the
|
||
cofounders began brainstorming, and then moved to more formal offices at
|
||
394 University Avenue in Palo Alto.
|
||
The cofounders were aligned philosophically around the idea that the
|
||
banking industry had fallen behind the times. Visiting a branch bank to
|
||
speak with a teller seemed pretty archaic now that the Internet had arrived.
|
||
The rhetoric sounded good, and the four men were enthused. The only thing
|
||
stopping them was reality. Musk had a modicum of banking experience and
|
||
had resorted to buying a book on the industry to help understand its inner
|
||
workings. The more the cofounders thought about their plan of attack, the
|
||
more they realized the regulatory issues blocking the creation of an online
|
||
bank were insurmountable. “As four and five months went by, the onion
|
||
just kept unwrapping,” said Ho.*
|
||
From the outset, there were personality clashes as well. Musk had
|
||
become a budding superstar in Silicon Valley and had the press fawning
|
||
over him. This didn’t sit that well with Fricker, who’d moved from Canada
|
||
and pegged X.com as his chance to make a mark on the world as a banking
|
||
whiz. Fricker, according to numerous people, wanted to run X.com and do
|
||
so in a more conventional manner. He found Musk’s visionary statements to
|
||
the press about rethinking the entire banking industry silly since the
|
||
company was struggling to build much of anything. “We were out
|
||
promising the sun, moon, and the stars to the media,” Fricker said. “Elon
|
||
would say that this is not a normal business environment, and you have to
|
||
suspend normal business thinking. He said, ‘There is a happy-gas factory up
|
||
on the hill, and it’s pumping stuff into the Valley.’” Fricker would not be the
|
||
last person to accuse Musk of overhyping products and playing the public,
|
||
although whether this is a flaw or one of Musk’s great talents as a
|
||
businessman is up for debate.
|
||
The squabble between Fricker and Musk came to a quick, nasty end.
|
||
Just five months after X.com had started, Fricker initiated a coup. “He said
|
||
either he takes over as CEO or he’s just going to take everyone from the
|
||
company and create his own company,” Musk said. “I don’t do well with
|
||
blackmail. I said, ‘You should go do that.’ So he did.” Musk tried to talk Ho
|
||
and some of the other key engineers into staying, but they sided with
|
||
Fricker and left. Musk ended up with a shell of a company and a handful of
|
||
loyal employees. “After all that went down, I remember sitting with Elon in
|
||
his office,” said Julie Ankenbrandt, an early X.com employee who stayed.
|
||
“There were a million laws in place to block something like X.com from
|
||
happening, but Elon didn’t care. He just looked at me and said, ‘I guess we
|
||
should hire some more people.’”*
|
||
Musk had been trying to raise funding for X.com and had been forced to
|
||
go to venture capitalists and confess that there wasn’t much in the way of a
|
||
company left. Mike Moritz, a famed investor from Sequoia Capital, backed
|
||
the company nonetheless, making a bet on Musk and little else. Musk hit
|
||
the streets of Silicon Valley once again and managed to attract engineers
|
||
with his rah-rah speeches about the future of Internet banking. Scott
|
||
Anderson, a young computer scientist, started on August 1, 1999, just a few
|
||
days after the exodus, and bought right into the vision. “You look back, and
|
||
it was total insanity,” Anderson said. “We had what amounted to a
|
||
Hollywood movie set of a website. It barely got past the VCs.”
|
||
Week by week, more engineers arrived and the vision became more real.
|
||
The company secured a banking license and a mutual fund license and
|
||
formed a partnership with Barclays. By November, X.com’s small software
|
||
team had created one of the world’s first online banks complete with FDIC
|
||
insurance to back the bank accounts and three mutual funds for investors to
|
||
choose. Musk gave the engineers $100,000 of his own money to conduct
|
||
their testing. On the night before Thanksgiving in 1999, X.com went live to
|
||
the public. “I was there until two A.M.,” Anderson said. “Then, I went home
|
||
to cook Thanksgiving dinner. Elon called me a few hours later and asked
|
||
me to come into the office to relieve some of the other engineers. Elon
|
||
stayed there forty-eight straight hours, making sure things worked.”
|
||
Under Musk’s direction, X.com tried out some radical banking
|
||
concepts. Customers received a $20 cash card just for signing up to use the
|
||
service and a $10 card for every person they referred. Musk did away with
|
||
niggling fees and overdraft penalties. In a very modern twist, X.com also
|
||
built a person-to-person payment system in which you could send someone
|
||
money just by plugging their e-mail address into the site. The whole idea
|
||
was to shift away from slow-moving banks with their mainframes taking
|
||
days to process payments and to create a kind of agile bank account where
|
||
you could move money around with a couple of clicks on a mouse or an email.
|
||
This was revolutionary stuff, and more than 200,000 people bought
|
||
into it and signed up for X.com within the first couple of months of
|
||
operation.
|
||
Soon enough, X.com had a major competitor. A couple of brainy kids
|
||
named Max Levchin and Peter Thiel had been working on a payment
|
||
system of their own at their start-up called Confinity. The duo actually
|
||
rented their office space—a glorified broom closet—from X.com and were
|
||
trying to make it possible for owners of Palm Pilot handhelds to swap
|
||
money via the infrared ports on the devices. Between X.com and Confinity,
|
||
the small office on University Avenue had turned into the frenzied epicenter
|
||
of the Internet finance revolution. “It was this mass of adolescent men that
|
||
worked so hard,” Ankenbrandt said. “It stunk so badly in there. I can still
|
||
smell it—leftover pizza, body odor, and sweat.”
|
||
The pleasantries between X.com and Confinity came to an abrupt end.
|
||
The Confinity founders moved to an office down the street and, like X.com,
|
||
began focusing their attention on Web and e-mail-based payments with their
|
||
service known as PayPal. The companies became locked in a heated battle
|
||
to match each other’s features and attract more users, knowing that whoever
|
||
got bigger faster would win. Tens of millions of dollars were spent on
|
||
promotions, while millions more were lost battling hackers who had seized
|
||
upon the services as new playgrounds for fraud. “It was like the Internet
|
||
version of making it rain at a strip club,” said Jeremy Stoppelman, an
|
||
X.com engineer who went on to become the CEO of Yelp. “You gave away
|
||
money as fast as you could.”
|
||
The race to win Internet payments gave Musk a chance to show off his
|
||
quick thinking and work ethic. He kept devising plans to counter the
|
||
advantage PayPal had established on auction sites like eBay. And he rallied
|
||
the X.com employees to implement the tactics as fast as possible using
|
||
brute-force appeals to their competitive natures. “There really wasn’t
|
||
anything suave about him,” Ankenbrandt said. “We all worked twenty hours
|
||
a day, and he worked twenty-three hours.”
|
||
In March 2000, X.com and Confinity finally decided to stop trying to
|
||
spend each other into oblivion and to join forces. Confinity had what looked
|
||
like the hottest product in PayPal but was paying out $100,000 a day in
|
||
awards to new customers and didn’t have the cash reserves to keep going.
|
||
X.com, by contrast, still had plenty of cash reserves and the more
|
||
sophisticated banking products. It took the lead in setting the merger terms,
|
||
leaving Musk as the largest shareholder of the combined company, which
|
||
would be called X.com. Shortly after the deal closed, X.com raised $100
|
||
million from backers including Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs and
|
||
boasted that it had more than one million customers.*
|
||
The two companies tried hard to mesh their cultures, with modest
|
||
success. Groups of employees from X.com tied their computer monitors to
|
||
their desk chairs with power cords and rolled them down the street to the
|
||
Confinity offices to work alongside their new colleagues. But the teams
|
||
could never quite see eye to eye. Musk kept championing the X.com brand,
|
||
while most everyone else favored PayPal. More fights broke out over the
|
||
design of the company’s technology infrastructure. The Confinity team led
|
||
by Levchin favored moving toward open-source software like Linux, while
|
||
Musk championed Microsoft’s data-center software as being more likely to
|
||
keep productivity high. This squabble may sound silly to outsiders, but it
|
||
was the equivalent of a religious war to the engineers, many of whom
|
||
viewed Microsoft as a dated evil empire and Linux as the modern software
|
||
of the people. Two months after the merger, Thiel resigned and Levchin
|
||
threatened to walk out over the technology rift. Musk was left to run a
|
||
fractured company.
|
||
The technology issues X.com had been facing worsened as the
|
||
computing systems failed to keep up with an exploding customer base.
|
||
Once a week, the company’s website collapsed. Most of the engineers were
|
||
ordered to start work designing a new system, which distracted key
|
||
technical personnel and left X.com vulnerable to fraud. “We were losing
|
||
money hand over fist,” said Stoppelman. As X.com became more popular
|
||
and its transaction volume exploded, all of its problems worsened. There
|
||
was more fraud. There were more fees from banks and credit card
|
||
companies. There was more competition from start-ups. X.com lacked a
|
||
cohesive business model to offset the losses and turn a profit from the
|
||
money it managed. Roelof Botha, the start-up’s chief financial officer and
|
||
now a prominent venture capitalist at Sequoia, did not think Musk provided
|
||
the board with a true picture of X.com’s issues. A growing number of other
|
||
people at the company questioned Musk’s decision-making in the face of all
|
||
the crises.
|
||
What followed was one of the nastiest coups in Silicon Valley’s long,
|
||
illustrious history of nasty coups. A small group of X.com employees
|
||
gathered one night at Fanny & Alexander, a now-defunct bar in Palo Alto,
|
||
and brainstormed about how to push out Musk. They decided to sell the
|
||
board on the idea of Thiel returning as CEO. Instead of confronting Musk
|
||
directly with this plan, the conspirators decided to take action behind
|
||
Musk’s back.
|
||
Musk and Justine had been married in January 2000 but had been too
|
||
busy for a honeymoon. Nine months later, in September, they planned to
|
||
mix business and pleasure by going on a fund-raising trip and ending it with
|
||
a honeymoon in Sydney to catch the Olympics. As they boarded their flight
|
||
one night, X.com executives delivered letters of no confidence to X.com’s
|
||
board. Some of the people loyal to Musk had sensed something was wrong,
|
||
but it was too late. “I went to the office at ten thirty that night, and everyone
|
||
was there,” Ankenbrandt said. “I could not believe it. I am frantically trying
|
||
to call Elon, but he’s on a plane.” By the time he landed, Musk had been
|
||
replaced by Thiel.
|
||
When Musk finally heard what had happened, he hopped on the next
|
||
plane back to Palo Alto. “It was shocking, but I will give Elon this—I
|
||
thought he handled it pretty well,” Justine said. For a brief period, Musk
|
||
tried to fight back. He urged the board to reconsider its decision. But when
|
||
it became clear that the company had already moved on, Musk relented. “I
|
||
talked to Moritz and a few others,” Musk said. “It wasn’t so much that I
|
||
wanted to be CEO but more like, ‘Hey, I think there are some pretty
|
||
important things that need to happen, and if I’m not CEO, I’m not sure they
|
||
are going to happen.’ But then I talked to Max and Peter, and it seemed like
|
||
they would make these things happen. So then, I mean, it’s not the end of
|
||
the world.”
|
||
Many of the X.com employees who had been with Musk since early on
|
||
were less than impressed by what had happened. “I was floored by it and
|
||
angry,” said Stoppelman. “Elon was sort of a rock star in my view. I was
|
||
very vocal about how I thought it was bullshit. But I knew fundamentally
|
||
that the company was doing well. It was a rocket ship, and I wasn’t going to
|
||
leave.” Stoppelman, then twenty-three, went into a conference room and
|
||
tore into Thiel and Levchin. “They let me vent it all out, and their reaction
|
||
was part of the reason I stayed.” Others remained embittered. “It was
|
||
backhanded and cowardly,” said Branden Spikes, a Zip2 and X.com
|
||
engineer. “I would have been more behind it if Elon had been in the room.”
|
||
By June 2001, Musk’s influence on the company was fading quickly.
|
||
That month, Thiel rebranded X.com as PayPal. Musk rarely lets a slight go
|
||
unpunished. Throughout this ordeal, however, he showed incredible
|
||
restraint. He embraced the role of being an advisor to the company and kept
|
||
investing in it, increasing his stake as PayPal’s largest shareholder. “You
|
||
would expect someone in Elon’s position to be bitter and vindictive, but he
|
||
wasn’t,” said Botha. “He supported Peter. He was a prince.”
|
||
The next few months would end up being key for Musk’s future. The
|
||
dot-com joyride was coming to a quick end, and people wanted to try to
|
||
cash out in any way possible. When executives from eBay began
|
||
approaching PayPal about an acquisition, the inclination for most people
|
||
was to sell and sell fast. Musk and Moritz, though, urged the board to reject
|
||
a number of offers and hold out for more money. PayPal had revenue of
|
||
about $240 million per year, and looked like it might make it as an
|
||
independent company and go public. Musk and Moritz’s resistance paid off
|
||
and then some. In July 2002, eBay offered $1.5 billion for PayPal, and
|
||
Musk and the rest of the board accepted the deal. Musk netted about $250
|
||
million from the sale to eBay, or $180 million after taxes—enough to make
|
||
what would turn out to be his very wild dreams possible.
|
||
The PayPal episode was a mixed bag for Musk. His reputation as a
|
||
leader suffered in the aftermath of the deal, and the media turned on him in
|
||
earnest for the first time. Eric Jackson, an early Confinity employee, wrote
|
||
The PayPal Wars: Battles with eBay, the Media, the Mafia, and the Rest of
|
||
Planet Earth in 2004 and recounted the company’s tumultuous journey. The
|
||
book painted Musk as an egomaniacal, stubborn jerk, making wrong
|
||
decisions at every turn, and portrayed Thiel and Levchin as heroic geniuses.
|
||
Valleywag, the technology industry gossip site, piled on as well and turned
|
||
bashing Musk into one of its pet projects. The criticisms grew to the point
|
||
that people started wondering aloud whether or not Musk counted as a true
|
||
cofounder of PayPal or had just ridden Thiel’s coattails to a magical payday.
|
||
The tone of the book along with the blog posts goaded Musk in 2007 into
|
||
writing a 2,200-word e-mail to Valleywag meant to set the record straight
|
||
with his version of events.
|
||
In the e-mail, Musk let his literary flair loose and gave the public a
|
||
direct look at his combative side. He described Jackson as “a sycophantic
|
||
jackass” and “one notch above an intern,” who had little insight into the
|
||
high-level goings-on at the company. “Since Eric worships Peter, the
|
||
outcome was obvious—Peter sounds like Mel Gibson in Braveheart and my
|
||
role is somewhere between negligible and a bad seed,” Musk wrote. Musk
|
||
then detailed seven reasons why he deserved cofounder status of PayPal,
|
||
including his role as its largest shareholder, the hiring of a lot of the top
|
||
talent, the creation of a number of the company’s most successful business
|
||
ideas, and his time as CEO when the company went from sixty to several
|
||
hundred employees.
|
||
Almost everyone I interviewed from the PayPal days leaned toward
|
||
agreeing with Musk’s overall assessment. They said that Jackson’s account
|
||
bordered on fantasy when it came to celebrating the Confinity team over
|
||
Musk and the X.com team. “There are a lot of PayPal people that suffer
|
||
from warped memories,” said Botha.
|
||
But these same people reached another consensus, saying that Musk had
|
||
mishandled the branding, technology infrastructure, and fraud situations. “I
|
||
think it would have killed the company if Elon had stayed on as CEO for
|
||
six more months,” said Botha. “The mistakes Elon was making at the time
|
||
were amplifying the risk of the business.” (For more on Musk’s take on the
|
||
PayPal years, see Appendix 2.)
|
||
The suggestions that Musk did not count as a “true” cofounder of
|
||
PayPal seem asinine in retrospect. Thiel, Levchin, and other PayPal
|
||
executives have said as much in the years since the eBay deal closed. The
|
||
only useful thing such criticisms produced were the bombastic
|
||
counteroffensives from Musk, which revealed touches of insecurity and the
|
||
seriousness with which Musk insists that the historical record reflect his
|
||
take on events. “He comes from the school of thought in the public relations
|
||
world that you let no inaccuracy go uncorrected,” said Vince Sollitto, the
|
||
former communications chief at PayPal. “It sets a precedent, and you
|
||
should fight every out-of-place comma tooth and nail. He takes things very
|
||
personally and usually seeks war.”
|
||
The stronger critique of Musk during this period of his life was that he
|
||
had succeeded to a large degree despite himself. Musk’s traits as a
|
||
confrontational know-it-all and his abundant ego created deep, lasting
|
||
fractures within his companies. While Musk consciously tried to temper his
|
||
behavior, these efforts were not enough to win over investors and more
|
||
experienced executives. At both Zip2 and PayPal, the companies’ boards
|
||
came to the conclusion that Musk was not yet CEO material. It can also be
|
||
argued that Musk had become a hyperbolic huckster, who overreached and
|
||
oversold his companies’ technology. Musk’s biggest detractors have made
|
||
all of these arguments either in public or private and a half dozen or so of
|
||
them said far worse things to me about his character and actions, describing
|
||
Musk as unethical in business and vicious with his personal attacks. Almost
|
||
universally, these people were unwilling to go on the record with their
|
||
comments, claiming to be afraid Musk would pursue litigation against them
|
||
or ruin their ability to do business.
|
||
These criticisms must be weighed against Musk’s track record. He
|
||
demonstrated an innate ability to read people and technology trends at the
|
||
inception of the consumer Web. While others tried to wrap their heads
|
||
around the Internet’s implications, Musk had already set off on a purposeful
|
||
plan of attack. He envisioned many of the early pieces of technology—
|
||
directories, maps, sites that focused on vertical markets—that would
|
||
become mainstays on the Web. Then, just as people became comfortable
|
||
with buying things from Amazon.com and eBay, Musk made the great leap
|
||
forward to full-fledged Internet banking. He would bring standard financial
|
||
instruments online and then modernize the industry with a host of new
|
||
concepts. He exhibited a deep insight into human nature that helped his
|
||
companies pull off exceptional marketing, technology, and financial feats.
|
||
Musk was already playing the entrepreneur game at the highest level and
|
||
working the press and investors like few others could. Did he hype things
|
||
up and rub people the wrong way? Absolutely—and with spectacular
|
||
results.
|
||
Based in large part on Musk’s guidance, PayPal survived the bursting of
|
||
the dot-com bubble, became the first blockbuster IPO after the 9/11 attacks,
|
||
and then sold to eBay for an astronomical sum while the rest of the
|
||
technology industry was mired in a dramatic downturn. It was nearly
|
||
impossible to survive let alone emerge as a winner in the midst of such a
|
||
mess.
|
||
PayPal also came to represent one of the greatest assemblages of
|
||
business and engineering talent in Silicon Valley history. Both Musk and
|
||
Thiel had a keen eye for young, brilliant engineers. The founders of startups
|
||
as varied as YouTube, Palantir Technologies, and Yelp all worked at
|
||
PayPal. Another set of people—including Reid Hoffman, Thiel, and Botha
|
||
—emerged as some of the technology industry’s top investors. PayPal staff
|
||
pioneered techniques in fighting online fraud that have formed the basis of
|
||
software used by the CIA and FBI to track terrorists and of software used
|
||
by the world’s largest banks to combat crime. This collection of superbright
|
||
employees has become known as the PayPal Mafia—more or less the
|
||
current ruling class of Silicon Valley—and Musk is its most famous and
|
||
successful member.
|
||
Hindsight also continues to favor Musk’s unbridled vision over the more
|
||
cautious pragmatism of executives at Zip2 and PayPal. Had it chased
|
||
consumers as Musk urged, Zip2 may have ended up as a blockbuster
|
||
mapping and review service. As for PayPal, an argument can still be made
|
||
that the investors sold out too early and should have listened more to
|
||
Musk’s demands to remain independent. By 2014, PayPal had amassed 153
|
||
million users and was valued at close to $32 billion as a stand-alone
|
||
company. A flood of payment and banking start-ups have appeared as well
|
||
—Square, Stripe, and Simple, to name three among the S’s—that have
|
||
looked to fulfill much of the original X.com vision.
|
||
If X.com’s board had been a bit more patient with Musk, there’s good
|
||
reason to believe he would have succeeded with delivery of the “online
|
||
bank to rule them all” that he had set out to create. History has
|
||
demonstrated that while Musk’s goals can sound absurd in the moment, he
|
||
certainly believes in them and, when given enough time, tends to achieve
|
||
them. “He always works from a different understanding of reality than the
|
||
rest of us,” Ankenbrandt said. “He is just different than the rest of us.”
|
||
While navigating the business tumult of Zip2 and PayPal, Musk found a
|
||
moment of peace in his personal life. He’d spent years courting Justine
|
||
Wilson from afar, flying her out for visits on the weekends. For a long time,
|
||
his oppressive hours and his roommates put a crimp on the relationship. But
|
||
the Zip2 sale let Musk buy a place of his own and pay a bit more attention
|
||
to Justine. Like any couple, they had their ups and downs, but that passion
|
||
of young love remained. “We fought a lot, but when we weren’t fighting,
|
||
there was a deep sense of compassion—a bond,” Justine said. The couple
|
||
had been sparring for a few days about phone calls Justine kept getting from
|
||
an ex-boyfriend—“Elon didn’t like that”—and had a major spat while
|
||
walking near the X.com offices. “I remember thinking it was a lot of drama,
|
||
and that if I was going to put up with it, we might as well be married. I told
|
||
him he should just propose to me,” Justine said. It took Musk a few minutes
|
||
to cool down and then he did just that, proposing on the spot. A few days
|
||
later, a more chivalrous Musk returned to the sidewalk, got down on bended
|
||
knee, and presented Justine with a ring.
|
||
Justine knew all about Musk’s grim childhood and the intense range of
|
||
emotions he could exhibit. Her romantic sensibilities overrode any
|
||
trepidation she might have had about these parts of Musk’s history and
|
||
character and centered instead on his strength. Musk often talked fondly
|
||
about Alexander the Great, and Justine saw him as her own conquering
|
||
hero. “He wasn’t afraid of responsibility,” she said. “He didn’t run from
|
||
things. He wanted to get married and have kids early on.” Musk also
|
||
exuded a confidence and passion that made Justine think life with him
|
||
would always be okay. “Money is not his motivation, and, quite frankly, I
|
||
think it just happens for him,” Justine said. “It’s just there. He knows he can
|
||
generate it.”
|
||
At their wedding reception, Justine encountered the other side of the
|
||
conquering hero. Musk pulled Justine close while they danced, and
|
||
informed her, “I am the alpha in this relationship.”3 Two months later,
|
||
Justine signed a postnuptial financial agreement that would come back to
|
||
haunt her and entered into an enduring power struggle. She described the
|
||
situation years later in an article for Marie Claire, writing, “He was
|
||
constantly remarking on the ways he found me lacking. ‘I am your wife,’ I
|
||
told him repeatedly, ‘not your employee.’ ‘If you were my employee,’ he
|
||
said just as often, ‘I would fire you.’”
|
||
The newlyweds were not helped by the drama at X.com. They’d put off
|
||
their honeymoon and then had it derailed by the coup. It took until late
|
||
December 2000 for things to calm down enough for Musk to take his first
|
||
vacation in years. He arranged a two-week trip, with the first part taking
|
||
place in Brazil and the second in South Africa at a game reserve near the
|
||
Mozambique border. While in Africa, Musk contracted the most virulent
|
||
version of malaria—falciparum malaria—which accounts for the vast
|
||
majority of malaria deaths.
|
||
Musk returned to California in January, which is when the illness took
|
||
hold. He started to get sick and was bedridden for a few days before Justine
|
||
took him to a doctor who then ordered that Musk be rushed in an ambulance
|
||
to Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City.* Doctors there misdiagnosed and
|
||
mistreated his condition to the point that Musk was near death. “Then, there
|
||
happened to be a guy visiting from another hospital who had seen a lot
|
||
more malaria cases,” Musk said. He spied Musk’s blood work in the lab and
|
||
ordered an immediate maximum dosage of doxycycline, an antibiotic. The
|
||
doctor told Musk that if he had turned up a day later, the medicine likely
|
||
would no longer have been effective.
|
||
Musk spent ten agonizing days in the intensive care unit. The
|
||
experience shocked Justine. “He’s built like a tank,” she said. “He has a
|
||
level of stamina and an ability to deal with levels of stress that I’ve never
|
||
seen in anyone else. To see him laid low like that in total misery was like a
|
||
visit to an alternate universe.” It took Musk six months to recover. He lost
|
||
forty-five pounds over the course of the illness and had a closet full of
|
||
clothes that no longer fit. “I came very close to dying,” Musk said. “That’s
|
||
my lesson for taking a vacation: vacations will kill you.”
|
||
6
|
||
MICE IN SPACE
|
||
ELON MUSK TURNED THIRTY IN JUNE 2001, and the birthday hit
|
||
him hard. “I’m no longer a child prodigy,” he told Justine, only half joking.
|
||
That same month X.com officially changed its name to PayPal, providing a
|
||
harsh reminder that the company had been ripped away from Musk and
|
||
given to someone else to run. The start-up life, which Musk described as
|
||
akin to “eating glass and staring into the abyss,”4 had gotten old and so had
|
||
Silicon Valley. It felt like Musk was living inside a trade show where
|
||
everyone worked in the technology industry and talked all the time about
|
||
funding, IPOs, and chasing big paydays. People liked to brag about the
|
||
crazy hours they worked, and Justine would just laugh, knowing Musk had
|
||
lived a more extreme version of the Silicon Valley lifestyle than they could
|
||
imagine. “I had friends who complained that their husbands came home at
|
||
seven or eight,” she said. “Elon would come home at eleven and work some
|
||
more. People didn’t always get the sacrifice he made in order to be where
|
||
he was.”
|
||
The idea of escaping this incredibly lucrative rat race started to grow
|
||
more and more appealing. Musk’s entire life had been about chasing a
|
||
bigger stage, and Palo Alto seemed more like a stepping-stone than a final
|
||
destination. The couple decided to move south and begin their family and
|
||
the next chapter of their lives in Los Angeles.
|
||
“There’s an element to him that likes the style and the excitement and
|
||
color of a place like L.A.,” said Justine. “Elon likes to be where the action
|
||
is.” A small group of Musk’s friends who felt similarly had also decamped
|
||
to Los Angeles for what would be a wild couple of years.
|
||
It wasn’t just Los Angeles’s glitz and grandeur that attracted Musk. It
|
||
was also the call of space. After being pushed out of PayPal, Musk had
|
||
started to revisit his childhood fantasies around rocket ships and space
|
||
travel and to think that he might have a greater calling than creating Internet
|
||
services. The changes in his attitude and thinking soon became obvious to
|
||
his friends, including a group of PayPal executives who had gathered in Las
|
||
Vegas one weekend to celebrate the company’s success. “We’re all hanging
|
||
out in this cabana at the Hard Rock Cafe, and Elon is there reading some
|
||
obscure Soviet rocket manual that was all moldy and looked like it had been
|
||
bought on eBay,” said Kevin Hartz, an early PayPal investor. “He was
|
||
studying it and talking openly about space travel and changing the world.”
|
||
Musk had picked Los Angeles with intent. It gave him access to space
|
||
or at least the space industry. Southern California’s mild, consistent weather
|
||
had made it a favored city of the aeronautics industry since the 1920s, when
|
||
the Lockheed Aircraft Company set up shop in Hollywood. Howard
|
||
Hughes, the U.S. Air Force, NASA, Boeing, and myriad other people and
|
||
organizations have performed much of their manufacturing and cuttingedge
|
||
experimentation in and around Los Angeles. Today the city remains a
|
||
major hub for the military’s aeronautics work and commercial activity.
|
||
While Musk didn’t know exactly what he wanted to do in space, he realized
|
||
that just by being in Los Angeles he would be surrounded by the world’s
|
||
top aeronautics thinkers. They could help him refine any ideas, and there
|
||
would be plenty of recruits to join his next venture.
|
||
Musk’s first interactions with the aeronautics community were with an
|
||
eclectic collection of space enthusiasts, members of a nonprofit group
|
||
called the Mars Society. Dedicated to exploring and settling the Red Planet,
|
||
the Mars Society planned to hold a fund-raiser in mid-2001. The $500-perplate
|
||
event was to take place at the house of one of the well-off Mars
|
||
Society members, and invitations to the usual characters had been mailed
|
||
out. What stunned Robert Zubrin, the head of the group, was the reply from
|
||
someone named Elon Musk, whom no one could remember inviting. “He
|
||
gave us a check for five thousand dollars,” Zubrin said. “That made
|
||
everyone take notice.” Zubrin began researching Musk, determined he was
|
||
rich, and invited him for coffee ahead of the dinner. “I wanted to make sure
|
||
he knew the projects we had under way,” Zubrin said. He proceeded to
|
||
regale Musk with tales of the research center the society had built in the
|
||
Arctic to mimic the tough conditions of Mars and the experiments they had
|
||
been running for something called the Translife Mission, in which there
|
||
would be a spinning capsule orbiting Earth that was piloted by a crew of
|
||
mice. “It would spin to give them one-third gravity—the same you would
|
||
have on Mars—and they would live there and reproduce,” Zubrin told
|
||
Musk.
|
||
When it was time for dinner, Zubrin placed Musk at the VIP table next
|
||
to himself, the director and space buff James Cameron, and Carol Stoker, a
|
||
planetary scientist for NASA with a deep interest in Mars. “Elon is so
|
||
youthful-looking and at that time he looked like a little boy,” Stoker said.
|
||
“Cameron was chatting him up right away to invest in his next movie, and
|
||
Zubrin was trying to get him to make a big donation to the Mars Society.”
|
||
In return for being hounded for cash, Musk probed about for ideas and
|
||
contacts. Stoker’s husband was an aerospace engineer at NASA working on
|
||
a concept for an airplane that would glide over Mars looking for water.
|
||
Musk loved that. “He was much more intense than some of the other
|
||
millionaires,” Zubrin said. “He didn’t know a lot about space, but he had a
|
||
scientific mind. He wanted to know exactly what was being planned in
|
||
regards to Mars and what the significance would be.” Musk took to the
|
||
Mars Society right away and joined its board of directors. He donated
|
||
another $100,000 to fund a research station in the desert as well.
|
||
Musk’s friends were not entirely sure what to make of his mental state.
|
||
He’d lost a tremendous amount of weight fighting off malaria and looked
|
||
almost skeletal. With little prompting, Musk would start expounding on his
|
||
desire to do something meaningful with his life—something lasting. His
|
||
next move had to be either in solar or in space. “He said, ‘The logical thing
|
||
to happen next is solar, but I can’t figure out how to make any money out of
|
||
it,’” said George Zachary, the investor and close friend of Musk’s, recalling
|
||
a lunch date at the time. “Then he started talking about space, and I thought
|
||
he meant office space like a real estate play.” Musk had actually started
|
||
thinking bigger than the Mars Society. Rather than send a few mice into
|
||
Earth’s orbit, Musk wanted to send them to Mars. Some very rough
|
||
calculations done at the time suggested that the journey would cost $15
|
||
million. “He asked if I thought that was crazy,” Zachary said. “I asked, ‘Do
|
||
the mice come back? Because, if they don’t, yeah, most people will think
|
||
that’s crazy.’” As it turned out, the mice were not only meant to go to Mars
|
||
and come back but were also meant to procreate along the way, during a
|
||
journey that would take months. Jeff Skoll, another one of Musk’s friends
|
||
who made a fortune at eBay, pointed out that the fornicating mice would
|
||
need a hell of a lot of cheese and bought Musk a giant wheel of Le Brouère,
|
||
a type of Gruyère.
|
||
Musk did not mind becoming the butt of cheese jokes. The more he
|
||
thought about space, the more important its exploration seemed to him. He
|
||
felt as if the public had lost some of its ambition and hope for the future.
|
||
The average person might see space exploration as a waste of time and
|
||
effort and rib him for talking about the subject, but Musk thought about
|
||
interplanetary travel in a very earnest way. He wanted to inspire the masses
|
||
and reinvigorate their passion for science, conquest, and the promise of
|
||
technology.
|
||
His fears that mankind had lost much of its will to push the boundaries
|
||
were reinforced one day when Musk went to the NASA website. He’d
|
||
expected to find a detailed plan for exploring Mars and instead found
|
||
bupkis. “At first I thought, jeez, maybe I’m just looking in the wrong
|
||
place,” Musk once told Wired. “Why was there no plan, no schedule? There
|
||
was nothing. It seemed crazy.” Musk believed that the very idea of America
|
||
was intertwined with humanity’s desire to explore. He found it sad that the
|
||
American agency tasked with doing audacious things in space and
|
||
exploring new frontiers as its mission seemed to have no serious interest in
|
||
investigating Mars at all. The spirit of Manifest Destiny had been deflated
|
||
or maybe even come to a depressing end, and hardly anyone seemed to
|
||
care. Like so many quests to revitalize America’s soul and bring hope to all
|
||
of mankind, Musk’s journey began in a hotel conference room. By this
|
||
time, Musk had built up a decent network of contacts in the space industry,
|
||
and he brought the best of them together at a series of salons—sometimes at
|
||
the Renaissance hotel at the Los Angeles airport and sometimes at the
|
||
Sheraton hotel in Palo Alto. Musk had no formal business plan for these
|
||
people to debate. He mostly wanted them to help him develop the mice-to-
|
||
Mars idea or at least to come up with something comparable. Musk hoped
|
||
to hit on a grand gesture for mankind—some type of event that would
|
||
capture the world’s attention, get people thinking about Mars again, and
|
||
have them reflect on man’s potential. The scientists and luminaries at the
|
||
meetings were to figure out a spectacle that would be technically feasible at
|
||
a price tag of approximately $20 million. Musk resigned from his position
|
||
as a director of the Mars Society and announced his own organization—the
|
||
Life to Mars Foundation.
|
||
The collection of talent attending these sessions in 2001 was impressive.
|
||
Scientists showed up from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, or JPL.
|
||
James Cameron appeared, lending some celebrity to the affair. Also
|
||
attending was Michael Griffin, whose academic credentials were
|
||
spectacular and included degrees in aerospace engineering, electrical
|
||
engineering, civil engineering, and applied physics. Griffin had worked for
|
||
the CIA’s venture capital arm called In-Q-Tel, at NASA, and at JPL and was
|
||
just in the process of leaving Orbital Sciences Corporation, a maker of
|
||
satellites and spacecraft, where he had been chief technical officer and the
|
||
general manager of the space systems group. It could be argued that no one
|
||
on the planet knew more about the realities of getting things into space than
|
||
Griffin, and he was working for Musk as space thinker in chief. (Four years
|
||
later, in 2005, Griffin took over as head of NASA.)
|
||
The experts were thrilled to have another rich guy appear who was
|
||
willing to fund something interesting in space. They happily debated the
|
||
merits and feasibility of sending up rodents and watching them hump. But,
|
||
as the discussion wore on, a consensus started to build around pursuing a
|
||
different project—something called “Mars Oasis.” Under this plan, Musk
|
||
would buy a rocket and use it to shoot what amounted to a robotic
|
||
greenhouse to Mars. A group of researchers had already been working on a
|
||
space-ready growth chamber for plants. The idea was to modify their
|
||
structure, so that it could open up briefly and suck in some of the Martian
|
||
regolith, or soil, and then use it to grow a plant, which would in turn
|
||
produce the first oxygen on Mars. Much to Musk’s liking, this new plan
|
||
seemed both ostentatious and feasible.
|
||
Musk wanted the structure to have a window and a way to send a video
|
||
feedback to Earth, so that people could watch the plant grow. The group
|
||
also talked about sending out kits to students around the country who would
|
||
grow their own plants simultaneously and take notice, for example, that the
|
||
Martian plant could grow twice as high as its Earth-bound counterpart in the
|
||
same amount of time. “This concept had been floating around in various
|
||
forms for a while,” said Dave Bearden, a space industry veteran who
|
||
attended the meetings. “It would be, yes, there is life on Mars, and we put it
|
||
there. The hope was that it might turn on a light for thousands of kids that
|
||
this place is not that hostile. Then they might start thinking, Maybe we
|
||
should go there.” Musk’s enthusiasm for the idea started to inspire the
|
||
group, many of whom had grown cynical about anything novel happening
|
||
in space again. “He’s a very smart, very driven guy with a huge ego,”
|
||
Bearden said. “At one point someone mentioned that he might become Time
|
||
magazine’s Man of the Year, and you could see him light up. He has this
|
||
belief that he is the guy who can change the world.”
|
||
The main thing troubling the space experts was Musk’s budget.
|
||
Following the salons, it seemed like Musk wanted to spend somewhere
|
||
between $20 million and $30 million on the stunt, and everyone knew that
|
||
the cost of a rocket launch alone would eat up that money and then some.
|
||
“In my mind, you needed two hundred million dollars to do it right,”
|
||
Bearden said. “But people were reluctant to bring too much reality into the
|
||
situation too early and just get the whole idea killed.” Then there were the
|
||
immense engineering challenges that would need solving. “To have a big
|
||
window on this thing was a real thermal problem,” Bearden said. “You
|
||
could not keep the container warm enough to keep anything alive.”
|
||
Scooping Martian soil into the structure seemed not only hard to do
|
||
physically but also like a flat-out bad idea since the regolith would be toxic.
|
||
For a while, the scientists debated growing the plant in a nutrient-rich gel
|
||
instead, but that felt like cheating and like it might undermine the whole
|
||
point of the endeavor. Even the optimistic moments were awash in
|
||
unknowns. One scientist found some very resilient mustard seeds and
|
||
thought they could possibly survive a treated version of the Martian soil.
|
||
“There was a pretty big downside if the plant didn’t survive,” Bearden said.
|
||
“You have this dead garden on Mars that ends up giving off the opposite of
|
||
the intended effect.”*
|
||
Musk never flinched. He turned some of the volunteer thinkers into
|
||
consultants, and put them to work on the plant machine’s design. He also
|
||
plotted a trip to Russia to find out exactly how much a launch would cost.
|
||
Musk intended to buy a refurbished intercontinental ballistic missile, or
|
||
ICBM, from the Russians and use that as his launch vehicle. For help with
|
||
this, Musk reached out to Jim Cantrell, an unusual fellow who had done a
|
||
mix of classified and unclassified work for the United States and other
|
||
governments. Among other claims to fame, Cantrell had been accused of
|
||
espionage and placed under house arrest in 1996 by the Russians after a
|
||
satellite deal went awry. “After a couple of weeks, Al Gore made some
|
||
calls, and it got worked out,” Cantrell said. “I didn’t want anything to do
|
||
with the Russians again—ever.” Musk had other ideas.
|
||
Cantrell was driving his convertible on a hot July evening in Utah when
|
||
a call came in. “This guy in a funny accent said, ‘I really need to talk to
|
||
you. I am a billionaire. I am going to start a space program.’” Cantrell could
|
||
not hear Musk well—he thought his name was Ian Musk—and said he
|
||
would call back once he got home. The two men didn’t exactly trust each
|
||
other at the outset. Musk refused to give Cantrell his cell phone number and
|
||
made the call from his fax machine. Cantrell found Musk both intriguing
|
||
and all too eager. “He asked if there was an airport near me and if I could
|
||
meet the next day,” Cantrell said. “My red flags started going off.” Fearing
|
||
one of his enemies was trying to orchestrate an elaborate setup, Cantrell
|
||
told Musk to meet him at the Salt Lake City airport, where he would rent a
|
||
conference room near the Delta lounge. “I wanted him to meet me behind
|
||
security so he couldn’t pack a gun,” Cantrell said. When the meeting finally
|
||
took place, Musk and Cantrell hit it off. Musk rolled out his “humans need
|
||
to become a multiplanetary species” speech, and Cantrell said that if Musk
|
||
was really serious, he’d be willing to go to Russia—again—and help buy a
|
||
rocket.
|
||
In late October 2001, Musk, Cantrell, and Adeo Ressi, Musk’s friend
|
||
from college, boarded a commercial flight to Moscow. Ressi had been
|
||
playing the role of Musk’s guardian and trying to ascertain whether his best
|
||
friend had started to lose his mind. Compilation videos of rockets exploding
|
||
were made, and interventions were held with Musk’s friends trying to talk
|
||
him out of wasting his money. While these measures failed, Adeo went
|
||
along to Russia to try to contain Musk as best as he could. “Adeo would call
|
||
me to the side and say, ‘What Elon is doing is insane. A philanthropic
|
||
gesture? That’s crazy,’” Cantrell said. “He was seriously worried but was
|
||
down with the trip.” And why not? The men were heading to Russia at the
|
||
height of its freewheeling post-Soviet days when rich guys could apparently
|
||
buy space missiles on the open market.
|
||
Team Musk would grow to include Mike Griffin, and meet with the
|
||
Russians three times over a period of four months.* The group set up a few
|
||
meetings with companies like NPO Lavochkin, which had made probes
|
||
intended for Mars and Venus for the Russian Federal Space Agency, and
|
||
Kosmotras, a commercial rocket launcher. The appointments all seemed to
|
||
go the same way, following Russian decorum. The Russians, who often skip
|
||
breakfast, would ask to meet around 11 A.M. at their offices for an early
|
||
lunch. Then there would be small talk for an hour or more as the meeting
|
||
attendees picked over a spread of sandwiches, sausages, and, of course,
|
||
vodka. At some point during this process, Griffin usually started to lose his
|
||
patience. “He suffers fools very poorly,” Cantrell said. “He’s looking
|
||
around and wondering when we’re going to get down to fucking business.”
|
||
The answer was not soon. After lunch came a lengthy smoking and coffeedrinking
|
||
period. Once all of the tables were cleared, the Russian in charge
|
||
would turn to Musk and ask, “What is it you’re interested in buying?” The
|
||
big windup may not have bothered Musk as much if the Russians had taken
|
||
him more seriously. “They looked at us like we were not credible people,”
|
||
Cantrell said. “One of their chief designers spit on me and Elon because he
|
||
thought we were full of shit.”
|
||
The most intense meeting occurred in an ornate, neglected,
|
||
prerevolutionary building near downtown Moscow. The vodka shots started
|
||
—“To space!” “To America!”—while Musk sat on $20 million, which he
|
||
hoped would be enough to buy three ICBMs that could be retooled to go to
|
||
space. Buzzed from the vodka, Musk asked point-blank how much a missile
|
||
would cost. The reply: $8 million each. Musk countered, offering $8 million
|
||
for two. “They sat there and looked at him,” Cantrell said. “And said
|
||
something like, ‘Young boy. No.’ They also intimated that he didn’t have
|
||
the money.” At this point, Musk had decided the Russians were either not
|
||
serious about doing business or determined to part a dot-com millionaire
|
||
from as much of his money as possible. He stormed out of the meeting.
|
||
The Team Musk mood could not have been worse. It was near the end
|
||
of February 2002, and they went outside to hail a cab and drove straight to
|
||
the airport surrounded by the snow and dreck of the Moscow winter. Inside
|
||
the cab, no one talked. Musk had come to Russia filled with optimism about
|
||
putting on a great show for mankind and was now leaving exasperated and
|
||
disappointed by human nature. The Russians were the only ones with
|
||
rockets that could possibly fit within Musk’s budget. “It was a long drive,”
|
||
Cantrell said. “We sat there in silence looking at the Russian peasants
|
||
shopping in the snow.” The somber mood lingered all the way to the plane,
|
||
until the drink cart arrived. “You always feel particularly good when the
|
||
wheels lift off in Moscow,” Cantrell said. “It’s like, ‘My God. I made it.’
|
||
So, Griffin and I got drinks and clinked our glasses.” Musk sat in the row in
|
||
front of them, typing on his computer. “We’re thinking, Fucking nerd. What
|
||
can he be doing now?” At which point Musk wheeled around and flashed a
|
||
spreadsheet he’d created. “Hey, guys,” he said, “I think we can build this
|
||
rocket ourselves.”
|
||
Griffin and Cantrell had downed a couple of drinks by this time and
|
||
were too deflated to entertain a fantasy. They knew all too well the stories
|
||
of gung-ho millionaires who thought they could conquer space only to lose
|
||
their fortunes. Just the year before, Andrew Beal, a real estate and finance
|
||
whiz in Texas, folded his aerospace company after having poured millions
|
||
into a massive test site. “We’re thinking, Yeah, you and whose fucking
|
||
army,” Cantrell said. “But, Elon says, ‘No, I’m serious. I have this
|
||
spreadsheet.’” Musk passed his laptop over to Griffin and Cantrell, and they
|
||
were dumbfounded. The document detailed the costs of the materials
|
||
needed to build, assemble, and launch a rocket. According to Musk’s
|
||
calculations, he could undercut existing launch companies by building a
|
||
modest-sized rocket that would cater to a part of the market that specialized
|
||
in carrying smaller satellites and research payloads to space. The
|
||
spreadsheet also laid out the hypothetical performance characteristics of the
|
||
rocket in fairly impressive detail. “I said, ‘Elon, where did you get this?’”
|
||
Cantrell said.
|
||
Musk had spent months studying the aerospace industry and the physics
|
||
behind it. From Cantrell and others, he’d borrowed Rocket Propulsion
|
||
Elements, Fundamentals of Astrodynamics, and Aerothermodynamics of
|
||
Gas Turbine and Rocket Propulsion, along with several more seminal texts.
|
||
Musk had reverted to his childhood state as a devourer of information and
|
||
had emerged from this meditative process with the realization that rockets
|
||
could and should be made much cheaper than what the Russians were
|
||
offering. Forget the mice. Forget the plant with its own video feed growing
|
||
—or possibly dying—on Mars. Musk would inspire people to think about
|
||
exploring space again by making it cheaper to explore space.
|
||
As word traveled around the space community about Musk’s plans,
|
||
there was a collective ho-hum. People like Zubrin had seen this show many
|
||
times before. “There was a string of zillionaires that got sold a good story
|
||
by an engineer,” Zubrin said. “Combine my brains and your money, and we
|
||
can build a rocket ship that will be profitable and open up the space frontier.
|
||
The techies usually ended up spending the rich guy’s money for two years,
|
||
and then the rich guy gets bored and shuts the thing down. With Elon,
|
||
everyone gave a sigh and said, ‘Oh well. He could have spent ten million
|
||
dollars to send up the mice, but instead he’ll spend hundreds of millions and
|
||
probably fail like all the others that proceeded him.’”
|
||
While well aware of the risks tied to starting a rocket company, Musk
|
||
had at least one reason to think he might succeed where others had failed.
|
||
That reason’s name was Tom Mueller.
|
||
Mueller grew up the son of a logger in the tidy Idaho town of St.
|
||
Maries, where he developed a reputation as an oddball. While the rest of the
|
||
kids were outside exploring the woods in winter, Mueller stayed warm in
|
||
the library reading books or watching Star Trek at his house. He also
|
||
tinkered. Walking to grade school one day, Mueller discovered a smashed
|
||
clock in an alley and turned it into a pet project. Each day, he fixed some
|
||
part of the clock—a gear, a spring—until he got it working. A similar thing
|
||
happened with the family’s lawn mower, which Mueller disassembled one
|
||
afternoon on the front lawn for fun. “My dad came home and was so mad
|
||
because he thought he’d have to buy a new mower,” Mueller said. “But I
|
||
put it back together, and it ran.” Mueller then got stuck on rockets. He
|
||
started buying mail order kits and following the instructions to build small
|
||
rockets. Rather quickly, Mueller graduated to constructing his own devices.
|
||
At the age of twelve, he crafted a mock-up space shuttle that could be
|
||
attached to a rocket, sent up into the air, and then glide back to the ground.
|
||
For a science project a couple of years later, Mueller borrowed his dad’s
|
||
oxyacetylene welding equipment to make a rocket engine prototype.
|
||
Mueller cooled the device by placing it upside down in a coffee can full of
|
||
water—“I could run it like that all day long”—and invented equally creative
|
||
ways to measure its performance. The machine was good enough for
|
||
Mueller to win a couple of regional science fair competitions and end up at
|
||
an international event. “That’s where I promptly got my ass kicked,”
|
||
Mueller said.
|
||
Tall, lanky, and with a rectangular face, Mueller is an easygoing sort
|
||
who muddled through college for a bit, teaching his friends how to make
|
||
smoke bombs, and then eventually settled down and did well as a
|
||
mechanical engineering student. Fresh out of college, he worked for Hughes
|
||
Aircraft on satellites—“It wasn’t rockets, but it was close”—and then went
|
||
to TRW Space & Electronics. It was the latter half of the 1980s, and Ronald
|
||
Reagan’s Star Wars program had the space gearheads dreaming about
|
||
kinetic weapons and all sorts of mayhem. At TRW, Mueller experimented
|
||
with crazy types of propellants and oversaw the development of the
|
||
company’s TR-106 engine, a giant machine fueled by liquid oxygen and
|
||
hydrogen. As a hobby, Mueller hung out with a couple hundred amateur
|
||
rocketry buffs in the Reaction Research Society, a group formed in 1943 to
|
||
encourage the building and firing of rockets. On the weekends, Mueller
|
||
traveled out to the Mojave Desert with the other RRS members to push the
|
||
limits of amateur machines. Mueller was one of the club’s standouts, able to
|
||
build things that actually worked, and could experiment with some of the
|
||
more radical concepts that were quashed by his conservative bosses at
|
||
TRW. His crowning achievement was an eighty-pound engine that could
|
||
produce thirteen thousand pounds of thrust and earned accolades as the
|
||
world’s largest liquid-fuel rocket engine built by an amateur. “I still keep
|
||
the rockets hanging in my garage,” Mueller said.
|
||
In January 2002, Mueller was hanging out in the workshop of John
|
||
Garvey, who had left a job at the aerospace company McDonnell Douglas
|
||
to start building his own rockets. Garvey’s facility was in Huntington
|
||
Beach, where he rented an industrial space about the size of a six-car
|
||
garage. The two men were fiddling around with the eighty-pound engine
|
||
when Garvey mentioned that a guy named Elon Musk might be stopping by.
|
||
The amateur rocketry scene is tight, and it was Cantrell who recommended
|
||
that Musk check out Garvey’s workshop and see Mueller’s designs. On a
|
||
Sunday, Musk arrived with a pregnant Justine, wearing a stylish black
|
||
leather trench coat and looking like a high-paid assassin. Mueller had the
|
||
eighty-pound engine on his shoulder and was trying to bolt it to a support
|
||
structure when Musk began peppering him with questions. “He asked me
|
||
how much thrust it had,” Mueller said. “He wanted to know if I had ever
|
||
worked on anything bigger. I told him that yeah, I’d worked on a 650,000-
|
||
pound thrust engine at TRW and knew every part of it.” Mueller set the
|
||
engine down and tried to keep up with Musk’s interrogation. “How much
|
||
would that big engine cost?” Musk asked. Mueller told him TRW built it for
|
||
about $12 million. Musk shot back, “Yeah, but how much could you really
|
||
do it for?”
|
||
Mueller ended up chatting with Musk for hours. The next weekend,
|
||
Mueller invited Musk to his house to continue their discussion. Musk knew
|
||
he had found someone who really knew the ins and outs of making rockets.
|
||
After that, Musk introduced Mueller to the rest of his roundtable of space
|
||
experts and their stealthy meetings. The caliber of the people impressed
|
||
Mueller, who had turned down past job offers from Beal and other budding
|
||
space magnates because of their borderline insane ideas. Musk, by contrast,
|
||
seemed to know what he was doing, weeding out the naysayers meeting by
|
||
meeting and forming a crew of bright, committed engineers.
|
||
Mueller had helped Musk fill out that spreadsheet around the
|
||
performance and cost metrics of a new, low-cost rocket, and, along with the
|
||
rest of Team Musk, had subsequently refined the idea. The rocket would not
|
||
carry truck-sized satellites like some of the monster rockets flown by
|
||
Boeing, Lockheed, the Russians, and others countries. Instead, Musk’s
|
||
rocket would be aimed at the lower end of the satellite market, and it could
|
||
end up as ideal for an emerging class of smaller payloads that capitalized on
|
||
the massive advances that had taken place in recent years in computing and
|
||
electronics technology. The rocket would cater directly to a theory in the
|
||
space industry that a whole new market might open for both commercial
|
||
and research payloads if a company could drastically lower the price per
|
||
launch and perform launches on a regular schedule. Musk relished the idea
|
||
of being at the forefront of this trend and developing the workhorse of a
|
||
new era in space. Of course, all of this was theoretical—and then, suddenly,
|
||
it wasn’t. PayPal had gone public in February with its shares shooting up 55
|
||
percent, and Musk knew that eBay wanted to buy the company as well.
|
||
While noodling on the rocket idea, Musk’s net worth had increased from
|
||
tens of millions to hundreds of millions. In April 2002, Musk fully
|
||
abandoned the publicity-stunt idea and committed to building a commercial
|
||
space venture. He pulled aside Cantrell, Griffin, Mueller, and Chris
|
||
Thompson, an aerospace engineer at Boeing, and told the group, “I want to
|
||
do this company. If you guys are in, let’s do it.” (Griffin wanted to join but
|
||
ended up declining when Musk rebuffed his request to live on the East
|
||
Coast, and Cantrell only stuck around for a few months after this meeting,
|
||
seeing the venture as too risky.)
|
||
Founded in June 2002, Space Exploration Technologies came to life in
|
||
humble settings. Musk acquired an old warehouse at 1310 East Grand
|
||
Avenue in El Segundo, a suburb of Los Angeles humming with the activity
|
||
of the aerospace industry. The previous tenant of the 75,000-square-foot
|
||
building had done lots of shipping and had used the south side of the facility
|
||
as a logistics depot, outfitting it with several receiving bays for delivery
|
||
trucks. This allowed Musk to drive his silver McLaren right into the
|
||
building. Beyond that the surroundings were sparse—just a dusty floor and
|
||
a forty-foot-high ceiling with its wooden beams and insulation exposed and
|
||
which curved at the top to give the place a hangarlike feel. The north side of
|
||
the building was an office space with cubicles and room for about fifty
|
||
people. During the first week of SpaceX’s operations, delivery trucks
|
||
showed up packed full of Dell laptops and printers and folding tables that
|
||
would serve as the first desks. Musk walked over to one of the loading
|
||
docks, rolled up the door, and off-loaded the equipment himself.
|
||
Musk had soon transformed the SpaceX office with what has become
|
||
his signature factory aesthetic: a glossy epoxy coating applied over concrete
|
||
on the floors, and a fresh coat of white paint slathered onto the walls. The
|
||
white color scheme was intended to make the factory look clean and feel
|
||
cheerful. Desks were interspersed around the factory so that Ivy League
|
||
computer scientists and engineers designing the machines could sit with the
|
||
welders and machinists building the hardware. This approach stood as
|
||
SpaceX’s first major break with traditional aerospace companies that prefer
|
||
to cordon different engineering groups off from each other and typically
|
||
separate engineers and machinists by thousands of miles by placing their
|
||
factories in locations where real estate and labor run cheap.
|
||
As the first dozen or so employees came to the offices, they were told
|
||
that SpaceX’s mission would be to emerge as the “Southwest Airlines of
|
||
Space.” SpaceX would build its own engines and then contract with
|
||
suppliers for the other components of the rocket. The company would gain
|
||
an edge over the competition by building a better, cheaper engine and by
|
||
fine-tuning the assembly process to make rockets faster and cheaper than
|
||
anyone else. This vision included the construction of a type of mobile
|
||
launch vehicle that could travel to various sites, take the rocket from a
|
||
horizontal to vertical position, and send it off to space—no muss, no fuss.
|
||
SpaceX was meant to get so good at this process that it could do multiple
|
||
launches a month, make money off each one, and never need to become a
|
||
huge contractor dependent on government funds.
|
||
SpaceX was to be America’s attempt at a clean slate in the rocket
|
||
business, a modernized reset. Musk felt that the space industry had not
|
||
really evolved in about fifty years. The aerospace companies had little
|
||
competition and tended to make supremely expensive products that
|
||
achieved maximum performance. They were building a Ferrari for every
|
||
launch, when it was possible that a Honda Accord might do the trick. Musk,
|
||
by contrast, would apply some of the start-up techniques he’d learned in
|
||
Silicon Valley to run SpaceX lean and fast and capitalize on the huge
|
||
advances in computing power and materials that had taken place over the
|
||
past couple of decades. As a private company, SpaceX would also avoid the
|
||
waste and cost overruns associated with government contractors. Musk
|
||
declared that SpaceX’s first rocket would be called the Falcon 1, a nod to
|
||
Star Wars’ Millennium Falcon and his role as the architect of an exciting
|
||
future. At a time when the cost of sending a 550-pound payload started at
|
||
$30 million, he promised that the Falcon 1 would be able to carry a 1,400-
|
||
pound payload for $6.9 million.
|
||
Bowing to his nature, Musk set an insanely ambitious timeline for all of
|
||
this. One of the earliest SpaceX presentations suggested that the company
|
||
would complete its first engine in May 2003, a second engine in June, the
|
||
body of the rocket in July, and have everything assembled in August. A
|
||
launchpad would then be prepared by September, and the first launch would
|
||
take place in November 2003, or about fifteen months after the company
|
||
started. A trip to Mars was naturally slated for somewhere near the end of
|
||
the decade. This was Musk the logical, naïve optimist tabulating how long it
|
||
should take people physically to perform all of this work. It’s the baseline
|
||
he expects of himself and one that his employees, with their human foibles,
|
||
are in a never-ending struggle to match.
|
||
As space enthusiasts started to learn about the new company, they didn’t
|
||
really obsess over whether Musk’s delivery schedule sounded realistic or
|
||
not. They were just thrilled that someone had decided to take the cheap and
|
||
fast approach. Some members of the military had already been promoting
|
||
the idea of giving the armed forces more aggressive space capabilities, or
|
||
what they called “responsive space.” If a conflict broke out, the military
|
||
wanted the ability to respond with purpose-built satellites for that mission.
|
||
This would mean moving away from a model where it takes ten years to
|
||
build and deploy a satellite for a specific job. Instead, the military desired
|
||
cheaper, smaller satellites that could be reconfigured through software and
|
||
sent up on short notice, almost like disposable satellites. “If we could pull
|
||
that off, it would be really game-changing,” said Pete Worden, a retired air
|
||
force general, who met with Musk while serving as a consultant to the
|
||
Defense Department. “It could make our response in space similar to what
|
||
we do on land, sea and in the air.” Worden’s job required him to look at
|
||
radical technologies. While many of the people he encountered came off as
|
||
eccentric dreamers, Musk seemed grounded, knowledgeable, and capable.
|
||
“I talked to people building ray guns and things in their garages. It was
|
||
clear that Elon was different. He was a visionary who really understood the
|
||
rocket technology, and I was impressed with him.”
|
||
Like the military, scientists wanted cheap, quick access to space and the
|
||
ability to send up experiments and get data back on a regular basis. Some
|
||
companies in the medical and consumer-goods industries were also
|
||
interested in rides to space to study how a lack of gravity affected the
|
||
properties of their products.
|
||
As good as a cheap launch vehicle sounded, the odds of a private citizen
|
||
building one that worked were beyond remote. A quick search on YouTube
|
||
for “rocket explosions” turns up thousands of compilation videos
|
||
documenting U.S. and Soviet launch disasters that have occurred over the
|
||
decades. From 1957 to 1966, the United States alone tried to blast more
|
||
than 400 rockets into orbit and about 100 of them crashed and burned.5 The
|
||
rockets used to transport things to space are mostly modified missiles
|
||
developed through all of this trial and error and funded by billions upon
|
||
billions of government dollars. SpaceX had the advantage of being able to
|
||
learn from this past work and having a few people on staff that had
|
||
overseen rocket projects at companies like Boeing and TRW. That said, the
|
||
start-up did not have a budget that could support a string of explosions. At
|
||
best, SpaceX would have three or four shots at making the Falcon 1 work.
|
||
“People thought we were just crazy,” Mueller said. “At TRW, I had an army
|
||
of people and government funding. Now we were going to make a low-cost
|
||
rocket from scratch with a small team. People just didn’t think it could be
|
||
done.”
|
||
In July 2002, Musk was gripped by the excitement of this daring
|
||
enterprise, and eBay made its aggressive move to buy PayPal for $1.5
|
||
billion. This deal gave Musk some liquidity and supplied him with more
|
||
than $100 million to throw at SpaceX. With such a massive up-front
|
||
investment, no one would be able to wrestle control of SpaceX away from
|
||
Musk as they had done at Zip2 and PayPal. For the employees who had
|
||
agreed to accompany Musk on this seemingly impossible journey, the
|
||
windfall provided at least a couple of years of job security. The acquisition
|
||
also upped Musk’s profile and celebrity, which he could leverage to score
|
||
meetings with top government officials and to sway suppliers.
|
||
And then all of a sudden none of this seemed to matter. Justine had
|
||
given birth to a son—Nevada Alexander Musk. He was ten weeks old
|
||
when, just as the eBay deal was announced, he died. The Musks had tucked
|
||
Nevada in for a nap and placed the boy on his back as parents are taught to
|
||
do. When they returned to check on him, he was no longer breathing and
|
||
had suffered from what the doctors would term a sudden infant death
|
||
syndrome–related incident. “By the time the paramedics resuscitated him,
|
||
he had been deprived of oxygen for so long that he was brain-dead,” Justine
|
||
wrote in her article for Marie Claire. “He spent three days on life support in
|
||
a hospital in Orange County before we made the decision to take him off it.
|
||
I held him in my arms when he died. Elon made it clear that he did not want
|
||
to talk about Nevada’s death. I didn’t understand this, just as he didn’t
|
||
understand why I grieved openly, which he regarded as ‘emotionally
|
||
manipulative.’ I buried my feelings instead, coping with Nevada’s death by
|
||
making my first visit to an IVF clinic less than two months later. Elon and I
|
||
planned to get pregnant again as swiftly as possible. Within the next five
|
||
years, I gave birth to twins, then triplets.” Later, Justine chalked up Musk’s
|
||
reaction to a defense mechanism that he’d learned from years of suffering
|
||
as a kid. “He doesn’t do well in dark places,” she told Esquire magazine.
|
||
“He’s forward-moving, and I think it’s a survival thing with him.”
|
||
Musk did open up to a couple of close friends and expressed the depth
|
||
of his misery. But for the most part, Justine read her husband right. He
|
||
didn’t see the value in grieving publicly. “It made me extremely sad to talk
|
||
about it,” Musk said. “I’m not sure why I’d want to talk about extremely
|
||
sad events. It does no good for the future. If you’ve got other kids and
|
||
obligations, then wallowing in sadness does no good for anyone around
|
||
you. I’m not sure what should be done in such situations.”
|
||
Following Nevada’s death, Musk threw himself at SpaceX and rapidly
|
||
expanded the company’s goals. His conversations with aerospace
|
||
contractors around possible work for SpaceX left Musk disenchanted. It
|
||
sounded like they all charged a lot of money and worked slowly. The plan
|
||
to integrate components made by these types of companies gave way to the
|
||
decision to make as much as practical right at SpaceX. “While drawing
|
||
upon the ideas of many prior launch vehicle programs from Apollo to the
|
||
X-34/Fastrac, SpaceX is privately developing the entire Falcon rocket from
|
||
the ground up, including both engines, the turbo-pump, the cryogenic tank
|
||
structure and the guidance system,” the company announced on its website.
|
||
“A ground up internal development increases difficulty and the required
|
||
investment, but no other path will achieve the needed improvement in the
|
||
cost of access to space.”
|
||
The SpaceX executives Musk hired were an all-star crew. Mueller set to
|
||
work right away building the two engines—Merlin and Kestrel, named after
|
||
two types of falcons. Chris Thompson, a onetime marine who had managed
|
||
the production of the Delta and Titan rockets at Boeing, joined as the vice
|
||
president of operations. Tim Buzza also came from Boeing, where he’d
|
||
earned a reputation as one of the world’s leading rocket testers. Steve
|
||
Johnson, who had worked at JPL and at two commercial space companies,
|
||
was tapped as the senior mechanical engineer. The aerospace engineer Hans
|
||
Koenigsmann came on to develop the avionics, guidance, and control
|
||
systems. Musk also recruited Gwynne Shotwell, an aerospace veteran who
|
||
started as SpaceX’s first salesperson and rose in the years that followed to
|
||
be president and Musk’s right-hand woman.
|
||
These early days also marked the arrival of Mary Beth Brown, a nowlegendary
|
||
character in the lore of both SpaceX and Tesla. Brown—or MB,
|
||
as everyone called her—became Musk’s loyal assistant, establishing a reallife
|
||
version of the relationship between Iron Man’s Tony Stark and Pepper
|
||
Potts. If Musk worked a twenty-hour day, so too did Brown. Over the years,
|
||
she brought Musk meals, set up his business appointments, arranged time
|
||
with his children, picked out his clothes, dealt with press requests, and
|
||
when necessary yanked Musk out of meetings to keep him on schedule. She
|
||
would emerge as the only bridge between Musk and all of his interests and
|
||
was an invaluable asset to the companies’ employees.
|
||
Brown played a key role in developing SpaceX’s early culture. She paid
|
||
attention to small details like the office’s red spaceship trash cans and
|
||
helped balance the vibe around the office. When it came to matters related
|
||
directly to Musk, Brown put on her firm countenance and no-nonsense
|
||
attitude. The rest of the time she usually had a warm, broad smile and a
|
||
disarming charm. “It was always, ‘Oh, dear. How are you, dear?’” recalled
|
||
a SpaceX technician. Brown collected the weird e-mails that arrived for
|
||
Musk and sent them out as “Kook of the Week” missives to make people
|
||
laugh. One of the better entries included a pencil sketch of a lunar
|
||
spacecraft that had a red spot on the page. The person who sent in the letter
|
||
had circled the spot on his own drawing and then written “What is that?
|
||
Blood?” next to it. In other letters there were plans for a perpetual motion
|
||
machine and a proposal for a giant inflatable rabbit that could be used to
|
||
plug oil spills. For a short time, Brown’s duties extended to managing
|
||
SpaceX’s books and handling the flow of business in Musk’s absence. “She
|
||
pretty much called the shots,” the technician said. “She would say, ‘This is
|
||
what Elon would want.’”
|
||
Her greatest gift, though, may have been reading Musk’s moods. At
|
||
both SpaceX and Tesla, Brown placed her desk a few feet in front of
|
||
Musk’s, so that people had to pass her before having a meeting with him. If
|
||
someone needed to request permission to buy a big-ticket item, they would
|
||
stop for a moment in front of Brown and wait for a nod to go see Musk or
|
||
the shake-off to go away because Musk was having a bad day. This system
|
||
of nods and shakes became particularly important during periods of
|
||
romantic strife for Musk, when his nerves were on edge more than usual.
|
||
The rank-and-file engineers at SpaceX tended to be young, male
|
||
overachievers. Musk would personally reach out to the aerospace
|
||
departments of top colleges and inquire about the students who had finished
|
||
with the best marks on their exams. It was not unusual for him to call the
|
||
students in their dorm rooms and recruit them over the phone. “I thought it
|
||
was a prank call,” said Michael Colonno, who heard from Musk while
|
||
attending Stanford. “I did not believe for a minute that he had a rocket
|
||
company.” Once the students looked Musk up on the Internet, selling them
|
||
on SpaceX was easy. For the first time in years if not decades, young
|
||
aeronautics whizzes who pined to explore space had a really exciting
|
||
company to latch on to and a path toward designing a rocket or even
|
||
becoming an astronaut that did not require them to join a bureaucratic
|
||
government contractor. As word of SpaceX’s ambitions spread, top
|
||
engineers from Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Orbital Sciences with a high
|
||
tolerance for risk fled to the upstart, too.
|
||
Throughout the first year at SpaceX, one or two new employees joined
|
||
almost every week. Kevin Brogan was employee No. 23 and came from
|
||
TRW, where he’d been used to various internal policies blocking him from
|
||
doing work. “I called it the country club,” he said. “Nobody did anything.”
|
||
Brogan started at SpaceX the day after his interview and was told to go
|
||
hunting in the office for a computer to use. “It was go to Fry’s and get
|
||
whatever you need and go to Staples and get a chair,” Brogan said. He
|
||
immediately felt in over his head and would work for twelve hours, drive
|
||
home, sleep for ten hours, and then head right back to the factory. “I was
|
||
exhausted and out of shape mentally,” he said. “But soon I loved it and got
|
||
totally hooked.”
|
||
One of the first projects SpaceX decided to tackle was the construction
|
||
of a gas generator, a machine not unlike a small rocket engine that produces
|
||
hot gas. Mueller, Buzza, and a couple of young engineers assembled the
|
||
generator in Los Angeles and then packed it into the back of a pickup truck
|
||
and drove it out to Mojave, California, to test it. A desert town about one
|
||
hundred miles from Los Angeles, Mojave had become a hub for aerospace
|
||
companies like Scaled Composites and XCOR. A lot of the aerospace
|
||
projects were based out of the Mojave airport, where companies had their
|
||
workshops and sent up all manner of cutting-edge airplanes and rockets.
|
||
The SpaceX team fit right into this environment and borrowed a test stand
|
||
from XCOR that was just about the perfect size to hold the gas generator.
|
||
The first ignition run took place at 11 A.M. and lasted ninety seconds. The
|
||
gas generator worked, but it had let out a billowing black smoke cloud that
|
||
on this windless day parked right over the airport tower. The airport
|
||
manager came down to the test area and lit into Mueller and Buzza. The
|
||
airport official and some of the guys from XCOR who had been helping out
|
||
urged the SpaceX engineers to take it easy and wait until the next day to run
|
||
another test. Instead, Buzza a strong leader ready to put SpaceX’s relentless
|
||
ethos into play, coordinated a couple of trucks to pick up more fuel, talked
|
||
the airport manager down, and got the test stand ready for another fire. In
|
||
the days that followed, SpaceX’s engineers perfected a routine that let them
|
||
do multiple tests a day—an unheard-of practice at the airport—and had the
|
||
gas generator tuned to their liking after two weeks of work.
|
||
They made a few more trips to Mojave and some other spots, including
|
||
a test stand at Edwards Air Force Base and another in Mississippi. While on
|
||
this countrywide rocketry tour, the SpaceX engineers came across a threehundred-
|
||
acre test site in McGregor, Texas, a small city near the center of
|
||
the state. They really liked this spot, and talked Musk into buying it. The
|
||
navy had tested rockets on the land years before and so too had Andrew
|
||
Beal before his aerospace company collapsed. “After Beal saw it was going
|
||
to cost him $300 million to develop a rocket capable of sending sizeable
|
||
satellites into orbit, he called it quits, leaving behind a lot of useful
|
||
infrastructure for SpaceX, including a three-story concrete tripod with legs
|
||
as big around as redwood tree trunks,” wrote journalist Michael Belfiore in
|
||
Rocketeers, a book that captured the rise of a handful of private space
|
||
companies.
|
||
Jeremy Hollman was one of the young engineers who soon found
|
||
himself living in Texas and customizing the test site to SpaceX’s needs.
|
||
Hollman exemplified the kind of recruit Musk wanted: he’d earned an
|
||
aerospace engineering degree from Iowa State University and a master’s in
|
||
astronautical engineering from the University of Southern California. He’d
|
||
spent a couple of years working as a test engineer at Boeing dealing with
|
||
jets, rockets, and spacecraft.*
|
||
The stint at Boeing had left Hollman unimpressed with big aerospace.
|
||
His first day on the job came right as Boeing completed its merger with
|
||
McDonnell Douglas. The resultant mammoth government contractor held a
|
||
picnic to boost morale but ended up failing at even this simple exercise.
|
||
“The head of one of the departments gave a speech about it being one
|
||
company with one vision and then added that the company was very cost
|
||
constrained,” Hollman said. “He asked that everyone limit themselves to
|
||
one piece of chicken.” Things didn’t improve much from there. Every
|
||
project at Boeing felt large, cumbersome, and costly. So, when Musk came
|
||
along selling radical change, Hollman bit. “I thought it was an opportunity I
|
||
could not pass up,” he said. At twenty-three, Hollman was young, single,
|
||
and willing to give up any semblance of having a life in favor of working at
|
||
SpaceX nonstop, and he became Mueller’s second in command.
|
||
Mueller had developed a pair of three-dimensional computer models of
|
||
the two engines he wanted to build. Merlin would be the engine for the first
|
||
stage of the Falcon 1, which lifted it off the ground, and Kestrel would be
|
||
the smaller engine used to power the upper, second stage of the rocket and
|
||
guide it in space. Together, Hollman and Mueller figured out which parts of
|
||
the engines SpaceX would build at the factory and which parts it would try
|
||
to buy. For the purchased parts, Hollman had to head out to various
|
||
machine shops and get quotes and delivery dates for the hardware. Quite
|
||
often, the machinists told Hollman that SpaceX’s timelines were nuts.
|
||
Others were more accommodating and would try to bend an existing
|
||
product to SpaceX’s needs instead of building something from scratch.
|
||
Hollman also found that creativity got him a long way. He discovered, for
|
||
example, that changing the seals on some readily available car wash valves
|
||
made them good enough to be used with rocket fuel.
|
||
After SpaceX completed its first engine at the factory in California,
|
||
Hollman loaded it and mounds of other equipment into a U-Haul trailer. He
|
||
hitched the U-Haul to the back of a white Hummer H2 and drove four
|
||
thousand pounds of gear* across Interstate 10 from Los Angeles to Texas
|
||
and the test site. The arrival of the engine in Texas kicked off one of the
|
||
great bonding exercises in SpaceX’s history. Amid rattlesnakes, fire ants,
|
||
isolation, and searing heat, the group led by Buzza and Mueller began the
|
||
process of exploring every intricacy of the engines. It was a high-pressure
|
||
slog full of explosions—or what the engineers politely called “rapid
|
||
unscheduled disassemblies”—that would determine whether a small band of
|
||
engineers really could match the effort and skill of nation-states. The
|
||
SpaceX employees christened the site in fitting fashion, downing a $1,200
|
||
bottle of Rémy Martin cognac out of paper cups and passing a sobriety test
|
||
on the drive back to the company apartments in the Hummer. From that
|
||
point on, the trek from California to the test site became known as the Texas
|
||
Cattle Haul. The SpaceX engineers would work for ten days straight, come
|
||
back to California for a weekend, and then head back. To ease the burden of
|
||
travel, Musk sometimes let them use his private jet. “It carried six people,”
|
||
Mueller said. “Well, seven if someone sat in the toilet, which happened all
|
||
the time.”
|
||
While the navy and Beal had left some testing apparatus, SpaceX had to
|
||
build a large amount of custom gear. One of the largest of these structures
|
||
was a horizontal test stand about 30 feet long, 15 feet wide, and 15 feet tall.
|
||
Then there was the complementary vertical test stand that stood two stories
|
||
high. When an engine needed to be fired, it would be fastened to one of the
|
||
test stands, outfitted with sensors to collect data, and monitored via several
|
||
cameras. The engineers took shelter in a bunker protected on one side by a
|
||
dirt embankment. If something went wrong, they would look at feeds from
|
||
the webcams or slowly lift one of the bunker’s hatches to listen for any
|
||
clues. The locals in town rarely complained about the noise, although the
|
||
animals on nearby farms seemed less impressed. “Cows have this natural
|
||
defense mechanism where they gather and start running in a circle,”
|
||
Hollman said. “Every time we fired an engine, the cows scattered and then
|
||
got in that circle with the younger ones placed in the middle. We set up a
|
||
cow cam to watch them.”
|
||
Both Kestrel and Merlin came with challenges, and they were treated as
|
||
alternating engineering exercises. “We would run Merlin until we ran out of
|
||
hardware or did something bad,” Mueller said. “Then we’d run Kestrel and
|
||
there was never a shortage of things to do.” For months, the SpaceX
|
||
engineers arrived at the site at 8 A.M. and spent twelve hours there working
|
||
on the engines before retiring to the Outback Steakhouse for dinner. Mueller
|
||
had a particular knack for looking over test data and spotting some place
|
||
where the engine ran hot or cold or had another flaw. He would call
|
||
California and prescribe hardware changes, and engineers would refashion
|
||
parts and send them off to Texas. Often the workers in Texas modified parts
|
||
themselves using a mill and lathe that Mueller had brought out. “Kestrel
|
||
started out as a real dog, and one of my proudest moments was taking it
|
||
from terrible to great performance with stuff we bought online and did in
|
||
the machine shop,” Mueller said. Some members of the Texas crew honed
|
||
their skills to the point that they could build a test-worthy engine in three
|
||
days. These same people were required to be adept at software. They’d pull
|
||
an all-nighter building a turbo pump for the engine and then dig in the next
|
||
night to retool a suite of applications used to control the engines. Hollman
|
||
did this type of work all the time and was an all-star, but he was not alone
|
||
among this group of young, nimble engineers who crossed disciplines out of
|
||
necessity and the spirit of adventure. “There was an almost addictive quality
|
||
to the experience,” Hollman said. “You’re twenty-four or twenty-five, and
|
||
they’re trusting you with so much. It was very empowering.”
|
||
To get to space, the Merlin engine would need to burn for 180 seconds.
|
||
That seemed like an eternity for the engineers at the outset of their stint in
|
||
Texas, when the engine would burn for only a half second before it conked
|
||
out. Sometimes Merlin vibrated too much during the tests. Sometimes it
|
||
responded badly to a new material. Sometimes it cracked and needed major
|
||
part upgrades, like moving from an aluminum manifold to a manifold made
|
||
out of the more exotic Inconel, an alloy suited to extreme temperatures. On
|
||
one occasion, a fuel valve refused to open properly and caused the whole
|
||
engine to blow up. Another test gone wrong ended up with the whole test
|
||
stand burning down. It usually came to Buzza and Mueller to make the
|
||
unpleasant call back to Musk and recap the day’s foibles. “Elon had pretty
|
||
good patience,” Mueller said. “I remember one time we had two test stands
|
||
running and blew up two things in one day. I told Elon we could put another
|
||
engine on there, but I was really, really frustrated and just tired and mad and
|
||
was kinda short with Elon. I said, ‘We can put another fucking thing on
|
||
there, but I’ve blown up enough shit today.’ He said, ‘Okay, all right, that’s
|
||
fine. Just calm down. We’ll do it again tomorrow.’” Coworkers in El
|
||
Segundo later reported that Musk had been near tears during this call after
|
||
hearing the frustration and agony in Mueller’s voice.
|
||
What Musk would not tolerate were excuses or the lack of a clear plan
|
||
of attack. Hollman was one of many engineers who arrived at this
|
||
realization after facing one of Musk’s trademark grillings. “The worst call
|
||
was the first one,” Hollman said. “Something had gone wrong, and Elon
|
||
asked me how long it would take to be operational again, and I didn’t have
|
||
an immediate answer. He said, ‘You need to. This is important to the
|
||
company. Everything is riding on this. Why don’t you have an answer?’ He
|
||
kept hitting me with pointed, direct questions. I thought it was more
|
||
important to let him know quickly what happened, but I learned it was more
|
||
important to have all the information.”
|
||
From time to time, Musk participated in the testing process firsthand.
|
||
One of the more memorable examples of this came as SpaceX tried to
|
||
perfect a cooling chamber for its engines. The company had bought several
|
||
of these chambers at $75,000 a pop and needed to put them under pressure
|
||
with water to gauge their ability to handle stress. During the initial test, one
|
||
of the pricey chambers cracked. Then the second one broke in the same
|
||
place. Musk ordered a third test, as the engineers looked on in horror. They
|
||
thought the test might be putting the chamber under undue stress and that
|
||
Musk was burning through essential equipment. When the third chamber
|
||
cracked, Musk flew the hardware back to California, took it to the factory
|
||
floor, and, with the help of some engineers, started to fill the chambers with
|
||
an epoxy to see if it would seal them. “He’s not afraid to get his hands
|
||
dirty,” Mueller said. “He’s out there with his nice Italian shoes and clothes
|
||
and has epoxy all over him. They were there all night and tested it again and
|
||
it broke anyway.” Musk, clothes ruined, had decided the hardware was
|
||
flawed, tested his hypothesis, and moved on quickly, asking the engineers to
|
||
come up with a new solution.
|
||
These incidents were all part of a trying but productive process. SpaceX
|
||
had developed the feeling of a small, tight-knit family up against the world.
|
||
In late 2002, the company had an empty warehouse. One year later, the
|
||
facility looked like a real rocket factory. Working Merlin engines were
|
||
arriving back from Texas, and being fed into an assembly line where
|
||
machinists could connect them to the main body, or first stage, of the
|
||
rocket. More stations were set up to link the first stage with the upper stage
|
||
of the rocket. Cranes were placed on the floor to handle the heavy lifting of
|
||
components, and blue metal transport tracks were positioned to guide the
|
||
rocket’s body through the factory from station to station. SpaceX had also
|
||
started to build the fairing, or case, that protects payloads atop the rocket
|
||
during launch and then opens up like a clam in space to let out the cargo.
|
||
SpaceX had picked up a customer as well. According to Musk, its first
|
||
rocket would launch in “early 2004” from Vandenberg Air Force Base,
|
||
carrying a satellite called TacSat-1 for the Department of Defense. With this
|
||
goal looming, twelve-hour days, six days a week were considered the norm,
|
||
although many people worked longer than that for extended periods of time.
|
||
Respites, as far as they existed, came around 8 P.M. on some weeknights
|
||
when Musk would allow everyone to use their work computers to play firstperson-
|
||
shooter video games like Quake III Arena and Counter-Strike
|
||
against each other. At the appointed hour, the sound of guns loading would
|
||
cascade throughout the office as close to twenty people armed themselves
|
||
for battle. Musk—playing under the handle Random9—often won the
|
||
games, talking trash and blasting away his employees without mercy. “The
|
||
CEO is there shooting at us with rockets and plasma guns,” said Colonno.
|
||
“Worse, he’s almost alarmingly good at these games and has insanely fast
|
||
reactions. He knew all the tricks and how to sneak up on people.”
|
||
The pending launch ignited Musk’s salesman instincts. He wanted to
|
||
show the public what his tireless workers had accomplished and drum up
|
||
some excitement around SpaceX. Musk decided to unveil a prototype of
|
||
Falcon 1 to the public in December 2003. The company would haul the
|
||
seven-story-high Falcon 1 across the country on a specially built rig and
|
||
leave it—and the SpaceX mobile launch system—outside of the Federal
|
||
Aviation Administration’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. An
|
||
accompanying press conference would make it clear to Washington that a
|
||
modern, smarter, cheaper rocket maker had arrived.
|
||
This marketing song and dance didn’t sound sensible to SpaceX’s
|
||
engineers. They were working more than one hundred hours per week to
|
||
make the actual rocket that SpaceX would need to be in business. Musk
|
||
wanted them to do that and build a slick-looking mock-up. Engineers were
|
||
called back from Texas and assigned another ulcer-inducing deadline to
|
||
craft this prop. “In my mind, it was a boondoggle,” Hollman said. “It wasn’t
|
||
advancing anything. In Elon’s mind, it would get us a lot of backing from
|
||
important people in the government.”
|
||
While making the prototype for the event, Hollman experienced the full
|
||
spectrum of highs and lows that came with working for Musk. The engineer
|
||
had lost his regular glasses weeks earlier when they slipped off his face and
|
||
fell down a flame duct at the Texas test site. Hollman had since made do by
|
||
wearing an old pair of prescription safety glasses,* but they too were ruined
|
||
when he scratched the lenses while trying to duck under an engine at the
|
||
SpaceX factory. Without a spare moment to visit an optometrist, Hollman
|
||
started to feel his sanity fray. The long hours, the scratch, the publicity stunt
|
||
—they were all too much.
|
||
He vented about this in the factory one night, unaware that Musk stood
|
||
nearby and could hear everything. Two hours later, Mary Beth Brown
|
||
appeared with an appointment card to see a Lasik eye surgery specialist.
|
||
When Hollman visited the doctor, he discovered that Musk had already
|
||
agreed to pay for the surgery. “Elon can be very demanding, but he’ll make
|
||
sure the obstacles in your way are removed,” Hollman said. Upon
|
||
reflection, he also warmed to the long-term thinking behind Musk’s
|
||
Washington plan. “I think he wanted to add an element of realism to
|
||
SpaceX, and if you park a rocket in someone’s front yard, it’s hard to deny
|
||
it,” Hollman said.
|
||
The event in Washington ended up being well received, and just a few
|
||
weeks after it took place, SpaceX made another astonishing announcement.
|
||
Despite not having even flown a rocket yet, SpaceX revealed plans for a
|
||
second rocket. Along with the Falcon 1, it would build the Falcon 5. Per the
|
||
name, this rocket would have five engines and could carry more weight—
|
||
9,200 pounds—to low orbit around Earth. Crucially, the Falcon 5 could also
|
||
theoretically reach the International Space Station for resupply missions—a
|
||
capability that would open up SpaceX for some large NASA contracts. And,
|
||
in a nod to Musk’s obsession with safety, the rocket was said to be able to
|
||
complete its missions even if three of the five engines failed, which was a
|
||
level of added reliability that had not been seen in the market in decades.
|
||
The only way to keep up with all of this work was to do what SpaceX
|
||
had promised from the beginning: operate in the spirit of a Silicon Valley
|
||
start-up. Musk was always looking for brainy engineers who had not just
|
||
done well at school but had done something exceptional with their talents.
|
||
When he found someone good, Musk was relentless in courting him or her
|
||
to come to SpaceX. Bryan Gardner, for example, first met Musk at a space
|
||
rave in the hangars at the Mojave airport and a short while later started
|
||
talking about a job. Gardner was having some of his academic work
|
||
sponsored by Northrop Grumman. “Elon said, ‘We’ll buy them out,’”
|
||
Gardner said. “So, I e-mailed him my resume at two thirty A.M., and he
|
||
replied back in thirty minutes addressing everything I put in there point by
|
||
point. He said, ‘When you interview make sure you can talk concretely
|
||
about what you do rather than use buzzwords.’ It floored me that he would
|
||
take the time to do this.” After being hired, Gardner was tasked with
|
||
improving the system for testing the valves on the Merlin engine. There
|
||
were dozens of valves, and it took three to five hours to manually test each
|
||
one. Six months later, Gardner had built an automated system for testing the
|
||
valves in minutes. The testing machine tracked the valves individually, so
|
||
that an engineer in Texas could request what the metrics had been on a
|
||
specific part. “I had been handed this redheaded stepchild that no one else
|
||
wanted to deal with and established my engineering credibility,” Gardner
|
||
said. As the new hires arrived, SpaceX moved beyond its original building to
|
||
fill up several buildings in the El Segundo complex. The engineers were
|
||
running demanding software and rendering large graphics files and needed
|
||
high-speed connections between all of these offices. But SpaceX had
|
||
neighbors who were blocking an initiative to connect all of its buildings via
|
||
fiber optic lines. Instead of taking the time to haggle with the other
|
||
companies for right of way, the IT chief Branden Spikes, who had worked
|
||
with Musk at Zip2 and PayPal, came up with a quicker, more devious
|
||
solution. A friend of his worked for the phone company and drew a diagram
|
||
that demonstrated a way to squeeze a networking cable safely between the
|
||
electricity, cable, and phone wires on a telephone pole. At 2 A.M., an off-thebooks
|
||
crew showed up with a cherry picker and ran fiber to the telephone
|
||
poles and then ran cables straight to the SpaceX buildings. “We did that
|
||
over a weekend instead of taking months to get permits,” Spikes said.
|
||
“There was always this feeling that we were facing a sort of insurmountable
|
||
challenge and that we had to band together to fight the good fight.”
|
||
SpaceX’s landlord, Alex Lidow, chuckled when thinking back to all of the
|
||
antics of Musk’s team. “I know they did a lot of hanky stuff at night,” he
|
||
said. “They were smart, needed to get things done, and didn’t always have
|
||
time to wait for things like city permits.”
|
||
Musk never relented in asking his employees to do more and be better,
|
||
whether it was at the office or during extracurricular activities. Part of
|
||
Spikes’s duties included building custom gaming PCs for Musk’s home that
|
||
pushed their computational power to the limits and needed to be cooled
|
||
with water running through a series of tubes inside the machines. When one
|
||
of these gaming rigs kept breaking, Spikes figured out that Musk’s mansion
|
||
had dirty power lines and had a second, dedicated power circuit built for the
|
||
gaming room to correct the problem. Doing this favor bought Spikes no
|
||
special treatment. “SpaceX’s mail server crashed one time, and Elon word
|
||
for word said, ‘Don’t ever fucking let that happen again,’” Spikes said. “He
|
||
had a way of looking at you—a glare—and would keep looking at you until
|
||
you understood him.”
|
||
Musk had tried to find contractors that could keep up with SpaceX’s
|
||
creativity and pace. Instead of always hitting up aerospace guys, for
|
||
example, he located suppliers with similar experience from different fields.
|
||
Early on, SpaceX needed someone to build the fuel tanks, essentially the
|
||
main body of the rocket, and Musk ended up in the Midwest talking to
|
||
companies that had made large, metal agricultural tanks used in the dairy
|
||
and food processing businesses. These suppliers also struggled to keep up
|
||
with SpaceX’s schedule, and Musk found himself flying across the country
|
||
to pay visits—sometimes surprise ones—on the contractors to check on
|
||
their progress. One such inspection took place at a company in Wisconsin
|
||
called Spincraft. Musk and a couple of SpaceX employees flew his jet
|
||
across the country and arrived late at night expecting to see a shift of
|
||
workers doing extra duty to get the fuel tanks completed. When Musk
|
||
discovered that Spincraft was well behind schedule, he turned to a Spincraft
|
||
employee and informed him, “You’re fucking us up the ass, and it doesn’t
|
||
feel good.” David Schmitz was a general manager at Spincraft and said
|
||
Musk earned a reputation as a fearsome negotiator who did indeed follow
|
||
up on things personally. “If Elon was not happy, you knew it,” Schmitz said.
|
||
“Things could get nasty.” In the months that followed that meeting, SpaceX
|
||
increased its internal welding capabilities so that it could make the fuel
|
||
tanks in El Segundo and ditch Spincraft.
|
||
Another salesman flew down to SpaceX to sell the company on some
|
||
technology infrastructure equipment. He was doing the standard
|
||
relationship-building exercise practiced by salespeople for centuries. Show
|
||
up. Speak for a while. Feel each other out. Then, start doing business down
|
||
the road. Musk was having none of it. “The guy comes in, and Elon asks
|
||
him why they’re meeting,” Spikes said. “He said, ‘To develop a
|
||
relationship.’ Elon replied, ‘Okay. Nice to meet you,’ which basically
|
||
meant, ‘Get the fuck out of my office.’ This guy had spent four hours
|
||
traveling for what ended up as a two-minute meeting. Elon just has no
|
||
tolerance for that kind of stuff.” Musk could be equally brisk with
|
||
employees who were not hitting his standards. “He would often say, ‘The
|
||
longer you wait to fire someone the longer it has been since you should
|
||
have fired them,’” Spikes said.
|
||
Most of the SpaceX employees were thrilled to be part of the company’s
|
||
adventure and tried not to let Musk’s grueling demands and harsh behavior
|
||
get to them. But there were some moments where Musk went too far. The
|
||
engineering corps flew into a collective rage every time they caught Musk
|
||
in the press claiming to have designed the Falcon rocket more or less by
|
||
himself. Musk also hired a documentary crew to follow him around for a
|
||
while. This audacious gesture really grated on the people toiling away in the
|
||
SpaceX factory. They felt like Musk’s ego had gotten the best of him and
|
||
that he was presenting SpaceX as the conqueror of the aerospace industry
|
||
when the company had yet to launch successfully. Employees who made
|
||
detailed cases around what they saw as flaws in the Falcon 5 design or
|
||
presented practical suggestions to get the Falcon 1 out the door more
|
||
quickly were often ignored or worse. “The treatment of staff was not good
|
||
for long stretches of this era,” said one engineer. “Many good engineers,
|
||
who everyone beside ‘management’ felt were assets to the company, were
|
||
forced out or simply fired outright after being blamed for things they hadn’t
|
||
done. The kiss of death was proving Elon wrong about something.”
|
||
Early 2004, when SpaceX had hoped to launch its rocket, came and
|
||
went. The Merlin engine that Mueller and his team had built appeared to be
|
||
among the most efficient rocket engines ever made. It was just taking longer
|
||
than Musk had expected to pass tests needed to clear the engine for a
|
||
launch. Finally, in the fall of 2004, the engines were burning consistently
|
||
and meeting all their requirements. This meant that Mueller and his team
|
||
could breathe easy and that everyone else at SpaceX should prepare to
|
||
suffer. Mueller had spent SpaceX’s entire existence as the “critical path”—
|
||
the person holding up the company from achieving its next steps—working
|
||
under Musk’s scrutiny. “With the engine ready, it was time for mass panic,”
|
||
Mueller said. “No one else knew what it was like to be on critical path.”
|
||
Lots of people soon found out, as major problems abounded. The
|
||
avionics, which included the electronics for the navigation, communication,
|
||
and overall management of the rocket, turned into a nightmare. Seemingly
|
||
trivial things like getting a flash storage drive to talk to the rocket’s main
|
||
computer failed for undetectable reasons. The software needed to manage
|
||
the rocket also became a major burden. “It’s like anything else where you
|
||
find out that the last ten percent is where all the integration happens and
|
||
things don’t play together,” Mueller said. “This process went on for six
|
||
months.” Finally, in May 2005, SpaceX transported the rocket 180 miles
|
||
north to Vandenberg Air Force Base for a test fire and completed a fivesecond
|
||
burn on the launchpad.
|
||
Launching from Vandenberg would have been very convenient for
|
||
SpaceX. The site is close to Los Angeles and has several launchpads to pick
|
||
from. SpaceX, though, became an unwelcome guest. The air force gave the
|
||
newcomer a cool welcome, and the people assigned to manage the launch
|
||
sites did not go out of their way help SpaceX. Lockheed and Boeing, which
|
||
fly $1 billion spy satellites for the military from Vandenberg, didn’t care for
|
||
SpaceX’s presence, either—in part because SpaceX represented a threat to
|
||
their business and in part because this startup was mucking around near
|
||
their precious cargo. As SpaceX started to move from the testing phase to
|
||
the launch, it was told to get in line. They would have to wait months to
|
||
launch. “Even though they said we could fly, it was clear that we would
|
||
not,” said Gwynne Shotwell.
|
||
Searching for a new site, Shotwell and Hans Koenigsmann put a
|
||
Mercator projection of the world up on the wall and looked for a name they
|
||
recognized along the equator, where the planet spins faster and gives
|
||
rockets an added boost. The first name that jumped out was Kwajalein
|
||
Island—or Kwaj—the largest island in an atoll between Guam and Hawaii
|
||
in the Pacific Ocean and part of the Republic of the Marshall Islands. This
|
||
spot registered with Shotwell because the U.S. Army had used it for
|
||
decades as a missile test site. Shotwell looked up the name of a colonel at
|
||
the test site and sent him an e-mail, and three weeks later got a call back
|
||
with the army saying they would love to have SpaceX fly from the islands.
|
||
In June 2005, SpaceX’s engineers began to fill containers with their
|
||
equipment to ship them to Kwaj.
|
||
About one hundred islands make up the Kwajalein Atoll. Many of them
|
||
stretch for just a few hundred yards and are much longer than they are wide.
|
||
“From the air, the place looks like these beautiful beads on a string,” said
|
||
Pete Worden, who visited the site in his capacity as a Defense Department
|
||
consultant. Most of the people in the area live on an island called Ebeye,
|
||
while the U.S. military has taken over Kwajalein, the southernmost island,
|
||
and turned it into part tropical paradise and part Dr. Evil’s secret lair. The
|
||
United States spent years lobbing its ICBMs from California at Kwaj and
|
||
used the island to run experiments on its space weapons during the “Star
|
||
Wars” period. Laser beams would be aimed at Kwaj from space in a bid to
|
||
see if they were accurate and responsive enough to take out an ICBM
|
||
hurtling toward the islands. The military presence resulted in a weird array
|
||
of buildings including hulking, windowless trapezoidal concrete structures
|
||
clearly conceived by someone who deals with death for a living.
|
||
To get to Kwaj, the SpaceX employees either flew on Musk’s jet or took
|
||
commercial flights through Hawaii. The main accommodations were twobedroom
|
||
affairs on Kwajalein Island that looked more like dormitories than
|
||
hotel rooms, with their military-issued dressers and desks. Any materials
|
||
that the engineers needed had to be flown in on Musk’s plane or were more
|
||
often brought by boat from Hawaii or the mainland United States. Each day,
|
||
the SpaceX crew gathered their gear and took a forty-five-minute boat ride
|
||
to Omelek, a seven-acre, palm-tree-and vegetation-covered island that
|
||
would be transformed into their launchpad. Over the course of several
|
||
months, a small team of people cleared the brush, poured concrete to
|
||
support the launchpad, and converted a double-wide trailer into offices. The
|
||
work was grueling and took place in soul-sapping humidity under a sun
|
||
powerful enough to burn the skin through a T-shirt. Eventually, some of the
|
||
workers preferred to spend the night on Omelek rather than make the
|
||
journey through rough waters back to the main island. “Some of the offices
|
||
were turned into bedrooms with mattresses and cots,” Hollman said. “Then
|
||
we shipped over a very nice refrigerator and a good grill and plumbed in a
|
||
shower. We tried to make it less like camping and more like living.”
|
||
The sun rose at 7 A.M. each day, and that’s when the SpaceX team got to
|
||
work. A series of meetings would take place with people listing what
|
||
needed to get done, and debating solutions to lingering problems. As the
|
||
large structures arrived, the workers placed the body of the rocket
|
||
horizontally in a makeshift hangar and spent hours melding together all of
|
||
its parts. “There was always something to do,” Hollman said. “If the engine
|
||
wasn’t a problem, then there was an avionics problem or a software
|
||
problem.” By 7 P.M., the engineers wound down their work. “One or two
|
||
people would decide it was their night to cook, and they would make steak
|
||
and potatoes and pasta,” Hollman said. “We had a bunch of movies and a
|
||
DVD player, and some of us did a lot of fishing off the docks.” For many of
|
||
the engineers, this was both a torturous and magical experience. “At Boeing
|
||
you could be comfortable, but that wasn’t going to happen at SpaceX,” said
|
||
Walter Sims, a SpaceX tech expert who found time to get certified to dive
|
||
while on Kwaj. “Every person on that island was a fucking star, and they
|
||
were always holding seminars on radios or the engine. It was such an
|
||
invigorating place.”
|
||
The engineers were constantly baffled by what Musk would fund and
|
||
what he wouldn’t. Back at headquarters, someone would ask to buy a
|
||
$200,000 machine or a pricey part that they deemed essential to Falcon 1’s
|
||
success, and Musk would deny the request. And yet he was totally
|
||
comfortable paying a similar amount to put a shiny surface on the factory
|
||
floor to make it look nice. On Omelek, the workers wanted to pave a twohundred-
|
||
yard pathway between the hangar and the launchpad to make it
|
||
easier to transport the rocket. Musk refused. This left the engineers moving
|
||
the rocket and its wheeled support structure in the fashion of the ancient
|
||
Egyptians. They laid down a series of wooden planks and rolled the rocket
|
||
across them, grabbing the last piece of wood from the back and running it
|
||
forward in a continuous cycle.
|
||
The whole situation was ludicrous. A start-up rocket company had
|
||
ended up in the middle of nowhere trying to pull off one of the most
|
||
difficult feats known to man, and, truth be told, only a handful of the
|
||
SpaceX team had any idea how to make a launch happen. Time and again,
|
||
the rocket would get marched out to the launchpad and hoisted vertical for a
|
||
couple of days, while technical and safety checks would reveal a litany of
|
||
new problems. The engineers worked on the rocket for as long as they could
|
||
before laying it horizontal and marching it back to the hangar to avoid
|
||
damage from the salty air. Teams that had worked separately for months
|
||
back at the SpaceX factory—propulsion, avionics, software—were thrust
|
||
together on the island and forced to become an interdisciplinary whole. The
|
||
sum total was an extreme learning and bonding exercise that played like a
|
||
comedy of errors. “It was like Gilligan’s Island except with rockets,”
|
||
Hollman said.
|
||
In November 2005, about six months after they had first gotten to the
|
||
island, the SpaceX team felt ready to give launching a shot. Musk flew in
|
||
with his brother, Kimbal, and joined the majority of the SpaceX team in the
|
||
barracks on Kwaj. On November 26, a handful of people woke up at 3 A.M.
|
||
and filled the rocket with liquid oxygen. They then scampered off to an
|
||
island about three miles away for protection, while the rest of the SpaceX
|
||
team monitored the launch systems from a control room twenty-six miles
|
||
away on Kwaj. The military gave SpaceX a six-hour launch window.
|
||
Everyone was hoping to see the first stage take off and reach about 6,850
|
||
miles per hour before giving way to the second stage, which would ignite
|
||
up in the air and reach 17,000 miles per hour. But, while going through the
|
||
pre-launch checks, the engineers detected a major problem: a valve on a
|
||
liquid oxygen tank would not close, and the LOX was boiling off into the
|
||
air at 500 gallons per hour. SpaceX scrambled to fix the issue but lost too
|
||
much of its fuel to launch before the window closed.
|
||
With that mission aborted, SpaceX ordered major LOX reinforcements
|
||
from Hawaii and prepared for another attempt in mid-December. High
|
||
winds, faulty valves, and other errors thwarted that launch attempt. Before
|
||
another attempt could be made, SpaceX discovered on a Saturday night that
|
||
the rocket’s power distribution systems had started malfunctioning and
|
||
would need new capacitors. On Sunday morning, the rocket was lowered
|
||
and split into its two stages so that a technician could slide in and remove
|
||
the electrical boards. Someone found an electronics supplier that was open
|
||
on Sunday in Minnesota, and off a SpaceX employee flew to get some fresh
|
||
capacitors. By Monday he was in California and testing the parts at
|
||
SpaceX’s headquarters to make sure they passed various heat and vibration
|
||
checks, then on a plane again back to the islands. In under eighty hours, the
|
||
electronics had been returned in working order and installed in the rocket.
|
||
The dash to the United States and back showed that SpaceX’s thirty-person
|
||
team had real pluck in the face of adversity and inspired everyone on the
|
||
island. A traditional three-hundred-person-strong aerospace launch crew
|
||
would never have tried to fix a rocket like that on the fly. But the energy,
|
||
smarts, and resourcefulness of the SpaceX team still could not overcome
|
||
their inexperience or the difficult conditions. More problems arose and
|
||
blocked any thoughts of a launch.
|
||
Finally, on March 24, 2006, it was all systems go. The Falcon 1 stood
|
||
on its square launchpad and ignited. It soared into the sky, turning the island
|
||
below it into a green spec amid a vast, blue expanse. In the control room,
|
||
Musk paced as he watched the action, wearing shorts, flip-flops, and a Tshirt.
|
||
Then, about twenty-five seconds in, it became clear that all was not
|
||
well. A fire broke out above the Merlin engine and suddenly this machine
|
||
that had been flying straight and true started to spin and then tumble
|
||
uncontrollably back to Earth. The Falcon 1 ended up falling directly down
|
||
onto the launch site. Most of the debris went into a reef 250 feet from the
|
||
launchpad, and the satellite cargo smashed through SpaceX’s machine shop
|
||
roof and landed more or less intact on the floor. Some of the engineers put
|
||
on their snorkeling and scuba gear and recovered the pieces, fitting all of
|
||
the rocket’s remnants into two refrigerator-sized crates. “It is perhaps worth
|
||
noting that those launch companies that succeeded also took their lumps
|
||
along the way,” Musk wrote in a postmortem. “A friend of mine wrote to
|
||
remind me that only 5 of the first 9 Pegasus launches succeeded; 3 of 5 for
|
||
Ariane; 9 of 20 for Atlas; 9 of 21 for Soyuz; and 9 of 18 for Proton. Having
|
||
experienced firsthand how hard it is to reach orbit, I have a lot of respect for
|
||
those that persevered to produce the vehicles that are mainstays of space
|
||
launch today.” Musk closed the letter writing, “SpaceX is in this for the
|
||
long haul and, come hell or high water, we are going to make this work.”
|
||
Musk and other SpaceX executives blamed the crash on an unnamed
|
||
technician. They said this technician had done some work on the rocket one
|
||
day before the launch and failed to properly tighten a fitting on a fuel pipe,
|
||
which caused the fitting to crack. The fitting in question was something
|
||
basic—an aluminum b-nut that’s often used to connect a pair of tubes. The
|
||
technician was Hollman. In the aftermath of the rocket crash, Hollman flew
|
||
to Los Angeles to confront Musk directly. He’d spent years working day
|
||
and night on the Falcon 1 and felt enraged that Musk had called out him and
|
||
his team in public. Hollman knew that he’d fastened the b-nut correctly and
|
||
that observers from NASA had been looking over his shoulder to check the
|
||
work. When Hollman charged into SpaceX’s headquarters with a head full
|
||
of fury, Mary Beth Brown tried to calm him and stop him from seeing
|
||
Musk. Hollman kept going anyway, and the two of them proceeded to have
|
||
a shouting match at Musk’s cubicle.
|
||
After all the debris was analyzed, it turned out that the b-nut had almost
|
||
certainly cracked due to corrosion from the months in Kwaj’s salty
|
||
atmosphere. “The rocket was literally crusted with salt on one side, and you
|
||
had to scrape it off,” Mueller said. “But we had done a static fire three days
|
||
earlier, and everything was fine.” SpaceX had tried to save about fifty
|
||
pounds of weight by using aluminum components instead of stainless steel.
|
||
Thompson, the former marine, had seen the aluminum parts work just fine
|
||
in helicopters that sat on aircraft carriers, and Mueller had seen aircraft
|
||
resting outside of Cape Canaveral for forty years with aluminum b-nuts in
|
||
fine condition. Years later, a number of SpaceX’s executives still agonize
|
||
over the way Hollman and his team were treated. “They were our best guys,
|
||
and they kind of got blamed to get an answer out to the world,” Mueller
|
||
said. “That was really bad. We found out later that it was dumb luck.”*
|
||
After the crash, there was a lot of drinking at a bar on the main island.
|
||
Musk wanted to launch again within six months, but putting together a new
|
||
machine would again require an immense amount of work. SpaceX had
|
||
some pieces for the vehicle ready in El Segundo but certainly not a readyto-
|
||
fire rocket. As they downed drinks, the engineers vowed to take a more
|
||
disciplined approach with their next craft and to work better as a collective.
|
||
Worden hoped the SpaceX engineers would raise their game as well. He’d
|
||
been observing them for the Defense Department and loved the energy of
|
||
the young engineers but not their methodology. “It was being done like a
|
||
bunch of kids in Silicon Valley would do software,” Worden said. “They
|
||
would stay up all night and try this and try that. I’d seen hundreds of these
|
||
types of operations, and it struck me that it wouldn’t work.” Leading up to
|
||
the first launch, Worden tried to caution Musk, sending a letter to him and
|
||
the director of DARPA, the research arm of the Defense Department, that
|
||
made his views clear. “Elon didn’t react well. He said, ‘What do you know?
|
||
You’re just an astronomer,’” Worden said. But, after the rocket blew up,
|
||
Musk recommended that Worden perform an investigation for the
|
||
government. “I give Elon huge credit for that,” Worden said.
|
||
Almost exactly a year later, SpaceX was ready to try another launch. On
|
||
March 15, 2007, a successful test fire took place. Then, on March 21, the
|
||
Falcon 1 finally behaved. From its launchpad surrounded by palm trees, the
|
||
Falcon 1 surged up and toward space. It flew for a couple of minutes with
|
||
engineers now and again reporting that the systems were “nominal,” or in
|
||
good shape. At three minutes into the flight, the first stage of the rocket
|
||
separated and fell back to Earth, and the Kestrel engine kicked in as planned
|
||
to carry the second stage into orbit. Ecstatic cheers went out in the control
|
||
room. Next, at the four-minute mark, the fairing atop the rocket separated as
|
||
planned. “It was doing exactly what it was supposed to do,” said Mueller. “I
|
||
was sitting next to Elon and looked at him and said, ‘We’ve made it.’ We’re
|
||
hugging and believe it’s going to make it to orbit. Then, it starts to wiggle.”
|
||
For more than five glorious minutes, the SpaceX engineers got to feel like
|
||
they had done everything right. A camera on board the Falcon 1 pointed
|
||
down and showed Earth getting smaller and smaller as the rocket made its
|
||
way methodically into space. But then that wiggle that Mueller noticed
|
||
turned into flailing, and the machine swooned, started to break apart, and
|
||
then blew up. This time the SpaceX engineers were quick to figure out what
|
||
went wrong. As the propellant was consumed, what was left started to move
|
||
around the tank and slosh against the sides, much like wine spinning around
|
||
a glass. The sloshing propellant triggered the wobbling, and at one point it
|
||
sloshed enough to leave an opening to the engine exposed. When the engine
|
||
sucked in a big breath of air, it flamed out.
|
||
The failure was another crushing blow to SpaceX’s engineers. Some of
|
||
them had spent close to two years shuffling back and forth between
|
||
California, Hawaii, and Kwaj. By the time SpaceX could attempt another
|
||
launch, it would be about four years after Musk’s original target, and the
|
||
company had been chewing through his Internet fortune at a worrying rate.
|
||
Musk had vowed publicly that he would see this thing through to the end,
|
||
but people inside and outside the company were doing back-of-theenvelope
|
||
math and could tell that SpaceX likely could only afford one more
|
||
attempt—maybe two. To the extent that the financial situation unnerved
|
||
Musk, he rarely if ever let it show to employees. “Elon did a great job of not
|
||
burdening people with those worries,” said Spikes. “He always
|
||
communicated the importance of being lean and of success, but it was never
|
||
‘if we fail, we’re done for.’ He was very optimistic.”
|
||
The failures seemed to do little to curtail Musk’s vision for the future or
|
||
raise doubts about his capabilities. In the midst of the chaos, he took a tour
|
||
of the islands with Worden. Musk began thinking aloud about how the
|
||
islands could be unified into one landmass. He suggested that walls could
|
||
be built through the small channels between the islands, and the water could
|
||
be pumped out in the spirit of the manmade systems in the Netherlands.
|
||
Worden, also known for his out-there ideas, was attracted to Musk’s
|
||
bravado. “That he is thinking of this stuff is kind of cool,” Worden said.
|
||
“From that point on, he and I discussed settling Mars. It really impressed
|
||
me that this is a guy that thinks big.”
|
||
PHOTOGRAPHIC INSERT
|
||
The Haldeman children had lots of downtime in the African bush while on wild adventures with their
|
||
parents. ©Maye Musk
|
||
As a toddler, Musk would often drift off into his own world and ignore those around him. Doctors
|
||
theorized that he might be hard of hearing and had his adenoid glands removed. ©Maye Musk
|
||
Musk was a loner throughout grade school and suffered for years at the hands of bullies. ©Maye
|
||
Musk
|
||
Musk’s original video-game code for Blastar, the game he wrote as a twelve-year-old and published
|
||
in a local magazine. ©Maye Musk
|
||
(From left to right:) Elon, Kimbal, and Tosca at their house in South Africa. All three children now
|
||
live in the United States. ©Maye Musk
|
||
Musk ran away on his own to Canada and ended up at Queen’s University in Ontario, living in a
|
||
dormitory for foreign students. ©Maye Musk
|
||
J. B. Straubel puts together one of Tesla Motors’ early battery packs at his house. Photograph
|
||
courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
A handful of engineers built the first Tesla Roadster in a Silicon Valley warehouse that they had
|
||
turned into a garage workshop and research lab. Photograph courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
Musk and Martin Eberhard prepare to take the early Roadster for a test-drive. The relationship
|
||
between the two men would fall apart in the years to come. Photograph courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
SpaceX built its rocket factory from the ground up in a Los Angeles warehouse to give birth to the
|
||
Falcon 1 rocket. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
Tom Mueller (far right, gray shirt) led the design, testing, and construction of SpaceX’s engines.
|
||
Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
SpaceX had to conduct its first flights from Kwajalein Atoll (or Kwaj) in the Marshall Islands. The
|
||
island experience was a difficult but ultimately fruitful adventure for the engineers. Photograph
|
||
courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
SpaceX built a mobile mission-control trailer, and Musk and Mueller used it to monitor the later
|
||
launches from Kwaj. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
Musk hired Franz von Holzhausen in 2008 to design the Tesla Model S. The two men speak almost
|
||
every day, as can be seen in this meeting in Musk’s SpaceX cubicle. ©Steve Jurvetson
|
||
SpaceX’s ambitions grew over the years to include the construction of the Dragon capsule, which
|
||
could take people to the International Space Station and beyond. ©Steve Jurvetson
|
||
Musk has long had a thing for robots and is always evaluating new machines for both the SpaceX and
|
||
Tesla factories. ©Steve Jurvetson
|
||
When SpaceX moved to a new factory in Hawthorne, California, it was able to scale out its assembly
|
||
line and work on multiple rockets and capsules at the same time. ©Steve Jurvetson
|
||
SpaceX tests new engines and crafts at a site in McGregor, Texas. Here the company is testing a
|
||
reusable rocket, code-named “Grasshopper,” that can land itself. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
Musk has a tradition of visiting Dairy Queen ahead of test flights in Texas, in this case with SpaceX
|
||
investor and board member Steve Jurvetson (left) and fellow investor Randy Glein (right). ©Steve
|
||
Jurvetson
|
||
With a Dragon capsule hanging overhead, SpaceX employees peer into the company’s mission
|
||
control center at the Hawthorne factory. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
Gwynne Shotwell is Musk’s right-hand woman at SpaceX and oversees the day-to-day operations of
|
||
the company, including monitoring a launch from mission control. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
Tesla took over the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. (or NUMMI) car factory in Fremont,
|
||
California, which is where workers produce the Model S sedan. Photograph courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
Tesla began shipping the Model S sedan in 2012. The car ended up winning most of the automotive
|
||
industry’s major awards. Photograph courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
The Tesla Model S sedan with its electric motor (near the rear) and battery pack (bottom) exposed.
|
||
Photograph courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
Tesla’s next car will be the Model X SUV with its signature “falcon-wing doors.” Photograph
|
||
courtesy of Tesla Motors
|
||
In 2013, Musk visited Cuba with Sean Penn (driving) and the investor Shervin Pishevar (back seat
|
||
next to Musk). They met with students and members of the Castro family, and tried to free an
|
||
American prisoner. ©Shervin Pishevar
|
||
Musk unveiled the Hyperloop in 2013. He proposed it as a new mode of transportation, and multiple
|
||
groups have now set to work on building it. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
In 2014, Musk unveiled a radical new take on the space capsule—the Dragon V2. It comes with a
|
||
drop-down touch-screen display and slick interior. Photograph courtesy of SpaceX
|
||
The Dragon V2 will be able to return to Earth and land with pinpoint accuracy. Photograph courtesy
|
||
of SpaceX
|
||
Musk is a nonstop traveler. Here’s a look at one year in his life via records obtained through a
|
||
Freedom of Information Act request.
|
||
Musk married, divorced, remarried, and then divorced the actress Talulah Riley. Photograph courtesy
|
||
of Talulah Riley
|
||
Musk and Riley relax at home in Los Angeles. Musk shares the home with his five young boys.
|
||
Photograph courtesy of Talulah Riley
|
||
7
|
||
ALL ELECTRIC
|
||
J. B. STRAUBEL HAS A TWO-INCH-LONG SCAR that cuts across the
|
||
middle of his left cheek. He earned it in high school, during a chemistry
|
||
class experiment. Straubel whipped up the wrong concoction of chemicals,
|
||
and the beaker he was holding exploded, throwing off shards of glass, one
|
||
of which sliced through his face.
|
||
The wound lingers as a tinkerer’s badge of honor. It arrived near the end
|
||
of a childhood full of experimentation with chemicals and machines. Born
|
||
in Wisconsin, Straubel constructed a large chemistry lab in the basement of
|
||
his family’s home that included fume hoods and chemicals ordered,
|
||
borrowed, or pilfered. At thirteen, Straubel found an old golf cart at the
|
||
dump. He brought it back home and restored it to working condition, which
|
||
required him to rebuild the electric motor. It seemed that Straubel was
|
||
always taking something apart, sprucing it up, and putting it back together.
|
||
All of this fit into the Straubel family’s do-it-yourself traditions. In the late
|
||
1890s Straubel’s great-grandfather started the Straubel Machine Company,
|
||
which built one of the first internal combustion engines in the United States
|
||
and used it to power boats.
|
||
Straubel’s inquisitive spirit carried him west to Stanford University,
|
||
where he enrolled in 1994 intending to become a physicist. After flying
|
||
through the hardest courses he could take, Straubel concluded that majoring
|
||
in physics would not be for him. The advanced courses were too theoretical,
|
||
and Straubel liked to get his hands dirty. He developed his own major called
|
||
energy systems and engineering. “I wanted to take software and electricity
|
||
and use it to control energy,” Straubel said. “It was computing combined
|
||
with power electronics. I collected all the things I love doing in one place.”
|
||
There was no clean-technology movement at this time, but there were
|
||
companies dabbling with new uses for solar power and electric vehicles.
|
||
Straubel ended up hunting down these startups, hanging out in their garages
|
||
and pestering the engineers. He began tinkering once again on his own as
|
||
well in the garage of a house he shared with a half dozen friends. Straubel
|
||
bought a “piece of shit Porsche” for $1,600 and turned it into an electric car.
|
||
This meant that Straubel had to create a controller to manage the electric
|
||
motor, build a charger from scratch, and write the software that made the
|
||
entire machine work. The car set the world record for electric vehicle (EV)
|
||
acceleration, traveling a quarter mile in 17.28 seconds. “The thing I took
|
||
away was that the electronics were great, and you could get acceleration on
|
||
a shoestring budget, but the batteries sucked,” Straubel said. “It had a thirtymile
|
||
range, so I learned firsthand about some of the limitations of electric
|
||
vehicles.” Straubel gave his car a hybrid boost, building a gasoline-powered
|
||
contraption that could be towed behind the Porsche and used to recharge the
|
||
batteries. It was good enough for Straubel to drive the four hundred miles
|
||
down to Los Angeles and back.
|
||
By 2002, Straubel was living in Los Angeles. He’d gotten a master’s
|
||
degree from Stanford and bounced around a couple of companies looking
|
||
for something that called out to him. He decided on Rosen Motors, which
|
||
had built one of the world’s first hybrid vehicles—a car that ran off a
|
||
flywheel and a gas turbine and had electric motors to drive the wheel. After
|
||
it folded, Straubel followed Harold Rosen, an engineer famed for inventing
|
||
the geostationary satellite, to create an electric plane. “I’m a pilot and love
|
||
to fly, so this was perfect for me,” Straubel said. “The idea was that it would
|
||
stay aloft for two weeks at a time and hover over a specific spot. This was
|
||
way before drones and all that.” To help make ends meet, Straubel also
|
||
worked nights and on the weekend doing electronics consulting for a startup.
|
||
It was in the midst of toiling away on all these projects that Straubel’s
|
||
old buddies from the Stanford solar car team came to pay him a visit. A
|
||
group of rogue engineers at Stanford had been working on solar cars for
|
||
years, building them in a World War II–era Quonset hut full of toxic
|
||
chemicals and black widows. Unlike today, when the university would jump
|
||
at the chance to support such a project, Stanford tried to shut down this
|
||
group of fringe freaks and geeks. The students proved very capable of doing
|
||
the work on their own and competed in cross-country solar-powered car
|
||
races. Straubel helped build the vehicles during his time at university and
|
||
even after, forming relationships with the incoming crop of engineers. The
|
||
team had just raced 2,300 miles from Chicago to Los Angeles, and Straubel
|
||
offered the strapped, exhausted kids a place to stay. About a half dozen
|
||
students showed up at Straubel’s place, took their first showers in many
|
||
days, and then spread across his floor. As they chatted late into the night,
|
||
Straubel and the solar team kept fixating on one topic. They realized that
|
||
lithium ion batteries—such as the ones in their car being fed by the sun—
|
||
had gotten much better than most people realized. Many consumer
|
||
electronics devices like laptops were running on so-called 18650 lithium ion
|
||
batteries, which looked a lot like AA batteries and could be strung together.
|
||
“We wondered what would happen if you put ten thousand of the battery
|
||
cells together,” Straubel said. “We did the math and figured you could go
|
||
almost one thousand miles. It was totally nerdy shit, and eventually
|
||
everyone fell asleep, but the idea really stuck with me.”
|
||
Soon enough, Straubel was stalking the solar car crew, trying to talk
|
||
them into building an electric car based on the lithium ion batteries. He
|
||
would fly up to Palo Alto, spend the night sleeping in his plane, and then
|
||
ride a bicycle to the Stanford campus to make his sales pitch while helping
|
||
with their current projects. The design Straubel had come up with was a
|
||
super-aerodynamic vehicle with 80 percent of its mass made up of the
|
||
batteries. It looked quite a bit like a torpedo on wheels. No one knew the
|
||
exact details of Straubel’s long-term vision for this thing, including
|
||
Straubel. The plan seemed to be less about forming a car company than
|
||
about building a proof-of-concept vehicle just to get people thinking about
|
||
the power of the lithium ion batteries. With any luck, they would find a race
|
||
to compete in.
|
||
The Stanford students agreed to join Straubel, if he could raise some
|
||
money. He began going to trade shows handing out brochures about his idea
|
||
and e-mailing just about anyone he could think of. “I was shameless,” he
|
||
said. The only problem was that no one had any interest in what Straubel
|
||
was selling. Investors dealt him one rejection after another for months on
|
||
end. Then, in the fall of 2003, Straubel met Elon Musk.
|
||
Harold Rosen had set up a lunch with Musk at a seafood restaurant near
|
||
the SpaceX headquarters in Los Angeles and brought Straubel along to help
|
||
talk up the electric plane idea. When Musk didn’t bite on that, Straubel
|
||
announced his electric car side project. The crazy idea struck an immediate
|
||
chord with Musk, who had been thinking about electric vehicles for years.
|
||
While Musk had mostly focused on using ultracapacitors for the vehicles,
|
||
he was thrilled and surprised to hear how far the lithium ion battery
|
||
technology had progressed. “Everyone else had told me I was nuts, but Elon
|
||
loved the idea,” Straubel said. “He said, ‘Sure, I will give you some
|
||
money.’” Musk promised Straubel $10,000 of the $100,000 he was seeking.
|
||
On the spot, Musk and Straubel formed a kinship that would survive more
|
||
than a decade of extreme highs and lows as they set out to do nothing less
|
||
than change the world.
|
||
After the meeting with Musk, Straubel reached out to his friends at AC
|
||
Propulsion. The Los Angeles–based company started in 1992 and was the
|
||
bleeding edge of electric vehicles, building everything from zippy midsize
|
||
passenger jobs right on up to sports cars. Straubel really wanted to show
|
||
Musk the tzero (from “t-zero”)—the highest-end vehicle in AC Propulsion’s
|
||
stable. It was a type of kit car that had a fiberglass body sitting on top of a
|
||
steel frame and went from zero to 60 miles per hour in 4.9 seconds when
|
||
first unveiled in 1997. Straubel had spent years hanging out with the AC
|
||
Propulsion crew and asked Tom Gage, the company’s president, to bring a
|
||
tzero over for Musk to drive. Musk fell for the car. He saw its potential as a
|
||
screaming-fast machine that could shift the perception of electric cars from
|
||
boring and plodding to something aspirational. For months Musk offered to
|
||
fund an effort to transform the kit car into a commercial vehicle but got
|
||
rebuffed time and again. “It was a proof of concept and needed to be made
|
||
real,” Straubel said. “I love the hell out of the AC Propulsion guys, but they
|
||
were sort of hopeless at business and refused to do it. They kept trying to
|
||
sell Elon on this car called the eBox that looked like shit, didn’t have good
|
||
performance, and was just uninspiring.” While the meetings with AC
|
||
Propulsion didn’t result in a deal, they had solidified Musk’s interest in
|
||
backing something well beyond Straubel’s science project. In a late
|
||
February 2004 e-mail to Gage, Musk wrote, “What I’m going to do is figure
|
||
out the best choice of a high performance base car and electric powertrain
|
||
and go in that direction.”
|
||
Unbeknownst to Straubel, at about the same time, a couple of business
|
||
partners in Northern California had also fallen in love with the idea of
|
||
making a lithium ion battery powered car. Martin Eberhard and Marc
|
||
Tarpenning had founded NuvoMedia in 1997 to create one of the earliest
|
||
electronic book readers, called the Rocket eBook. The work at NuvoMedia
|
||
had given the men insight into cutting-edge consumer electronics and the
|
||
hugely improved lithium ion batteries used to power laptops and other
|
||
portable devices. While the Rocket eBook was too far ahead of its time and
|
||
not a major commercial success, it was innovative enough to attract the
|
||
attention of Gemstar International Group, which owned TV Guide and some
|
||
electronic programming guide technology. Gemstar paid $187 million to
|
||
acquire NuvoMedia in March 2000. Spoils in hand, the cofounders stayed
|
||
in touch after the deal. They both lived in Woodside, one of the wealthiest
|
||
towns in Silicon Valley, and chatted from time to time about what they
|
||
should tackle next. “We thought up some goofball things,” said Tarpenning.
|
||
“There was one plan for these fancy irrigation systems for farms and the
|
||
home based on smart water-sensing networks. But nothing really resonated,
|
||
and we wanted something more important.”
|
||
Eberhard was a supremely talented engineer with a do-gooder’s social
|
||
conscience. The United States’ repeated conflicts in the Middle East
|
||
bothered him, and like many other science-minded folks around 2000 he
|
||
had started to accept global warming as a reality. Eberhard began looking
|
||
for alternatives to gas-guzzling cars. He investigated the potential of
|
||
hydrogen fuel cells but found them lacking. He also didn’t see much point
|
||
in leasing something like the EV1 electric car from General Motors. What
|
||
did catch Eberhard’s interest, however, were the all-electric cars from AC
|
||
Propulsion that he spied on the Internet. Eberhard went down to Los
|
||
Angeles around 2001 to visit the AC Propulsion shop. “The place looked
|
||
like a ghost town and like they were going out of business,” Eberhard said.
|
||
“I bailed them out with five hundred thousand dollars so that they could
|
||
build one of their cars for me with lithium ion instead of lead acid
|
||
batteries.” Eberhard too tried to goad AC Propulsion into being a
|
||
commercial enterprise rather than a hobby shop. When they rejected his
|
||
overtures, Eberhard decided to form his own company and see what the
|
||
lithium ion batteries could really do.
|
||
Eberhard’s journey began with him building a technical model of the
|
||
electric car on a spreadsheet. This let him tweak various components and
|
||
see how they might affect the vehicle’s shape and performance. He could
|
||
adjust the weight, number of batteries, resistance of the tires and body, and
|
||
then get back answers on how many batteries it would take to power the
|
||
various designs. The models made it clear that SUVs, which were very
|
||
popular at the time, and things like delivery trucks were unlikely
|
||
candidates. The technology seemed instead to favor a lighter-weight, highend
|
||
sports car, which would be fast, fun to drive, and have far better range
|
||
than most people would expect. These technical specifications
|
||
complemented the findings of Tarpenning, who had been doing research
|
||
into a financial model for the car. The Toyota Prius had started to take off in
|
||
California, and it was being purchased by wealthy eco-crusaders. “We also
|
||
learned that the average income for EV1 owners was around two hundred
|
||
thousand dollars per year,” Tarpenning said. People who used to go after the
|
||
Lexus, BMW, and Cadillac brands saw electric and hybrid cars as a
|
||
different kind of status symbol. The men figured they could build
|
||
something for the $3 billion per year luxury auto market in the United
|
||
States that would let rich people have fun and feel good about themselves
|
||
too. “People pay for cool and sexy and an amazing zero-to-sixty time,”
|
||
Tarpenning said.
|
||
On July 1, 2003, Eberhard and Tarpenning incorporated their new
|
||
company. While at Disneyland a few months earlier on a date with his wife,
|
||
Eberhard had come up with the name Tesla Motors, both to pay homage to
|
||
the inventor and electric motor pioneer Nikola Tesla and because it sounded
|
||
cool. The cofounders rented an office that had three desks and two small
|
||
rooms in a decrepit 1960s building located at 845 Oak Grove Avenue in
|
||
Menlo Park. The third desk was occupied a few months later by Ian Wright,
|
||
an engineer who grew up on a farm in New Zealand. He was a neighbor of
|
||
the Tesla cofounders in Woodside, and had been working with them to hone
|
||
his pitch for a networking startup. When the start-up failed to raise any
|
||
money from venture capitalists, Wright joined Tesla. As the three men
|
||
began to tell some of their confidants of their plans, they were confronted
|
||
with universal derision. “We met a friend at this Woodside pub to tell her
|
||
what we had finally decided to do and that it was going to be an electric
|
||
car,” Tarpenning said. “She said, ‘You have to be kidding me.’”
|
||
Anyone who tries to build a car company in the United States is quickly
|
||
reminded that the last successful start-up in the industry was Chrysler,
|
||
founded in 1925. Designing and building a car from the ground up comes
|
||
with plenty of challenges, but it’s really getting the money and know-how
|
||
to build lots of cars that has thwarted past efforts to get a new company
|
||
going. The Tesla founders were aware of these realities. They figured that
|
||
Nikola Tesla had built an electric motor a century earlier and that creating a
|
||
drivetrain to take the power from the motor and send it to the wheels was
|
||
doable. The really frightening part of their enterprise would be building the
|
||
factory to make the car and its associated parts. But the more the Tesla guys
|
||
researched the industry, the more they realized that the big automakers
|
||
don’t even really build their cars anymore. The days of Henry Ford having
|
||
raw materials delivered to one end of his Michigan factory and then sending
|
||
cars out the other end had long passed. “BMW didn’t make its windshields
|
||
or upholstery or rearview mirrors,” Tarpenning said. “The only thing the big
|
||
car companies had kept was internal combustion research, sales and
|
||
marketing, and the final assembly. We thought naïvely that we could access
|
||
all the same suppliers for our parts.”
|
||
The plan the Tesla cofounders came up with was to license some
|
||
technology from AC Propulsion around the tzero vehicle and to use the
|
||
Lotus Elise chassis for the body of their car. Lotus, the English carmaker,
|
||
had released the two-door Elise in 1996, and it certainly had the sleek,
|
||
ground-hugging appeal to make a statement to high-end car buyers. After
|
||
talking to a number of people in the car dealership business, the Tesla team
|
||
decided to avoid selling their cars through partners and sell direct. With
|
||
these basics of a plan in place, the three men went hunting for some venture
|
||
capital funding in January 2004.
|
||
To make things feel more real for the investors, the Tesla founders
|
||
borrowed a tzero from AC Propulsion and drove it to the venture capital
|
||
corridor of Sand Hill Road. The car accelerated faster than a Ferrari, and
|
||
this translated into visceral excitement for the investors. The downside,
|
||
though, was that venture capitalists are not a terribly imaginative bunch,
|
||
and they struggled to see past the crappy plastic finish of this glorified kit
|
||
car. The only venture capitalists that bit were Compass Technology Partners
|
||
and SDL Ventures, and they didn’t sound altogether thrilled. The lead
|
||
partner at Compass had made out well on NuvoMedia and felt some loyalty
|
||
to Eberhard and Tarpenning. “He said, ‘This is stupid, but I have invested in
|
||
every automotive start-up for the last forty years, so why not,’” Tarpenning
|
||
recalled. Tesla still needed a lead investor who would pony up the bulk of
|
||
the $7 million needed to make what’s known as a mule or a prototype
|
||
vehicle. That would be their first milestone and give them something
|
||
physical to show off, which could aid a second round of funding.
|
||
Eberhard and Tarpenning had Elon Musk’s name in the back of their
|
||
heads as a possible lead investor from the outset. They had both seen him
|
||
speak a couple of years earlier at a Mars Society conference held at
|
||
Stanford where Musk had laid out his vision of sending mice into space,
|
||
and they got the impression that he thought a bit differently and would be
|
||
open to the idea of an electric car. The idea to pitch Musk on Tesla Motors
|
||
solidified when Tom Gage from AC Propulsion called Eberhard and told
|
||
him that Musk was looking to fund something in the electric car arena.
|
||
Eberhard and Wright flew down to Los Angeles and met with Musk on a
|
||
Friday. That weekend, Musk peppered Tarpenning, who had been away on a
|
||
trip, with questions about the financial model. “I just remember responding,
|
||
responding, and responding,” Tarpenning said. “The following Monday,
|
||
Martin and I flew down to meet him again, and he said, ‘Okay, I’m in.’”
|
||
The Tesla founders felt like they had lucked into the perfect investor.
|
||
Musk had the engineering smarts to know what they were building. He also
|
||
shared their larger goal of trying to end the United States’ addiction to oil.
|
||
“You need angel investors to have some belief, and it wasn’t a purely
|
||
financial transaction for him,” Tarpenning said. “He wanted to change the
|
||
energy equation of the country.” With an investment of $6.5 million, Musk
|
||
had become the largest shareholder of Tesla and the chairman of the
|
||
company. Musk would later wield his position of strength well while
|
||
battling Eberhard for control of Tesla. “It was a mistake,” Eberhard said. “I
|
||
wanted more investors. But, if I had to do it again, I would take his money.
|
||
A bird in the hand, you know. We needed it.”
|
||
Not long after this meeting took place, Musk called Straubel and urged
|
||
him to meet with the Tesla team. Straubel heard that their offices in Menlo
|
||
Park were about a half a mile from his house, and he was intrigued but very
|
||
skeptical of their story. No one on the planet was more dialed into the
|
||
electric vehicle scene than Straubel, and he found it hard to believe that a
|
||
couple of guys had gotten this far along without word of their project
|
||
reaching him. Nonetheless, Straubel stopped by the office for a meeting,
|
||
and was hired right away in May 2004 at a salary of $95,000 per year. “I
|
||
told them that I had been building the battery pack they need down the
|
||
street with funding from Elon,” Straubel said. “We agreed to join forces and
|
||
formed this ragtag group.”
|
||
Had anyone from Detroit stopped by Tesla Motors at this point, they
|
||
would have ended up in hysterics. The sum total of the company’s
|
||
automotive expertise was that a couple of the guys at Tesla really liked cars
|
||
and another one had created a series of science fair projects based on
|
||
technology that the automotive industry considered ridiculous. What’s
|
||
more, the founding team had no intention of turning to Detroit for advice on
|
||
how to build a car company. No, Tesla would do what every other Silicon
|
||
Valley start-up had done before it, which was hire a bunch of young, hungry
|
||
engineers and figure things out as they went along. Never mind that the Bay
|
||
Area had no real history of this model ever having worked for something
|
||
like a car and that building a complex, physical object had little in common
|
||
with writing a software application. What Tesla did have, ahead of anyone
|
||
else, was the realization that 18650 lithium ion batteries had gotten really
|
||
good and were going to keep getting better. Hopefully that coupled with
|
||
some effort and smarts would be enough.
|
||
Straubel had a direct pipeline into the smart, energetic engineers at
|
||
Stanford and told them about Tesla. Gene Berdichevsky, one of the
|
||
members of the solar-powered-car team, lit up the second he heard from
|
||
Straubel. An undergraduate, Berdichevsky volunteered to quit school, work
|
||
for free, and sweep the floors at Tesla if that’s what it took to get a job. The
|
||
founders were impressed with his spirit and hired Berdichevsky after one
|
||
meeting. This left Berdichevsky in the uncomfortable position of calling his
|
||
Russian immigrant parents, a pair of nuclear submarine engineers, to tell
|
||
them that he was giving up on Stanford to join an electric car start-up. As
|
||
employee No. 7, he spent part of the workday in the Menlo Park office and
|
||
the rest in Straubel’s living room designing three-dimensional models of the
|
||
car’s powertrain on a computer and building battery pack prototypes in the
|
||
garage. “Only now do I realize how insane it was,” Berdichevsky said.
|
||
Tesla soon needed to expand to accommodate its budding engineer army
|
||
and to create a workshop that would help bring the Roadster, as they were
|
||
now calling the car, to life. They found a two-story industrial building in
|
||
San Carlos at 1050 Commercial Street. The 10,000-square-foot facility
|
||
wasn’t much, but it had room to build a research and development shop
|
||
capable of knocking out some prototype cars. There were a couple of large
|
||
assembly bays on the ride side of the building and two large rollup doors
|
||
big enough for cars to drive in and out. Wright divided the open floor space
|
||
into segments—motors, batteries, power electronics, and final assembly.
|
||
The left half of the building was an office space that had been modified in
|
||
weird ways by the previous tenant, a plumbing supply company. The main
|
||
conference room had a wet bar and a sink where the faucet was a swan’s
|
||
mouth, and the hot and cold knobs were wings. Berdichevsky painted the
|
||
office white on a Sunday night, and the next week the employees made a
|
||
field trip to IKEA to buy desks and hopped online to order their computers
|
||
from Dell. As for tools, Tesla had a single Craftsman toolbox loaded with
|
||
hammers, nails, and other carpentry basics. Musk would visit now and
|
||
again from Los Angeles and was unfazed by the conditions, having seen
|
||
SpaceX grow up in similar surroundings.
|
||
The original plan for producing a prototype vehicle sounded simple.
|
||
Tesla would take the AC Propulsion tzero powertrain and fit it into the
|
||
Lotus Elise body. The company had acquired a schematic for an electric
|
||
motor design and figured it could buy a transmission from a company in the
|
||
United States or Europe and outsource any other parts from Asia. Tesla’s
|
||
engineers mostly needed to focus on developing the battery pack systems,
|
||
wiring the car, and cutting and welding metal as needed to bring everything
|
||
together. Engineers love to muck around with hardware, and the Tesla team
|
||
thought of the Roadster as something akin to a car conversion project that
|
||
could be done with two or three mechanical engineers, and a few assembly
|
||
people.
|
||
The main team of prototype builders consisted of Straubel,
|
||
Berdichevsky, and David Lyons, a very clever mechanical engineer and
|
||
employee No. 12. Lyons had about a decade of experience working for
|
||
Silicon Valley companies and had met Straubel a few years before when the
|
||
two men struck up a conversation at a 7-Eleven about an electric bike
|
||
Straubel was riding. Lyons had helped Straubel pay bills by hiring him as a
|
||
consultant for a company building a device to measure people’s core body
|
||
temperature. Straubel thought he could return the favor by bringing Lyons
|
||
on early to such an exciting project. Tesla would benefit in a big way as
|
||
well. As Berdichevsky put it, “Dave Lyons knew how to get shit done.”
|
||
The engineers bought a blue lift for the car and set it up inside the
|
||
building. They also purchased some machine tools, hand tools, and
|
||
floodlights to work at night and started to turn the facility into a hotbed of
|
||
R&D activity. Electrical engineers studied the Lotus’s base-level software
|
||
to figure out how it tied together the pedals, mechanical apparatus, and the
|
||
dashboard gauges. The really advanced work took place with the battery
|
||
pack design. No one had ever tried to combine hundreds of lithium ion
|
||
batteries in parallel, so Tesla ended up at the cutting edge of the technology.
|
||
The engineers started trying to understand how heat would dissipate and
|
||
current flow would behave across seventy batteries by supergluing them
|
||
together into groups called bricks. Then ten bricks would be placed
|
||
together, and the engineers would test various types of air and liquid
|
||
cooling mechanisms. When the Tesla team had developed a workable
|
||
battery pack, they stretched the yellow Lotus Elise chassis five inches and
|
||
lowered the pack with a crane into the back of the car, where its engine
|
||
would normally be. These efforts began in earnest on October 18, 2004,
|
||
and, rather remarkably, four months later, on January 27, 2005, an entirely
|
||
new kind of car had been built by eighteen people. It could even be driven
|
||
around. Tesla had a board meeting that day, and Musk zipped about in the
|
||
car. He came away happy enough to keep investing. Musk put in $9 million
|
||
more as Tesla raised a $13 million funding round. The company now
|
||
planned to deliver the Roadster to consumers in early 2006.
|
||
Once they’d finished building a second car a few months later, the
|
||
engineers at Tesla decided they needed to face up to a massive potential
|
||
flaw in their electric vehicle. On July 4, 2005, they were at Eberhard’s
|
||
house in Woodside celebrating Independence Day and figured it was as
|
||
good a moment as any to see what happened when the Roadster’s batteries
|
||
caught on fire. Someone taped twenty of the batteries together, put a heating
|
||
strip wire into the bundle, and set it off. “It went up like a cluster of bottle
|
||
rockets,” Lyons said. Instead of twenty batteries, the Roadster would have
|
||
close to 7,000, and the thought of what an explosion at that scale would be
|
||
like horrified the engineers. One of the perks of an electric car was meant to
|
||
be that it moved people away from a flammable liquid like gasoline and the
|
||
endless explosions that take place in an engine. Rich people were unlikely
|
||
to pay a high price for something even more dangerous, and the early
|
||
nightmare scenario for the employees at Tesla was that a rich, famous
|
||
person would get caught in a fire caused by the car. “It was one of those ‘oh
|
||
shit’ moments,” Lyons said. “That is when we really sobered up.”
|
||
Tesla formed a six-person task force to deal with the battery issue. They
|
||
were pulled off all other work and given money to begin running
|
||
experiments. The first explosions started taking place at the Tesla
|
||
headquarters, where the engineers filmed them in slow motion. Once saner
|
||
minds prevailed, Tesla moved its explosion research to a blast area behind
|
||
an electrical substation maintained by the fire department. Blast by blast,
|
||
the engineers learned a great deal about the inner workings of the batteries.
|
||
They developed methods for arranging them in ways that would prevent
|
||
fires spreading from one battery to the next and other techniques for
|
||
stopping explosions altogether. Thousands of batteries exploded along the
|
||
way, and the effort was worth it. It was still early days, for sure, but Tesla
|
||
was on the verge of inventing battery technology that would set it apart
|
||
from rivals for years to come and would become one of the company’s great
|
||
advantages.
|
||
The early success at building two prototype cars, coupled with Tesla’s
|
||
engineering breakthroughs around the batteries and other technological
|
||
pieces, boosted the company’s confidence. It was time to put Tesla’s stamp
|
||
on the vehicle. “The original plan had been to do the bare minimum we
|
||
could get away with as far as making the car stylistically different from a
|
||
Lotus but electric,” said Tarpenning. “Along the way, Elon and the rest of
|
||
the board said, ‘You only get to do this once. It has to delight the customer,
|
||
and the Lotus just isn’t good enough to do that.’”
|
||
The Elise’s chassis, or base frame, worked fine for Tesla’s engineering
|
||
purposes. But the body of the car had serious issues in both form and
|
||
function. The door on the Elise was all of a foot tall, and you were meant to
|
||
either jump into the car or fall into it, depending on your flexibility and/or
|
||
dignity. The body also needed to be longer to accommodate Tesla’s battery
|
||
pack and a trunk. And Tesla preferred to make the Roadster out of carbon
|
||
fiber instead of fiberglass. On these design points, Musk had a lot of
|
||
opinion and influence. He wanted a car that Justine could feel comfortable
|
||
getting into and that had some measure of practicality. Musk made these
|
||
opinions clear when he visited Tesla for board meetings and design reviews.
|
||
Tesla hired a handful of designers to mock up new looks for the
|
||
Roadster. After settling on a favorite, the company paid to build a quarterscale
|
||
model of the vehicle in January 2005 and then a full-scale model in
|
||
April. This process provided the Tesla executives with yet another
|
||
revelation of everything that went into making a car. “They wrap this shiny
|
||
Mylar material around the model and vacuum it, so that you can really see
|
||
the contours and shine and shadows,” Tarpenning said. The silver model
|
||
was then turned into a digital rendering that the engineers could manipulate
|
||
on their computers. A British company took the digital file and used it to
|
||
create a plastic version of the car called an “aero buck” for aerodynamics
|
||
testing. “They put it on a boat and shipped it to us, and then we took it to
|
||
Burning Man,” Tarpenning said, referring to the annual drug-infused art
|
||
festival held in the Nevada desert.
|
||
About a year later, after many tweaks and much work, Tesla had a
|
||
pencils-down moment. It was May 2006, and the company had grown to a
|
||
hundred employees. This team built a black version of the Roadster known
|
||
as EP1, or engineering prototype one. “It was saying, ‘We now think we
|
||
know what we will build,’” Tarpenning said. “You can feel it. It’s a real car,
|
||
and it’s very exciting.” The arrival of the EP1 provided a great excuse to
|
||
show existing investors what their money had bought and to ask for more
|
||
funds from a wider audience. The venture capitalists were impressed
|
||
enough to overlook the fact that engineers sometimes had to manually fan
|
||
the car to cool it down in between test drives and were now starting to grasp
|
||
Tesla’s long-term potential. Musk once again put money into Tesla—$12
|
||
million—and a handful of other investors, including the venture capital firm
|
||
Draper Fisher Jurvetson, VantagePoint Capital Partners, J.P. Morgan,
|
||
Compass Technology Partners, Nick Pritzker, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin,
|
||
joined the $40 million round.*
|
||
In July 2006, Tesla decided to tell the world what it had been up to. The
|
||
company’s engineers had built a red prototype—EP2—to complement the
|
||
black one, and they both went on display at an event in Santa Clara. The
|
||
press flocked to the announcement and were quite taken with what they
|
||
saw. The Roadsters were gorgeous, two-seater convertibles that could go
|
||
from zero to 60 in about four seconds. “Until today,” Musk said at the
|
||
event, “all electric cars have sucked.”6
|
||
Celebrities like then-governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and former
|
||
Disney CEO Michael Eisner showed up at the event, and many of them
|
||
took test rides in the Roadsters. The vehicles were so fragile that only
|
||
Straubel and a couple of other trusted hands knew how to run them, and
|
||
they were swapped out every five minutes to avoid overheating. Tesla
|
||
revealed that each car would cost about $90,000 and had a range of 250
|
||
miles per charge. Thirty people, the company said, had committed to buying
|
||
a Roadster, including the Google cofounders Brin and Page and a handful of
|
||
other technology billionaires. Musk promised that a cheaper car—a fourseat,
|
||
four-door model under $50,000, would arrive in about three years.
|
||
Around the time of this event, Tesla made its debut in the New York
|
||
Times via a mini-profile on the company. Eberhard vowed—optimistically
|
||
—to begin shipments of the Roadster in the middle of 2007, instead of early
|
||
2006 as once planned, and laid out Tesla’s strategy of starting with a highpriced,
|
||
low-volume product and moving down to more affordable products
|
||
over time, as underlying technology and manufacturing capabilities
|
||
advanced. Musk and Eberhard were big believers in this strategy, having
|
||
seen it play out with a number of electronic devices. “Cellphones,
|
||
refrigerators, color TV’s, they didn’t start off by making a low-end product
|
||
for masses,” Eberhard told the paper.7 “They were relatively expensive, for
|
||
people who could afford it.” While the story was a coup for Tesla, Musk
|
||
didn’t appreciate being left out of the article entirely. “We tried to
|
||
emphasize him, and told the reporter about him over and over again, but
|
||
they weren’t interested in the board of the company,” Tarpenning said.
|
||
“Elon was furious. He was livid.”
|
||
You could understand why Musk might want some of the shine of Tesla
|
||
to rub off on him. The car had turned into a cause célèbre of the automotive
|
||
world. Electric vehicles tended to invoke religious overreactions from both
|
||
the pro and con camps, and the appearance of a good-looking, fast electric
|
||
car stoked everyone’s passions. Tesla had also turned Silicon Valley into a
|
||
real threat, at least conceptually, to Detroit for the first time. The month
|
||
after the Santa Monica event was the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, a
|
||
famous showcase for exotic cars. Tesla had become such a topic of
|
||
conversation that the organizers of the event begged to have a Roadster and
|
||
waived the usual display fees. Tesla set up a booth, and people showed up
|
||
by the dozens writing $100,000 checks on the spot to pre-order their cars.
|
||
“This was long before Kickstarter, and we just had not thought of trying to
|
||
do that,” Tarpenning said. “But then we started getting millions of dollars at
|
||
these types of events.” Venture capitalists, celebrities, and friends of Tesla
|
||
employees began trying to buy their way onto the waiting list. Some of
|
||
Silicon Valley’s wealthy elite went so far as to show up at the Tesla office
|
||
and knock on the door, looking to buy a car. The entrepreneurs Konstantin
|
||
Othmer and Bruce Leak, who had known Musk from his internship days at
|
||
Rocket Science Games, did just that one weekday and ended up getting a
|
||
personal tour of the car from Musk and Eberhard that stretched over a
|
||
couple of hours. “At the end we said, ‘We’ll take one,’” Othmer said. “They
|
||
weren’t actually allowed to sell cars yet, though, so we joined their club. It
|
||
cost one hundred thousand dollars, but one of the benefits of membership
|
||
was that you’d get a free car.”
|
||
As Tesla switched from marketing back into R&D mode, it had some
|
||
trends working in its favor. Advances in computing had made it so that
|
||
small car companies could sometimes punch at the same weight as the
|
||
giants of the industry. Years ago, automakers would have needed to make a
|
||
fleet of cars for crash testing. Tesla could not afford to do that, and it didn’t
|
||
have to. The third Roadster engineering prototype went to the same
|
||
collision testing facility used by large automakers, giving Tesla access to
|
||
top-of-the-line high-speed cameras and other imaging technology.
|
||
Thousands of other tests, though, were done by a third party that specialized
|
||
in computer simulations and saved Tesla from building a fleet of crash
|
||
vehicles. Tesla also had equal access to the big guys’ durability tracks made
|
||
out of cobblestones and concrete embedded with metal objects. It could
|
||
replicate 100,000 miles and ten years of wear at these facilities.
|
||
Quite often, the Tesla engineers brought their Silicon Valley attitude to
|
||
the automakers’ traditional stomping grounds. There’s a break and traction
|
||
testing track in northern Sweden near the Arctic Circle where cars get tuned
|
||
on large plains of ice. It would be standard to run the car for three days or
|
||
so, get the data, and return to company headquarters for many weeks of
|
||
meetings about how to adjust the car. The whole process of tuning a car can
|
||
take the entire winter. Tesla, by contrast, sent its engineers along with the
|
||
Roadsters being tested and had them analyze the data on the spot. When
|
||
something needed to be tweaked, the engineers would rewrite some code
|
||
and send the car back on the ice. “BMW would need to have a confab
|
||
between three or four companies that would all blame each other for the
|
||
problem,” Tarpenning said. “We just fixed it ourselves.” Another testing
|
||
procedure required that the Roadsters go into a special cooling chamber to
|
||
check how they would respond to frigid temperatures. Not wanting to pay
|
||
the exorbitant costs to use one of these chambers, the Tesla engineers opted
|
||
to rent an ice cream delivery truck with a large refrigerated trailer. Someone
|
||
would drive a Roadster into the truck, and the engineers would don parkas
|
||
and work on the car.
|
||
Every time Tesla interacted with Detroit it received a reminder of how
|
||
the once-great city had been separated from its own can-do culture. Tesla
|
||
tried to lease a small office in Detroit. The costs were incredibly low
|
||
compared with space in Silicon Valley, but the city’s bureaucracy made
|
||
getting just a basic office an ordeal. The building’s owner wanted to see
|
||
seven years of audited financials from Tesla, which was still a private
|
||
company. Then the building owner wanted two years’ worth of advanced
|
||
rent. Tesla had about $50 million in the bank and could have bought the
|
||
building outright. “In Silicon Valley, you say you’re backed by a venture
|
||
capitalist, and that’s the end of the negotiation,” Tarpenning said. “But
|
||
everything was like that in Detroit. We’d get FedEx boxes, and they
|
||
couldn’t even decide who should sign for the package.”
|
||
Throughout these early years, the engineers credited Eberhard with
|
||
making quick, crisp decisions. Rarely did Tesla get hung up overanalyzing a
|
||
situation. The company would pick a plan of attack, and when it failed at
|
||
something, it failed fast and then tried a new approach. It was many of the
|
||
changes that Musk wanted that started to delay the Roadster. Musk kept
|
||
pushing for the car to be more comfortable, asking for alterations to the
|
||
seats and the doors. He made the carbon-fiber body a priority, and he
|
||
pushed for electronic sensors on the doors so that the Roadster could be
|
||
unlocked with the touch of a finger instead of a tug on a handle. Eberhard
|
||
groused that these features were slowing the company down, and many of
|
||
the engineers agreed. “It felt at times like Elon was this unreasonably
|
||
demanding overarching force,” said Berdichevsky. “The company as a
|
||
whole was sympathetic to Martin because he was there all the time, and we
|
||
all felt the car should ship sooner.”
|
||
By the middle of 2007, Tesla had grown to 260 employees and seemed
|
||
to be pulling off the impossible. It had produced the fastest, most beautiful
|
||
electric car the world had ever seen almost from thin air. All it had to do
|
||
next was build a lot of the cars—a process that would end up almost
|
||
bankrupting the company.
|
||
The greatest mistake Tesla’s executives made in the early days were
|
||
assumptions around the transmission system for the Roadster. The goal had
|
||
always been to get from zero to 60 mph as quickly as possible in the hopes
|
||
that the raw speed of the Roadster would attract a lot of attention and make
|
||
it fun to drive. To do this, Tesla’s engineers had decided on a two-speed
|
||
transmission, which is the underlying mechanism in the car for transferring
|
||
power from the motor to the wheels. The first gear would take the car from
|
||
zero to 60 mph in less than four seconds, and then the second gear would
|
||
take the car up to 130 mph. Tesla had hired Xtrac, a British company
|
||
specializing in transmission designs, to build this part and had every reason
|
||
to believe that this would be one of the smoother bits of the Roadster’s
|
||
journey. “People had been making transmissions since Robert Fulton built
|
||
the steam engine,” said Bill Currie,8 a veteran Silicon Valley engineer and
|
||
employee No. 86 at Tesla. “We thought you would just order one. But the
|
||
first one we had lasted forty seconds.” The initial transmission could not
|
||
handle the big jump from the first to the second gear, and the fear was that
|
||
the second gear would engage at high speed and not be synchronized with
|
||
the motor properly, which would result in catastrophic damage to the car.
|
||
Lyons and the other engineers quickly set out to try to fix the issue.
|
||
They found a couple of other contractors to design replacements and again
|
||
hoped that these longtime transmission experts would deliver something
|
||
usable with relative ease. It soon became apparent, however, that the
|
||
contractors were not always putting their A team to work on this project for
|
||
a tiny start-up in Silicon Valley and that the new transmissions were no
|
||
better than the first. During tests, Tesla found that the transmissions would
|
||
sometimes break after 150 miles and that the mean time between failures
|
||
was about 2,000 miles. When a team from Detroit ran a root cause analysis
|
||
of the transmission to find failures, they discovered fourteen separate issues
|
||
that could cause the system to break. Tesla had wanted to deliver the
|
||
Roadster in November 2007, but the transmission issues lingered, and by
|
||
the time January 1, 2008, rolled around, the company had to once again
|
||
start from scratch, on a third transmission push.
|
||
Tesla also faced issues abroad. The company had decided to send a team
|
||
of its youngest, most energetic engineers to Thailand to set up a battery
|
||
factory. Tesla partnered with an enthusiastic although not totally capable
|
||
manufacturing partner. The Tesla engineers had been told that they could fly
|
||
over and manage the construction of a state-of-the-art battery factory.
|
||
Instead of a factory, they found a concrete slab with posts holding up a roof.
|
||
The building was about a three-hour drive south from Bangkok, and had
|
||
been left mostly open like many of the other factories because of the
|
||
incredible heat. The other manufacturing operations dealt with making
|
||
stoves, tires, and commodities that could withstand the elements. Tesla had
|
||
sensitive batteries and electronics, and like parts of the Falcon 1, they’d be
|
||
chewed up by the salty, humid conditions. Eventually, Tesla’s partner paid
|
||
about $75,000 to put in drywall, coat the floor, and create storage rooms
|
||
with temperature controls. Tesla’s engineers ended up working maddening
|
||
hours trying to train the Thai workers on how to handle the electronics
|
||
properly. The development of the battery technology, which had once
|
||
moved along at a rapid pace, slowed to a crawl.
|
||
The battery factory was one part of a supply chain that stretched across
|
||
the globe, adding cost and delays to the Roadster production. Body panels
|
||
for the car were to be made in France, while the motors were to come from
|
||
Taiwan. Tesla planned on buying battery cells in China and shipping them
|
||
to Thailand to turn the piece parts into battery packs. The battery packs,
|
||
which had to be stored for a minimal amount of time to avoid degradation,
|
||
would then be taken to port and shipped to England, where they needed to
|
||
clear customs. Tesla then planned for Lotus to build the body of the car,
|
||
attach the battery packs, and ship the Roadsters by boat around Cape Horn
|
||
to Los Angeles. In that scenario, Tesla would have paid for the bulk of the
|
||
car and had no chance to recognize revenue on the parts until six to nine
|
||
months had passed. “The idea was to get to Asia, get things done fast and
|
||
cheap, and make money on the car,” said Forrest North, one of the
|
||
engineers sent to Thailand. “What we found out was that for really
|
||
complicated things, you can do the work cheaper here and have less delays
|
||
and less problems.” When some new hires came on, they were horrified to
|
||
discover just how haphazard Tesla’s plan appeared. Ryan Popple, who had
|
||
spent four years in the army and then gotten an MBA from Harvard, arrived
|
||
at Tesla as a director of finance meant to prep the company to go public.
|
||
After examining the company’s books early in his tenure, Popple asked the
|
||
manufacturing and operations head exactly how he would get the car made.
|
||
“He said, ‘Well, we will decide we’re going into production and then a
|
||
miracle is going to happen,’” Popple said.
|
||
As word of the manufacturing issues reached Musk, he became very
|
||
concerned about the way Eberhard had run the company and called in a
|
||
fixer to address the situation. One of Tesla’s investors was Valor Equity, a
|
||
Chicago-based investment firm that specialized in fine-tuning
|
||
manufacturing operations. The company had been drawn to Tesla’s battery
|
||
and powertrain technology and calculated that even if Tesla failed to sell
|
||
many cars, the big automakers would end up wanting to buy its intellectual
|
||
property. To protect its investment, Valor sent in Tim Watkins, its managing
|
||
director of operations, and he soon reached some horrific conclusions.
|
||
Watkins is a Brit with degrees in industrial robotics and electrical
|
||
engineering. He’s built up a reputation as an ingenious solver of problems.
|
||
While doing work in Switzerland, for example, Watkins found a way to get
|
||
around the country’s rigid labor laws that limit the hours employees can
|
||
work, by automating a metal stamping factory so that it could run twentyfour
|
||
hours per day instead of sixteen hours like the factories or rivals.
|
||
Watkins is also known for keeping his ponytail in place with a black
|
||
scrunchie, wearing a black leather jacket, and toting a black fanny pack
|
||
everywhere he goes. The fanny pack has his passport, checkbook, earplugs,
|
||
sunscreen, food, and an assortment of other necessities. “It’s full of the
|
||
everyday things I need to survive,” said Watkins. “If I walk ten feet away
|
||
from this thing, I sense it.” While a bit eccentric, Watkins was thorough and
|
||
spent weeks talking to employees and analyzing every part of Tesla’s
|
||
supply chain to figure out how much it cost to make the Roadster.
|
||
Tesla had done a decent job of keeping its employee costs down. It hired
|
||
the kid fresh out of Stanford for $45,000 rather than the proven guy who
|
||
probably didn’t want to work that hard anyway for $120,000. But when it
|
||
came to equipment and materials, Tesla was a spending horror show. No
|
||
one liked using the company’s software that tracked the bill of materials. So
|
||
some people used it, and some people didn’t. Those that did use it often
|
||
made huge errors. They would take the cost of a part from the prototype
|
||
cars and then estimate how much of a discount they expected when buying
|
||
that part in bulk, rather than actually negotiating to find a viable price. At
|
||
one point, the software declared that each Roadster should cost about
|
||
$68,000, which would leave Tesla making about $30,000 per vehicle.
|
||
Everyone knew the figure was wrong, but it got reported to the board
|
||
anyway.
|
||
Around the middle of 2007, Watkins came to Musk with his findings.
|
||
Musk was prepared for a high figure but felt confident that the price of the
|
||
car would come down significantly over time as Tesla ironed out its
|
||
manufacturing process and increased its sales. “That’s when Tim told me it
|
||
was really bad news,” Musk said. It looked like each Roadster could cost up
|
||
to $200,000 to make, and Tesla planned to sell the car for only around
|
||
$85,000. “Even in full production, they would have been like $170,000 or
|
||
something insane,” Musk said. “Of course, it didn’t much matter because
|
||
about a third of the cars didn’t flat-out fucking work.”
|
||
Eberhard made attempts to pull his team out of this mess. He’d gone to
|
||
see a speech in which the famous venture capitalist John Doerr, who
|
||
became a major investor in green technology companies, declared that he
|
||
would devote his time and money to trying to save the Earth from global
|
||
warming because he owed such an effort to his children. Eberhard promptly
|
||
returned to the Tesla building and ginned up a similar speech. In front of
|
||
about a hundred people, Eberhard had a picture of his young daughter
|
||
projected onto the wall of the main workshop. He asked the Tesla engineers
|
||
why he had put that picture up. One of them guessed that it was because
|
||
people like his daughter would drive the car. To which Eberhard replied,
|
||
“No. We are building this because by the time she is old enough to drive she
|
||
will know a car as something completely different to how we know it today,
|
||
just like you don’t think of a phone as a thing on the wall with a cord on it.
|
||
It’s this future that depends on you.” Eberhard then thanked some of the key
|
||
engineers and called out their efforts in public. Many of the engineers had
|
||
been pulling all-nighters on a regular basis and Eberhard’s show boosted
|
||
morale. “We were all working ourselves to the point of exhaustion,” said
|
||
David Vespremi, a former Tesla spokesman. “Then came this profound
|
||
moment where we were reminded that building the car was not about
|
||
getting to an IPO or selling it to a bunch of rich dudes but because it might
|
||
change what a car is.”
|
||
These victories, though, were not enough to overcome the feeling
|
||
shared by many of the Tesla engineers that Eberhard had reached the end of
|
||
his abilities as a CEO. The company veterans had always admired
|
||
Eberhard’s engineering smarts and continued to do so. Eberhard, in fact,
|
||
had turned Tesla into a cult of engineering. Regrettably, other parts of the
|
||
company had been neglected, and people doubted Eberhard’s ability to take
|
||
the company from the R&D stage to production. The ridiculous cost of the
|
||
car, the transmission, the ineffective suppliers were crippling Tesla. And, as
|
||
the company started to miss its delivery dates, many of the once-fanatical
|
||
consumers who had made their large up-front payments turned on Tesla and
|
||
Eberhard. “We saw the writing on the wall,” Lyons said. “Everyone knew
|
||
that the person who starts a company is not necessarily the right person to
|
||
lead it in the long term, but whenever that is the case, it’s not easy.”
|
||
Eberhard and Musk had battled for years over some of the design points
|
||
on the car. But for the most part, they had gotten along well enough. Neither
|
||
man suffered fools. And they certainly shared many of the same visions for
|
||
the battery technology and what it could mean to the world. What their
|
||
relationship could not survive were the cost figures for the Roadster
|
||
unearthed by Watkins. It looked to Musk as if Eberhard had grossly
|
||
mismanaged the company by allowing the parts costs to soar so high. Then,
|
||
as Musk saw it, Eberhard failed to disclose the severity of the situation to
|
||
the board. While on his way to give a talk to the Motor Press Guild in Los
|
||
Angeles, Eberhard received a call from Musk and in a brief, uncomfortable
|
||
chat learned that he would be replaced as CEO.
|
||
In August 2007, Tesla’s board demoted Eberhard and named him
|
||
president of technology, which only exacerbated the company’s issues.
|
||
“Martin was so bitter and disruptive,” Straubel said. “I remember him
|
||
running around the office and sowing discontent, as we’re trying to finish
|
||
the car and are running out of money and everything is at knife’s edge.” As
|
||
Eberhard saw it, other people at Tesla had foisted a wonky finance software
|
||
application on him that made it tricky to accurately track costs. He
|
||
contended that the delays and cost increases were partly due to the requests
|
||
of other members of the management team and that he’d been up front with
|
||
the board about the issues. Beyond that, he thought Watkins had made the
|
||
situation out to be worse than it really was. Start-ups in Silicon Valley view
|
||
mayhem as standard operating procedure. “Valor was used to dealing with
|
||
older companies,” Eberhard said. “They found chaos and weren’t used to it.
|
||
This was the chaos of a start-up.” Eberhard had also already been asking
|
||
Tesla’s board to replace him as CEO and find someone with more
|
||
manufacturing experience.
|
||
A few months passed, and Eberhard remained pissed-off. Many of the
|
||
Tesla employees felt like they were caught in the middle of a divorce and
|
||
had to pick their parent—Eberhard or Musk. By the time December arrived,
|
||
the situation was untenable, and Eberhard left the company altogether. Tesla
|
||
said in a statement that Eberhard had been offered a position on its advisory
|
||
board, although he denied that. “I am no longer with Tesla Motors—neither
|
||
on its board of directors nor an employee of any sort,” Eberhard said in a
|
||
statement at the time. “I’m not happy with the way I was treated.” Musk
|
||
sent a note to a Silicon Valley newspaper saying, “I’m sorry that it came to
|
||
this and wish it were not so. It was not a question of personality differences,
|
||
as the decision to have Martin transition to an advisory role was unanimous
|
||
among the board. Tesla has operational problems that need to be solved and
|
||
if the board thought there was any way that Martin could be part of the
|
||
solution, then he would still be an employee of the company.”9 These
|
||
statements were the start of a war that would drag on between the two men
|
||
in public for years and that in many ways continues to the present day.
|
||
As 2007 played out, the problems mounted for Tesla. The carbon-fiber
|
||
body that looked so good turned out to be a huge pain to paint, and Tesla
|
||
had to cycle through a couple of companies to find one that could do the
|
||
work well. Sometimes there were faults in the battery pack. The motor
|
||
short-circuited now and again. The body panels had visible gaps. The
|
||
company also had to face up to the reality that a two-speed transmission
|
||
was not going to happen. In order for the Roadster to achieve its flashy
|
||
zero-to-60 times with a single-speed transmission, Tesla’s engineers had to
|
||
redesign the car’s motor and inverter and shave off some weight. “We
|
||
essentially had to do a complete reboot,” Musk said. “That was terrible.”
|
||
After Eberhard was removed as CEO, Tesla’s board tapped Michael
|
||
Marks as its interim chief. Marks had run Flextronics, an enormous
|
||
electronics supplier, and had deep experience with complex manufacturing
|
||
operations and logistics issues. Marks began interrogating various groups at
|
||
the company to try to figure out their problems and to prioritize the issues
|
||
plaguing the Roadster. He also put in some basic rules like making sure that
|
||
people all showed up at work at the same time to establish a baseline of
|
||
productivity—a tricky ask in Silicon Valley’s work anywhere, anytime
|
||
culture. All of these moves were part of the Marks List, a 10-point, 100-day
|
||
plan that included eliminating all faults in the battery packs, getting gaps
|
||
between body parts to less than 40 mm, and booking a specified number of
|
||
reservations. “Martin had been falling apart and lacked a lot of the
|
||
discipline key for a manager,” Straubel said. “Michael came in and
|
||
evaluated the mess and was a bullshit filter. He didn’t really have a dog in
|
||
the fight and could say, ‘I don’t care what you think or what you think. This
|
||
is what we should do.’” For a while, Marks’s strategy worked, and the
|
||
engineers at Tesla could once again focus on building the Roadster rather
|
||
than on internal politics. But then Marks’s vision for the company began to
|
||
diverge from Musk’s.
|
||
By this time, Tesla had moved into a larger facility at 1050 Bing Street
|
||
in San Carlos. The bigger building allowed Tesla to bring the battery work
|
||
back in-house from Asia and for it to do some of the Roadster
|
||
manufacturing, alleviating the supply chain issues. Tesla was maturing as a
|
||
car company, although its wild-child start-up streak remained well intact.
|
||
While strolling around the factory one day, Marks saw a Smart car from
|
||
Daimler on a lift. Musk and Straubel had a small side project going on
|
||
around the Smart car to see what it might be like as an electric vehicle.
|
||
“Michael didn’t know about it, and he’s like, ‘Who is the CEO here?’” said
|
||
Lyons. (The work on the Smart car eventually led to Daimler buying a 10
|
||
percent stake in Tesla.)
|
||
Marks’s inclination was to try to package Tesla as an asset that could be
|
||
sold to a larger car company. It was a perfectly reasonable plan. While
|
||
running Flextronics, Marks had overseen a vast, global supply chain and
|
||
knew the difficulties of manufacturing intimately. Tesla must have looked
|
||
borderline hopeless to him at this point. The company could not make its
|
||
one product well, was poised to hemorrhage money, and had missed a string
|
||
of delivery deadlines and yet its engineers were still off doing side
|
||
experiments. Making Tesla look as pretty as possible for a suitor was the
|
||
rational thing to do.
|
||
In just about every other case, Marks would be thanked for his decisive
|
||
plan of action and saving the company’s investors from a big loss. But
|
||
Musk had little interest in polishing up Tesla’s assets for the highest bidder.
|
||
He’d started the company to put a dent in the automotive industry and force
|
||
people to rethink electric cars. Instead of doing the fashionable Silicon
|
||
Valley thing of “pivoting” toward a new idea or plan, Musk would dig in
|
||
deeper. “The product was late and over budget and everything was wrong,
|
||
but Elon didn’t want anything to do with those plans to either sell the whole
|
||
company or lose control through a partnership,” Straubel said. “So, Elon
|
||
decided to double down.”
|
||
On December 3, 2007, Ze’ev Drori replaced Marks as CEO. Drori had
|
||
experience in Silicon Valley starting a company that made computer
|
||
memory and selling it to the chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices. Drori
|
||
was not Musk’s first pick—a top choice had turned down the job because he
|
||
didn’t want to move from the East Coast—and did not inspire much
|
||
enthusiasm from the Tesla employees. Drori had about fifteen years on the
|
||
youngest Tesla worker and no connection to this group bonded by suffering
|
||
and toil. He came to be seen more as an executor of Musk’s wishes than as
|
||
a commanding, independent CEO.
|
||
Musk began making more public gestures to mitigate the bad press
|
||
around Tesla. He issued statements and did interviews, promising that the
|
||
Roadster would ship to customers in early 2008. He began talking up a car
|
||
code-named WhiteStar—the Roadster had been code-named DarkStar—that
|
||
would be a sedan possibly priced around $50,000, and a new factory to
|
||
build the machine. “Given the recent management changes, some
|
||
reassurances are in order regarding Tesla Motors’ future plans,” Musk wrote
|
||
in a blog post. “The near term message is simple and unequivocal—we are
|
||
going to deliver a great sports car next year that customers will love driving.
|
||
. . . My car, production VIN 1, is already off the production line in the UK
|
||
and final preparations are being made for importation.” Tesla held a series
|
||
of town hall meetings with customers where it tried to fess up to its
|
||
problems in the open, and it started building some showrooms for its car.
|
||
Vince Sollitto, the former PayPal executive, visited the Menlo Park
|
||
showroom and found Musk complaining about the public relations issues
|
||
but clearly inspired by the product Tesla was building. “His demeanor
|
||
changed the moment we got to this display of the motor,” Sollitto said.
|
||
Dressed in a leather jacket and slacks, Musk started talking about the
|
||
motor’s properties and then put on a performance worthy of a carnival
|
||
strongman by lifting the hundred-or-so-pound hunk of metal. “He picks this
|
||
thing up and wedges it between his two palms,” Sollitto said. “He’s holding
|
||
it, and he’s shaking and beads of sweat are forming on his forehead. It
|
||
wasn’t so much a display of strength as a physical demonstration of the
|
||
beauty of the product.” While the customers complained a lot about the
|
||
delays, they seemed to sense this passion from Musk and share his
|
||
enthusiasm for the product. Only a handful of customers asked for their
|
||
prepayments back.
|
||
Tesla employees soon got to witness the same Musk that SpaceX
|
||
employees had seen for years. When an issue like the Roadster’s faulty
|
||
carbon-fiber body panels cropped up, Musk dealt with it directly. He flew to
|
||
England in his jet to pick up some new manufacturing tools for the body
|
||
panels and personally delivered them to a factory in France to ensure that
|
||
the Roadster stayed on its production schedule. The days of people being
|
||
ambiguous about the Roadster’s manufacturing costs were gone as well.
|
||
“Elon got fired up and said we were going to do this intense cost-down
|
||
program,” said Popple. “He gave a speech, saying we would work on
|
||
Saturdays and Sundays and sleep under desks until it got done. Someone
|
||
pushed back from the table and argued that everyone had been working so
|
||
hard just to get the car done, and they were ready for a break and to see
|
||
their families. Elon said, ‘I would tell those people they will get to see their
|
||
families a lot when we go bankrupt.’ I was like, ‘Wow,’ but I got it. I had
|
||
come out of a military culture, and you just have to make your objective
|
||
happen.” Employees were required to meet at 7 A.M. every Thursday
|
||
morning for bill-of-materials updates. They had to know the price of every
|
||
part and have a cogent plan for getting parts cheaper. If the motor cost
|
||
$6,500 a pop at the end of December, Musk wanted it to cost $3,800 by
|
||
April. The costs were plotted and analyzed each month. “If you started
|
||
falling behind, there was hell to pay,” Popple said. “Everyone could see it,
|
||
and people lost their jobs when they didn’t deliver. Elon has a mind that’s a
|
||
bit like a calculator. If you put a number on the projector that does not make
|
||
sense, he will spot it. He doesn’t miss details.” Popple found Musk’s style
|
||
aggressive, but he liked that Musk would listen to a well-argued, analytical
|
||
point and often change his mind if given a good enough reason. “Some
|
||
people thought Elon was too tough or hot-tempered or tyrannical,” Popple
|
||
said. “But these were hard times, and those of us close to the operational
|
||
realities of the company knew it. I appreciated that he didn’t sugarcoat
|
||
things.”
|
||
On the marketing front, Musk would run daily Google searches for
|
||
news stories about Tesla. If he saw a bad story, he ordered someone to “fix
|
||
it” even though the Tesla public relations people could do little to sway the
|
||
reporters. One employee missed an event to witness the birth of his child.
|
||
Musk fired off an e-mail saying, “That is no excuse. I am extremely
|
||
disappointed. You need to figure out where your priorities are. We’re
|
||
changing the world and changing history, and you either commit or you
|
||
don’t.”*
|
||
Marketing people who made grammatical mistakes in e-mails were let
|
||
go, as were other people who hadn’t done anything “awesome” in recent
|
||
memory. “He can be incredibly intimidating at times but doesn’t have a real
|
||
sense for just how imposing he can be,” said one former Tesla executive.
|
||
“We’d have these meetings and take bets on who was going to get bloodied
|
||
and bruised. If you told him that you made a particular choice because ‘it
|
||
was the standard way things had always been done,’ he’d kick you out of a
|
||
meeting fast. He’d say, ‘I never want to hear that phrase again. What we
|
||
have to do is fucking hard and half-assing things won’t be tolerated.’ He
|
||
just destroys you and, if you survive, he determines if he can trust you. He
|
||
has to understand that you’re as crazy as he is.” This ethos filtered through
|
||
the entire company, and everyone quickly understood that Musk meant
|
||
business.
|
||
Straubel, while sometimes on the bad end of the critiques, welcomed
|
||
Musk’s hard-charging presence. The five years to get to this point had been
|
||
an enjoyable slog for him. Straubel had transformed from a quiet, capable
|
||
engineer who shuffled around Tesla’s factory floor with his head down into
|
||
the most crucial member of the technical team. He knew more about the
|
||
batteries and the electric drivetrain than just about anyone else at the
|
||
company. He also began developing a role as a go-between for employees
|
||
and Musk. Straubel’s engineering smarts and work ethic had earned Musk’s
|
||
respect, and Straubel found that he could deliver difficult messages to Musk
|
||
on behalf of other employees. As he would do for years to come, Straubel
|
||
also proved willing to check his ego at the door. All that mattered was
|
||
getting the Roadster and the follow-on sedan to market to popularize
|
||
electric cars, and Musk looked like the best person to make that happen.
|
||
Other employees had enjoyed the thrill of the engineering challenge
|
||
over the past five years but were burnt-out beyond repair. Wright didn’t
|
||
believe that an electric car for the masses would ever take off. He left and
|
||
started his own company dedicated to making electric versions of delivery
|
||
trucks. Berdichevsky had been a crucial, do-anything young engineer for
|
||
much of Tesla’s existence. Now that the company employed about three
|
||
hundred people, he felt less effective and didn’t relish the idea of suffering
|
||
for another five years to bring the sedan to market. He would leave Tesla,
|
||
get a couple of degrees from Stanford, and cofound a start-up looking to
|
||
make a revolutionary new battery that could soon go into electric cars. With
|
||
Eberhard gone, Tarpenning found Tesla less fun. He didn’t see eye to eye
|
||
with Drori and also shied away from the idea of frying his soul to get the
|
||
sedan out. Lyons stuck around longer, which is a minor miracle. At various
|
||
points, he had led the development of most of the core technology behind
|
||
the Roadster, including the battery packs, the motor, the power electronics,
|
||
and, yes, the transmission. This meant that for about five years Lyons had
|
||
been among Tesla’s most capable employees and the guy constantly in the
|
||
doghouse for being behind on something and thus holding the rest of the
|
||
company up. He suffered through some of Musk’s more colorful tirades—
|
||
directed either at him or suppliers that had let Tesla down—that included
|
||
talk of people’s balls being chopped off and other violent or sexual acts.
|
||
Lyons also saw an exhausted, stressed-out Musk spit coffee across a
|
||
conference room table because it was cold and then, without a pause,
|
||
demand that the employees work harder, do more, and mess up less. Like so
|
||
many people privy to these performances, Lyons came away with no
|
||
illusions about Musk’s personality but with the utmost respect for his vision
|
||
and drive to execute. “Working at Tesla back then was like being Kurtz in
|
||
Apocalypse Now,” Lyons said. “Don’t worry about the methods or if they’re
|
||
unsound. Just get the job done. It comes from Elon. He listens, asks good
|
||
questions, is fast on his feet, and gets to the bottom of things.”
|
||
Tesla could survive the loss of some of these early hires. Its strong
|
||
brand had allowed the company to keep recruiting top talent, including
|
||
people from large automotive companies who knew how to get over the last
|
||
set of challenges blocking the Roadster from reaching customers. But
|
||
Tesla’s major issue no longer revolved around effort, engineering, or clever
|
||
marketing. Heading into 2008, the company was running out of money. The
|
||
Roadster had cost about $140 million to develop, way over the $25 million
|
||
originally estimated in the 2004 business plan. Under normal
|
||
circumstances, Tesla had probably done enough to raise more funds. These,
|
||
however, were not normal times. The big automakers in the United States
|
||
were charging toward bankruptcy in the middle of the worst financial crisis
|
||
since the Great Depression. In the midst of all this, Musk needed to
|
||
convince Tesla’s investors to fork over tens of millions of additional dollars,
|
||
and those investors had to go to their constituents to lay out why this made
|
||
any sense. As Musk put it, “Try to imagine explaining that you’re investing
|
||
in an electric car company, and everything you read about the car company
|
||
sounds like it is shit and doomed and it’s a recession and no one is buying
|
||
cars.” All Musk had to do to dig Tesla out of this conundrum was lose his
|
||
entire fortune and verge on a nervous breakdown.
|
||
8
|
||
PAIN, SUFFERING, AND SURVIVAL
|
||
AS HE PREPARED TO BEGIN FILMING IRON MAN IN EARLY 2007,
|
||
the director Jon Favreau rented out a complex in Los Angeles that once
|
||
belonged to Hughes Aircraft, the aerospace and defense contractor started
|
||
about eighty years earlier by Howard Hughes. The facility had a series of
|
||
interlocking hangars and served as a production office for the movie. It also
|
||
supplied Robert Downey Jr., who was to play Iron Man and his human
|
||
creator Tony Stark, with a splash of inspiration. Downey felt nostalgic
|
||
looking at one of the larger hangars, which had fallen into a state of
|
||
disrepair. Not too long ago, that building had played host to the big ideas of
|
||
a big man who shook up industries and did things his own way.
|
||
Downey heard some rumblings about a Hughes-like figure named Elon
|
||
Musk who had constructed his own, modern-day industrial complex about
|
||
ten miles away. Instead of visualizing how life might have been for Hughes,
|
||
Downey could perhaps get a taste of the real thing. He set off in March
|
||
2007 for SpaceX’s headquarters in El Segundo and wound up receiving a
|
||
personal tour from Musk. “My mind is not easily blown, but this place and
|
||
this guy were amazing,” Downey said.
|
||
To Downey, the SpaceX facility looked like a giant, exotic hardware
|
||
store. Enthusiastic employees were zipping about, fiddling with an
|
||
assortment of machines. Young white-collar engineers interacted with bluecollar
|
||
assembly line workers, and they all seemed to share a genuine
|
||
excitement for what they were doing. “It felt like a radical start-up
|
||
company,” Downey said. After the initial tour, Downey came away pleased
|
||
that the sets being hammered out at the Hughes factory did have parallels to
|
||
the SpaceX factory. “Things didn’t feel out of place,” he said.
|
||
Beyond the surroundings, Downey really wanted a peek inside Musk’s
|
||
psyche. The men walked, sat in Musk’s office, and had lunch. Downey
|
||
appreciated that Musk was not a foul-smelling, fidgety, coder whack job.
|
||
What Downey picked up on instead were Musk’s “accessible eccentricities”
|
||
and the feeling that he was an unpretentious sort who could work alongside
|
||
the people in the factory. Both Musk and Stark were the type of men,
|
||
according to Downey, who “had seized an idea to live by and something to
|
||
dedicate themselves to” and were not going to waste a moment.
|
||
When he returned to the Iron Man production office, Downey asked that
|
||
Favreau be sure to place a Tesla Roadster in Tony Stark’s workshop. On a
|
||
superficial level, this would symbolize that Stark was so cool and connected
|
||
that he could get a Roadster before it even went on sale. On a deeper level,
|
||
the car was to be placed as the nearest object to Stark’s desk so that it
|
||
formed something of a bond between the actor, the character, and Musk.
|
||
“After meeting Elon and making him real to me, I felt like having his
|
||
presence in the workshop,” Downey said. “They became contemporaries.
|
||
Elon was someone Tony probably hung out with and partied with or more
|
||
likely they went on some weird jungle trek together to drink concoctions
|
||
with the shamans.”
|
||
After Iron Man came out, Favreau began talking up Musk’s role as the
|
||
inspiration for Downey’s interpretation of Tony Stark. It was a stretch on
|
||
many levels. Musk is not exactly the type of guy who downs scotch in the
|
||
back of a Humvee while part of a military convoy in Afghanistan. But the
|
||
press lapped up the comparison, and Musk started to become more of a
|
||
public figure. People who sort of knew him as “that PayPal guy” began to
|
||
think of him as the rich, eccentric businessman behind SpaceX and Tesla.
|
||
Musk enjoyed his rising profile. It fed his ego and provided some fun.
|
||
He and Justine bought a house in Bel Air. Their neighbor to one side was
|
||
Quincy Jones, the music producer, and their other neighbor was Joe Francis,
|
||
the infamous creator of the Girls Gone Wild videos. Musk and some former
|
||
PayPal executives, having settled their differences, produced Thank You for
|
||
Smoking and used Musk’s jet in the movie. While not a hard-drinking
|
||
carouser, Musk took part in the Hollywood nightlife and its social scene.
|
||
“There were just a lot of parties to go to,” said Bill Lee, Musk’s close
|
||
friend. “Elon was neighbors with two quasi-celebrities. Our friends were
|
||
making movies and through this confluence of our networks, there was
|
||
something to go out and do every night.” In one interview, Musk calculated
|
||
that his life had become 10 percent playboy and 90 percent engineer.10 “We
|
||
had a domestic staff of five; during the day our home transformed into a
|
||
workplace,” Justine wrote in magazine article. “We went to black-tie
|
||
fundraisers and got the best tables at elite Hollywood nightclubs, with Paris
|
||
Hilton and Leonardo DiCaprio partying next to us. When Google cofounder
|
||
Larry Page got married on Richard Branson’s private Caribbean island, we
|
||
were there, hanging out in a villa with John Cusack and watching Bono
|
||
pose with swarms of adoring women outside the reception tent.”
|
||
Justine appeared to relish their status even more than Musk. A writer of
|
||
fantasy fiction novels, she kept a blog detailing the couple’s family life and
|
||
their adventures on the town. In one entry, Justine had Musk saying that
|
||
he’d prefer to sleep with Veronica than Betty from the Archie comics and
|
||
that he’d like to visit a Chuck E. Cheese sometime. In another entry, she
|
||
wrote about meeting Leonardo DiCaprio at a club and having him beg for a
|
||
free Tesla Roadster, only to be turned down. Justine handed out nicknames
|
||
to oft-occurring characters in the blog, so Bill Lee became “Bill the Hotel
|
||
Guy” because he owns a hotel in the Dominican Republic, and Joe Francis
|
||
appeared as “Notorious Neighbor.” It’s hard to imagine Musk, who keeps to
|
||
himself, hanging out with someone as ostentatious as Francis, but the men
|
||
got along well. When Francis took over an amusement park for his birthday,
|
||
Musk attended and then ended up partying at Francis’s house. Justine wrote,
|
||
“E was there for a bit but admitted he also found it ‘kind of lame’—he’s
|
||
been to a couple of parties at NN’s house now and ends up feeling selfconscious,
|
||
‘because it just seems like there are always these skeevy guys
|
||
wandering around the house trolling for girls. I don’t want to be seen as one
|
||
of those guys.’” When Francis got ready to buy a Roadster, he stopped by
|
||
the Musks’ house and handed over a yellow envelope with $100,000 in
|
||
cash. For a while, the blog provided a rare, welcome glimpse into the life of
|
||
an unconventional CEO. Musk seemed charming. The public learned that
|
||
he bought Justine a nineteenth-century edition of Pride and Prejudice, that
|
||
Musk’s best friends gave him the nickname “Elonius,” and that Musk likes
|
||
to place one-dollar wagers on all manner of things—Can you catch herpes
|
||
from the Great Barrier Reef? Is it possible to balance two forks with a
|
||
toothpick?—that he knows he will win. Justine told one story about Musk
|
||
traveling to Necker Island, in the British Virgin Islands, to hang out with
|
||
Tony Blair and Richard Branson. A photo of the three men appeared later in
|
||
the press that depicted Musk with a vacant stare. “This was E’s I’mthinking-
|
||
about-a-rocket-problem stance, which makes me pretty sure that
|
||
he had just gotten some kind of bothersome work-related e-mail, and was
|
||
clearly oblivious to the fact that a picture was being taken at all,” she wrote.
|
||
“This is also the reason I get suck [sic] a kick out of it—the spouse the
|
||
camera caught is the exact spouse I encountered, say, last night en route to
|
||
the bathroom, standing in the hallway frowning with his arms folded.”
|
||
Justine letting the world into the couple’s bathroom should have served as a
|
||
warning of things to come. Her blog would soon turn into one of Musk’s
|
||
worst nightmares.
|
||
The press had not run into a guy like Musk for a very long time. His
|
||
shine as an Internet millionaire kept getting, well, shinier thanks to PayPal’s
|
||
ongoing success. He also had an element of mystery. There was the weird
|
||
name. And there was the willingness to spend vast sums of money on
|
||
spaceships and electric cars, which came across as a combination of daring,
|
||
flamboyant, and downright flabbergasting. “Elon Musk has been called
|
||
‘part playboy, part space cowboy,’ an image hardly dispelled by a car
|
||
collection that has boasted a Porsche 911 Turbo, 1967 Series 1 Jaguar, a
|
||
Hamann BMW M5 plus the aforementioned McLaren F1—which he has
|
||
driven at up to 215mph on a private airstrip,” a British reporter gushed in
|
||
2007. “Then there was the L39 Soviet military jet, which he sold after
|
||
becoming a father.” The press had picked up on the fact that Musk tended to
|
||
talk a huge game and then struggle to deliver on his promises in time, but
|
||
they didn’t much care. The game he talked was so much bigger than anyone
|
||
else’s that reporters were comfortable giving Musk leeway. Tesla became
|
||
the darling of Silicon Valley’s bloggers, who tracked its every move and
|
||
were breathless in their coverage. Similarly, reporters covering SpaceX
|
||
were overjoyed that a young, feisty company had arrived to needle Boeing,
|
||
Lockheed, and, to a large extent, NASA. All Musk had to do was eventually
|
||
bring some of these wondrous things he’d been funding to market.
|
||
While Musk put on a good show for the public and press, he’d started to
|
||
get very worried about his businesses. SpaceX’s second launch attempt had
|
||
failed, and the reports coming in from Tesla kept getting worse. Musk had
|
||
started these two adventures with a fortune nearing $200 million and had
|
||
chewed through more than half the money with little to show for it. As each
|
||
Tesla delay turned into a PR fiasco, the Musk glow dimmed. People in
|
||
Silicon Valley began to gossip about Musk’s money problems. Reporters
|
||
who months earlier had been heaping adulation on Musk turned on him.
|
||
The New York Times picked up on Tesla’s transmission problems.
|
||
Automotive websites griped that the Roadster might never ship. By the end
|
||
of 2007, things got downright nasty. Valleywag, Silicon Valley’s gossip
|
||
blog, began to take a particular interest in Musk. Owen Thomas, the site’s
|
||
lead writer, dug into the histories of Zip2 and PayPal and played up the
|
||
times Musk was ousted as CEO to undermine some of his entrepreneurial
|
||
street cred. Thomas then championed the premise that Musk was a master
|
||
manipulator who played fast and loose with other people’s money. “It’s
|
||
wonderful that Musk has realized even a small part of his childhood
|
||
fantasies,” Thomas wrote. “But he risks destroying his dreams by refusing
|
||
to reconcile them with reality.” Valleywag anointed the Tesla Roadster as its
|
||
No. 1 fail of 2007 among technology companies.
|
||
As his businesses and public persona suffered, Musk’s home life
|
||
degraded as well. His triplets—Kai, Damian, and Saxon—had arrived near
|
||
the end of 2006 and joined their brothers Griffin and Xavier. According to
|
||
Musk, Justine suffered from postpartum depression following the birth of
|
||
the triplets. “In the spring of 2007, our marriage was having real issues,”
|
||
Musk said. “It was on the rocks.” Justine’s blog posts back up his
|
||
sentiments. She described a much less romantic Musk and felt people
|
||
treated her as “an arm ornament who couldn’t possibly have anything
|
||
interesting to say” rather than as an author and her husband’s equal. During
|
||
one trip to St. Barts, the Musks ended up sharing dinner with some wealthy,
|
||
influential couples. When Justine let out her political views, one of the men
|
||
at the table made a crack about her being so opinionated. “E chuckled back,
|
||
patted my hand the way you pat a child’s,” Justine wrote on her blog. From
|
||
that point on, Justine ordered Musk to introduce her as a published novelist
|
||
and not just his wife and mother of his children. The results? “E’s way of
|
||
doing this throughout the rest of the trip: ‘Justine wants me to tell you that
|
||
she’s written novels,’ which made people look at me like oh, that’s just so
|
||
cute and didn’t really help my case.”
|
||
As 2007 rolled into 2008, Musk’s life became more tumultuous. Tesla
|
||
basically had to start over on much of the Roadster, and SpaceX still had
|
||
dozens of people living in Kwajalein awaiting the next launch of the Falcon
|
||
1. Both endeavors were vacuuming up Musk’s money. He started selling off
|
||
prized possessions like the McLaren to generate extra cash. Musk tended to
|
||
shield employees from the gravity of his fiscal situation by always
|
||
encouraging them to do their best work. At the same time, he personally
|
||
oversaw all significant purchases at both companies. Musk also trained
|
||
employees to make the right trade-offs between spending money and
|
||
productivity. This struck many of the SpaceX employees as a novel idea,
|
||
since they were used to traditional aerospace companies that had huge,
|
||
multiyear government contracts and no day-to-day survival pressure. “Elon
|
||
would always be at work on Sunday, and we had some chats where he laid
|
||
out his philosophy,” said Kevin Brogan, the early SpaceX employee. “He
|
||
would say that everything we did was a function of our burn rate and that
|
||
we were burning through a hundred thousand dollars per day. It was this
|
||
very entrepreneurial, Silicon Valley way of thinking that none of the
|
||
aerospace engineers in Los Angeles were dialed into. Sometimes he
|
||
wouldn’t let you buy a part for two thousand dollars because he expected
|
||
you to find it cheaper or invent something cheaper. Other times, he
|
||
wouldn’t flinch at renting a plane for ninety thousand dollars to get
|
||
something to Kwaj because it saved an entire workday, so it was worth it.
|
||
He would place this urgency that he expected the revenue in ten years to be
|
||
ten million dollars a day and that every day we were slower to achieve our
|
||
goals was a day of missing out on that money.”
|
||
Musk had become all consumed with Tesla and SpaceX out of necessity,
|
||
and there can be no doubt that this exacerbated the tensions in his marriage.
|
||
The Musks had a team of nannies to help with their five children, but Elon
|
||
could not spend much time at home. He worked seven days a week and
|
||
quite often split his time between Los Angeles and San Francisco. Justine
|
||
needed a change. During moments of self-reflection, she felt sickened,
|
||
perceiving herself a trophy wife. Justine longed to be Elon’s partner again
|
||
and to feel some of that spark from their early days before life had turned so
|
||
dazzling and demanding. It’s not clear how much Musk let on to Justine
|
||
about his dwindling bank account. She has long maintained that Musk kept
|
||
her in the dark about the family’s financial arrangements. But some of
|
||
Musk’s closest friends did get a glimpse into the worsening financial
|
||
situation. In the first half of 2008, Antonio Gracias, the founder and CEO of
|
||
Valor Equity, met Musk for dinner. Gracias had been an investor in Tesla
|
||
and had become one of Musk’s closest friends and allies, and he could see
|
||
Musk agonizing over his future. “Things were starting to be difficult with
|
||
Justine, but they were still together,” Gracias said. “During that dinner, Elon
|
||
said, ‘I will spend my last dollar on these companies. If we have to move
|
||
into Justine’s parents’ basement, we’ll do it.’”
|
||
The option of moving in with Justine’s parents expired on June 16,
|
||
2008, when Musk filed for divorce. The couple did not disclose the
|
||
situation right away, although Justine left hints on her blog. In late June, she
|
||
posted a quotation from Moby without any additional context: “There’s no
|
||
such thing as a well-adjusted public figure. If they were well adjusted they
|
||
wouldn’t try to be a public figure.” The next entry had Justine house
|
||
hunting for undisclosed reasons with Sharon Stone, and a couple of entries
|
||
later she talked about “a major drama” that she’d been dealing with. In
|
||
September, Justine wrote her first blog post explicitly about the divorce,
|
||
saying, “We had a good run. We married young, took it as far as we could
|
||
and now it is over.” Valleywag naturally followed with a story about the
|
||
divorce and noted that Musk had been seen out with a twenty-something
|
||
actress.
|
||
The media coverage and divorce freed Justine to write about her private
|
||
life in a much more liberated way. In the posts that followed, she gave her
|
||
account of how the marriage ended, her views on Musk’s girlfriend and
|
||
future second wife, and the inner workings of the divorce proceedings. For
|
||
the first time, the public had access to a deeply unpleasant portrayal of
|
||
Musk and received some firsthand accounts—albeit from an ex-wife—of
|
||
his hardline behavior. The writing may have been biased, but it provided a
|
||
window into how Musk operated. Here’s one post about the lead-up to the
|
||
divorce and its rapid execution:
|
||
Divorce, for me, was like the bomb you set off when all other
|
||
options have been exhausted. I had not yet given up on the
|
||
diplomacy option, which was why I hadn’t already filed. We were
|
||
still in the early stages of marital counseling (three sessions total).
|
||
Elon, however, took matters into his own hands—he tends to like to
|
||
do that—when he gave me an ultimatum: “Either we fix [the
|
||
marriage] today, or I will divorce you tomorrow.”
|
||
That night, and again the next morning, he asked me what I
|
||
wanted to do. I stated emphatically that I was not ready to unleash
|
||
the dogs of divorce; I suggested that “we” hold off for at least
|
||
another week. Elon nodded, touched the top of my head, and left.
|
||
Later that same morning I tried to make a purchase and discovered
|
||
that he had cut off my credit card, which is when I also knew that he
|
||
had gone ahead and filed (as it was, E did not tell me directly; he
|
||
had another person do it).
|
||
For Musk, each online missive from Justine created another public
|
||
relations crisis that added to the endless stream of issues faced by his
|
||
companies. The image he’d sculpted over the years appeared ready to
|
||
crumble alongside his businesses. It was a disaster scenario.
|
||
Soon enough, the Musks had achieved celebrity divorce status.
|
||
Mainstream outlets joined Valleywag in poring over court filings tied to the
|
||
breakup, particularly as Justine fought for more money. During the PayPal
|
||
days, Justine had signed a postnuptial agreement and now argued that she
|
||
didn’t really have the time or inclination to dig into the ramifications of the
|
||
paperwork. Justine took to her blog in an entry titled “golddigger,” and said
|
||
she was fighting for a divorce settlement that would include their house,
|
||
alimony and child support, $6 million in cash, 10 percent of Musk’s Tesla
|
||
stock, 5 percent of Musk’s SpaceX stock, and a Tesla Roadster. Justine also
|
||
appeared on CNBC’s show Divorce Wars and wrote an article for Marie
|
||
Claire titled “‘I Was a Starter Wife’: Inside America’s Messiest Divorce.”
|
||
The public tended to side with Justine during all of this and couldn’t
|
||
quite figure out why a billionaire was fighting his wife’s seemingly fair
|
||
requests. A major problem for Musk, of course, was that his assets were
|
||
anything but liquid with most of his net worth being tied up in Tesla and
|
||
SpaceX stock. The couple eventually settled with Justine getting the house,
|
||
$2 million in cash (minus her legal fees), $80,000 a month in alimony and
|
||
child support for seventeen years, and a Tesla Roadster.*
|
||
Years after the settlement, Justine still struggled to speak about her
|
||
relationship with Musk. During our interview, she broke down in tears
|
||
several times and needed moments to compose her thoughts. Musk, she
|
||
said, had hidden many things from her during their marriage and ultimately
|
||
treated her much like a business adversary to be conquered during the
|
||
divorce. “We were at war for a while, and when you go to war with Elon,
|
||
it’s pretty brutal,” she said. Well after their marriage ended, Justine
|
||
continued to blog about Musk. She wrote about Riley and provided
|
||
commentary on his parenting. One post gave Musk a hard time for banning
|
||
stuffed animals from the house when their twins turned seven. Asked about
|
||
this, Justine said, “Elon is hard-core. He grew up in a tough culture and
|
||
tough circumstances. He had to become very tough to not only thrive but to
|
||
conquer the world. He doesn’t want to raise soft overprivileged kids with no
|
||
direction.” Comments like these seemed to indicate that Justine still
|
||
admired or at least understood Musk’s strong will.*
|
||
In the weeks after he first filed for divorce in mid-June of 2008, Musk
|
||
tumbled into a deep funk. Bill Lee started to worry about his friend’s mental
|
||
state and, as one of Musk’s more free-spirited friends, wanted to do
|
||
something to cheer him up. Now and again, Musk and Lee, an investor,
|
||
would take trips overseas and mix business and pleasure. The time was
|
||
right for just such a journey, and they set off for London at the start of July.
|
||
The decompression program began poorly. Musk and Lee visited the
|
||
headquarters of Aston Martin to see the company’s CEO and get a tour of
|
||
his factory. The executive treated Musk like an amateur car builder, talking
|
||
down to him and suggesting that he knew more about electric vehicles than
|
||
anyone else on the planet. “He was a complete douche,” as Lee put it, and
|
||
the men did their best to make a hasty exit back to central London. Along
|
||
the way, Musk had a nagging stomach pain turn severe. At the time, Lee
|
||
was married to Sarah Gore, the daughter of former vice president Al Gore,
|
||
who had been a medical student, and so he called her for advice. They
|
||
decided that Musk might be suffering from appendicitis, and Lee took him
|
||
to a medical clinic in the middle of a shopping mall. When the tests came
|
||
back negative, Lee set to work trying to goad Musk into a night on the
|
||
town. “Elon didn’t want to go out, and I didn’t really, either,” Lee said. “But
|
||
I was like, ‘No, come on. We’re all the way here.’”
|
||
Lee coaxed Musk into going to a club called Whisky Mist, in Mayfair.
|
||
People had packed the small, high-end dance spot and Musk wanted to
|
||
leave after ten minutes. The well-connected Lee texted a promoter friend of
|
||
his, who pulled some strings to get Musk escorted into the VIP area. The
|
||
promoter then reached out to some of his prettiest friends, including a
|
||
twenty-two-year-old up-and-coming actress named Talulah Riley, and they
|
||
soon arrived at the club as well. Riley and her two gorgeous friends had
|
||
come from a charity gala and were in full-length, flowing gowns. “Talulah
|
||
was in this huge Cinderella thing,” Lee said. Musk and Riley were
|
||
introduced by people at the club, and he perked at the sight of her dazzling
|
||
figure.
|
||
Musk and Riley sat at a table with their friends but immediately zeroed
|
||
in on each other. Riley had just hit it big with her portrayal of Mary Bennet
|
||
in Pride and Prejudice and thought of herself as quite the hotshot. The older
|
||
Musk, meanwhile, took on the role of the soft-spoken, sweet engineer. He
|
||
whipped out his phone and displayed photos of the Falcon 1 and Roadster,
|
||
although Riley thought he had just done some work on these projects and
|
||
didn’t realize he ran the companies building the machines. “I remember
|
||
thinking that this guy probably didn’t get to talk to young actresses a lot and
|
||
that he seemed quite nervous,” Riley said. “I decided to be really nice to
|
||
him and give him a nice evening. Little did I know that he’d spoken to a lot
|
||
of pretty girls in his life.”* The more Musk and Riley talked, the more Lee
|
||
egged them on. It was the first time in weeks that his friend appeared happy.
|
||
“His stomach didn’t hurt; he’s not bummed, this is great,” Lee said. Despite
|
||
being dressed for a fairy tale, Riley didn’t fall in love with Musk at first
|
||
sight. But she did become more impressed and intrigued as the night went
|
||
on, particularly after the club promoter introduced Musk to a stunning
|
||
model, and he politely said “Hello” and then sat right back down with
|
||
Riley. “I figured he couldn’t be all bad after that,” said Riley, who then
|
||
allowed Musk to place his hand on her knee. Musk asked Riley out to
|
||
dinner the next night, and she accepted.
|
||
With her curvy figure, sultry eyes, and playful good-girl demeanor,
|
||
Riley was a budding film star but didn’t really act the part. She grew up in
|
||
the idyllic English countryside, went to a top school, and, until a week
|
||
before she met Musk, had been living at home with her parents. After the
|
||
night at Whisky Mist, Riley called her family to tell them about the
|
||
interesting guy she had met who builds rockets and cars. Her father used to
|
||
head up the National Crime Squad and went straight to his computer to
|
||
conduct a background check that illuminated Musk’s resume as a married
|
||
international playboy with five kids. Riley’s father chided his daughter for
|
||
being a fool, but she held out hope that Musk had an explanation and went
|
||
to dinner with him anyway.
|
||
Musk brought Lee to the dinner, and Riley brought her friend Tamsin
|
||
Egerton, also a beautiful actress. Things were cooler throughout the meal as
|
||
the group dined in a depressingly empty restaurant. Riley waited to see
|
||
what Musk would bring up on his own. Eventually, he did announce his five
|
||
sons and his pending divorce. The confession proved enough to keep Riley
|
||
interested and curious about where things would lead. Following the meal,
|
||
Musk and Riley broke off on their own. They went for a walk through Soho
|
||
and then stopped at Cafe Boheme, where Riley, a lifelong teetotaler, sipped
|
||
an apple juice. Musk kept Riley’s attention, and the romance began in
|
||
earnest.
|
||
The couple had lunch the next day and then went to the White Cube, a
|
||
modern art gallery, and then back to Musk’s hotel room. Musk told Riley, a
|
||
virgin, that he wanted to show her his rockets. “I was skeptical, but he did
|
||
actually show me rocket videos,” she said. Once Musk went back to the
|
||
United States,* they kept in touch via e-mail for a couple of weeks, and
|
||
then Riley booked a flight to Los Angeles. “I wasn’t even thinking
|
||
girlfriend or anything like that,” Riley said. “I was just having fun.”
|
||
Musk had other ideas. Riley had been in California for just five days
|
||
when he made his move as they lay in bed talking in a tiny room at the
|
||
Peninsula hotel in Beverley Hills. “He said, ‘I don’t want you to leave. I
|
||
want you to marry me.’ I think I laughed. Then, he said, ‘No. I’m serious.
|
||
I’m sorry I don’t have a ring.’ I said, ‘We can shake on it if you like.’ And
|
||
we did. I don’t remember what I was thinking at the time, and all I can say
|
||
is that I was twenty-two.”
|
||
Riley had been a model daughter up to that point, never giving her
|
||
parents much of anything to worry about. She did well at school, had scored
|
||
some tremendous acting gigs, and had a soft, sweet personality that her
|
||
friends described as Snow White brought to life. But there she was on the
|
||
hotel’s balcony, informing her parents that she had agreed to marry a man
|
||
fourteen years her senior, who had just filed for divorce from his first wife,
|
||
had five kids and two companies, and she didn’t even see how she could
|
||
possibly love him after knowing him for a matter of weeks. “I think my
|
||
mother had a nervous breakdown,” Riley said. “But I had always been
|
||
highly romantic, and it actually didn’t strike me as that strange.” Riley flew
|
||
back to England to gather her things, and her parents flew back with her to
|
||
the United States to meet Musk, who belatedly asked Riley’s father for his
|
||
blessing. Musk did not have his own house, which left the couple moving
|
||
into a home that belonged to Musk’s friend the billionaire Jeff Skoll. “I had
|
||
been living there a week when this random guy walked in,” Riley said. “I
|
||
said, ‘Who are you?’ He said, ‘I am the homeowner. Who are you?’ I told
|
||
him, and then he just walked out.” Musk later proposed to Riley again on
|
||
the balcony of Skoll’s house, unveiling a massive ring. (He has since bought
|
||
her three engagement rings, including the giant first one, an everyday ring,
|
||
and one designed by Musk that has a diamond surrounded by ten
|
||
sapphires.) “I remember him saying, ‘Being with me was choosing the hard
|
||
path.’ I didn’t quite understand at the time, but I do now. It’s quite hard,
|
||
quite the crazy ride.”
|
||
Riley experienced a baptism by fire. The whirlwind romance had given
|
||
her the impression that she was engaged to a world conquering, jet-setting
|
||
billionaire. That was true in theory but a murkier proposition in practice. As
|
||
late July rolled around, Musk could see that he had just enough cash on
|
||
hand to scrape through to the end of the year. Both SpaceX and Tesla would
|
||
need cash infusions at some point just to pay the employees, and it was
|
||
unclear where that money would come from with the world’s financial
|
||
markets in disarray and investments being put on hold. If things had been
|
||
going more smoothly at the companies, Musk could have felt more
|
||
confident about raising money, but they were not. “He would come home
|
||
every day, and there would be some calamity,” Riley said. “He was under
|
||
immense pressure from all quarters. It was horrendous.”
|
||
SpaceX’s third flight from Kwajalein jumped out as Musk’s most
|
||
pressing concern. His team of engineers had remained camped out on the
|
||
island, preparing the Falcon 1 for another run. A typical company would
|
||
focus just on the task at hand. Not SpaceX. It had shipped the Falcon 1 to
|
||
Kwaj in April with one set of engineers and then put another group of
|
||
engineers on a new project to develop the Falcon 9, a nine-engine rocket
|
||
that would take the place of the Falcon 5 and serve as a possible
|
||
replacement to the retiring space shuttle. SpaceX had yet to prove it could
|
||
get to space successfully, but Musk kept positioning it to bid on big-ticket
|
||
NASA contracts.*
|
||
On July 30, 2008, the Falcon 9 had a successful test fire in Texas with
|
||
all nine of its engines lighting up and producing 850,000 pounds of thrust.
|
||
Three days later, in Kwaj, SpaceX’s engineers fueled up the Falcon 1 and
|
||
crossed their fingers. The rocket had an air force satellite as its payload,
|
||
along with a couple of experiments from NASA. All told, the cargo
|
||
weighed 375 pounds.
|
||
SpaceX had been making significant changes to its rocket since the last,
|
||
failed launch. A traditional aerospace company would not have wanted the
|
||
added risk, but Musk insisted that SpaceX push its technology forward
|
||
while at the same time trying to make it work right. Among the biggest
|
||
changes for the Falcon 1 was a new version of the Merlin 1 engine that
|
||
relied on a tweaked cooling system.
|
||
The first launch attempt on August 2, 2008, aborted at T minus zero
|
||
seconds. SpaceX regrouped and tried to launch again the same day. This
|
||
time everything seemed to be going well. The Falcon 1 soared into the sky
|
||
and flew spectacularly without any indication of a problem. SpaceX
|
||
employees watching a webcast of the proceedings back in California let out
|
||
hoots and whistles. Then, right at the moment when the first stage and
|
||
second stage were to separate, there was a malfunction. An analysis after
|
||
the fact would show that the new engines had delivered an unexpected
|
||
thrust during the separation process that caused the first stage to bump up
|
||
into the second stage, damaging the top part of the rocket and its engine.*
|
||
The failed launch left many SpaceX employees shattered. “It was so
|
||
profound seeing the energy shift over the room in the course of thirty
|
||
seconds,” said Dolly Singh, a recruiter at SpaceX. “It was like the worst
|
||
fucking day ever. You don’t usually see grown-ups weeping, but there they
|
||
were. We were tired and broken emotionally.” Musk addressed the workers
|
||
right away and encouraged them to get back to work. “He said, ‘Look. We
|
||
are going to do this. It’s going to be okay. Don’t freak out,’” Singh recalled.
|
||
“It was like magic. Everyone chilled out immediately and started to focus
|
||
on figuring out what just happened and how to fix it. It went from despair to
|
||
hope and focus.” Musk put up a positive front to the public as well. In a
|
||
statement, he said that SpaceX had another rocket waiting to attempt a
|
||
fourth launch and a fifth launch planned shortly after that. “I have also
|
||
given the go-ahead to begin fabrication of flight six,” he said. “Falcon 9
|
||
development will also continue unabated.”
|
||
In reality, the third launch was a disaster with cascading consequences.
|
||
Since the second stage of the rocket did not fire properly, SpaceX never got
|
||
a chance to see if it had really fixed the fuel-sloshing issues that had
|
||
plagued the second flight. Many of the SpaceX engineers were confident
|
||
that they had solved this problem and were anxious to get to the fourth
|
||
launch, believing that they had an easy answer for the recent thrust problem.
|
||
For Musk, the situation seemed graver. “I was super depressed,” Musk said.
|
||
“If we hadn’t solved the slush coupling problem on flight two, or there was
|
||
just some random other thing that occurred—say a mistake in the launch
|
||
process or the manufacturing process unrelated to anything previous—then
|
||
game over.” SpaceX simply did not have enough money to try a fifth flight.
|
||
He’d put $100 million into the company and had nothing to spare because
|
||
of the issues at Tesla. “Flight four was it,” Musk said. If, however, SpaceX
|
||
could nail the fourth flight, it would instill confidence on the part of the
|
||
U.S. government and possible commercial customers, paving the way for
|
||
the Falcon 9 and even more ambitious projects.
|
||
Leading up to the third launch, Musk had been his usual ultra-involved
|
||
self. Anyone at SpaceX who held the launch back went onto Musk’s
|
||
critical-path shit list. Musk would hound the person responsible about the
|
||
delays but, typically, he would also do everything in his power to help solve
|
||
problems. “I was personally holding up the launch once and had to give
|
||
Elon twice-daily updates about what was going on,” said Kevin Brogan.
|
||
“But Elon would say, ‘There are five hundred people at this company. What
|
||
do you need?’” One of the calls must have taken place while Musk courted
|
||
Riley because Brogan remembered Musk phoning from the bathroom of a
|
||
London club to find out how welding had gone on a large part of the rocket.
|
||
Musk fielded another call in the middle of the night while sleeping next to
|
||
Riley and had to whisper as he berated the engineers. “He’s giving us the
|
||
pillow talk voice, so we all have to huddle around the speakerphone, while
|
||
he tells us, ‘You guys need to get your shit together,’” Brogan said.
|
||
With the fourth launch, the demands and anticipation had ratcheted to
|
||
the point that people started making silly mistakes. Typically, the body of
|
||
the Falcon 1 rocket traveled to Kwaj via barge. This time Musk and the
|
||
engineers were too excited and desperate to wait for the ocean journey.
|
||
Musk rented a military cargo plane to fly the rocket body from Los Angeles
|
||
to Hawaii and then on to Kwaj. This would have been a fine idea except the
|
||
SpaceX engineers forgot to factor in what the pressurized plane would do to
|
||
the body of the rocket, which is less than an eighth of an inch thick. As the
|
||
plane started its descent into Hawaii, everyone inside of it could hear
|
||
strange noises coming from the cargo hold. “I looked back and could see
|
||
the stage crumpling,” said Bulent Altan, the former head of avionics at
|
||
SpaceX. “I told the pilot to go up, and he did.” The rocket had behaved
|
||
much like an empty water bottle will on a plane, with the air pressure
|
||
pushing against the sides of the bottle and making it buckle. Altan
|
||
calculated that the SpaceX team on the plane had about thirty minutes to do
|
||
something about the problem before they would need to land. They pulled
|
||
out their pocketknives and cut away the shrink wrap that held the rocket’s
|
||
body tight. Then they found a maintenance kit on the plane and used
|
||
wrenches to open up some nuts on the rocket that would allow its internal
|
||
pressure to match that of the plane’s. When the plane landed, the engineers
|
||
divvied up the duties of calling SpaceX’s top executives to tell them about
|
||
the catastrophe. It was 3 A.M. Los Angeles time, and one of the executives
|
||
volunteered to deliver the horrific news to Musk. The thinking at the time
|
||
was that it would take three months to repair the damage. The body of the
|
||
rocket had caved in in several places, baffles placed inside the fuel tank to
|
||
stop the sloshing problem had broken, and an assortment of other issues had
|
||
appeared. Musk ordered the team to continue on to Kwaj and sent in a
|
||
reinforcement team with repair parts. Two weeks later, the rocket had been
|
||
fixed inside of the makeshift hangar. “It was like being stuck in a foxhole
|
||
together,” Altan said. “You weren’t going to quit and leave the person next
|
||
to you behind. When it was all done, everyone felt amazing.”
|
||
The fourth and possibly final launch for SpaceX took place on
|
||
September 28, 2008. The SpaceX employees had worked nonstop shifts
|
||
under agonizing pressure for six weeks to reach this day. Their pride as
|
||
engineers and their hopes and dreams were on the line. “The people
|
||
watching back at the factory were trying their best not to throw up,” said
|
||
James McLaury, a machinist at SpaceX. Despite their past flubs, the
|
||
engineers on Kwaj were confident that this launch would work. Some of
|
||
these people had spent years on the island going through one of the more
|
||
surreal engineering exercises in human history. They had been separated
|
||
from their families, assaulted by the heat, and exiled on their tiny launchpad
|
||
outpost—sometimes without much food—for days on end as they waited
|
||
for the launch windows to open and dealt with the aborts that followed. So
|
||
much of that pain and suffering and fear would be forgotten if this launch
|
||
went successfully.
|
||
In the late afternoon on the twenty-eighth, the SpaceX team raised the
|
||
Falcon 1 into its launch position. Once again, it stood tall, looking like a
|
||
bizarre artifact of an island tribe as palm trees swayed beside it and a
|
||
smattering of clouds crossed through the spectacular blue sky. By this time,
|
||
SpaceX had upped its webcast game, turning each launch into a major
|
||
production both for its employees and the public. Two SpaceX marketing
|
||
executives spent twenty minutes before the launch going through all the
|
||
technical ins and outs of the launch. The Falcon 1 was not carrying real
|
||
cargo this time; neither the company nor the military wanted to see
|
||
something else blow up or get lost at sea, so the rocket held a 360-pound
|
||
dummy payload.
|
||
The fact that SpaceX had been reduced to launch theater did not faze the
|
||
employees or dampen their enthusiasm. As the rocket rumbled and then
|
||
climbed higher, the employees back at SpaceX headquarters let out raucous
|
||
cheers. Each milestone that followed—clearing the island, engine checks
|
||
coming back good—was again met with whistles and shouts. As the first
|
||
stage fell away, the second stage fired up about ninety seconds into the
|
||
flight and the employees turned downright rapturous, filling the webcast
|
||
with their ecstatic hollering. “Perfect,” said one of the talking heads. The
|
||
Kestrel engine glowed red and started its six-minute burn. “When the
|
||
second stage cleared, I could finally start breathing again and my knees
|
||
stopped buckling,” said McLaury.
|
||
The fairing opened up around the three-minute mark and fell back
|
||
toward Earth. And, finally, around nine minutes into its journey, the Falcon
|
||
1 shut down just as planned and reached orbit, making it the first privately
|
||
built machine to accomplish such a feat. It took six years—about four and
|
||
half more than Musk had once planned—and five hundred people to make
|
||
this miracle of modern science and business happen.
|
||
Earlier in the day, Musk had tried to distract himself from the mounting
|
||
pressure by going to Disneyland with his brother Kimbal and their children.
|
||
Musk then had to race back to make the 4 P.M. launch and walked into
|
||
SpaceX’s trailer control room about two minutes before blastoff. “When the
|
||
launch was successful, everyone burst into tears,” Kimbal said. “It was one
|
||
of the most emotional experiences I’ve had.” Musk left the control room
|
||
and walked out to the factory floor, where he received a rock star’s
|
||
welcome. “Well, that was freaking awesome,” he said. “There are a lot of
|
||
people who thought we couldn’t do it—a lot actually—but as the saying
|
||
goes, ‘the fourth time is the charm,’ right? There are only a handful of
|
||
countries on Earth that have done this. It’s normally a country thing, not a
|
||
company thing. . . . My mind is kind of frazzled, so it’s hard for me to say
|
||
anything, but, man, this is definitely one of the greatest days in my life, and
|
||
I think probably for most people here. We showed people we can do it. This
|
||
is just the first step of many. . . . I am going to have a really great party
|
||
tonight. I don’t know about you guys.” Mary Beth Brown then tapped Musk
|
||
on the shoulder and pulled him away to a meeting.
|
||
The afterglow of this mammoth victory faded soon after the party
|
||
ended, and the severity of SpaceX’s financial hell became top of mind again
|
||
for Musk. SpaceX had the Falcon 9 efforts to support and had also
|
||
immediately green-lighted the construction of another machine—the
|
||
Dragon capsule—that would be used to take supplies, and one day humans,
|
||
to the International Space Station. Historically, either project would cost
|
||
more than $1 billion to complete, but SpaceX would have to find a way to
|
||
build both machines simultaneously for a fraction of the cost. The company
|
||
had dramatically increased the rate at which it hired employees and moved
|
||
into a much larger headquarters in Hawthorne, California. SpaceX had a
|
||
commercial flight booked to carry a satellite into orbit for the Malaysian
|
||
government, but that launch and the payment for it would not arrive until
|
||
the middle of 2009. In the meantime, SpaceX simply struggled to make its
|
||
payroll.
|
||
The press did not know the extent of Musk’s financial woes, but they
|
||
knew enough to turn detailing Tesla’s precarious financial situation into a
|
||
favored pastime. A website called the Truth About Cars began a “Tesla
|
||
Death Watch” in May 2008 and followed up with dozens of entries
|
||
throughout the year. The blog took special pleasure in rejecting the idea that
|
||
Musk was a true founder of the company, presenting him as the moneyman
|
||
and chairman who had more or less stolen Tesla from the genius engineer
|
||
Eberhard. When Eberhard started a blog detailing the pros and cons of
|
||
being a Tesla customer, the auto site was all too happy to echo his gripes.
|
||
Top Gear, a popular British television show, ripped the Roadster apart,
|
||
making it look as if the car had run out of juice during a road test. “People
|
||
joke about the Tesla Death Watch and all that, but it was harsh,” said
|
||
Kimbal Musk. “One day there were fifty articles about how Tesla will die.”
|
||
Then, in October 2008 (just a couple weeks after SpaceX’s successful
|
||
launch), Valleywag appeared on the scene again. First it ridiculed Musk for
|
||
officially taking over as CEO of Tesla and replacing Drori, on the grounds
|
||
that Musk had just lucked into his past successes. It followed that by
|
||
printing a tell-all e-mail from a Tesla employee. The report said that Tesla
|
||
had just gone through a round of layoffs, shut down its Detroit office, and
|
||
had only $9 million left in the bank. “We have over 1,200 reservations,
|
||
which manes [sic] we’ve taken multiples of tens of millions of cash from
|
||
our customers and have spent them all,” the Tesla employee wrote.
|
||
“Meanwhile, we only delivered less than 50 cars. I actually talked a close
|
||
friend of mine into putting down $60,000 for a Tesla Roadster. I cannot
|
||
conscientiously be a bystander anymore and allow my company to deceive
|
||
the public and defraud our dear customers. Our customers and the general
|
||
public are the reason Tesla is so loved. The fact that they are being lied to is
|
||
just wrong.”*
|
||
Yes, Tesla deserved much of the negative attention. Musk, though, felt
|
||
like the 2008 climate with the hatred of bankers and the rich had turned him
|
||
into a particularly juicy target. “I was just getting pistol-whipped,” Musk
|
||
said. “There was a lot of schadenfreude at the time, and it was bad on so
|
||
many levels. Justine was torturing me in the press. There were always all
|
||
these negative articles about Tesla, and the stories about SpaceX’s third
|
||
failure. It hurt really bad. You have these huge doubts that your life is not
|
||
working, your car is not working, you’re going through a divorce and all of
|
||
those things. I felt like a pile of shit. I didn’t think we would overcome it. I
|
||
thought things were probably fucking doomed.”
|
||
When Musk ran through the calculations concerning SpaceX and Tesla,
|
||
it occurred to him that only one company would likely even have a chance
|
||
at survival. “I could either pick SpaceX or Tesla or split the money I had
|
||
left between them,” Musk said. “That was a tough decision. If I split the
|
||
money, maybe both of them would die. If I gave the money to just one
|
||
company, the probability of it surviving was greater, but then it would mean
|
||
certain death for the other company. I debated that over and over.” While
|
||
Musk meditated on this, the economy worsened quickly and so too did
|
||
Musk’s financial condition. As 2008 came to an end, Musk had run out of
|
||
money.
|
||
Riley began to see Musk’s life as a Shakespearean tragedy. Sometimes
|
||
Musk would open up to her about the issues, and other times he retreated
|
||
into himself. Riley spied on Musk while he read e-mail and watched him
|
||
grimace as the bad news poured in. “You’d witness him having these
|
||
conversations in his head,” she said. “It’s really hard to watch someone you
|
||
love struggle like that.” Because of the long hours that he worked and his
|
||
eating habits, Musk’s weight fluctuated wildly. Bags formed under his eyes,
|
||
and his countenance started to resemble that of a shattered runner at the
|
||
back end of an ultra-marathon. “He looked like death itself,” Riley said. “I
|
||
remember thinking this guy would have a heart attack and die. He seemed
|
||
like a man on the brink.” In the middle of the night, Musk would have
|
||
nightmares and yell out. “He was in physical pain,” Riley said. “He would
|
||
climb on me and start screaming while still asleep.” The couple had to start
|
||
borrowing hundreds of thousands of dollars from Musk’s friend Skoll, and
|
||
Riley’s parents offered to remortgage their house. Musk no longer flew his
|
||
jet back and forth between Los Angles and Silicon Valley. He took
|
||
Southwest.
|
||
Burning through about $4 million a month, Tesla needed to close
|
||
another major round of funding to get through 2008 and stay alive. Musk
|
||
had to lean on friends just to try to make payroll from week to week, as he
|
||
negotiated with investors. He sent impassioned pleas to anyone he could
|
||
think of who might be able to spare some money. Bill Lee invested $2
|
||
million in Tesla, and Sergey Brin invested $500,000. “A bunch of Tesla
|
||
employees wrote checks to keep the company going,” said Diarmuid
|
||
O’Connell, the vice president of business development at Tesla. “They
|
||
turned into investments, but, at the time, it was twenty-five or fifty thousand
|
||
dollars that you didn’t expect to see again. It just seemed like holy shit, this
|
||
thing is going to crater.” Kimbal had lost most of his money during the
|
||
recession when his investments bottomed out but sold what he had left and
|
||
put it into Tesla as well. “I was close to bankruptcy,” Kimbal said. Tesla had
|
||
set the prepayments that customers made for the Roadsters aside, but Musk
|
||
now needed to use that money to keep the company going and soon those
|
||
funds were gone, too. These fiscal maneuvers worried Kimbal. “I’m sure
|
||
Elon would have found a way to make things right, but he definitely took
|
||
risks that seemed like they could have landed him in jail for using someone
|
||
else’s money,” he said.
|
||
In December 2008, Musk mounted simultaneous campaigns to try to
|
||
save his companies. He heard a rumor that NASA was on the verge of
|
||
awarding a contract to resupply the space station. SpaceX’s fourth launch
|
||
had put it in a position to receive some of this money, which was said to be
|
||
in excess of $1 billion. Musk reached out through some back channels in
|
||
Washington and found out that SpaceX might even be a front-runner for the
|
||
deal. Musk began doing everything in his power to assure people that the
|
||
company could meet the challenge of getting a capsule to the ISS. As for
|
||
Tesla, Musk had to go to his existing investors and ask them to pony up for
|
||
another round of funding that needed to close by Christmas Eve to avoid
|
||
bankruptcy. To give the investors some measure of confidence, Musk made
|
||
a last-ditch effort to raise all the personal funds he could and put them into
|
||
the company. He took out a loan from SpaceX, which NASA approved, and
|
||
earmarked the money for Tesla. Musk went to the secondary markets to try
|
||
to sell some of his shares in SolarCity. He also seized about $15 million that
|
||
came through when Dell acquired a data center software start-up called
|
||
Everdream, founded by Musk’s cousins, in which he had invested. “It was
|
||
like the fucking Matrix,” Musk said, describing his financial maneuvers.
|
||
“The Everdream deal really saved my butt.”
|
||
Musk had cobbled together $20 million, and asked Tesla’s existing
|
||
investors—since no new investors materialized—to match that figure. The
|
||
investors agreed, and on December 3, 2008, they were in the process of
|
||
finalizing the paperwork for the funding round when Musk noticed a
|
||
problem. VantagePoint Capital Partners had signed all of the paperwork
|
||
except for one crucial page. Musk phoned up Alan Salzman, VantagePoint’s
|
||
cofounder and managing partner, to ask about the situation. Salzman
|
||
informed Musk that the firm had a problem with the investment round
|
||
because it undervalued Tesla. “I said, ‘I’ve got an excellent solution then.
|
||
Take my entire portion of the deal. I had a real hard time coming up with
|
||
the money. Based on the cash we have in the bank right now, we will
|
||
bounce payroll next week. So unless you’ve got another idea, can you either
|
||
just participate as much as you’d like, or allow the round to go through
|
||
because otherwise we will be bankrupt.’” Salzman balked and told Musk to
|
||
come in the following week at 7 A.M. to present to VantagePoint’s top brass.
|
||
Not having a week of time to work with, Musk asked to come in the next
|
||
day, and Salzman refused that offer, forcing Musk to continue taking on
|
||
loans. “The only reason he wanted the meeting at his office was for me to
|
||
come on bended knee begging for money so he could say, ‘No,’” Musk
|
||
theorized. “What a fuckhead.”
|
||
VantagePoint declined to speak about this period, but Musk believed
|
||
that Salzman’s tactics were part of a mission to bankrupt Tesla. Musk feared
|
||
that VantagePoint would oust him as CEO, recapitalize Tesla, and emerge as
|
||
the major owner of the carmaker. It could then sell Tesla to a Detroit
|
||
automaker or focus on selling electric drivetrains and battery packs instead
|
||
of making cars. Such reasoning would have been quite practical from a
|
||
business standpoint but did not match up with Musk’s goals for Tesla.
|
||
“VantagePoint was forcing that wisdom down the throat of an entrepreneur
|
||
who wanted to do something bigger and bolder,” said Steve Jurvetson, a
|
||
partner at Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Tesla investor. “Maybe they’re used
|
||
to a CEO buckling, but Elon doesn’t do that.” Instead, Musk took another
|
||
huge risk. Tesla recharacterized the funding as a debt round rather than an
|
||
equity round, knowing that VantagePoint could not interfere with a debt
|
||
deal. The tricky part of this strategy was that investors like Jurvetson who
|
||
wanted to help Tesla were put in a bind because venture capital firms are
|
||
not structured to do debt deals, and convincing their backers to alter their
|
||
normal rules of engagement for a company that could very well go bankrupt
|
||
in a matter of days would be a very tough ask. Knowing this, Musk bluffed.
|
||
He told the investors that he would take another loan from SpaceX and fund
|
||
the entire round—all $40 million—himself. The tactic worked. “When you
|
||
have scarcity, it naturally reinforces greed and leads to more interest,”
|
||
Jurvetson said. “It was also easier for us to go back to our firms and say,
|
||
‘Here is the deal. Go or no go?’” The deal ended up closing on Christmas
|
||
Eve, hours before Tesla would have gone bankrupt. Musk had just a few
|
||
hundred thousand dollars left and could not have made payroll the next day.
|
||
Musk ultimately put in $12 million, and the investment firms put up the
|
||
rest. As for Salzman, Musk said, “He should be ashamed of himself.”
|
||
At SpaceX, Musk and the company’s top executives had spent most of
|
||
December in a state of fear. According to reports in the press, SpaceX, the
|
||
onetime front-runner for the large NASA contract, had suddenly lost favor
|
||
with the space agency. Michael Griffin, who had once almost been a
|
||
cofounder of SpaceX, was the head of NASA and had turned on Musk.
|
||
Griffin did not care for Musk’s aggressive business tactics, seeing him as
|
||
borderline unethical. Others have suggested that Griffin ended up being
|
||
jealous of Musk and SpaceX.* On December 23, 2008, however, SpaceX
|
||
received a shock. People inside NASA had backed SpaceX to become a
|
||
supplier for the ISS. The company received $1.6 billion as payment for
|
||
twelve flights to the space station. Staying with Kimbal in Boulder,
|
||
Colorado, for the holidays, Musk broke down in tears as the SpaceX and
|
||
Tesla transactions processed. “I hadn’t had an opportunity to buy a
|
||
Christmas present for Talulah or anything,” he said. “I went running down
|
||
the fucking street in Boulder, and the only place that was open sold these
|
||
shitty trinkets, and they were about to close. The best thing I could find
|
||
were these plastic monkeys with coconuts—those ‘see no evil, hear no evil’
|
||
monkeys.”
|
||
For Gracias, the Tesla and SpaceX investor and Musk’s friend, the 2008
|
||
period told him everything he would ever need to know about Musk’s
|
||
character. He saw a man who arrived in the United States with nothing, who
|
||
had lost a child, who was being pilloried in the press by reporters and his
|
||
ex-wife and who verged on having his life’s work destroyed. “He has the
|
||
ability to work harder and endure more stress than anyone I’ve ever met,”
|
||
Gracias said. “What he went through in 2008 would have broken anyone
|
||
else. He didn’t just survive. He kept working and stayed focused.” That
|
||
ability to stay focused in the midst of a crisis stands as one of Musk’s main
|
||
advantages over other executives and competitors. “Most people who are
|
||
under that sort of pressure fray,” Gracias said. “Their decisions go bad. Elon
|
||
gets hyperrational. He’s still able to make very clear, long-term decisions.
|
||
The harder it gets, the better he gets. Anyone who saw what he went
|
||
through firsthand came away with more respect for the guy. I’ve just never
|
||
seen anything like his ability to take pain.”
|
||
9
|
||
LIFTOFF
|
||
THE FALCON 9 HAS BECOME SPACEX’S WORKHORSE. The rocket
|
||
looks—let’s face it—like a giant white phallus. It stands 224.4 feet tall, is
|
||
12 feet across, and weighs 1.1 million pounds. The rocket is powered by
|
||
nine engines arranged in an “octaweb” pattern at its base with one engine in
|
||
the center and eight others encircling it. The engines connect to the first
|
||
stage, or the main body of the rocket, which bears the blue SpaceX insignia
|
||
and an American flag. The shorter second stage of the rocket sits on top of
|
||
the first and is the one that actually ends up doing things in space. It can be
|
||
outfitted with a rounded container for carrying satellites or a capsule
|
||
capable of transporting humans. By design, there’s nothing particularly
|
||
flashy about the Falcon 9’s outward appearance. It’s the spaceship
|
||
equivalent of an Apple laptop or a Braun kettle—an elegant, purposeful
|
||
machine stripped of frivolity and waste.
|
||
SpaceX sometimes uses Vandenberg Air Force Base in Southern
|
||
California to send up these Falcon 9 rockets. Were it not owned by the
|
||
military, the base would be a resort. The Pacific Ocean runs for miles along
|
||
its border, and its grounds have wide-open shrubby fields dotted by green
|
||
hills. Nestled into one hilly spot just at the ocean’s edge are a handful of
|
||
launchpads. On launch days, the white Falcon 9 breaks up the blue and
|
||
green landscape, pointing skyward and leaving no doubt about its
|
||
intentions.
|
||
About four hours before a launch, the Falcon 9 starts getting filled with
|
||
an immense amount of liquid oxygen and rocket-grade kerosene. Some of
|
||
the liquid oxygen vents out of the rocket as it awaits launch and is kept so
|
||
cold that it boils off on contact with the metal and air, forming white plumes
|
||
that stream down the rocket’s sides. This gives the impression of the Falcon
|
||
9 huffing and puffing as it limbers up before the journey. The engineers
|
||
inside of SpaceX’s mission control monitor these fuel systems and all
|
||
manner of other items. They chat back and forth through headsets and begin
|
||
cycling through their launch checklist, consumed by what people in the
|
||
business call “go fever” as they move from one approval to the next. Ten
|
||
minutes before launch, the humans step out of the way and leave the
|
||
remaining processes up to automated machines. Everything goes quiet, and
|
||
the tension builds until right before the main event. That’s when, out of
|
||
nowhere, the Falcon 9 breaks the silence by letting out a loud gasp.
|
||
A white latticed support structure pulls away from its body. The Tminus-
|
||
ten-seconds countdown begins. Nothing much happens from ten
|
||
down to four. At the count of three, however, the engines ignite, and the
|
||
computers conduct a last, oh-so-rapid, health check. Four enormous metal
|
||
clamps hold the rocket down, as computing systems evaluate all nine
|
||
engines and measure if there’s sufficient downward force being produced.
|
||
By the time zero arrives, the rocket has decided that all is well enough to go
|
||
through with its mission, and the clamps release. The rocket goes to war
|
||
with inertia, and then, with flames surrounding its base and snow-thick
|
||
plumes of the liquid oxygen filling the air, it shoots up. Seeing something so
|
||
large hold so straight and steady while suspended in midair is hard for the
|
||
brain to register. It is foreign, inexplicable. About twenty seconds after
|
||
liftoff, the spectators placed safely a few miles away catch the first faceful
|
||
of the Falcon 9’s rumble. It’s a distinct sound—a sort of staccato crackling
|
||
that arises from chemicals whipped into a violent frenzy. Pant legs vibrate
|
||
from shock waves produced by a stream of sonic booms coming out of the
|
||
Falcon 9’s exhaust. The white rocket climbs higher and higher with
|
||
impressive stamina. After about a minute, it’s just a red spot in the sky, and
|
||
then—poof—it’s gone. Only a cynical dullard could come away from
|
||
witnessing this feeling anything other than wonder at what man can
|
||
accomplish.
|
||
For Elon Musk, this spectacle has turned into a familiar experience.
|
||
SpaceX has metamorphosed from the joke of the aeronautics industry into
|
||
one of its most consistent operators. SpaceX sends a rocket up about once a
|
||
month, carrying satellites for companies and nations and supplies to the
|
||
International Space Station. Where the Falcon 1 blasting off from Kwajalein
|
||
was the work of a start-up, the Falcon 9 taking off from Vandenberg is the
|
||
work of an aerospace superpower. SpaceX can undercut its U.S.
|
||
competitors—Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Orbital Sciences—on price by a
|
||
ridiculous margin. It also offers U.S. customers a peace of mind that its
|
||
rivals can’t. Where these competitors rely on Russian and other foreign
|
||
suppliers, SpaceX makes all of its machines from scratch in the United
|
||
States. Because of its low costs, SpaceX has once again made the United
|
||
States a player in the worldwide commercial launch market. Its $60 million
|
||
per launch cost is much less than what Europe and Japan charge and trumps
|
||
even the relative bargains offered by the Russians and Chinese, who have
|
||
the added benefit of decades of sunk government investment into their
|
||
space programs as well as cheap labor.
|
||
The United States continues to take great pride in having Boeing
|
||
compete against Airbus and other foreign aircraft makers. For some reason,
|
||
though, government leaders and the public have been willing to concede
|
||
much of the commercial launch market. It’s a disheartening and
|
||
shortsighted position. The total market for satellites, related services, and
|
||
the rocket launches needed to carry them to space has exploded over the
|
||
past decade from about $60 billion per year to more than $200 billion.11 A
|
||
number of countries pay to send up their own spy, communication, and
|
||
weather satellites. Companies then turn to space for television, Internet,
|
||
radio, weather, navigation, and imaging services. The machines in space
|
||
supply the fabric of modern life, and they’re going to become more capable
|
||
and interesting at a rapid pace. A whole new breed of satellite makers has
|
||
just appeared on the scene with the ability to answer Google-like queries
|
||
about our planet. These satellites can zoom in on Iowa and determine when
|
||
cornfields are at peak yields and ready to harvest, and they can count cars in
|
||
Wal-Mart parking lots throughout California to calculate shopping demand
|
||
during the holiday season. The start-ups making these types of innovative
|
||
machines must often turn to the Russians to get them into space, but
|
||
SpaceX intends to change that.
|
||
The United States has remained competitive in the most lucrative parts
|
||
of the space industry, building the actual satellites and complementary
|
||
systems and services to run them. Each year, the United States makes about
|
||
one-third of all satellites and takes about 60 percent of the global satellite
|
||
revenue. The majority of this revenue comes from business done with the
|
||
U.S. government. China, Europe, and Russia account for almost all of the
|
||
remaining satellite sales and launches. It’s expected that China’s role in the
|
||
space industry will increase, while Russia has vowed to spend $50 billion
|
||
on revitalizing its space program. This leaves the United States dealing with
|
||
two of its least-favored nations in space matters and doing so without much
|
||
leverage. Case in point: the retirement of the space shuttle made the United
|
||
States totally dependent on the Russians to get astronauts to the ISS. Russia
|
||
gets to charge $70 million per person for the trip and to cut the United
|
||
States off as it sees fit during political rifts. At present, SpaceX looks like
|
||
the best hope of breaking this cycle and giving back to America its ability to
|
||
take people into space.
|
||
SpaceX has become the free radical trying to upend everything about
|
||
this industry. It doesn’t want to handle a few launches per year or to rely on
|
||
government contracts for survival. Musk’s goal is to use manufacturing
|
||
breakthroughs and launchpad advances to create a drastic drop in the cost of
|
||
getting things to space. Most significant, he’s been testing rockets that can
|
||
push their payload to space and then return to Earth and land with supreme
|
||
accuracy on a pad floating at sea or even their original launchpad. Instead of
|
||
having its rockets break apart after crashing into the sea, SpaceX will use
|
||
reverse thrusters to lower them down softly and reuse them. Within the next
|
||
few years, SpaceX expects to cut its price to at least one-tenth that of its
|
||
rivals. Reusing its rockets will drive the bulk of this reduction and SpaceX’s
|
||
competitive advantage. Imagine one airline that flies the same plane over
|
||
and over again, competing against others that dispose of their planes after
|
||
every flight.* Through its cost advantages, SpaceX hopes to take over the
|
||
majority of the world’s commercial launches, and there’s evidence that the
|
||
company is on its way toward doing just that. To date, it has flown satellites
|
||
for Canadian, European, and Asian customers and completed about two
|
||
dozen launches. Its public launch manifest stretches out for a number of
|
||
years, and SpaceX has more than fifty flights planned, which are all
|
||
together worth more than $5 billion. The company remains privately owned
|
||
with Musk as the largest shareholder alongside outside investors including
|
||
venture capital firms like the Founders Fund and Draper Fisher Jurvetson,
|
||
giving it a competitive ethos its rivals lack. Since getting past its near-death
|
||
experience in 2008, SpaceX has been profitable and is estimated to be
|
||
worth $12 billion.
|
||
Zip2, PayPal, Tesla, SolarCity—they are all expressions of Musk.
|
||
SpaceX is Musk. Its foibles emanate directly from him, as do its successes.
|
||
Part of this comes from Musk’s maniacal attention to detail and
|
||
involvement in every SpaceX endeavor. He’s hands-on to a degree that
|
||
would make Hugh Hefner feel inadequate. Part of it stems from SpaceX
|
||
being the apotheosis of the Cult of Musk. Employees fear Musk. They
|
||
adore Musk. The give up their lives for Musk, and they usually do all of this
|
||
simultaneously.
|
||
Musk’s demanding management style can only flourish because of the
|
||
otherworldly—in a literal sense—aspirations of the company. While the rest
|
||
of the aerospace industry has been content to keep sending what look like
|
||
relics from the 1960s into space, SpaceX has made a point of doing just the
|
||
opposite. Its reusable rockets and reusable spaceships look like true twentyfirst-
|
||
century machines. The modernization of the equipment is not just for
|
||
show. It reflects SpaceX’s constant push to advance its technology and
|
||
change the economics of the industry. Musk does not simply want to lower
|
||
the cost of deploying satellites and resupplying the space station. He wants
|
||
to lower the cost of launches to the point that it becomes economical and
|
||
practical to fly thousands upon thousands of supply trips to Mars and start a
|
||
colony. Musk wants to conquer the solar system, and, as it stands, there’s
|
||
just one company where you can work if that sort of quest gets you out of
|
||
bed in the morning.
|
||
It seems unfathomable, but the rest of the space industry has made space
|
||
boring. The Russians, who dominate much of the business of sending things
|
||
and people to space, do so with decades-old equipment. The cramped Soyuz
|
||
capsule that takes people to the space station has mechanical knobs and
|
||
computer screens that appear unchanged from its inaugural 1966 flight.
|
||
Countries new to the space race have mimicked the antiquated Russian and
|
||
American equipment with maddening accuracy. When young people get
|
||
into the aerospace industry, they’re forced to either laugh or cry at the state
|
||
of the machines. Nothing sucks the fun out of working on a spaceship like
|
||
controlling it with mechanisms last seen in a 1960s laundromat. And the
|
||
actual work environment is as outmoded as the machines. Hotshot college
|
||
graduates have historically been forced to pick between a variety of slowmoving
|
||
military contractors and interesting but ineffectual start-ups.
|
||
Musk has managed to take these negatives surrounding the aerospace
|
||
business and turn them into gains for SpaceX. He’s presented the company
|
||
as anything but another aerospace contractor. SpaceX is the hip, forwardthinking
|
||
place that’s brought the perks of Silicon Valley—namely frozen
|
||
yogurt, stock options, speedy decision making, and a flat corporate structure
|
||
—to a staid industry. People who know Musk well tend to describe him
|
||
more as a general than a CEO, and this is apt. He’s built an engineering
|
||
army by having the pick of just about anyone in the business that SpaceX
|
||
wants.
|
||
The SpaceX hiring model places some emphasis on getting top marks at
|
||
top schools. But most of the attention goes toward spotting engineers who
|
||
have exhibited type A personality traits over the course of their lives. The
|
||
company’s recruiters look for people who might excel at robot-building
|
||
competitions or who are car-racing hobbyists who have built unusual
|
||
vehicles. The object is to find individuals who ooze passion, can work well
|
||
as part of a team, and have real-world experience bending metal. “Even if
|
||
you’re someone who writes code for your job, you need to understand how
|
||
mechanical things work,” said Dolly Singh, who spent five years as the
|
||
head of talent acquisition at SpaceX. “We were looking for people that had
|
||
been building things since they were little.”
|
||
Sometimes these people walked through the front door. Other times,
|
||
Singh relied on a handful of enterprising techniques to find them. She
|
||
became famous for trawling through academic papers to find engineers with
|
||
very specific skills, cold-calling researchers at labs and plucking possessed
|
||
engineers out of college. At trade shows and conferences, SpaceX recruiters
|
||
wooed interesting candidates they had spotted with a cloak-and-dagger
|
||
shtick. They would hand out blank envelopes that contained invitations to
|
||
meet at a specific time and place, usually a bar or restaurant near the event,
|
||
for an initial interview. The candidates that showed up would discover they
|
||
were among only a handful of people who been anointed out of all the
|
||
conference attendees. They were immediately made to feel special and
|
||
inspired.
|
||
Like many tech companies, SpaceX subjects potential hires to a gauntlet
|
||
of interviews and tests. Some of the interviews are easygoing chats in which
|
||
both parties get to feel each other out; others are filled with quizzes that can
|
||
be quite hard. Engineers tend to face the most rigorous interrogations,
|
||
although business types and salesmen are made to suffer, too. Coders who
|
||
expect to pass through standard challenges have rude awakenings.
|
||
Companies will typically challenge software developers on the spot by
|
||
asking them to solve problems that require a couple of dozen lines of code.
|
||
The standard SpaceX problem requires five hundred or more lines of code.
|
||
All potential employees who make their way to the end of the interview
|
||
process then handle one more task. They’re asked to write an essay for
|
||
Musk about why they want to work at SpaceX.
|
||
The reward for solving the puzzles, acting clever in interviews, and
|
||
penning up a good essay is a meeting with Musk. He interviewed almost
|
||
every one of SpaceX’s first one thousand hires, including the janitors and
|
||
technicians, and has continued to interview the engineers as the company’s
|
||
workforce swelled. Each employee receives a warning before going to meet
|
||
with Musk. The interview, he or she is told, could last anywhere from thirty
|
||
seconds to fifteen minutes. Elon will likely keep on writing e-mails and
|
||
working during the initial part of the interview and not speak much. Don’t
|
||
panic. That’s normal. Eventually, he will turn around in his chair to face
|
||
you. Even then, though, he might not make actual eye contact with you or
|
||
fully acknowledge your presence. Don’t panic. That’s normal. In due course,
|
||
he will speak to you. From that point, the tales of engineers who have
|
||
interviewed with Musk run the gamut from torturous experiences to the
|
||
sublime. He might ask one question or he might ask several. You can be
|
||
sure, though, that he will roll out the Riddle: “You’re standing on the
|
||
surface of the Earth. You walk one mile south, one mile west, and one mile
|
||
north. You end up exactly where you started. Where are you?” One answer
|
||
to that is the North Pole, and most of the engineers get it right away. That’s
|
||
when Musk will follow with “Where else could you be?” The other answer
|
||
is somewhere close to the South Pole where, if you walk one mile south, the
|
||
circumference of the Earth becomes one mile. Fewer engineers get this
|
||
answer, and Musk will happily walk them through that riddle and others and
|
||
cite any relevant equations during his explanations. He tends to care less
|
||
about whether or not the person gets the answer than about how they
|
||
describe the problem and their approach to solving it.
|
||
When speaking to potential recruits, Singh tried to energize them and be
|
||
up front about the demands of SpaceX and of Musk at the same time. “The
|
||
recruiting pitch was SpaceX is special forces,” she said. “If you want as
|
||
hard as it gets, then great. If not, then you shouldn’t come here.” Once at
|
||
SpaceX, the new employees found out very quickly if they were indeed up
|
||
for the challenge. Many of them would quit within the first few months
|
||
because of the ninety-plus-hour workweeks. Others quit because they could
|
||
not handle just how direct Musk and the other executives were during
|
||
meetings. “Elon doesn’t know about you and he hasn’t thought through
|
||
whether or not something is going to hurt your feelings,” Singh said. “He
|
||
just knows what the fuck he wants done. People who did not normalize to
|
||
his communication style did not do well.”
|
||
There’s an impression that SpaceX suffers from incredibly high
|
||
turnover, and the company has without question churned through a fair
|
||
number of bodies. Many of the key executives who helped start the
|
||
company, however, have hung on for a decade or more. Among the rankand-
|
||
file engineers, most people stay on for at least five years to have their
|
||
stock options vest and to see their projects through. This is typical behavior
|
||
for any technology company. SpaceX and Musk also seem to inspire an
|
||
unusual level of loyalty. Musk has managed to conjure up that Steve Jobs–
|
||
like zeal among his troops. “His vision is so clear,” Singh said. “He almost
|
||
hypnotizes you. He gives you the crazy eye, and it’s like, yes, we can get to
|
||
Mars.” Take that a bit further and you arrive at a pleasure-pain,
|
||
sadomasochistic vibe that comes with working for Musk. Numerous people
|
||
interviewed for this book decried the work hours, Musk’s blunt style, and
|
||
his sometimes ludicrous expectations. Yet almost every person—even those
|
||
who had been fired—still worshipped Musk and talked about him in terms
|
||
usually reserved for superheroes or deities.
|
||
SpaceX’s original headquarters in El Segundo were not quite up to the
|
||
company’s desired image as a place where the cool kids want to work. This
|
||
is not a problem for SpaceX’s new facility in Hawthorne. The building’s
|
||
address is 1 Rocket Road, and it has the Hawthorne Municipal Airport and
|
||
several tooling and manufacturing companies as neighbors. While the
|
||
SpaceX building resembles the others in size and shape, its all-white color
|
||
makes it the obvious outlier. The structure looks like a gargantuan,
|
||
rectangular glacier that’s been planted in the midst of a particularly soulless
|
||
portion of Los Angeles County’s sprawl.
|
||
Visitors to SpaceX have to walk past a security guard and through a
|
||
small executive parking lot where Musk parks his black Model S, which
|
||
flanks the building’s entryway. The front doors are reflective and hide
|
||
what’s on the inside, which is more white. There are white walls in the
|
||
foyer, a funky white table in the waiting area, and a white check-in desk
|
||
with a pair of orchids sitting in white pots. After going through the
|
||
registration process, guests are given a name badge and led into the main
|
||
SpaceX office space. Musk’s cubicle—a supersize unit—sits to the right
|
||
where he has a couple of celebratory Aviation Week magazine covers up on
|
||
the wall, pictures of his boys, next to a huge flat-screen monitor, and
|
||
various knickknacks on his desk, including a boomerang, some books, a
|
||
bottle of wine, and a giant samurai sword named Lady Vivamus, which
|
||
Musk received when he won the Heinlein Prize, an award given for big
|
||
achievements in commercial space. Hundreds of other people work in
|
||
cubicles amid the big, wide-open area, most of them executives, engineers,
|
||
software developers, and salespeople tapping away on their computers. The
|
||
conference rooms that surround their desks all have space-themed names
|
||
like Apollo or Wernher von Braun and little nameplates that explain the
|
||
label’s significance. The largest conference rooms have ultramodern chairs
|
||
—high-backed, sleek red jobs that surround large glass tables—while
|
||
panoramic photos of a Falcon 1 taking off from Kwaj or the Dragon capsule
|
||
docking with the ISS hang on the walls in the background.
|
||
Take away the rocket swag and the samurai sword and this central part
|
||
of the SpaceX office looks just like what you might find at your run-of-themill
|
||
Silicon Valley headquarters. The same thing cannot be said for what
|
||
visitors encounter as they pass through a pair of double doors into the heart
|
||
of the SpaceX factory.
|
||
The 550,000-square-foot factory floor is difficult to process at first
|
||
glance. It’s one continuous space with grayish epoxied floors, white walls,
|
||
and white support columns. A small city’s worth of stuff—people,
|
||
machines, noise—has been piled into this area. Just near the entryway, one
|
||
of the Dragon capsules that has gone to the ISS and returned to Earth hangs
|
||
from the ceiling with black burn marks running down its side. Just under the
|
||
capsule on the ground are a pair of the twenty-five-foot-long landing legs
|
||
built by SpaceX to let the Falcon rocket come to a gentle rest on the ground
|
||
after a flight so it can be flown again. To the left side of this entryway area
|
||
there’s a kitchen, and to the right side there’s the mission control room. It’s
|
||
a closed-off area with expansive glass windows and fronted by wall-size
|
||
screens for tracking a rocket’s progress. It has four rows of desks with about
|
||
ten computers each for the mission control staff. Step a bit farther into the
|
||
factory and there are a handful of industrial work areas separated from each
|
||
other in the most informal of ways. In some spots there are blue lines on the
|
||
floor to mark off an area and in other spots blue workbenches have been
|
||
arranged in squares to cordon off the space. It’s a common sight to have one
|
||
of the Merlin engines raised up in the middle of one of these work areas
|
||
with a half dozen technicians wiring it up and tuning its bits and pieces.
|
||
Just behind these workspaces is a glass-enclosed square big enough to
|
||
fit two of the Dragon capsules. This is a clean room where people must
|
||
wear lab coats and hairnets to fiddle with the capsules without
|
||
contaminating them. About forty feet to the left, there are several Falcon 9
|
||
rockets lying next to each other horizontally that have been painted and
|
||
await transport. There are some areas tucked in between all of this that have
|
||
blue walls and appear to have been covered by fabric. These are top-secret
|
||
zones where SpaceX might be working on a fanciful astronaut’s outfit or
|
||
rocket part that it has to hide from visitors and employees not tied to the
|
||
projects. There’s a large area off to the side where SpaceX builds all of its
|
||
electronics, another area for creating specialized composite materials, and
|
||
another for making the bus-sized fairings that wrap around the satellites.
|
||
Hundreds of people move about at the same time through the factory—a
|
||
mix of gritty technicians with tattoos and bandanas, and young, white-collar
|
||
engineers. The sweaty smell of kids who have just come off the playground
|
||
permeates the building and hints at its nonstop activity.
|
||
Musk has left his personal touches throughout the factory. There are
|
||
small things like the data center that has been bathed in blue lights to give it
|
||
a sci-fi feel. The refrigerator-sized computers under the lights have been
|
||
labeled with big block letters to make it look like they were made by
|
||
Cyberdyne Systems, the fictional company from the Terminator movie
|
||
franchise. Near the elevators, Musk has placed a glowing life-size Iron Man
|
||
figure. Surely the factory’s most Muskian element is the office space that
|
||
has been built smack-dab in its center. This is a three-story glass structure
|
||
with meeting rooms and desks that rises up between various welding and
|
||
construction areas. It looks and feels bizarre to have a see-through office
|
||
inside this hive of industry. Musk, though, wanted his engineers to watch
|
||
what was going on with the machines at all times and to make sure they had
|
||
to walk through the factory and talk to the technicians on the way to their
|
||
desks.
|
||
The factory is a temple devoted to what SpaceX sees as its major
|
||
weapon in the rocket-building game, in-house manufacturing. SpaceX
|
||
manufactures between 80 percent and 90 percent of its rockets, engines,
|
||
electronics, and other parts. It’s a strategy that flat-out dumbfounds
|
||
SpaceX’s competitors, like United Launch Alliance, or ULA, which openly
|
||
brags about depending on more than 1,200 suppliers to make its end
|
||
products. (ULA, a partnership between Lockheed Martin and Boeing, sees
|
||
itself as an engine of job creation rather than a model of inefficiency.)
|
||
A typical aerospace company comes up with the list of parts that it
|
||
needs for a launch system and then hands off their design and specifications
|
||
to myriad third parties who then actually build the hardware. SpaceX tends
|
||
to buy as little as possible to save money and because it sees depending on
|
||
suppliers—especially foreign ones—as a weakness. This approach comes
|
||
off as excessive at first blush. Companies have made things like radios and
|
||
power distribution units for decades. Reinventing the wheel for every
|
||
computer and machine on a rocket could introduce more chances for error
|
||
and, in general, be a waste of time. But for SpaceX, the strategy works. In
|
||
addition to building its own engines, rocket bodies, and capsules, SpaceX
|
||
designs its own motherboards and circuits, sensors to detect vibrations,
|
||
flight computers, and solar panels. Just by streamlining a radio, for instance,
|
||
SpaceX’s engineers have found that they can reduce the weight of the
|
||
device by about 20 percent. And the cost savings for a homemade radio are
|
||
dramatic, dropping from between $50,000 to $100,000 for the industrialgrade
|
||
equipment used by aerospace companies to $5,000 for SpaceX’s unit.
|
||
It’s hard to believe these kinds of price differentials at first, but there are
|
||
dozens if not hundreds of places where SpaceX has secured such savings.
|
||
The equipment at SpaceX tends to be built out of readily available
|
||
consumer electronics as opposed to “space grade” equipment used by others
|
||
in the industry. SpaceX has had to work for years to prove to NASA that
|
||
standard electronics have gotten good enough to compete with the more
|
||
expensive, specialized gear trusted in years past. “Traditional aerospace has
|
||
been doing things the same way for a very, very long time,” said Drew
|
||
Eldeen, a former SpaceX engineer. “The biggest challenge was convincing
|
||
NASA to give something new a try and building a paper trail that showed
|
||
the parts were high enough quality.” To prove that it’s making the right
|
||
choice to NASA and itself, SpaceX will sometimes load a rocket with both
|
||
the standard equipment and prototypes of its own design for testing during
|
||
flight. Engineers then compare the performance characteristics of the
|
||
devices. Once a SpaceX design equals or outperforms the commercial
|
||
products, it becomes the de facto hardware.
|
||
There have also been numerous times when SpaceX has done
|
||
pioneering work on advancing very complex hardware systems. A classic
|
||
example of this is one of the factory’s weirder-looking contraptions, a twostory
|
||
machine designed to perform what’s known as friction stir welding.
|
||
The machine allows SpaceX to automate the welding process for massive
|
||
sheets of metal like the ones that make up the bodies of the Falcon rockets.
|
||
An arm takes one of the rocket’s body panels, lines it up against another
|
||
body panel, and then joins them together with a weld that could run twenty
|
||
feet or more. Aerospace companies typically try to avoid welds whenever
|
||
possible because they create weaknesses in the metal, and that’s limited the
|
||
size of metal sheets they can use and forced other design constraints. From
|
||
the early days of SpaceX, Musk pushed the company to master friction stir
|
||
welding, in which a spinning head is smashed at high speeds into the join
|
||
between two pieces of metal in a bid to make their crystalline structures
|
||
merge. It’s as if you heated two sheets of aluminum foil and then joined
|
||
them by putting your thumb down on the seam and twisting the metal
|
||
together. This type of welding tends to result in much stronger bonds than
|
||
traditional welds. Companies had performed friction stir welding before but
|
||
not on structures as large as a rocket’s body or to the degree to which
|
||
SpaceX has used the technique. As a result of its trials and errors, SpaceX
|
||
can now join large, thin sheets of metal and shave hundreds of pounds off
|
||
the weight of the Falcon rockets, as it’s able to use lighter-weight alloys and
|
||
avoid using rivets, fasteners, and other support structures. Musk’s
|
||
competitors in the auto industry might soon need to do the same because
|
||
SpaceX has transferred some of the equipment and techniques to Tesla. The
|
||
hope is that Tesla will be able to make lighter, stronger cars.
|
||
The technology has proven so valuable that SpaceX’s competitors have
|
||
started to copy it and have tried to poach some of the company’s experts in
|
||
the field. Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos’s secretive rocket company, has been
|
||
particularly aggressive, hiring away Ray Miryekta, one of the world’s
|
||
foremost friction stir welding experts and igniting a major rift with Musk.
|
||
“Blue Origin does these surgical strikes on specialized talent* offering like
|
||
double their salaries. I think it’s unnecessary and a bit rude,” Musk said.
|
||
Within SpaceX, Blue Origin is mockingly referred to as BO and at one
|
||
point the company created an e-mail filter to detect messages with “blue”
|
||
and “origin” to block the poaching. The relationship between Musk and
|
||
Bezos has soured, and they no longer chat about their shared ambition of
|
||
getting to Mars. “I do think Bezos has an insatiable desire to be King
|
||
Bezos,” Musk said. “He has a relentless work ethic and wants to kill
|
||
everything in e-commerce. But he’s not the most fun guy, honestly.”*
|
||
In the early days of SpaceX, Musk knew little about the machines and
|
||
amount of grunt work that goes into making rockets. He rebuffed requests
|
||
to buy specialized tooling equipment, until the engineers could explain in
|
||
clear terms why they needed certain things and until experience taught him
|
||
better. Musk also had yet to master some of the management techniques for
|
||
which he would become both famous and to some degree infamous.
|
||
Musk’s growth as a CEO and rocket expert occurred alongside
|
||
SpaceX’s maturation as a company. At the start of the Falcon 1 journey,
|
||
Musk was a forceful software executive trying to learn some basic things
|
||
about a very different world. At Zip2 and PayPal, he felt comfortable
|
||
standing up for his positions and directing teams of coders. At SpaceX, he
|
||
had to pick things up on the job. Musk initially relied on textbooks to form
|
||
the bulk of his rocketry knowledge. But as SpaceX hired one brilliant
|
||
person after another, Musk realized he could tap into their stores of
|
||
knowledge. He would trap an engineer in the SpaceX factory and set to
|
||
work grilling him about a type of valve or specialized material. “I thought at
|
||
first that he was challenging me to see if I knew my stuff,” said Kevin
|
||
Brogan, one of the early engineers. “Then I realized he was trying to learn
|
||
things. He would quiz you until he learned ninety percent of what you
|
||
know.” People who have spent significant time with Musk will attest to his
|
||
abilities to absorb incredible quantities of information with near-flawless
|
||
recall. It’s one of his most impressive and intimidating skills and seems to
|
||
work just as well in the present day as it did when he was a child
|
||
vacuuming books into his brain. After a couple of years running SpaceX,
|
||
Musk had turned into an aerospace expert on a level that few technology
|
||
CEOs ever approach in their respective fields. “He was teaching us about
|
||
the value of time, and we were teaching him about rocketry,” Brogan said.
|
||
In regards to time, Musk may well set more aggressive delivery targets
|
||
for very difficult-to-make products than any executive in history. Both his
|
||
employees and the public have found this to be one of the more jarring
|
||
aspects of Musk’s character. “Elon has always been optimistic,” Brogan
|
||
said. “That’s the nice word. He can be a downright liar about when things
|
||
need to get done. He will pick the most aggressive time schedule
|
||
imaginable assuming everything goes right, and then accelerate it by
|
||
assuming that everyone can work harder.”
|
||
Musk has been pilloried by the press for setting and then missing
|
||
product delivery dates. It’s one of the habits that got him in the most trouble
|
||
as SpaceX and Tesla tried to bring their first products to market. Time and
|
||
again, Musk found himself making a public appearance where he had to
|
||
come up with a new batch of excuses for a delay. Reminded about the initial
|
||
2003 target date to fly the Falcon 1, Musk acted shocked. “Are you
|
||
serious?” he said. “We said that? Okay, that’s ridiculous. I think I just didn’t
|
||
know what the hell I was talking about. The only thing I had prior
|
||
experience in was software, and, yeah, you can write a bunch of software
|
||
and launch a website in a year. No problem. This isn’t like software. It
|
||
doesn’t work that way with rockets.” Musk simply cannot help himself.
|
||
He’s an optimist by nature, and it can feel like he makes calculations for
|
||
how long it will take to do something based on the idea that things will
|
||
progress without flaw at every step and that all the members of his team
|
||
have Muskian abilities and work ethics. As Brogan joked, Musk might
|
||
forecast how long a software project will take by timing the amount of
|
||
seconds needed physically to write a line of code and then extrapolating that
|
||
out to match however many lines of code he expects the final piece of
|
||
software to be. It’s an imperfect analogy but one that does not seem that far
|
||
off from Musk’s worldview. “Everything he does is fast,” Brogan said. “He
|
||
pees fast. It’s like a fire hose—three seconds and out. He’s authentically in a
|
||
hurry.”
|
||
Asked about his approach, Musk said,
|
||
I certainly don’t try to set impossible goals. I think impossible
|
||
goals are demotivating. You don’t want to tell people to go through a
|
||
wall by banging their head against it. I don’t ever set intentionally
|
||
impossible goals. But I’ve certainly always been optimistic on time
|
||
frames. I’m trying to recalibrate to be a little more realistic.
|
||
I don’t assume that it’s just like 100 of me or something like that.
|
||
I mean, in the case of the early SpaceX days, it would have been just
|
||
the lack of understanding of what it takes to develop a rocket. In that
|
||
case I was off by, say, 200 percent. I think future programs might be
|
||
off by anywhere from like 25 percent to 50 percent as opposed to
|
||
200 percent.
|
||
So, I think generally you do want to have a timeline where,
|
||
based on everything you know about, the schedule should be X, and
|
||
you execute towards that, but with the understanding that there will
|
||
be all sorts of things that you don’t know about that you will
|
||
encounter that will push the date beyond that. It doesn’t mean that
|
||
you shouldn’t have tried to aim for that date from the beginning
|
||
because aiming for something else would have been an arbitrary
|
||
time increase.
|
||
It’s different to say, “Well, what do you promise people?”
|
||
Because you want to try to promise people something that includes
|
||
schedule margin. But in order to achieve the external promised
|
||
schedule, you’ve got to have an internal schedule that’s more
|
||
aggressive than that. Sometimes you still miss the external schedule.
|
||
SpaceX, by the way, is not alone here. Being late is par for the
|
||
course in the aerospace industry. It’s not a question of if it’s late, it’s
|
||
how late will the program be. I don’t think an aerospace program
|
||
has been completed on time since bloody World War II.
|
||
Dealing with the epically aggressive schedules and Musk’s expectations
|
||
has required SpaceX’s engineers to develop a variety of survival techniques.
|
||
Musk often asks for highly detailed proposals for how projects will be
|
||
accomplished. The employees have learned never to break the time needed
|
||
to accomplish something down into months or weeks. Musk wants day-byday
|
||
and hour-by-hour forecasts and sometimes even minute-by-minute
|
||
countdowns, and the fallout from missed schedules is severe. “You had to
|
||
put in when you would go to the bathroom,” Brogan said. “I’m like, ‘Elon,
|
||
sometimes people need to take a long dump.’” SpaceX’s top managers work
|
||
together to, in essence, create fake schedules that they know will please
|
||
Musk but that are basically impossible to achieve. This would not be such a
|
||
horrible situation if the targets were kept internal. Musk, however, tends to
|
||
quote these fake schedules to customers, unintentionally giving them false
|
||
hope. Typically, it falls to Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX’s president, to clean
|
||
up the resulting mess. She will either need to ring up a customer to give
|
||
them a more realistic timeline or concoct a litany of excuses to explain
|
||
away the inevitable delays. “Poor Gwynne,” Brogan said. “Just to hear her
|
||
on the phone with the customers is agonizing.”
|
||
There can be no question that Musk has mastered the art of getting the
|
||
most out of his employees. Interview three dozen SpaceX engineers and
|
||
each one of them will have picked up on a managerial nuance that Musk has
|
||
used to get people to meet his deadlines. One example from Brogan: Where
|
||
a typical manager may set the deadline for the employee, Musk guides his
|
||
engineers into taking ownership of their own delivery dates. “He doesn’t
|
||
say, ‘You have to do this by Friday at two P.M.,’” Brogan said. “He says, ‘I
|
||
need the impossible done by Friday at two P.M. Can you do it?’ Then, when
|
||
you say yes, you are not working hard because he told you to. You’re
|
||
working hard for yourself. It’s a distinction you can feel. You have signed
|
||
up to do your own work.” And by recruiting hundreds of bright, selfmotivated
|
||
people, SpaceX has maximized the power of the individual. One
|
||
person putting in a sixteen-hour day ends up being much more effective
|
||
than two people working eight-hour days together. The individual doesn’t
|
||
have to hold meetings, reach a consensus, or bring other people up to speed
|
||
on a project. He just keeps working and working and working. The ideal
|
||
SpaceX employee is someone like Steve Davis, the director of advanced
|
||
projects at SpaceX. “He’s been working sixteen hours a day every day for
|
||
years,” Brogan said. “He gets more done than eleven people working
|
||
together.”
|
||
To find Davis, Musk called a teaching assistant* in Stanford’s
|
||
aeronautics department and asked him if there were any hardworking,
|
||
bright master’s and doctoral candidates who didn’t have families. The TA
|
||
pointed Musk to Davis, who was pursuing a master’s degree in aerospace
|
||
engineering to add to degrees in finance, mechanical engineering, and
|
||
particle physics. Musk called Davis on a Wednesday and offered him a job
|
||
the following Friday. Davis was the twenty-second SpaceX hire and has
|
||
ended up the twelfth most senior person still at the company. He turned
|
||
thirty-five in 2014.
|
||
Davis did his tour of duty on Kwaj and considered it the greatest time of
|
||
his life. “Every night, you could either sleep by the rocket in this tent shelter
|
||
where the geckos crawled all over you or take this one-hour boat ride that
|
||
made you seasick back to the main island,” he said. “Every night, you had
|
||
to pick the pain that you remembered least. You got so hot and exhausted. It
|
||
was just amazing.” After working on the Falcon 1, Davis moved to the
|
||
Falcon 9 and then Dragon.
|
||
The Dragon capsule took SpaceX four years to design. It’s likely the
|
||
fastest project of its ilk done in the history of the aerospace industry. The
|
||
project started with Musk and a handful of engineers, most of them under
|
||
thirty years old, and peaked at one hundred people.* They cribbed from past
|
||
capsule work and read over every paper published by NASA and other
|
||
aeronautics bodies around projects like Gemini and Apollo. “If you go
|
||
search for something like Apollo’s reentry guidance algorithm, there are
|
||
these great databases that will just spit out the answer,” Davis said. The
|
||
engineers at SpaceX then had to figure out how to advance these past efforts
|
||
and bring the capsule into the modern age. Some of the areas of
|
||
improvement were obvious and easily accomplished, while others required
|
||
more ingenuity. Saturn 5 and Apollo had colossal computing bays that
|
||
produced only a fraction of the computer horsepower that can be achieved
|
||
today on, say, an iPad. The SpaceX engineers knew they could save a lot of
|
||
room by cutting out some of the computers while also adding capabilities
|
||
with their more powerful equipment. The engineers decided that while
|
||
Dragon would look a lot like Apollo, it would have steeper wall angles, to
|
||
clear space for gear and for the astronauts that the company hoped to fly.
|
||
SpaceX also got the recipe for its heat shield material, called PICA, through
|
||
a deal with NASA. The SpaceX engineers found out how to make the PICA
|
||
material less expensively and improved the underlying recipe so that
|
||
Dragon—from day one—could withstand the heat of a reentry coming back
|
||
from Mars.* The total cost for Dragon came in at $300 million, which
|
||
would be on the order of 10 to 30 times less than capsule projects built by
|
||
other companies. “The metal comes in, we roll it out, weld it, and make
|
||
things,” Davis said. “We build almost everything in-house. That is why the
|
||
costs have come down.”
|
||
Davis, like Brogan and plenty of other SpaceX engineers, has had Musk
|
||
ask for the seemingly impossible. His favorite request dates back to 2004.
|
||
SpaceX needed an actuator that would trigger the gimbal action used to
|
||
steer the upper stage of Falcon 1. Davis had never built a piece of hardware
|
||
before in his life and naturally went out to find some suppliers who could
|
||
make an electromechanical actuator for him. He got a quote back for
|
||
$120,000. “Elon laughed,” Davis said. “He said, ‘That part is no more
|
||
complicated than a garage door opener. Your budget is five thousand
|
||
dollars. Go make it work.’” Davis spent nine months building the actuator.
|
||
At the end of the process, he toiled for three hours writing an e-mail to
|
||
Musk covering the pros and cons of the device. The e-mail went into gory
|
||
detail about how Davis had designed the part, why he had made various
|
||
choices, and what its cost would be. As he pressed send, Davis felt anxiety
|
||
surge through his body knowing that he’d given his all for almost a year to
|
||
do something an engineer at another aerospace company would not even
|
||
attempt. Musk rewarded all of this toil and angst with one of his standard
|
||
responses. He wrote back, “Ok.” The actuator Davis designed ended up
|
||
costing $3,900 and flew with Falcon 1 into space. “I put every ounce of
|
||
intellectual capital I had into that e-mail and one minute later got that
|
||
simple response,” Davis said. “Everyone in the company was having that
|
||
same experience. One of my favorite things about Elon is his ability to
|
||
make enormous decisions very quickly. That is still how it works today.”
|
||
Kevin Watson can attest to that. He arrived at SpaceX in 2008 after
|
||
spending twenty-four years at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Watson
|
||
worked on a wide variety of projects at JPL, including building and testing
|
||
computing systems that could withstand the harsh conditions of space. JPL
|
||
would typically buy expensive, specially toughened computers, and this
|
||
frustrated Watson. He daydreamed about ways to handcraft much cheaper,
|
||
equally effective computers. While having his job interview with Musk,
|
||
Watson learned that SpaceX needed just this type of thinking. Musk wanted
|
||
the bulk of a rocket’s computing systems to cost no more than $10,000. It
|
||
was an insane figure by aerospace industry standards, where the avionics
|
||
systems for a rocket typically cost well over $10 million. “In traditional
|
||
aerospace, it would cost you more than ten thousand dollars just for the
|
||
food at a meeting to discuss the cost of the avionics,” Watson said.
|
||
During the job interview, Watson promised Musk that he could do the
|
||
improbable and deliver the $10,000 avionics system. He began working on
|
||
making the computers for Dragon right after being hired. The first system
|
||
was called CUCU, pronounced “cuckoo.” This communications box would
|
||
go inside the International Space Station and communicate back with
|
||
Dragon. A number of people at NASA referred to the SpaceX engineers as
|
||
“the guys in the garage” and were cynical about the start-up’s ability to do
|
||
much of anything, including building this type of machine. But SpaceX
|
||
produced the communication computer in record time, and it ended up as
|
||
the first system of its kind to pass NASA’s protocol tests on the first try.
|
||
NASA officials were forced to say “cuckoo” over and over again during
|
||
meetings—a small act of defiance SpaceX had planned all along to torture
|
||
NASA. As the months went on, Watson and other engineers built out the
|
||
complete computing systems for Dragon and then adapted the technology
|
||
for Falcon 9. The result was a fully redundant avionics platform that used a
|
||
mix of off-the-shelf computing gear and products built in-house by SpaceX.
|
||
It cost a bit more than $10,000 but came close to meeting Musk’s goal.
|
||
SpaceX reinvigorated Watson, who had become disenchanted with
|
||
JPL’s acceptance of wasteful spending and bureaucracy. Musk had to sign
|
||
off on every expenditure over $10,000. “It was his money that we were
|
||
spending, and he was keeping an eye on it, as he damn well should,”
|
||
Watson said. “He made sure nothing stupid was happening.” Decisions
|
||
were made quickly during weekly meetings, and the entire company bought
|
||
into them. “It was amazing how fast people would adapt to what came out
|
||
of those meetings,” Watson said. “The entire ship could turn ninety degrees
|
||
instantly. Lockheed Martin could never do anything like that.” Watson
|
||
continued:
|
||
Elon is brilliant. He’s involved in just about everything. He
|
||
understands everything. If he asks you a question, you learn very
|
||
quickly not to go give him a gut reaction. He wants answers that get
|
||
down to the fundamental laws of physics. One thing he understands
|
||
really well is the physics of the rockets. He understands that like
|
||
nobody else. The stuff I have seen him do in his head is crazy. He
|
||
can get in discussions about flying a satellite and whether we can
|
||
make the right orbit and deliver Dragon at the same time and solve
|
||
all these equations in real time. It’s amazing to watch the amount of
|
||
knowledge he has accumulated over the years. I don’t want to be the
|
||
person who ever has to compete with Elon. You might as well leave
|
||
the business and find something else fun to do. He will outmaneuver
|
||
you, outthink you, and out-execute you.
|
||
One of Watson’s top discoveries at SpaceX was the test bed on the third
|
||
floor of the Hawthorne factory. SpaceX has test versions of all the hardware
|
||
and electronics that go into a rocket laid out on metal tables. It has in effect
|
||
replicated the innards of a rocket end to end in order to run thousands of
|
||
flight simulations. Someone “launches” the rocket from a computer and
|
||
then every piece of mechanical and computing hardware is monitored with
|
||
sensors. An engineer can tell a valve to open, then check to see if it opened,
|
||
how quickly it opened, and the level of current running to it. This testing
|
||
apparatus lets SpaceX engineers practice ahead of launches and figure out
|
||
how they would deal with all manner of anomalies. During the actual
|
||
flights, SpaceX has people in the test facility who can replicate errors seen
|
||
on Falcon or Dragon and make adjustments accordingly. SpaceX has made
|
||
numerous changes on the fly with this system. In one case someone spotted
|
||
an error in a software file in the hours right before a launch. SpaceX’s
|
||
engineers changed the file, checked how it affected the test hardware, and,
|
||
when no problems were detected, sent the file to the Falcon 9, waiting on
|
||
the launchpad, all in less than thirty minutes. “NASA wasn’t used to this,”
|
||
Watson said. “If something went wrong with the shuttle, everyone was just
|
||
resigned to waiting three weeks before they could try and launch again.”12
|
||
From time to time, Musk will send out an e-mail to the entire company
|
||
to enforce a new policy or let them know about something that’s bothering
|
||
him. One of the more famous e-mails arrived in May 2010 with the subject
|
||
line: Acronyms Seriously Suck:
|
||
There is a creeping tendency to use made up acronyms at SpaceX.
|
||
Excessive use of made up acronyms is a significant impediment to
|
||
communication and keeping communication good as we grow is
|
||
incredibly important. Individually, a few acronyms here and there
|
||
may not seem so bad, but if a thousand people are making these up,
|
||
over time the result will be a huge glossary that we have to issue to
|
||
new employees. No one can actually remember all these acronyms
|
||
and people don’t want to seem dumb in a meeting, so they just sit
|
||
there in ignorance. This is particularly tough on new employees.
|
||
That needs to stop immediately or I will take drastic action—I
|
||
have given enough warnings over the years. Unless an acronym is
|
||
approved by me, it should not enter the SpaceX glossary. If there is
|
||
an existing acronym that cannot reasonably be justified, it should be
|
||
eliminated, as I have requested in the past.
|
||
For example, there should be no “HTS” [horizontal test stand] or
|
||
“VTS” [vertical test stand] designations for test stands. Those are
|
||
particularly dumb, as they contain unnecessary words. A “stand” at
|
||
our test site is obviously a *test* stand. VTS-3 is four syllables
|
||
compared with “Tripod,” which is two, so the bloody acronym
|
||
version actually takes longer to say than the name!
|
||
The key test for an acronym is to ask whether it helps or hurts
|
||
communication. An acronym that most engineers outside of SpaceX
|
||
already know, such as GUI, is fine to use. It is also ok to make up a
|
||
few acronyms/contractions every now and again, assuming I have
|
||
approved them, eg MVac and M9 instead of Merlin 1C-Vacuum or
|
||
Merlin 1C-Sea Level, but those need to be kept to a minimum.
|
||
This was classic Musk. The e-mail is rough in its tone and yet not really
|
||
unwarranted for a guy who just wants things done as efficiently as possible.
|
||
It obsesses over something that other people might find trivial and yet he
|
||
has a definite point. It’s comical in that Musk wants all acronym approvals
|
||
to run directly through him, but that’s entirely in keeping with the hands-on
|
||
management style that has, mainly, worked well at both SpaceX and Tesla.
|
||
Employees have since dubbed the acronym policy the ASS Rule.
|
||
The guiding principle at SpaceX is to embrace your work and get stuff
|
||
done. People who await guidance or detailed instructions languish. The
|
||
same goes for workers who crave feedback. And the absolute worst thing
|
||
that someone can do is inform Musk that what he’s asking is impossible. An
|
||
employee could be telling Musk that there’s no way to get the cost on
|
||
something like that actuator down to where he wants it or that there is
|
||
simply not enough time to build a part by Musk’s deadline. “Elon will say,
|
||
‘Fine. You’re off the project, and I am now the CEO of the project. I will do
|
||
your job and be CEO of two companies at the same time. I will deliver it,’”
|
||
Brogan said. “What’s crazy is that Elon actually does it. Every time he’s
|
||
fired someone and taken their job, he’s delivered on whatever the project
|
||
was.”
|
||
It is jarring for both parties when the SpaceX culture rubs against more
|
||
bureaucratic bodies like NASA, the U.S. Air Force, and the Federal
|
||
Aviation Administration. The first inklings of these difficulties appeared on
|
||
Kwaj, where government officials sometimes questioned what they saw as
|
||
SpaceX’s cavalier approach to the launch process. There were times when
|
||
SpaceX would want to make a change to its launch procedures and any such
|
||
change would require a pile of paperwork. SpaceX, for example, would
|
||
have written down all the steps needed to replace a filter—put on gloves,
|
||
wear safety goggles, remove a nut—and then want to alter this procedure or
|
||
use a different type of filter. The FAA would need a week to review the new
|
||
process before SpaceX could actually go about changing the filter on the
|
||
rocket, a lag that both the engineers and Musk found ridiculous. On one
|
||
occasion after this type of thing happened, Musk laid into an FAA official
|
||
while on a conference call with members of the SpaceX team and NASA.
|
||
“It got hot and heated, and he berated this guy on a personal level for like
|
||
ten minutes,” Brogan said.
|
||
Musk did not recall this incident but did remember other confrontations
|
||
with the FAA. One time he compiled a list of things an FAA subordinate
|
||
had said during a meeting that Musk found silly and sent the list along to
|
||
the guy’s boss. “And then his dingbat manager sent me this long e-mail
|
||
about how he had been in the shuttle program and in charge of twenty
|
||
launches or something like that and how dare I say that the other guy was
|
||
wrong,” Musk said. “I told him, ‘Not only is he wrong, and let me
|
||
rearticulate the reasons, but you’re wrong, and let me articulate the
|
||
reasons.’ I don’t think he sent me another e-mail after that. We’re trying to
|
||
have a really big impact on the space industry. If the rules are such that you
|
||
can’t make progress, then you have to fight the rules.
|
||
“There is a fundamental problem with regulators. If a regulator agrees to
|
||
change a rule and something bad happens, they could easily lose their
|
||
career. Whereas if they change a rule and something good happens, they
|
||
don’t even get a reward. So, it’s very asymmetric. It’s then very easy to
|
||
understand why regulators resist changing the rules. It’s because there’s a
|
||
big punishment on one side and no reward on the other. How would any
|
||
rational person behave in such a scenario?”
|
||
In the middle of 2009, SpaceX hired Ken Bowersox, a former astronaut,
|
||
as its vice president of astronaut safety and mission assurance. Bowersox fit
|
||
the mold of recruit prized by a classic big aerospace company. He had a
|
||
degree in aerospace engineering from the U.S. Naval Academy, had been a
|
||
test pilot in the air force, and flew on the space shuttle a handful of times.
|
||
Many people within SpaceX saw his arrival at the company as a good thing.
|
||
He was considered a diligent, dignified sort who would provide a second set
|
||
of eyes to many of SpaceX’s procedures, checking to make sure the
|
||
company went about things in a safe, standardized manner. Bowersox ended
|
||
up smack in the middle of the constant pull and push at SpaceX between
|
||
doing things efficiently and agonizing over traditional procedures. He and
|
||
Musk were increasingly at odds as the months passed, and Bowersox started
|
||
to feel as if his opinions were being ignored. During one incident in
|
||
particular, a part made it all the way to the test stand with a major flaw—
|
||
described by one engineer as the equivalent of a coffee cup not having a
|
||
bottom—instead of being caught at the factory. According to observers,
|
||
Bowersox argued that SpaceX should go back and investigate the process
|
||
that led to the mistake and fix its root cause. Musk had already decided that
|
||
he knew the basis of the problem and dismissed Bowersox after a couple of
|
||
years on the job. (Bowersox declined to speak on the record about his time
|
||
at SpaceX.) A number of people inside SpaceX saw the Bowersox incident
|
||
as an example of Musk’s hard-charging manner undermining some muchneeded
|
||
process. Musk had a totally different take on the situation, casting
|
||
Bowersox as not being up to the engineering demands at SpaceX.
|
||
A handful of high-ranking government officials gave me their candid
|
||
takes on Musk, albeit without being willing to put their names to the
|
||
remarks. One found Musk’s treatment of air force generals and military men
|
||
of similar rank appalling. Musk has been known to let even high-ranking
|
||
officials have it when he thinks they’re off base and is not apologetic about
|
||
this. Another could not believe it when Musk would call very intelligent
|
||
people idiots. “Imagine the worst possible way that could come out, and it
|
||
would come out,” this person said. “Life with Elon is like being in a very
|
||
intimate married couple. He can be so gentle and loyal and then really hard
|
||
on people when it isn’t necessary.” One former official felt that Musk would
|
||
need to temper himself better in the years to come if SpaceX was to keep
|
||
currying favor with the military and government agencies in its bid to defeat
|
||
the incumbent contractors. “His biggest enemy will be himself and the way
|
||
he treats people,” this person said.
|
||
When Musk rubs outsiders the wrong way, Shotwell is often there to try
|
||
to smooth over the situation. Like Musk, she has a salty tongue and a fiery
|
||
personality, but Shotwell is willing to play the role of the conciliator. These
|
||
skills have allowed her to handle the day-to-day operations at SpaceX,
|
||
leaving Musk to focus on the company’s overall strategy, the product
|
||
designs, marketing, and motivating employees. Like all of Musk’s most
|
||
trusted lieutenants, Shotwell has been willing to stay largely in the
|
||
background, do her work, and focus on the company’s cause.
|
||
Shotwell grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, the daughter of an artist
|
||
(mom) and a neurosurgeon (dad). She played the part of a bright, pretty girl,
|
||
getting straight A’s at school and joining the cheerleading squad. Shotwell
|
||
had not expressed a major inclination toward the sciences and knew only
|
||
one version of an engineer—the guy who drives a train. But there were
|
||
clues that she was wired a bit different. She was the daughter who mowed
|
||
the lawn and helped put the family basketball hoop together. In third grade,
|
||
Shotwell developed a brief interest in car engines, and her mom bought a
|
||
book detailing how they work. Later, in high school, Shotwell’s mom
|
||
forced her to attend a lecture at the Illinois Institute of Technology on a
|
||
Saturday afternoon. As Shotwell listened to one of the panels, she grew
|
||
enamored with a fifty-year-old mechanical engineer. “She had these
|
||
beautiful clothes, this suit and shoes that I loved,” Shotwell said. “She was
|
||
tall and carried off the heels really well.” Shotwell chatted with the engineer
|
||
after the talk, learning about her job. “That was the day I decided to become
|
||
a mechanical engineer,” she said.
|
||
Shotwell went on to receive an undergraduate degree in mechanical
|
||
engineering and a master’s degree in applied mathematics from
|
||
Northwestern University. Then she took a job at Chrysler. It was a type of
|
||
management training program meant for hotshot recent graduates who
|
||
appeared to have leadership potential. Shotwell started out going to auto
|
||
mechanics school—“I loved that”—and then from department to
|
||
department. While working on engines research, Shotwell found that there
|
||
were two very expensive Cray supercomputers sitting idle because none of
|
||
the veterans knew how to use them. A short while later, she logged onto the
|
||
computers and set them up to run computational fluid dynamics, or CFD,
|
||
operations to simulate the performance of valves and other components.
|
||
The work kept Shotwell interested, but the environment started to grate on
|
||
her. There were rules for everything, including lots of union regulations
|
||
around who could operate certain machines. “I picked up a tool once, and
|
||
got written up,” she said. “Then I opened a bottle of liquid nitrogen and got
|
||
written up. I started thinking that the job was not what I had anticipated it
|
||
would be.”
|
||
Shotwell pulled out of the Chrysler training program, regrouped at
|
||
home, and then briefly pursued her doctorate in applied mathematics. While
|
||
back on the Northwestern campus, one of her professors mentioned an
|
||
opportunity at the Aerospace Corporation. Anything but a household name,
|
||
Aerospace Corporation has been headquartered in El Segundo since 1960,
|
||
serving as a kind of neutral, nonprofit organization that advises the air
|
||
force, NASA, and other federal bodies on space programs. The company
|
||
has a bureaucratic feel but has proved very useful over the years with its
|
||
research activities and ability to champion and nix costly endeavors.
|
||
Shotwell started at Aerospace in October 1988 and worked on a wide range
|
||
of projects. One job required her to develop a thermal model that depicted
|
||
how temperature fluctuations in the space shuttle’s cargo bay affected the
|
||
performance of equipment on various payloads. She spent ten years at
|
||
Aerospace and honed her skills as a systems engineer. By the end, though,
|
||
Shotwell had become irritated by the pace of the industry. “I didn’t
|
||
understand why it had to take fifteen years to make a military satellite,” she
|
||
said. “You could see my interest was waning.”
|
||
For the next four years, Shotwell worked at Microcosm, a space start-up
|
||
just down the road from the Aerospace Corporation, and became the head
|
||
of its space systems division and business development. Boasting a
|
||
combination of smarts, confidence, direct talk, and good looks, Shotwell
|
||
developed a reputation as a strong saleswoman. In 2002, one of her
|
||
coworkers, Hans Koenigsmann, left for SpaceX. Shotwell took
|
||
Koenigsmann out for a going-away lunch and dropped him off at SpaceX’s
|
||
then rinky-dink headquarters. “Hans told me to go in and meet Elon,”
|
||
Shotwell said. “I did, and that’s when I told him, ‘You need a good business
|
||
development person.’” The next day Mary Beth Brown called Shotwell and
|
||
told her that Musk wanted to interview her for the new vice president of
|
||
business development position. Shotwell ended up as employee No. 7. “I
|
||
gave three weeks’ notice at Microcosm and remodeled my bathroom
|
||
because I knew I would not have a life after taking the job,” she said.
|
||
Through the early years of SpaceX, Shotwell pulled off the miraculous
|
||
feat of selling something the company did not have. It took SpaceX so
|
||
much longer than it had planned to have a successful flight. The failures
|
||
along the way were embarrassing and bad for business. Nonetheless,
|
||
Shotwell managed to sell about a dozen flights to a mix of government and
|
||
commercial customers before SpaceX put its first Falcon 1 into orbit. Her
|
||
deal-making skills extended to negotiating the big-ticket contracts with
|
||
NASA that kept SpaceX alive during its leanest years, including a $278
|
||
million contract in August 2006 to begin work on vehicles that could ferry
|
||
supplies to the ISS. Shotwell’s track record of success turned her into
|
||
Musk’s ultimate confidante at SpaceX, and at the end of 2008, she became
|
||
president and chief operating officer at the company.
|
||
Part of Shotwell’s duties include reinforcing the SpaceX culture as the
|
||
company grows larger and larger and starts to resemble the traditional
|
||
aerospace giants that it likes to mock. Shotwell can switch on an easygoing,
|
||
affable air and address the entire company during a meeting or convince a
|
||
collection of possible recruits why they should sign up to be worked to the
|
||
bone. During one such meeting with a group of interns, Shotwell pulled
|
||
about a hundred people into the corner of the cafeteria. She wore high-heel
|
||
black boots, skintight jeans, a tan jacket, and a scarf and had big hoop
|
||
earnings dangling beside her shoulder-length blond hair. Pacing back and
|
||
forth in front of the group with a microphone in hand, she asked them to
|
||
announce what school they came from and what project they were working
|
||
on while at SpaceX. One student went to Cornell and worked on Dragon,
|
||
another went to USC and did propulsion system design, and another went to
|
||
the University of Illinois and worked with the aerodynamics group. It took
|
||
about thirty minutes to make it all the way around the room, and the
|
||
students were, at least by academic pedigree and bright-eyed enthusiasm,
|
||
among the most impressive youngsters in the world. The students peppered
|
||
Shotwell with questions—her best moment, her advice for being successful,
|
||
SpaceX’s competitive threats—and she replied with a mix of earnest
|
||
answers and rah-rah stuff. Shotwell made sure to emphasize the lean,
|
||
innovative edge SpaceX has over the more traditional aerospace companies.
|
||
“Our competitors are scared shitless of us,” Shotwell told the group. “The
|
||
behemoths are going to have to figure out how to get it together and
|
||
compete. And it is our job to have them die.”
|
||
One of SpaceX’s biggest goals, Shotwell said, was to fly as often as
|
||
possible. The company has never sought to make a fortune off each flight. It
|
||
would rather make a little on each launch and keep the flights flowing. A
|
||
Falcon 9 flight costs $60 million, and the company would like to see that
|
||
figure drop to about $20 million through economies of scale and
|
||
improvements in launch technology. SpaceX spent $2.5 billion to get four
|
||
Dragon capsules to the ISS, nine flights with the Falcon 9, and five flights
|
||
with the Falcon 1. It’s a price-per-launch total that the rest of the players in
|
||
the industry cannot comprehend let alone aspire to. “I don’t know what
|
||
those guys do with their money,” Shotwell said. “They are smoking it. I just
|
||
don’t know.” As Shotwell saw it, a number of new nations were showing
|
||
interest in launches, eyeing communications technology as essential to
|
||
growing their economies and leveling their status with developed nations.
|
||
Cheaper flights would help SpaceX take the majority of the business from
|
||
that new customer set. The company also expected to participate in an
|
||
expanding market for human flights. SpaceX has never had any interest in
|
||
doing the five-minute tourist flights to low Earth orbit like Virgin Galactic
|
||
and XCOR. It does, however, have the ability to carry researchers to
|
||
orbiting habitats being built by Bigelow Aerospace and to orbiting science
|
||
labs being constructed by various countries. SpaceX will also start making
|
||
its own satellites, turning the company into a one-stop space shop. All of
|
||
these plans hinge on SpaceX being able to prove that it can fly on schedule
|
||
every month and churn through the $5 billion backlog of launches. “Most of
|
||
our customers signed up early and wanted to be supportive and got good
|
||
deals on their missions,” she said. “We are in a phase now where we need to
|
||
launch on time and make launching Dragons more efficient.”
|
||
For a short while, the conversation with the interns bogged down. It
|
||
turned to some of the annoyances of SpaceX’s campus. The company leases
|
||
its facility and has not been able to build things like a massive parking
|
||
structure that would make life easier for its three-thousand-person
|
||
workforce. Shotwell promised that more parking, more bathrooms, and
|
||
more of the freebies that technology start-ups in Silicon Valley offer their
|
||
employees would be on the way. “I want a day care,” she said.
|
||
But it was while discussing SpaceX’s grandest missions that Shotwell
|
||
really came into her own and seemed to inspire the interns. Some of them
|
||
clearly dreamed of becoming astronauts, and Shotwell said that working at
|
||
SpaceX was almost certainly their best chance to get to space now that
|
||
NASA’s astronaut corps had dwindled. Musk had made designing coollooking,
|
||
“non–Stay Puft” spacesuits a personal priority. “They can’t be
|
||
clunky and nasty,” Shotwell said. “You have to do better than that.” As for
|
||
where the astronauts would go: well, there were the space habitats, the
|
||
moon, and, of course, Mars as options. SpaceX has already started testing a
|
||
giant rocket, called the Falcon Heavy, that will take it much farther into
|
||
space than the Falcon 9, and it has another, even larger spaceship on the
|
||
way. “Our Falcon Heavy rocket will not take a busload of people to Mars,”
|
||
she said. “So, there’s something after Heavy. We’re working on it.” To
|
||
make something like that vehicle happen, she said, the SpaceX employees
|
||
needed to be effective and pushy. “Make sure your output is high,” Shotwell
|
||
said. “If we’re throwing a bunch of shit in your way, you need to be mouthy
|
||
about it. That’s not a quality that’s widely accepted elsewhere, but it is at
|
||
SpaceX.” And, if that sounded harsh, so be it. As Shotwell saw it, the
|
||
commercial space race was coming down to SpaceX and China and that’s it.
|
||
And in the bigger picture, the race was on to ensure man’s survival. “If you
|
||
hate people and think human extinction is okay, then fuck it,” Shotwell said.
|
||
“Don’t go to space. If you think it is worth humans doing some risk
|
||
management and finding a second place to go live, then you should be
|
||
focused on this issue and willing to spend some money. I am pretty sure we
|
||
will be selected by NASA to drop landers and rovers off on Mars. Then the
|
||
first SpaceX mission will be to drop off a bunch of supplies, so that once
|
||
people get there, there will be places to live and food to eat and stuff for
|
||
them to do.”
|
||
It’s talk like this that thrills and amazes people in the aerospace industry,
|
||
who have long been hoping that some company would come along and truly
|
||
revolutionize space travel. Aeronautics experts will point out that twenty
|
||
years after the Wright brothers started their experiments, air travel had
|
||
become routine. The launch business, by contrast, appears to have frozen.
|
||
We’ve been to the moon, sent research vehicles to Mars, and explored the
|
||
solar system, but all of these things are still immensely expensive one-off
|
||
projects. “The cost remains extraordinarily high because of the rocket
|
||
equation,” said Carol Stoker, the planetary scientist at NASA. Thanks to
|
||
military and government contracts from agencies like NASA, the aerospace
|
||
industry has historically had massive budgets to work with and tried to
|
||
make the biggest, most reliable machines it could. The business has been
|
||
tuned to strive for maximum performance, so that the aerospace contractors
|
||
can say they met their requirements. That strategy makes sense if you’re
|
||
trying to send up a $1 billion military satellite for the U.S. government and
|
||
simply cannot afford for the payload to blow up. But on the whole, this
|
||
approach stifles the pursuit of other endeavors. It leads to bloat and excess
|
||
and a crippling of the commercial space industry.
|
||
Outside of SpaceX, the American launch providers are no longer
|
||
competitive against their peers in other countries. They have limited launch
|
||
abilities and questionable ambition. SpaceX’s main competitor for domestic
|
||
military satellites and other large payloads is United Launch Alliance
|
||
(ULA), a joint venture formed in 2006 when Boeing and Lockheed Martin
|
||
combined forces. The thinking at the time about the union was that the
|
||
government did not have enough business for two companies and that
|
||
combining the research and manufacturing work of Boeing and Lockheed
|
||
would result in cheaper, safer launches. ULA has leaned on decades of work
|
||
around the Delta (Boeing) and Atlas (Lockheed) launch vehicles and has
|
||
flown many dozens of rockets successfully, making it a model of reliability.
|
||
But neither the joint venture nor Boeing nor Lockheed, both of which can
|
||
offer commercial services on their own, come close to competing on price
|
||
against SpaceX, the Russians, or the Chinese. “For the most part, the global
|
||
commercial market is dominated by Arianespace [Europe], Long March
|
||
[China] or Russian vehicles,” said Dave Bearden, the general manager of
|
||
civil and commercial programs at the Aerospace Corporation. “There are
|
||
just different labor rates and differences in the way they are built.”
|
||
To put things more bluntly, ULA has turned into an embarrassment for
|
||
the United States. In March 2014, ULA’s then CEO, Michael Gass, faced
|
||
off against Musk during a congressional hearing that dealt, in part, with
|
||
SpaceX’s request to take on more of the government’s annual launch load.
|
||
A series of slides were rolled out that showed how the government
|
||
payments for launches have skyrocketed since Boeing and Lockheed went
|
||
from a duopoly to a monopoly. According to Musk’s math presented at the
|
||
hearing, ULA charged $380 million per flight, while SpaceX would charge
|
||
$90 million per flight. (The $90 million figure was higher than SpaceX’s
|
||
standard $60 million because the government has certain additional
|
||
requirements for particularly sensitive launches.) By simply picking
|
||
SpaceX as its launch provider, Musk pointed out, the government would
|
||
save enough money to pay for the satellite going on the rocket. Gass had no
|
||
real retort. He claimed Musk’s figures for the ULA launch price were
|
||
inaccurate but failed to provide a figure of his own. The hearing also came
|
||
as tensions between the United States and Russia were running high due to
|
||
Russia’s aggressive actions in Ukraine. Musk rightly noted that the United
|
||
States could soon be placing sanctions on Russia that could carry over to
|
||
aerospace equipment. ULA, as it happens, relies on Russian-made engines
|
||
to send up sensitive U.S. military equipment in its Atlas V rockets. “Our
|
||
Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launch vehicles are truly American,” Musk
|
||
said. “We design and manufacture our rockets in California and Texas.”
|
||
Gass countered that ULA had bought a two-year supply of Russian engines
|
||
and purchased the blueprints to the machines and had them translated from
|
||
Russian to English, and he said this with a straight face. (A few months
|
||
after the hearing, ULA replaced Gass as CEO and signed a deal with Blue
|
||
Origin to develop American-made rockets.)
|
||
Some of the most disheartening moments of the hearing arrived when
|
||
Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama took the microphone for questioning.
|
||
ULA has manufacturing facilities in Alabama and close ties to the senator.
|
||
Shelby felt compelled to play the role of hometown booster by repeatedly
|
||
pointing out that ULA had enjoyed sixty-eight successful launches and then
|
||
asking Musk what he made of that accomplishment. The aerospace industry
|
||
stands as one of Shelby’s biggest donors and he’s ended up surprisingly probureaucracy
|
||
and anticompetition when it comes to getting things into space.
|
||
“Typically competition results in better quality and lower-priced contracts
|
||
—but the launch market is not typical,” Shelby said. “It is limited demand
|
||
framed by government-industrial policies.” The March hearing in which
|
||
Shelby made these statements would turn out to be something of a sham.
|
||
The government had agreed to put fourteen of its sensitive launches up for
|
||
bid instead of just awarding them directly to ULA. Musk had come to
|
||
Congress to present his case for why SpaceX made sense as a viable
|
||
candidate for those and other launches. The day after the hearing, the air
|
||
force cut the number of launches up for bid from fourteen to between seven
|
||
and one. One month later, SpaceX filed a lawsuit against the air force
|
||
asking for a chance to earn its launch business. “SpaceX is not seeking to be
|
||
awarded contracts for these launches,” the company said on its
|
||
freedomtolaunch.com website. “We are simply seeking the right to
|
||
compete.”*
|
||
SpaceX’s main competitor for ISS resupply missions and commercial
|
||
satellites in the United States is Orbital Sciences Corporation. Founded in
|
||
Virginia in 1982, the company started out not unlike SpaceX, as the new kid
|
||
that raised outside funding and focused on putting smaller satellites into
|
||
low-Earth orbit. Orbital is more experienced, although it has a limited roster
|
||
of machine types. Orbital depends on suppliers, including Russian and
|
||
Ukrainian companies, for its engines and rocket bodies, making it more of
|
||
an assembler of spacecraft than a true builder like SpaceX. And, also unlike
|
||
SpaceX, Orbital’s capsules cannot withstand the journey back from the ISS
|
||
to Earth, so it’s unable to return experiments and other goods. In October
|
||
2014, one of Orbital’s rockets blew up on the launchpad. With its ability to
|
||
launch on hold while it investigated the incident, Orbital reached out to
|
||
SpaceX for help. It wanted to see if Musk had any extra capacity to take
|
||
care of some of Orbital’s customers. The company also signaled that it
|
||
would move away from using Russian engines as well.
|
||
As for getting humans to space, SpaceX and Boeing were the victors in
|
||
a four-year NASA competition to fly astronauts to the ISS. SpaceX will get
|
||
$2.6 billion, and Boeing will get $4.2 billion to develop their capsules and
|
||
ferry people to the ISS by 2017. The companies would, in effect, be
|
||
replacing the space shuttle and restoring the United States’ ability to
|
||
conduct manned flights. “I actually don’t mind that Boeing gets twice as
|
||
much money for meeting the same NASA requirements as SpaceX with
|
||
worse technology,” Musk said. “Having two companies involved is better
|
||
for the advancement of human spaceflight.”
|
||
SpaceX had once looked like it too would be a one-trick pony. The
|
||
company’s original plans were to have the smallish Falcon 1 function as its
|
||
primary workhorse. At $6 million to $12 million per flight, the Falcon 1
|
||
was by far the cheapest means of getting something into orbit, thrilling
|
||
people in the space industry. When Google announced its Lunar X Prize in
|
||
2007—$30 million in awards to people who could land a robot on the moon
|
||
—many of the proposals that followed selected the Falcon 1 as their
|
||
preferred launch vehicle because it seemed like the only reasonably priced
|
||
option for getting something to the moon. Scientists around the world were
|
||
equally excited, thinking that for the first time they had a means of placing
|
||
experiments into orbit in a cost-effective way. But for all the enthusiastic
|
||
talk about the Falcon 1, the demand never arrived. “It became very clear
|
||
that there was a huge need for the Falcon 1 but no money for it,” said
|
||
Shotwell. “The market has to be able to sustain a certain amount of
|
||
vehicles, and three Falcon 1s per year does not make a business.” The last
|
||
Falcon 1 launch took place in July 2009 from Kwajalein, when SpaceX
|
||
carried a satellite into orbit for the Malaysian government. People in the
|
||
aerospace industry have been grumbling ever since. “We gave Falcon 1 a
|
||
hell of a shot,” Shotwell said. “I was emotional about it and disappointed.
|
||
I’d anticipated a flood of orders but, after eight years, they just did not
|
||
come.”
|
||
SpaceX has since expanded its launch capabilities at a remarkable pace
|
||
and looks like it might be on the verge of getting that $12 million per flight
|
||
option back. In June 2010, the Falcon 9 flew for the first time and orbited
|
||
Earth successfully. In December 2010, SpaceX proved that the Falcon 9
|
||
could carry the Dragon capsule into space and that the capsule could be
|
||
recovered safely after an ocean landing.* It became the first commercial
|
||
company ever to pull off this feat. Then, in May 2012, SpaceX went
|
||
through the most significant moment in the company’s history since that
|
||
first successful launch on Kwajalein.
|
||
On May 22, at 3:44 A.M., a Falcon 9 rocket took off from the Kennedy
|
||
Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The rocket did its yeoman-like
|
||
work boosting Dragon into space. Then the capsule’s solar panels fanned
|
||
out and Dragon became dependent on its eighteen Draco thrusters, or small
|
||
rocket engines, to guide its path to the International Space Station. The
|
||
SpaceX engineers worked in shifts—some of them sleeping on cots at the
|
||
factory—as it took the capsule three days for Dragon to make its journey.
|
||
They spent most of the time observing Dragon’s flight and checking to see
|
||
that its sensor systems were picking up the ISS. Originally, Dragon planned
|
||
to dock with the ISS around 4 A.M. on the twenty-fifth, but as the capsule
|
||
approached the space station, an unexpected glint kept throwing off the
|
||
calculations of a laser used to measure the distance between Dragon and the
|
||
ISS. “I remember it being two and a half hours of struggle,” Shotwell said.
|
||
Her outfit of Uggs, a fishnet sweater, and leggings started to feel like
|
||
pajamas as the night wore on, and the engineers battled this unplanned
|
||
difficulty. Fearing all the time that the mission would be aborted, SpaceX
|
||
decided to upload some new software to the Dragon that would cut the size
|
||
of the visual frame used by the sensors to eliminate the effect of the sunlight
|
||
on the machine. Then, just before 7 A.M., Dragon got close enough to the
|
||
ISS for Don Pettit, an astronaut, to use a fifty-eight-foot robotic arm to
|
||
reach out and grab the resupply capsule. “Houston, Station, it looks like
|
||
we’ve got us a dragon by the tail,” Pettit said.13
|
||
“I’d been digesting my guts,” Shotwell said. “And then I am drinking
|
||
champagne at six in the morning.” About thirty people were in the control
|
||
room when the docking happened. Over the next couple of hours, workers
|
||
streamed into the SpaceX factory to soak up the elation of the moment.
|
||
SpaceX had set another first, as the only private company to dock with the
|
||
ISS. A couple of months later SpaceX received $440 million from NASA to
|
||
keep developing Dragon so that it could transport people. “Elon is changing
|
||
the way aerospace business is done,” said NASA’s Stoker. “He’s managed
|
||
to keep the safety factor up while cutting costs. He’s just taken the best
|
||
things from the tech industry like the open-floor office plans and having
|
||
everyone talking and all this human interaction. It’s a very different way to
|
||
most of the aerospace industry, which is designed to produce requirements
|
||
documents and project reviews.”
|
||
In May 2014, Musk invited the press to SpaceX’s headquarters to
|
||
demonstrate what some of that NASA money had bought. He unveiled the
|
||
Dragon V2, or version two, spacecraft. Unlike most executives, who like to
|
||
show their products off at trade shows or daytime events, Musk prefers to
|
||
hold true Hollywood-style galas in the evenings. People arrived in
|
||
Hawthorne by the hundreds and snacked on hors d’oeuvres until the 7:30
|
||
P.M. showing. Musk appeared wearing a purplish velvet jacket and popping
|
||
open the capsule’s door with a bump of his fist like the Fonz. What he
|
||
revealed was spectacular. The cramped quarters of past capsules were gone.
|
||
There were seven thin, sturdy, contoured seats arranged with four seats
|
||
close to the main console and a row of three seats in the back. Musk walked
|
||
around in the capsule to show how roomy it was and then plopped down in
|
||
the central captain’s chair. He reached up and unlocked a four-paneled flatscreen
|
||
console that gracefully slid down right in front of the first row of
|
||
seats.* In the middle of the console was a joystick for flying the aircraft and
|
||
some physical buttons for essential functions that astronauts could press in
|
||
case of an emergency or a malfunctioning touch-screen. The inside of the
|
||
capsule had a bright, metallic finish. Someone had finally built a spaceship
|
||
worthy of scientist and moviemaker dreams.
|
||
There was substance to go with the style. The Dragon 2 will be able to
|
||
dock with the ISS and other space habitats automatically without needing
|
||
the intervention of a robotic arm. It will run on a SuperDraco engine—a
|
||
thruster made by SpaceX and the first engine ever built completely by a 3-D
|
||
printer to go into space. This means that a machine guided by a computer
|
||
formed the engine out of single piece of metal—in this case the highstrength
|
||
alloy Inconel—so that its strength and performance should exceed
|
||
anything built by humans by welding various parts together. And most
|
||
mind-boggling of all, Musk revealed that the Dragon 2 will be able to land
|
||
anywhere on Earth that SpaceX wants by using the SuperDraco engines and
|
||
thrusters to come to a gentle stop on the ground. No more landings at sea.
|
||
No more throwing spaceships away. “That is how a twenty-first-century
|
||
spaceship should land,” Musk said. “You can just reload propellant and fly
|
||
again. So long as we continue to throw away rockets and spacecraft, we will
|
||
never have true access to space.”
|
||
The Dragon 2 is just one of the machines that SpaceX continues to
|
||
develop in parallel. One of the company’s next milestones will be the first
|
||
flight of the Falcon Heavy, which is designed to be the world’s most
|
||
powerful rocket.* SpaceX has found a way to combine three Falcon 9s into
|
||
a single craft with 27 of the Merlin engines and the ability to carry more
|
||
than 53 metric tons of stuff into orbit. Part of the genius of Musk and
|
||
Mueller’s designs is that SpaceX can reuse the same engine in different
|
||
configurations—from the Falcon 1 up to the Falcon Heavy—saving on cost
|
||
and time. “We make our main combustion chambers, turbo pump, gas
|
||
generators, injectors, and main valves,” Mueller said. “We have complete
|
||
control. We have our own test site, while most of the other guys use
|
||
government test sites. The labor hours are cut in half and so is the work
|
||
around the materials. Four years ago, we could make two rockets a year and
|
||
now we can make twenty a year.” SpaceX boasts that the Falcon Heavy can
|
||
take up twice the payload of the nearest competitor—the Delta IV Heavy
|
||
from Boeing/ULA—at one-third the cost. SpaceX is also busy building a
|
||
spaceport from the ground up. The goal is to be able to launch many rockets
|
||
an hour from this facility located in Brownsville, Texas, by automating the
|
||
processes needed to stand a rocket up on the pad, fuel it, and send it off.
|
||
Just as it did in the early days, SpaceX continues to experiment with
|
||
these new vehicles during actual launches in ways that other companies
|
||
would dare not do. SpaceX will often announce that it’s trying out a new
|
||
engine or its landing legs and place the emphasis on that one upgrade in the
|
||
marketing material leading up to a launch. It’s common, though, for SpaceX
|
||
to test out a dozen other objectives in secret during a mission. Musk
|
||
essentially asks employees to do the impossible on top of the impossible.
|
||
One former SpaceX executive described the working atmosphere as a
|
||
perpetual-motion machine that runs on a weird mix of dissatisfaction and
|
||
eternal hope. “It’s like he has everyone working on this car that is meant to
|
||
get from Los Angeles to New York on one tank of gas,” this executive said.
|
||
“They will work on the car for a year and test all of its parts. Then, when
|
||
they set off for New York after that year, all of the vice presidents think
|
||
privately that the car will be lucky to get to Las Vegas. What ends up
|
||
happening is that the car gets to New Mexico—twice as far as they ever
|
||
expected—and Elon is still mad. He gets twice as much as anyone else out
|
||
of people.”
|
||
There’s a degree to which it’s just never enough for Musk, no matter
|
||
what it is. Case in point: the December 2010 launch in which SpaceX got
|
||
the Dragon capsule to orbit Earth and return successfully. This had been one
|
||
of the company’s great achievements, and people had worked tirelessly for
|
||
months, if not years. The launch had taken place on December 8, and
|
||
SpaceX had a Christmas party on December 16. About ninety minutes
|
||
before the party started, Musk had called his top executives to SpaceX for a
|
||
meeting. Six of them, including Mueller, were decked out in party attire and
|
||
ready to celebrate the holidays and SpaceX’s historic achievement around
|
||
Dragon. Musk laid into them for about an hour because the truss structure
|
||
for a future rocket was running behind schedule. “Their wives were sitting
|
||
three cubes over waiting for the berating to end,” Brogan said. Other
|
||
examples of similar behavior have cropped up from time to time. Musk, for
|
||
example, rewarded a group of thirty employees who had pulled off a tough
|
||
project for NASA with bonuses that consisted of additional stock option
|
||
grants. Many of the employees, seeking instant, more tangible gratification,
|
||
demanded cash. “He chided us for not valuing the stock,” Drew Eldeen, a
|
||
former engineer, said. “He said, ‘In the long run, this is worth a lot more
|
||
than a thousand dollars in cash.’ He wasn’t screaming or anything like that,
|
||
but he seemed disappointed in us. It was hard to hear that.”
|
||
The lingering question for many SpaceX employees is when exactly
|
||
they will see a big reward for all their work. SpaceX’s staff is paid well but
|
||
by no means exorbitantly. Many of them expect to make their money when
|
||
SpaceX files for an initial public offering. The thing is that Musk does not
|
||
want to go public anytime soon, and understandably so. It’s a bit hard to
|
||
explain the whole Mars thing to investors, when it’s unclear what the
|
||
business model around starting a colony on another planet will be. When
|
||
the employees heard Musk say that an IPO was years away and would not
|
||
occur until the Mars mission looked more secure, they started to grumble,
|
||
and when Musk found out, he addressed all of SpaceX in an e-mail that is a
|
||
fantastic window into his thinking and how it differs from almost every
|
||
other CEO’s. (The full e-mail appears in Appendix 3.)
|
||
June 7, 2013
|
||
Going Public
|
||
Per my recent comments, I am increasingly concerned about
|
||
SpaceX going public before the Mars transport system is in place.
|
||
Creating the technology needed to establish life on Mars is and
|
||
always has been the fundamental goal of SpaceX. If being a public
|
||
company diminishes that likelihood, then we should not do so until
|
||
Mars is secure. This is something that I am open to reconsidering,
|
||
but, given my experiences with Tesla and SolarCity, I am hesitant to
|
||
foist being public on SpaceX, especially given the long term nature
|
||
of our mission.
|
||
Some at SpaceX who have not been through a public company
|
||
experience may think that being public is desirable. This is not so.
|
||
Public company stocks, particularly if big step changes in
|
||
technology are involved, go through extreme volatility, both for
|
||
reasons of internal execution and for reasons that have nothing to do
|
||
with anything except the economy. This causes people to be
|
||
distracted by the manic-depressive nature of the stock instead of
|
||
creating great products.
|
||
For those who are under the impression that they are so clever
|
||
that they can outsmart public market investors and would sell
|
||
SpaceX stock at the “right time,” let me relieve you of any such
|
||
notion. If you really are better than most hedge fund managers, then
|
||
there is no need to worry about the value of your SpaceX stock, as
|
||
you can just invest in other public company stocks and make
|
||
billions of dollars in the market.
|
||
Elon
|
||
10
|
||
THE REVENGE OF THE ELECTRIC CAR
|
||
THERE ARE SO MANY TELEVISION COMMERCIALS FOR CARS
|
||
AND TRUCKS that it’s easy to become immune to them and ignore what’s
|
||
taking place in the ads. That’s okay. Because there’s not really much of note
|
||
happening. Carmakers looking to put a modicum of effort into their ads
|
||
have been hawking the exact same things for decades: a car with a bit more
|
||
room, a few extra miles per gallon, better handling, or an extra cup holder.
|
||
Those that can’t find anything interesting at all to tout about their cars turn
|
||
to scantily clad women, men with British accents, and, when necessary,
|
||
dancing mice in tuxedos to try and convince people that their products are
|
||
better than the rest. Next time a car ad appears on your television, pause for
|
||
a moment and really listen to what’s being said. When you realize that the
|
||
Volkswagen sign-and-drive “event” is code for “we’re making the
|
||
experience of buying a car slightly less miserable than usual,” you’ll start to
|
||
appreciate just how low the automotive industry has sunk.
|
||
In the middle of 2012, Tesla Motors stunned its complacent peers in the
|
||
automotive industry. It began shipping the Model S sedan. This all-electric
|
||
luxury vehicle could go more than 300 miles on a single charge. It could
|
||
reach 60 miles per hour in 4.2 seconds. It could seat seven people, if you
|
||
used a couple of optional rear-facing seats in the back for kids. It also had
|
||
two trunks. There was the standard one and then what Tesla calls a “frunk”
|
||
up front, where the bulky engine would usually be. The Model S ran on an
|
||
electric battery pack that makes up the base of the car and a watermelonsized
|
||
electric motor located between the rear tires. Getting rid of the engine
|
||
and its din of clanging machinery also meant that the Model S ran silently.
|
||
The Model S outclassed most other luxury sedans in terms of raw speed,
|
||
mileage, handling, and storage space.
|
||
And there was more—like a cutesy thing with the door handles, which
|
||
were flush with the car’s body until the driver got close to the Model S.
|
||
Then the silver handles would pop out, the driver would open the door and
|
||
get in, and the handles would retract flush with the car’s body again. Once
|
||
inside, the driver encountered a seventeen-inch touch-screen that controlled
|
||
the vast majority of the car’s functions, be it raising the volume on the
|
||
stereo* or opening the sunroof with a slide of the finger. Whereas most cars
|
||
have a large dashboard to accommodate various displays and buttons and to
|
||
protect people from the noise of the engine, the Model S offered up vast
|
||
amounts of space. The Model S had an ever-present Internet connection,
|
||
allowing the driver to stream music through the touch console and to
|
||
display massive Google maps for navigation. The driver didn’t need to turn
|
||
a key or even push an ignition button to start the car. His weight in the seat
|
||
coupled with a sensor in the key fob, which is shaped like a tiny Model S,
|
||
was enough to activate the vehicle. Made of lightweight aluminum, the car
|
||
achieved the highest safety rating in history. And it could be recharged for
|
||
free at Tesla’s stations lining highways across the United States and later
|
||
around the world.
|
||
For both engineers and green-minded people, the Model S presented a
|
||
model of efficiency. Traditional cars and hybrids have anywhere from
|
||
hundreds to thousands of moving parts. The engine must perform constant,
|
||
controlled explosions with pistons, crankshafts, oil filters, alternators, fans,
|
||
distributors, valves, coils, and cylinders among the many pieces of
|
||
machinery needed for the work. The oomph produced by the engine must
|
||
then be passed through clutches, gears, and driveshafts to make the wheels
|
||
turn, and then exhaust systems have to deal with the waste. Cars end up
|
||
being about 10–20 percent efficient at turning the input of gasoline into the
|
||
output of propulsion. Most of the energy (about 70 percent) is lost as heat in
|
||
the engine, while the rest is lost through wind resistance, braking, and other
|
||
mechanical functions. The Model S, by contrast, has about a dozen moving
|
||
parts, with the battery pack sending energy instantly to a watermelon-sized
|
||
motor that turns the wheels. The Model S ends up being about 60 percent
|
||
efficient, losing most of the rest of its energy to heat. The sedan gets the
|
||
equivalent of about 100 miles per gallon.*
|
||
Yet another distinguishing characteristic of the Model S was the
|
||
experience of buying and owning the car. You didn’t go to a dealership and
|
||
haggle with a pushy salesman. Tesla sold the Model S directly through its
|
||
own stores and website. Typically, the stores were placed in high-end malls
|
||
or affluent suburbs, not far from the Apple stores on which they were
|
||
modeled. Customers would walk in and find a complete Model S in the
|
||
middle of the shop and often an exposed version of the car’s base near the
|
||
back of the store to show off the battery pack and motor. There were
|
||
massive touch-screens where people could calculate how much they might
|
||
save on fuel costs by moving to an all-electric car, and where they could
|
||
configure the look and add-ons for their future Model S. Once the
|
||
configuration process was done, the customer could give the screen a big,
|
||
forceful swipe and his Model S would theatrically appear on an even bigger
|
||
screen in the center of the store. If you wanted to sit in the display model, a
|
||
salesman would pull back a red velvet rope near the driver’s-side door and
|
||
let you enter the car. The salespeople were not compensated on commission
|
||
and didn’t have to try to talk you into buying a suite of extras. Whether you
|
||
ultimately bought the car in the store or online, it was delivered in a
|
||
concierge fashion. Tesla would bring it to your home, office, or anywhere
|
||
else you wanted it. The company also offered customers the option of
|
||
picking their cars up from the factory in Silicon Valley and treating their
|
||
friends and family to a complimentary tour of the facility. In the months that
|
||
followed the delivery, there were no oil changes or tune-ups to be dealt with
|
||
because the Model S didn’t need them. It had done away with so much of
|
||
the mechanical dreck standard in an internal combustion vehicle. However,
|
||
if something did go wrong with the car, Tesla would come pick it up and
|
||
give the customer a loaner while it repaired the Model S.
|
||
The Model S also offered a way to fix issues in a manner that people
|
||
had never before encountered with a mass-produced car. Some of the early
|
||
owners complained about glitches like the door handles not popping out
|
||
quite right or their windshield wipers operating at funky speeds. These were
|
||
inexcusable flaws for such a costly vehicle, but Tesla typically moved with
|
||
clever efficiency to address them. While the owner slept, Tesla’s engineers
|
||
tapped into the car via the Internet connection and downloaded software
|
||
updates. When the customer took the car out for a spin in the morning and
|
||
found it working right, he was left feeling as if magical elves had done the
|
||
work. Tesla soon began showing off its software skills for jobs other than
|
||
making up for mistakes. It put out a smartphone app that let people turn on
|
||
their air-conditioning or heating from afar and to see where the car was
|
||
parked on a map. Tesla also began installing software updates that imbued
|
||
the Model S with new features. Overnight, the Model S sometimes got new
|
||
traction controls for hilly and highway driving or could suddenly recharge
|
||
much faster than before or possess a new range of voice controls. Tesla had
|
||
transformed the car into a gadget—a device that actually got better after you
|
||
bought it. As Craig Venter, one of the earliest Model S owners and the
|
||
famed scientist who first decoded man’s DNA, put it, “It changes
|
||
everything about transportation. It’s a computer on wheels.”
|
||
The first people to notice what Tesla had accomplished were the
|
||
technophiles in Silicon Valley. The region is filled with early adopters
|
||
willing to buy the latest gizmos and suffer through their bugs. Normally this
|
||
habit applies to computing devices ranging from $100 to $2,000 in price.
|
||
This time around, the early adopters proved willing not only to spend
|
||
$100,000 on a product that might not work but also to trust their well-being
|
||
to a start-up. Tesla needed this early boost of confidence and got it on a
|
||
scale few expected. In the first couple of months after the Model S went on
|
||
sale, you might see one or two per day on the streets of San Francisco and
|
||
the surrounding cities. Then you started to see five to ten per day. Soon
|
||
enough, the Model S seemed to feel like the most common car in Palo Alto
|
||
and Mountain View, the two cities at the heart of Silicon Valley. The Model
|
||
S emerged as the ultimate status symbol for wealthy technophiles, allowing
|
||
them to show off, get a new gadget, and claim to be helping the
|
||
environment at the same time. From Silicon Valley, the Model S
|
||
phenomenon spread to Los Angeles, then all along the West Coast and then
|
||
to Washington, D.C., and New York (although to a lesser degree).
|
||
At first the more traditional automakers viewed the Model S as a
|
||
gimmick and its surging sales as part of a fad. These sentiments, however,
|
||
soon gave way to something more akin to panic. In November 2012, just a
|
||
few months after it started shipping, the Model S was named Motor Trend’s
|
||
Car of the Year in the first unanimous vote that anyone at the magazine
|
||
could remember. The Model S beat out eleven other vehicles from
|
||
companies such as Porsche, BMW, Lexus, and Subaru and was heralded as
|
||
“proof positive that America can still make great things.” Motor Trend
|
||
celebrated the Model S as the first non–internal combustion engine car ever
|
||
to win its top award and wrote that the vehicle handled like a sports car,
|
||
drove as smoothly as a Rolls-Royce, held as much as a Chevy Equinox, and
|
||
was more efficient than a Toyota Prius. Several months later, Consumer
|
||
Reports gave the Model S its highest car rating in history—99 out of 100—
|
||
while proclaiming that it was likely the best car ever built. It was at about
|
||
this time that sales of the Model S started to soar alongside Tesla’s share
|
||
price and that General Motors, among other automakers, pulled together a
|
||
team to study the Model S, Tesla, and the methods of Elon Musk.
|
||
It’s worth pausing for a moment to meditate on what Tesla had
|
||
accomplished. Musk had set out to make an electric car that did not suffer
|
||
from any compromises. He did that. Then, using a form of entrepreneurial
|
||
judo, he upended the decades of criticisms against electric cars. The Model
|
||
S was not just the best electric car; it was best car, period, and the car
|
||
people desired. America had not seen a successful car company since
|
||
Chrysler emerged in 1925. Silicon Valley had done little of note in the
|
||
automotive industry. Musk had never run a car factory before and was
|
||
considered arrogant and amateurish by Detroit. Yet, one year after the
|
||
Model S went on sale, Tesla had posted a profit, hit $562 million in
|
||
quarterly revenue, raised its sales forecast, and become as valuable as
|
||
Mazda Motor. Elon Musk had built the automotive equivalent of the
|
||
iPhone. And car executives in Detroit, Japan, and Germany had only their
|
||
crappy ads to watch as they pondered how such a thing had occurred.
|
||
You can forgive the automotive industry veterans for being caught
|
||
unawares. For years Tesla had looked like an utter disaster incapable of
|
||
doing much of anything right. It took until early 2009 for Tesla to really hit
|
||
its stride with the Roadster and work out the manufacturing issues behind
|
||
the sports car. Just as the company tried to build some momentum around
|
||
the Roadster, Musk sent out an e-mail to customers declaring a price hike.
|
||
Where the car originally started around $92,000, it would now start at
|
||
$109,000. In the e-mail, Musk said that four hundred customers who had
|
||
already placed their orders for a Roadster but not yet received them would
|
||
bear the brunt of the price change and need to cough up the extra cash. He
|
||
tried to assuage Tesla’s customer base by arguing that the company had no
|
||
choice but to raise prices. The manufacturing costs for the Roadster had
|
||
come in much higher than the company initially expected, and Tesla needed
|
||
to prove that it could make the cars at a profit to bolster its chances of
|
||
securing a large government loan that would be needed to build the Model
|
||
S, which it vowed to deliver in 2011. “I firmly believe that the plan . . .
|
||
strikes a reasonable compromise between being fair to early customers and
|
||
ensuring the viability of Tesla, which is obviously in the best interests of all
|
||
customers,” Musk wrote in the e-mail. “Mass market electric cars have been
|
||
my goal from the beginning of Tesla. I don’t want and I don’t think the vast
|
||
majority of Tesla customers want us to do anything to jeopardize that
|
||
objective.” While some Tesla customers grumbled, Musk had largely read
|
||
his customer base right. They would support just about anything he
|
||
suggested.
|
||
Following the price increase, Tesla had a safety recall. It said that Lotus,
|
||
the manufacturer of the Roadster’s chassis, had failed to tighten a bolt
|
||
properly on its assembly line. On the plus side, Tesla had only delivered
|
||
about 345 Roadsters, which meant that it could fix the problem in a
|
||
manageable fashion. On the downside, a safety recall was the last thing a
|
||
car start-up needs, even if it was, as Tesla claimed, more of a proactive
|
||
measure than anything else. The next year, Tesla had another voluntary
|
||
recall. It had received a report of a power cable grinding against the body of
|
||
the Roadster to the point that it caused a short circuit and some smoke. That
|
||
time, Tesla brought 439 Roadsters in for a fix. Tesla did its best to put a
|
||
positive spin on these issues, saying that it would make “house calls” to fix
|
||
the Roadsters or pick up the cars and take them back to the factory. Ever
|
||
since, Musk has tried to turn any snafu with a Tesla into an excuse to show
|
||
off the company’s attention to service and dedication to pleasing the
|
||
customer. More often than not, the strategy has worked.
|
||
On top of the occasional issues with the Roadster, Tesla continued to
|
||
suffer from public perception problems. In June 2009, Martin Eberhard
|
||
sued Musk and went to town in the complaint detailing his ouster from the
|
||
company. Eberhard accused Musk of libel, slander, and breach of contract.
|
||
The charges painted Musk as a bully moneyman who had pushed the
|
||
soulful inventor out of his own company. The lawsuit also accused Musk of
|
||
trumping up his role in Tesla’s founding. Musk responded in kind, issuing a
|
||
blog post that detailed his take on Eberhard’s foibles and taking umbrage at
|
||
the suggestions that he was not a true founder of the company. A short
|
||
while later, the two men settled and agreed to stop going at each other. “As
|
||
co-founder of the company, Elon’s contributions to Tesla have been
|
||
extraordinary,” Eberhard said in a statement at the time. It must have been
|
||
excruciating for Eberhard to agree to put that in writing and the very
|
||
existence of that statement points to Musk’s skills and tactics as a hard-line
|
||
negotiator. The two men continue to despise each other today, although they
|
||
must do so in private, as legally required. Eberhard, though, holds no longstanding
|
||
grudge against Tesla. His shares in the company ended up
|
||
becoming very valuable. He still drives his Roadster, and his wife got a
|
||
Model S.
|
||
For so much of its early existence, Tesla appeared in the news for the
|
||
wrong reasons. There were people in the media and the automotive industry
|
||
who viewed it as a gimmick. They seemed to delight in the soap opera–
|
||
worthy spats between Musk and Eberhard and other disgruntled former
|
||
employees. Far from being seen universally as a successful entrepreneur,
|
||
Musk was viewed in some Silicon Valley circles as an abrasive blowhard
|
||
who would get what he deserved when Tesla inevitably collapsed. The
|
||
Roadster would make its way to the electric-car graveyard. Detroit would
|
||
prove that it had a better handle on this whole car innovation thing than
|
||
Silicon Valley. The natural order of the world would remain intact.
|
||
A funny thing happened, however. Tesla did just enough to survive.
|
||
From 2008 to 2012, Tesla sold about 2,500 Roadsters.* The car had
|
||
accomplished what Musk had intended from the outset. It proved that
|
||
electric cars could be fun to drive and that they could be objects of desire.
|
||
With the Roadster, Tesla kept electric cars in the public’s consciousness and
|
||
did so under impossible circumstances, namely the collapse of the
|
||
American automotive industry and the global financial markets. Whether
|
||
Musk was a founder of Tesla in the purest sense of the word is irrelevant at
|
||
this point. There would be no Tesla to talk about today were it not for
|
||
Musk’s money, marketing savvy, chicanery, engineering smarts, and
|
||
indomitable spirit. Tesla was, in effect, willed into existence by Musk and
|
||
reflects his personality as much as Intel, Microsoft, and Apple reflect the
|
||
personalities of their founders. Marc Tarpenning, the other Tesla cofounder,
|
||
said as much when he reflected on what Musk has meant to the company.
|
||
“Elon pushed Tesla so much farther than we ever imagined,” he said.
|
||
As difficult as birthing the Roadster had been, the adventure had
|
||
whetted Musk’s appetite for what he could accomplish in the automotive
|
||
industry with a clean slate. Tesla’s next car—code-named WhiteStar—
|
||
would not be an adapted version of another company’s vehicle. It would be
|
||
made from scratch and structured to take full advantage of what the electriccar
|
||
technology offered. The battery pack in the Roadster, for example, had
|
||
to be placed near the rear of the car because of constraints imposed by the
|
||
Lotus Elise chassis. This was okay but not ideal due to the imposing weight
|
||
of the batteries. With WhiteStar, which would become the Model S, Musk
|
||
and Tesla’s engineers knew from the start that they would place the 1,300-
|
||
pound battery pack on the base of the car. This would give the vehicle a low
|
||
center of gravity and excellent handling. It would also give the Model S
|
||
what’s known as a low polar moment of inertia, which relates to how a car
|
||
resists turning. Ideally, you want heavy parts like the engine as close as
|
||
possible to the car’s center of gravity, which is why the engines of race cars
|
||
tend to be near the middle of the vehicle. Traditional cars are a mess on this
|
||
metric, with the bulky engine up front, passengers in the middle, and
|
||
gasoline sloshing around the rear. In the case of the Model S, the bulk of the
|
||
car’s mass is very close to the center of gravity and this has positive followon
|
||
effects to handling, performance, and safety.
|
||
The innards, though, were just one part of what would make the Model
|
||
S shine. Musk wanted to make a statement with the car’s look as well. It
|
||
would be a sedan, yes, but it would be a sexy sedan. It would also be
|
||
comfortable and luxurious and have none of the compromises that Tesla had
|
||
been forced to embrace with the Roadster. To bring such a beautiful,
|
||
functional car to life, Musk hired Henrik Fisker, a Danish automobile
|
||
designer renowned for his work at Aston Martin.
|
||
Tesla first revealed its plans for the Model S to Fisker in 2007. It asked
|
||
him to design a sleek, four-door sedan that would cost between $50,000 and
|
||
$70,000. Tesla could still barely make Roadsters and had no idea if its allelectric
|
||
powertrain would hold up over time. Musk, though, refused to wait
|
||
and find out. He wanted the Model S to ship in late 2009 or early 2010 and
|
||
needed Fisker to work fast. By reputation, Fisker had a flair for the dramatic
|
||
and had produced some of the most stunning car designs over the past
|
||
decade, not just for Aston Martin but also for special versions of BMW and
|
||
Mercedes-Benz vehicles.
|
||
Fisker had a studio in Orange County, California, and Musk and other
|
||
Tesla executives would meet there to go over his evolving takes on the
|
||
Model S. Each visit was less inspiring than the last. Fisker baffled the Tesla
|
||
teams with his stodgy designs. “Some of the early styles were like a giant
|
||
egg,” said Ron Lloyd, the former vice president of the WhiteStar project at
|
||
Tesla. “They were terrible.” When Musk pushed back, Fisker blamed the
|
||
physical constraints Tesla had put in place for the Model S as too restrictive.
|
||
“He said they would not let him make the car sexy,” Lloyd said. Fisker tried
|
||
a couple of different approaches and unveiled some foam models of the car
|
||
for Musk and his crew to dissect. “We kept on telling him they were not
|
||
right,” Lloyd said.
|
||
Not long after these meetings, Fisker started his own company—Fisker
|
||
Automotive—and unveiled the Fisker Karma hybrid in 2008. This luxury
|
||
sedan looked like a vehicle Batman might take out for a Sunday drive. With
|
||
its elongated lines and sharp edges, the car was stunning and truly original.
|
||
“It rapidly became clear that he was trying to compete with us,” Lloyd said.
|
||
As Musk dug into the situation, he discovered that Fisker had been
|
||
shopping his idea for a car company to investors around Silicon Valley for
|
||
some time. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, one of the more famous
|
||
venture capital firms in Silicon Valley, once had a chance to invest in Tesla
|
||
and then ended up putting money into Fisker instead. All of this was too
|
||
much for Musk, and he launched a lawsuit against Fisker in 2008, accusing
|
||
him of stealing Tesla’s ideas and using the $875,000 Tesla had paid for
|
||
design work to help get his rival car company off the ground. (Fisker
|
||
ultimately prevailed in the dispute with an arbitrator ordering Tesla to
|
||
reimburse Fisker’s legal fees and deeming Tesla’s allegations baseless.)
|
||
Tesla had thought about doing a hybrid like Fisker where a gas engine
|
||
would be present to recharge the car’s batteries after they had consumed an
|
||
initial charge. The car would be able to travel fifty to eighty miles after
|
||
being plugged into an outlet and then take advantage of ubiquitous gas
|
||
stations as needed to top up the batteries, eliminating range anxiety. Tesla’s
|
||
engineers prototyped the hybrid vehicle and ran all sorts of cost and
|
||
performance metrics. In the end, they found the hybrid to be too much of a
|
||
compromise. “It would be expensive, and the performance would not be as
|
||
good as the all-electric car,” said J. B. Straubel. “And we would have
|
||
needed to build a team to compete with the core competency of every car
|
||
company in the world. We would have been betting against all the things we
|
||
believe in, like the power electronics and batteries improving. We decided
|
||
to put all the effort into going where we think the endpoint is and to never
|
||
look back.” After coming to this conclusion, Straubel and others inside
|
||
Tesla started to let go of their anger toward Fisker. They figured he would
|
||
end up delivering a kluge of a car and get what was coming to him.
|
||
A large car company might spend $1 billion and need thousands of
|
||
people to design a new vehicle and bring it to market. Tesla had nothing
|
||
close to these resources as it gave birth to the Model S. According to Lloyd,
|
||
Tesla initially aimed to make about ten thousand Model S sedans per year
|
||
and had budgeted around $130 million to achieve this goal, including
|
||
engineering the car and acquiring the manufacturing machines needed to
|
||
stamp out the body parts. “One of the things Elon pushed hard with
|
||
everyone was to do as much as possible in-house,” Lloyd said. Tesla would
|
||
make up for its lack of R&D money by hiring smart people who could
|
||
outwork and outthink the third parties relied on by the rest of the
|
||
automakers. “The mantra was that one great engineer will replace three
|
||
medium ones,” Lloyd said.
|
||
A small team of Tesla engineers began the process of trying to figure
|
||
out the mechanical inner workings of the Model S. Their first step in this
|
||
journey took place at a Mercedes dealership where they test drove a CLS 4-
|
||
Door Coupe and an E-Class sedan. The cars had the same chassis, and the
|
||
Tesla engineers took measurements of every inch of the vehicles, studying
|
||
what they liked and didn’t like. In the end, they preferred the styling on the
|
||
CLS and settled on it as their baseline for thinking about the Model S.
|
||
After purchasing a CLS, Tesla’s engineers tore it apart. One team had
|
||
reshaped the boxy, rectangular battery pack from the Roadster and made it
|
||
flat. The engineers cut the floor out of the CLS and plopped in the pack.
|
||
Next they put the electronics that tied the whole system together in the
|
||
trunk. After that, they replaced the interior of the car to restore its fit and
|
||
finish. Following three months of work, Tesla had in effect built an allelectric
|
||
Mercedes CLS. Tesla used the car to woo investors and future
|
||
partners like Daimler that would eventually turn to Tesla for electric
|
||
powertrains in their vehicles. Now and again, the Tesla team took the car
|
||
out for drives on public roads. It weighed more than the Roadster but was
|
||
still fast and had a range of about 120 miles per charge. To perform these
|
||
joyrides-cum-tests in relative secrecy, the engineers had to weld the tips of
|
||
the exhaust pipes back onto the car to make it look like any other CLS.
|
||
It was at this time, the summer of 2008, when an artsy car lover named
|
||
Franz von Holzhausen joined Tesla. His job would be to breathe new life
|
||
into the car’s early designs and, if possible, turn the Model S into an iconic
|
||
product.*
|
||
Von Holzhausen grew up in a small Connecticut town. His father
|
||
worked on the design and marketing of consumer products, and Franz
|
||
treated the family basement full of markers, different kinds of paper, and
|
||
other materials as a playground for his imagination. As he grew older, von
|
||
Holzhausen drifted toward cars. He and a friend stripped down a dunebuggy
|
||
motor one winter and then built it back up, and von Holzhausen
|
||
always filled the margins of his school notebooks with drawings of cars and
|
||
had pictures of cars on his bedroom walls. Applying to college, von
|
||
Holzhausen decided to follow his father’s path and enrolled in the industrial
|
||
design program at Syracuse University. Then, through a chance encounter
|
||
with another designer during an internship, von Holzhausen heard about the
|
||
Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles. “This guy had been teaching
|
||
me about car design and this school in Los Angeles, and I got superintrigued,”
|
||
said von Holzhausen. “I went to Syracuse for two years and then
|
||
decided to transfer out to California.”
|
||
The move to Los Angeles kicked off a long and storied design career in
|
||
the automotive industry. Von Holzhausen would go on to intern in Michigan
|
||
with Ford and in Europe with Volkswagen, where he began to pick up on a
|
||
mix of design sensibilities. After graduating in 1992, he started work for
|
||
Volkswagen on just about the most exciting project imaginable—a topsecret
|
||
new version of the Beetle. “It really was a magical time,” von
|
||
Holzhausen said. “Only fifty people in the world knew we were doing this
|
||
project.” Von Holzhausen had a chance to work on the exterior and interior
|
||
of the vehicle, including the signature flower vase built into the dashboard.
|
||
In 1997, Volkswagen launched the “New Beetle,” and von Holzhausen saw
|
||
firsthand how the look of the car captivated the public and changed the way
|
||
people felt about Volkswagen, which had suffered from woeful sales in the
|
||
United States. “It started a rebirth of the VW brand and brought design back
|
||
into their mix,” he said.
|
||
Von Holzhausen spent eight years with VW, climbing the ranks of its
|
||
design team and falling in love with the car culture of Southern California.
|
||
Los Angeles has long adored its cars, with the climate lending itself to all
|
||
manner of vehicles from convertibles to surfboard-toting vans. Almost all
|
||
of the major carmakers set up design studios in the city. The presence of the
|
||
studios allowed von Holzhausen to hop from VW to General Motors and
|
||
Mazda, where he served as the company’s director of design.
|
||
GM taught von Holzhausen just how nasty a big car company could
|
||
become. None of the cars in GM’s lineup really excited him, and it seemed
|
||
near impossible to make a large impact on the company’s culture. He was
|
||
one member of a thousand-person design team that divvyed up the makes of
|
||
cars haphazardly without any consideration as to which person really
|
||
wanted to work on which car. “They took all the spirit out of me,” said von
|
||
Holzhausen. “I knew I didn’t want to die there.” Mazda, by contrast, needed
|
||
and wanted help. It let von Holzhausen and his team in Los Angeles put
|
||
their imprint on every car in the North American vehicle lineup and to
|
||
produce a set of concept cars that reshaped how the company approached
|
||
design. As von Holzhausen put it, “We brought the zoom-zoom back into
|
||
the look and feel of the car.”
|
||
Von Holzhausen started a project to make Mazda’s cars more green by
|
||
revaluating the types of materials used to fabricate the seats and the fuels
|
||
going into the vehicles. He had, in fact, just made an ethanol-based concept
|
||
car when, in early 2008, a friend told him that Tesla needed a chief designer.
|
||
After playing phone tag for a month with Musk’s assistant, Mary Beth
|
||
Brown, to inquire about the position, von Holzhausen finally got in touch
|
||
and met Musk for an interview at the SpaceX headquarters.
|
||
Musk instantly saw von Holzhausen, with his bouffant, trendy clothes
|
||
and laid-back attitude, as a free-spirited, creative complement and wooed
|
||
him with vigor. They took a tour of the SpaceX factory in Hawthorne and
|
||
Tesla’s headquarters in Silicon Valley. Both facilities were chaotic and
|
||
reeked of start-up. Musk ramped up the charm and sold von Holzhausen on
|
||
the idea that he had a chance to shape the future of the automobile and that
|
||
it made sense to leave his cushy job at a big, proven automaker for this
|
||
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. “Elon and I went for a drive in the Roadster,
|
||
and everyone was checking it out,” von Holzhausen said. “I knew I could
|
||
stay at Mazda for ten years and get very comfortable or take a huge leap of
|
||
faith. At Tesla, there was no history, no baggage. There was just a vision of
|
||
products that could change the world. Who wouldn’t want to be involved
|
||
with that?”
|
||
While von Holzhausen knew the risks of going to a startup, he could not
|
||
have realized just how close Tesla was to bankruptcy when he joined the
|
||
company in August 2008. Musk had coaxed von Holzhausen away from a
|
||
secure job and into the jaws of death. But in many ways, this is what von
|
||
Holzhausen sought at this point in his career. Tesla did not feel as much like
|
||
a car company as a bunch of guys tinkering on a big idea. “To me, it was
|
||
exciting,” he said. “It was like a garage experiment, and it made cars cool
|
||
again.” The suits were gone, and so were the veteran automotive hands
|
||
dulled by years working in the industry. In their stead, von Holzhausen
|
||
found energetic geeks who didn’t realize that what they wanted to do was
|
||
borderline impossible. Musk’s presence added to the energy and gave von
|
||
Holzhausen confidence that Tesla actually could outflank much, much
|
||
larger competitors. “Elon’s mind was always way beyond the present
|
||
moment,” he said. “You could see that he was a step or three ahead of
|
||
everyone else and one hundred percent committed to what we were doing.”
|
||
Von Holzhausen had examined the drawings of the Model S left by
|
||
Fisker and a clay model of the car and had come away unimpressed. “It was
|
||
a blob,” he said. “It was clear to me that the people that had been working
|
||
on this were novices.” Musk realized the same thing and tried to articulate
|
||
what he wanted. Even though the words were not precise, they were good
|
||
enough to give von Holzhausen a feel for Musk’s vision and the confidence
|
||
that he could deliver on it. “I said, ‘We’re going to start over. We’re going
|
||
to work together and make this awesome.’”
|
||
To save money, the Tesla design center came to life inside the SpaceX
|
||
factory. A handful of people on von Holzhausen’s team took over one
|
||
corner and put up a tent to add some separation and secrecy to what they
|
||
were doing. In the tradition of many a Musk employee, von Holzhausen had
|
||
to build his own office. He made a pilgrimage to IKEA to buy some desks
|
||
and then went to an art store to get some paper and pens.
|
||
As von Holzhausen began sketching the outside of the Model S, the
|
||
Tesla engineers had started up a project to build another electric CLS. They
|
||
ripped this one down to its very core, removing all of the body structure and
|
||
then stretching the wheelbase by four inches to match up with some of the
|
||
early Model S specifications. Things began moving fast for everyone
|
||
involved in the Model S project. In the span of about three months, von
|
||
Holzhausen had designed 95 percent of what people see today with the
|
||
Model S, and the engineers had started building a prototype exterior around
|
||
the skeleton.
|
||
Throughout this process, von Holzhausen and Musk talked every day.
|
||
Their desks were close, and the men had a natural rapport. Musk said he
|
||
wanted an aesthetic that borrowed from Aston Martin and Porsche and
|
||
some specific functions. He insisted, for example, that the car seat seven
|
||
people. “It was like ‘Holy shit, how do we pull this off in a sedan?’” von
|
||
Holzhausen said. “But I understood. He had five kids and wanted
|
||
something that could be thought of as a family vehicle, and he knew other
|
||
people would have this issue.”
|
||
Musk wanted to make another statement with a huge touchscreen. This
|
||
was years before the iPad would be released. The touch-screens that people
|
||
ran into now and again at airports or shopping kiosks were for the most part
|
||
terrible. But to Musk, the iPhone and all of its touch functions made it
|
||
obvious that this type of technology would soon become commonplace. He
|
||
would make a giant iPhone and have it handle most of the car’s functions.
|
||
To find the right size for the screen, Musk and von Holzhausen would sit in
|
||
the skeleton car and hold up laptops of different sizes, placing them
|
||
horizontally and vertically to see what looked best. They settled on a
|
||
seventeen-inch screen in a vertical position. Drivers would tap on this
|
||
screen for every task except for opening the glove box and turning on the
|
||
emergency lights—jobs required by law to be performed with physical
|
||
buttons.
|
||
Since the battery pack at the base of the car would weigh so much,
|
||
Musk, the designers, and the engineers were always looking for ways to
|
||
reduce the Model S’s weight in other spots. Musk opted to solve a big
|
||
chunk of this problem by making the body of the Model S out of
|
||
lightweight aluminum instead of steel. “The non-battery-pack portion of the
|
||
car has to be lighter than comparable gasoline cars, and making it all
|
||
aluminum became the obvious decision,” Musk said. “The fundamental
|
||
problem was that if we didn’t make it out of aluminum the car wasn’t going
|
||
to be any good.”
|
||
Musk’s word choice there—“obvious decision”—goes a long way
|
||
toward explaining how he operates. Yes, the car needed to be light, and, yes,
|
||
aluminum would be an option for making that happen. But at the time, car
|
||
manufacturers in North America had almost no experience producing
|
||
aluminum body panels. Aluminum tends to tear when worked by large
|
||
presses. It also develops lines that look like stretch marks on skin and make
|
||
it difficult to lay down smooth coats of paint. “In Europe, you had some
|
||
Jaguars and one Audi that were made of aluminum, but it was less than five
|
||
percent of the market,” Musk said. “In North America, there was nothing.
|
||
It’s only recently that the Ford F-150 has arrived as mostly aluminum.
|
||
Before that, we were the only one.” Inside of Tesla, attempts were
|
||
repeatedly made to talk Musk out of the aluminum body, but he would not
|
||
budge, seeing it as the only rational choice. It would be up to the Tesla team
|
||
to figure out how to make the aluminum manufacturing happen. “We knew
|
||
it could be done,” Musk said. “It was a question of how hard it would be
|
||
and how long it would take us to sort it out.”
|
||
Just about all of the major design choices with the Model S came with
|
||
similar challenges. “When we first talked about the touch-screen, the guys
|
||
came back and said, ‘There’s nothing like that in the automotive supply
|
||
chain,’” Musk said. “I said, ‘I know. That’s because it’s never been put in a
|
||
fucking car before.’” Musk figured that computer manufacturers had tons of
|
||
experience making seventeen-inch laptop screens and expected them to
|
||
knock out a screen for the Model S with relative ease. “The laptops are
|
||
pretty robust,” Musk said. “You can drop them and leave them out in the
|
||
sun, and they still have to work.” After contacting the laptop suppliers,
|
||
Tesla’s engineers came back and said that the temperature and vibration
|
||
loads for the computers did not appear to be up to automotive standards.
|
||
Tesla’s supplier in Asia also kept pointing the carmaker to its automotive
|
||
division instead of its computing division. As Musk dug into the situation
|
||
more, he discovered that the laptop screens simply had not been tested
|
||
before under the tougher automotive conditions, which included large
|
||
temperature fluctuations. When Tesla performed the tests, the electronics
|
||
ended up working just fine. Tesla also started working hand in hand with
|
||
the Asian manufacturers to perfect their then-immature capacitive-touch
|
||
technology and to find ways to hide the wiring behind the screen that made
|
||
the touch technology possible. “I’m pretty sure that we ended up with the
|
||
only seventeen-inch touch-screen in the world,” Musk said. “None of the
|
||
computer makers or Apple had made it work yet.”
|
||
The Tesla engineers were radical by automotive industry standards but
|
||
even they had problems fully committing to Musk’s vision. “They wanted
|
||
to put in a bloody switch or a button for the lights,” Musk said. “Why
|
||
would we need a switch? When it’s dark, turn the lights on.” Next, the
|
||
engineers put up resistance to the door handles. Musk and von Holzhausen
|
||
had been studying a bunch of preliminary designs in which the handles had
|
||
yet to be drawn in and started to fall in love with how clean the car looked.
|
||
They decided that the handles should only present themselves when a
|
||
passenger needed to get in the car. Right away, the engineers realized this
|
||
would be a technological pain, and they completely ignored the idea in one
|
||
prototype version of the car, much to the dismay of Musk and von
|
||
Holzhausen. “This prototype had the handles pivot instead of popping out,”
|
||
von Holzhausen said. “I was upset about it, and Elon said, ‘Why the fuck is
|
||
this different? We’re not doing this.’”
|
||
To crank up the pace of the Model S design, there were engineers
|
||
working all day and then others who would show up at 9 P.M. and work
|
||
through the night. Both groups huddled inside of the 3,000-square-foot tent
|
||
placed on the SpaceX factory floor. Their workspace looked like a reception
|
||
area at an outdoor wedding. “The SpaceX guys were amazingly respectful
|
||
and didn’t peek or ask questions,” said Ali Javidan, one of the main
|
||
engineers. As von Holzhausen delivered his specifications, the engineers
|
||
built the prototype body of the car. Every Friday afternoon, they brought
|
||
what they had made into a courtyard behind the factory where Musk would
|
||
look it over and provide feedback. To run tests on the body, the car would
|
||
be loaded up with ballast to represent five people and then do loops around
|
||
the factory until it overheated or broke down.
|
||
The more von Holzhausen learned about Tesla’s financial struggles, the
|
||
more he wanted the public to see the Model S. “Things were so precarious,
|
||
and I didn’t want to miss our opportunity to get this thing finished and show
|
||
it to the world,” he said. That moment came in March 2009, when, just six
|
||
months after von Holzhausen had arrived, Tesla unveiled the Model S at a
|
||
press event held at SpaceX.
|
||
Amid rocket engines and hunks of aluminum, Tesla showcased a gray
|
||
Model S sedan. From a distance, the display model looked glamorous and
|
||
refined. The media reports from the day described the car as the love child
|
||
of an Aston Martin and a Maserati. In reality, the sedan barely held together.
|
||
It still had the base structure of a Mercedes CLS, although no one in the
|
||
press knew that, and some of the body panels and the hood were stuck to
|
||
the frame with magnets. “They could just slide the hood right off,” said
|
||
Bruce Leak, a Tesla owner invited to attend the event. “It wasn’t really
|
||
attached. They would put it back on and try and align it to get the fit and
|
||
finish right, but then someone would push on it, and it would move again. It
|
||
was one of those Wizard of Oz, man behind the curtain moments.” A couple
|
||
of the Tesla engineers practiced test-driving the car for a couple of days
|
||
leading up to the event to make sure that they knew just how long the car
|
||
would go before it overheated. While not perfect, the display accomplished
|
||
exactly what Musk had intended. It reminded people that Tesla had a
|
||
credible plan to make electric cars more mainstream and that its cars were
|
||
far more ambitious than what big-time automakers like GM and Nissan
|
||
seemed to have in mind both from a design and a range perspective.
|
||
The messy reality behind the display was that the odds of Tesla
|
||
advancing the Model S from a prop to a sellable car were infinitesimal. The
|
||
company had the technical know-how and the will for the job. It just didn’t
|
||
have much money or a factory that could crank out cars by the thousands.
|
||
Building an entire car would require blanking machines that take sheets of
|
||
aluminum and chop them up into the appropriate size for doors, hoods, and
|
||
body panels. Next up would be the massive stamping machines and metal
|
||
dies used to take the aluminum and bend it into precise shapes. Then there
|
||
would be dozens of robots that would aid in assembling the cars, computercontrolled
|
||
milling machines for precise metalwork, painting equipment, and
|
||
a bevy of other machines for running tests. It was an investment that would
|
||
run into the hundreds of millions of dollars. Musk would also need to hire
|
||
thousands of workers.
|
||
As with SpaceX, Musk preferred to build as much of Tesla’s vehicles
|
||
in-house as possible, but the high costs were limiting just how much Tesla
|
||
could take on. “The original plan was that we would do final assembly,”
|
||
said Diarmuid O’Connell, the vice president of business development at
|
||
Tesla. Partners would stamp out the body parts, do the welding and handle
|
||
the painting, and ship everything to Tesla, where workers would turn the
|
||
parts into a whole car. Tesla proposed to build a factory to handle this type
|
||
of work first in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and then later in San Jose,
|
||
California, and then pulled back on these proposals, much to the dismay of
|
||
city officials in both locales. The public hemming and hawing around
|
||
picking the factory site did little to inspire confidence in Tesla’s ability to
|
||
knock out a second car and generated the same type of negative headlines
|
||
that had surrounded the Roadster’s protracted delivery.
|
||
O’Connell had joined Tesla in 2006 to help solve some of the factory
|
||
and financing issues. He grew up near Boston in a middle-class Irish family
|
||
and went on to earn a bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College. After
|
||
that, O’Connell attended the University of Virginia to get a master’s degree
|
||
in foreign policy and then Northwestern, where he got an MBA from the
|
||
Kellogg School of Management. He had fancied himself a scholar of the
|
||
Soviet Union and its foreign and economic policy and had studied these
|
||
areas at UVa. “But then, in 1988 and 1989, they’re starting to close down
|
||
the Soviet Union, and, at the very least, I had a brand problem,” O’Connell
|
||
said. “It started looking to me like I was heading to a career in academia or
|
||
intelligence.” It was then that O’Connell’s career took a detour into the
|
||
business world, where he became a management consultant working for
|
||
McCann Erickson Worldwide, Young & Rubicam, and Accenture, advising
|
||
companies like Coca-Cola and AT&T.
|
||
O’Connell’s career path changed more drastically in 2001 when the
|
||
planes hit the twin towers in New York. In the wake of the terrorist attacks,
|
||
O’Connell, like many people, decided to serve the United States in any
|
||
capacity that he could. In his late thirties, he had missed the window to be a
|
||
soldier and instead focused his attention on trying to get into national
|
||
security work. O’Connell went from office to office in Washington, D.C.,
|
||
looking for a job and had little luck until Lincoln Bloomfield, the assistant
|
||
secretary of state for political-military affairs, heard him out. Bloomfield
|
||
needed someone who could help prioritize missions in the Middle East and
|
||
make sure the right people were working on the right things, and he figured
|
||
that O’Connell’s management consulting experience made him a nice fit for
|
||
the job. O’Connell became Bloomfield’s chief of staff and dealt with a wide
|
||
range of charged situations, from trade negotiations to setting up an
|
||
embassy in Baghdad. After gaining security clearance, O’Connell also had
|
||
access to a daily report that collected information from intelligence and
|
||
military personnel on the status of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
|
||
“Every morning at six A.M., the first thing to hit my desk was this overnight
|
||
report that included information on who got killed and what killed them,”
|
||
O’Connell said. “I kept thinking, This is insane. Why are we in this place?
|
||
It was not just Iraq but the whole picture. Why were we so invested in that
|
||
part of the world?” The unsurprising answer that O’Connell came up with
|
||
was oil.
|
||
The more O’Connell dug into the United States’ dependence on foreign
|
||
oil, the more frustrated and despondent he became. “My clients were
|
||
basically the combat commanders—people in charge of Latin America and
|
||
Central Command,” he said. “As I talked with them and studied and
|
||
researched, I realized that even in peacetime, so many of our assets were
|
||
employed to support the economic pipeline around oil.” O’Connell decided
|
||
that the rational thing to do for his country and for his newborn son was to
|
||
alter this equation. He looked at the wind industry and the solar industry
|
||
and the traditional automakers but came away unconvinced that what they
|
||
were doing could have a radical enough impact on the status quo. Then,
|
||
while reading Businessweek, he stumbled on an article about a start-up
|
||
called Tesla Motors and went to the company’s website, which described
|
||
Tesla as a place “where we are doing things, not talking about things.” “I
|
||
sent an e-mail telling them I had come from the national security area and
|
||
was really passionate about reducing our dependence on oil and figured it
|
||
was just a dead-letter type of thing,” O’Connell said. “I got an e-mail back
|
||
the next day.”
|
||
Musk hired O’Connell and quickly dispatched him to Washington, D.C.,
|
||
to start poking around on what types of tax credits and rebates Tesla might
|
||
be able to drum up around its electric vehicles. At the same time, O’Connell
|
||
drafted an application for a Department of Energy stimulus package.* “All I
|
||
knew is that we were going to need a shitload of money to build this
|
||
company,” O’Connell said. “My view was that we needed to explore
|
||
everything.” Tesla had been looking for between $100 million and $200
|
||
million, grossly underestimating what it would take to build the Model S.
|
||
“We were naïve and learning our way in the business,” O’Connell said.
|
||
It January 2009, Tesla took over Porsche’s usual spot at the Detroit auto
|
||
show, getting the space cheap because so many other car companies had
|
||
bailed out on the event. Fisker had a luxurious booth across the hallway
|
||
with wood flooring and pretty blond booth babes draped over its car. Tesla
|
||
had the Roadster, its electric powertrain, and no frills.
|
||
The technology that Tesla’s engineers displayed proved good enough to
|
||
attract the attention of the big boys. Not long after the show, Daimler voiced
|
||
some interest in seeing what an electric Mercedes A Class car might look
|
||
and feel like. Daimler executives said they would visit Tesla in about a
|
||
month to discuss this proposition in detail, and the Tesla engineers decided
|
||
to blow them away by producing two prototype vehicles before the visit.
|
||
When the Daimler executives saw what Tesla had done, they ordered four
|
||
thousand of Tesla’s battery packs for a fleet of test vehicles in Germany.
|
||
The Tesla team pulled off the same kind of feats for Toyota and won its
|
||
business, too.
|
||
In May 2009, things started to take off for Tesla. The Model S had been
|
||
unveiled, and Daimler followed that by acquiring a 10 percent stake in Tesla
|
||
for $50 million. The companies also formed a strategic partnership to have
|
||
Tesla provide the battery packs for one thousand of Daimler’s Smart cars.
|
||
“That money was important and went a long way back then,” said
|
||
O’Connell. “It was also a validation. Here is the company that invented the
|
||
internal combustion engine, and they are investing in us. It was a seminal
|
||
moment, and I am sure it gave the guys over at the DOE the feeling that we
|
||
were real. It’s not just our scientists saying this stuff is good. It’s Mercedes
|
||
freaking Benz.”
|
||
Sure enough, in January 2010, the Department of Energy struck a $465
|
||
million loan agreement with Tesla.* The money was far more than Tesla
|
||
had ever expected to get from the government. But it still represented just a
|
||
fraction of the $1 billion plus that most carmakers needed to bring a new
|
||
vehicle to market. So, while Musk and O’Connell were thrilled to get the
|
||
money, they still wondered if Tesla would be able to live up to the bargain.
|
||
Tesla would need one more windfall or, perhaps, to steal a car factory. And
|
||
in May 2010, that’s more or less what it did.
|
||
General Motors and Toyota had teamed up in 1984 to build New United
|
||
Motor Manufacturing Inc., or NUMMI, on the site of a former GM
|
||
assembly plant in Fremont, California, a city on the outskirts of Silicon
|
||
Valley. The companies hoped the joint facility would combine the best of
|
||
American and Japanese automaking skills and result in higher-quality,
|
||
cheaper cars. The factory went on to pump out millions of vehicles like the
|
||
Chevy Nova and Toyota Corolla. Then the recession hit, and GM found
|
||
itself trying to climb out of bankruptcy. It decided to abandon the plant in
|
||
2009, and Toyota followed right after, saying it would close down the whole
|
||
facility, leaving five thousand people without jobs.
|
||
All of a sudden, Tesla had the chance to buy a 5.3-million-square-foot
|
||
plant in its backyard. Just one month after the last Toyota Corolla went off
|
||
the manufacturing line in April 2010, Tesla and Toyota announced a
|
||
partnership and transfer of the factory. Tesla agreed to pay $42 million for a
|
||
large portion of the factory (once worth $1 billion), while Toyota invested
|
||
$50 million in Tesla for a 2.5 percent stake in the company. Tesla had
|
||
basically secured a factory, including the massive metal-stamping machines
|
||
and other equipment, for free.*
|
||
The string of fortunate turns for Tesla left Musk feeling good. Just after
|
||
the factory deal closed in the summer of 2010, Tesla started the process of
|
||
filing for an initial public offering. The company obviously needed as much
|
||
capital as it could get to bring the Model S to market and push forward with
|
||
its other technology projects. Tesla hoped to raise about $200 million.
|
||
For Musk, going public represented something of a Faustian bargain.
|
||
Ever since the Zip2 and PayPal days, Musk has done everything in his
|
||
power to maintain absolute control over his companies. Even if he remained
|
||
the largest shareholder in Tesla, the company would be subjected to the
|
||
capricious nature of the public markets. Musk, the ultimate long-term
|
||
thinker, would face constant second-guessing from investors looking for
|
||
short-term returns. Tesla would also be subject to public scrutiny, as it
|
||
would be forced to open its books for public consumption. This was bad
|
||
because Musk prefers to operate in secrecy and because Tesla’s financial
|
||
situation looked awful. The company had one product (the Roadster), had
|
||
huge development costs, and had bordered on bankruptcy months earlier.
|
||
The car blog Jalopnik greeted the Tesla IPO as a Hail Mary rather than a
|
||
sound fiscal move. “For lack of a better phrase, Tesla is a money pit,” the
|
||
blog wrote. “Since the company’s founding in 2003, it’s managed to incur
|
||
over $290 million in losses on just $147.6 million in revenue.” Told by a
|
||
source that Tesla hoped to sell 20,000 units of the Model S per year at
|
||
$58,000 a pop, Jalopnik scoffed. “Even considering the supposed pent-up
|
||
demand among environmentalists for a car like the Model S, those are
|
||
ambitious goals for a small company planning to launch a niche luxury
|
||
product into a soft market. Frankly, we’re skeptical. We’ve seen how brutal
|
||
and unforgiving the market can be, and other automakers aren’t simply
|
||
going to roll over and surrender that volume to Tesla.” Other pundits
|
||
concurred with this assessment.
|
||
Tesla went public on June 29, 2010, nonetheless. It raised $226 million,
|
||
with the company’s shares shooting up 41 percent that day. Investors looked
|
||
past Tesla’s $55.7 million loss in 2009 and the more than $300 million the
|
||
company had spent in seven years. The IPO stood as the first for an
|
||
American carmaker since Ford went public in 1956. Competitors continued
|
||
to treat Tesla like an annoying, ankle-biting dachshund. Nissan’s CEO,
|
||
Carlos Ghosn, used the event to remind people that Tesla was but a
|
||
pipsqueak and that his company had plans to pump out up to 500,000
|
||
electric cars by 2012.
|
||
Flush with funds, Musk began expanding some of the engineering teams
|
||
and formalizing the development work around the Model S. Tesla’s main
|
||
offices moved from San Mateo to a larger building in Palo Alto, and von
|
||
Holzhausen expanded the design team in Los Angeles. Javidan hopped
|
||
between projects, helping develop technology for the electrified Mercedes-
|
||
Benz, an electric Toyota Rav4, and prototypes of the Model S. The Tesla
|
||
team worked fast inside of a tiny lab with about 45 people knocking out 35
|
||
Rav4 test vehicles at the rate of about two cars per week. The alpha version
|
||
of the Model S, including newly stamped body parts from the Fremont
|
||
factory, a revamped battery pack, and revamped power electronics, came to
|
||
life in the basement of the Palo Alto office. “The first prototype was
|
||
finished at about two A.M.,” Javidan said. “We were so excited that we
|
||
drove it around without glass, any interior, or a hood.”
|
||
A day or two later, Musk came to check out the vehicle. He jumped into
|
||
the car and drove it to the opposite end of the basement, where he could
|
||
spend some time alone with it. He got out and walked around the vehicle,
|
||
and then the engineers came over to hear his take on the machine. This
|
||
process would be repeated many times in the months to come. “He would
|
||
generally be positive but constructive,” Javidan said. “We would try and get
|
||
him rides whenever we could, and he might ask for the steering to be tighter
|
||
or something like that before running off to another meeting.”
|
||
About a dozen of the alpha cars were produced. A couple went to
|
||
suppliers like Bosch to begin work on the braking systems, while others
|
||
were used for various tests and design tweaks. Tesla’s executives kept the
|
||
vehicles rotating on a strict schedule, giving one team two weeks for coldweather
|
||
testing and then shipping that alpha car to another team right away
|
||
for powertrain tuning. “The guys from Toyota and Daimler were blown
|
||
away,” Javidan said. “They might have two hundred alpha cars and several
|
||
hundred to a thousand beta cars. We were doing everything from crash tests
|
||
to the interior design with about fifteen cars. That was amazing to them.”
|
||
Tesla employees developed similar techniques to their counterparts at
|
||
SpaceX for dealing with Musk’s high demands. The savvy engineers knew
|
||
better than to go into a meeting and deliver bad news without some sort of
|
||
alternative plan at the ready. “One of the scariest meetings was when we
|
||
needed to ask Elon for an extra two weeks and more money to build out
|
||
another version of the Model S,” Javidan said. “We put together a plan,
|
||
stating how long things would take and what they would cost. We told him
|
||
that if he wanted the car in thirty days it would require hiring some new
|
||
people, and we presented him with a stack of resumes. You don’t tell Elon
|
||
you can’t do something. That will get you kicked out of the room. You need
|
||
everything lined up. After we presented the plan, he said, ‘Okay, thanks.’
|
||
Everyone was like, ‘Holy shit, he didn’t fire you.’”
|
||
There were times when Musk would overwhelm the Tesla engineers
|
||
with his requests. He took a Model S prototype home for a weekend and
|
||
came back on the Monday asking for around eighty changes. Since Musk
|
||
never writes anything down, he held all the alterations in his head and
|
||
would run down the checklist week by week to see what the engineers had
|
||
fixed. The same engineering rules as those at SpaceX applied. You did what
|
||
Musk asked or were prepared to burrow down into the properties of
|
||
materials to explain why something could not be done. “He always said,
|
||
‘Take it down to the physics,’” Javidan said.
|
||
As the development of the Model S neared completion in 2012, Musk
|
||
refined his requests and dissection style. He went over the Model S with
|
||
von Holzhausen every Friday at Tesla’s design studio in Los Angeles. Von
|
||
Holzhausen and his small team had moved out of the corner in the SpaceX
|
||
factory and gotten their own hangar-shaped facility near the rear of the
|
||
SpaceX complex.* The building had a few offices and then one large, wideopen
|
||
area where various mock-ups of vehicles and parts awaited inspection.
|
||
During a visit I made in 2012, there was one complete Model S, a skeletal
|
||
version of the Model X—an as yet to be released SUV—and a selection of
|
||
tires and hubcaps lined up against the wall. Musk sank into the Model S
|
||
driver seat and von Holzhausen climbed into the passenger seat. Musk’s
|
||
eyes darted around for a few moments and then settled onto the sun visor. It
|
||
was beige and a visible seam ran around the edge and pushed the fabric out.
|
||
“It’s fish-lipped,” Musk said. The screws attaching the visor to the car were
|
||
visible as well, and Musk insisted that every time he saw them it felt like
|
||
tiny daggers were stabbing him in the eyes. The whole situation was
|
||
unacceptable. “We have to decide what is the best sun visor in the world
|
||
and then do better,” Musk said. A couple of assistants taking notes outside
|
||
of the car jotted this down.
|
||
This process played out again with the Model X. This was to be Tesla’s
|
||
merger of an SUV and a minivan built off the Model S foundation. Von
|
||
Holzhausen had four different versions of the vehicle’s center console
|
||
resting on the floor, so that they could be slotted in one by one and viewed
|
||
by Musk. The pair spent most of their time, however, agonizing over the
|
||
middle row of seats. Each one had an independent base so that each
|
||
passenger could adjust his seat rather than moving the whole row
|
||
collectively. Musk loved the freedom this gave the passenger but grew
|
||
concerned after seeing all three seats in different positions. “The problem is
|
||
that they will never be aligned and might look a mess,” Musk said. “We
|
||
have to make sure they are not too hodgy podgy.”
|
||
The idea of Musk as a design expert has long struck me as bizarre. He’s
|
||
a physicist at heart and an engineer by demeanor. So much of who Musk is
|
||
says that he should fall into that Silicon Valley stereotype of the schlubby
|
||
nerd who would only know good design if he read about it in a textbook.
|
||
The truth is that there might be some of that going on with Musk, and he’s
|
||
turned it into an advantage. He’s very visual and can store things that others
|
||
have deemed to look good away in his brain for recall at any time. This
|
||
process has helped Musk develop a good eye, which he’s combined with his
|
||
own sensibilities, while also refining his ability to put what he wants into
|
||
words. The result is a confident, assertive perspective that does resonate
|
||
with the tastes of consumers. Like Steve Jobs before him, Musk is able to
|
||
think up things that consumers did not even know they wanted—the door
|
||
handles, the giant touch-screen—and to envision a shared point of view for
|
||
all of Tesla’s products and services. “Elon holds Tesla up as a product
|
||
company,” von Holzhausen said. “He’s passionate that you have to get the
|
||
product right. I have to deliver for him and make sure it’s beautiful and
|
||
attractive.”
|
||
With the Model X, Musk again turned to his role as a dad to shape some
|
||
of the flashiest design elements of the vehicle. He and von Holzhausen were
|
||
walking around the floor of an auto show in Los Angeles, and they both
|
||
complained about the awkwardness of getting to the middle and back row
|
||
seats in an SUV. Parents who have felt their backs wrench while trying to
|
||
angle a child and car seat into a vehicle know this reality all too well, as
|
||
does any decent-sized human who has tried to wedge into a third row seat.
|
||
“Even on a minivan, which is supposed to have more room, almost onethird
|
||
of the entry space is covered by the sliding door,” von Holzhausen
|
||
said. “If you could open up the car in a way that is unique and special, that
|
||
could be a real game changer. We took that kernel of an idea back and
|
||
worked up forty or fifty design concepts to solve the problem, and I think
|
||
we ended up with one of the most radical ones.” The Model X has what
|
||
Musk coined as “falcon-wing doors.” They’re hinged versions of the gullwing
|
||
doors found on some high-end cars like the DeLorean. The doors go
|
||
up and then flop over in a constrained enough way that the Model X won’t
|
||
rub up against a car parked close to it or hit the ceiling in a garage. The end
|
||
result is that a parent can plop a child in the second-row passenger seat
|
||
without needing to bend over or twist at all.
|
||
When Tesla’s engineers first heard about the falcon-wing doors, they
|
||
cringed. Here was Musk with another crazy ask. “Everyone tried to come
|
||
up with an excuse as to why we couldn’t do it,” Javidan said. “You can’t put
|
||
it in the garage. It won’t work with things like skis. Then, Elon took a demo
|
||
model to his house and showed us that the doors opened. Everyone is
|
||
mumbling, ‘Yeah, in a fifteen-million-dollar house, the doors will open just
|
||
fine.’” Like the controversial door handles on the Model S, the Model X’s
|
||
doors have become one of its most striking features and the thing
|
||
consumers talk about the most. “I was one of the first people to test it out
|
||
with a kid’s car seat,” Javidan said. “We have a minivan, and you have to be
|
||
a contortionist to get the seat into the middle row. Compared to that, the
|
||
Model X was so easy. If it’s a gimmick, it’s a gimmick that works.”
|
||
During my 2012 visit to the design studio, Tesla had a number of
|
||
competitors’ vehicles in the parking lot nearby, and Musk made sure to
|
||
demonstrate the limitations of their seating compared to the Model X. He
|
||
tried with honest effort to sit in the third row of an Acura SUV, but, even
|
||
though the car claimed to have room for seven, Musk’s knees were pressed
|
||
up to his chin, and he never really fit into the seat. “That’s like a midget
|
||
cave,” he said. “Anyone can make a car big on the outside. The trick is to
|
||
make it big on the inside.” Musk went from one rival’s car to the next,
|
||
illuminating the vehicles’ flaws for me and von Holzhausen. “It’s good to
|
||
get a sense for just how bad the other cars are,” he said.
|
||
When these statements fly out of Musk’s mouth, it’s momentarily
|
||
shocking. Here’s a guy who needed nine years to produce about three
|
||
thousand cars ridiculing automakers that build millions of vehicles every
|
||
year. In that context, his ribbing comes off as absurd.
|
||
Musk, though, approaches everything from a Platonic perspective. As
|
||
he sees it, all of the design and technology choices should be directed
|
||
toward the goal of making a car as close to perfect as possible. To the extent
|
||
that rival automakers haven’t, that’s what Musk is judging. It’s almost a
|
||
binary experience for him. Either you’re trying to make something
|
||
spectacular with no compromises or you’re not. And if you’re not, Musk
|
||
considers you a failure. This position can look unreasonable or foolish to
|
||
outsiders, but the philosophy works for Musk and constantly pushes him
|
||
and those around him to their limits.
|
||
On June 22, 2012, Tesla invited all of its employees, some select
|
||
customers, and the press to its factory in Fremont to watch as the first
|
||
Model S sedans were taken home. Depending on which of the many
|
||
promised delivery dates you pick, the Model S was anywhere from eighteen
|
||
months to two-plus years late. Some of the delays were a result of Musk’s
|
||
requests for exotic technologies that needed to be invented. Other delays
|
||
were simply a function of this still quite young automaker learning how to
|
||
produce an immaculate luxury vehicle and needing to go through the trial
|
||
and error tied to becoming a more mature, more refined company.
|
||
The outsiders were blown away by their first glimpse of the Tesla
|
||
factory. Musk had T-E-S-L-A painted in enormous black letters on the side
|
||
of the building so that people driving by on the freeway, or flying above for
|
||
that matter, were made well aware of the company’s presence. The inside of
|
||
the factory, once dressed in the dark, dingy tones of General Motors and
|
||
Toyota, had taken on the Musk aesthetic. The floors received a white epoxy,
|
||
the walls and beams were painted white, the thirty-foot tall stamping
|
||
machines were white, and then much of the other machinery, like the teams
|
||
of the robots, had been painted red, making the place look like an industrial
|
||
version of Santa Claus’s workshop. Just as he did at SpaceX, Musk placed
|
||
the desks of his engineers right on the factory floor, where they worked in
|
||
an area cordoned off by rudimentary cubicle dividers. Musk had a desk in
|
||
this area as well.*
|
||
The Model S launch event took place in a section of the factory where
|
||
they finish off the cars. There’s a part of the floor with various grooves and
|
||
bumps that the cars pass over, as technicians listen for any rattles. There’s
|
||
also a chamber where water can be sprayed at high pressure onto the car to
|
||
check for leaks. For the very last inspection, the Model S cruises onto a
|
||
raised platform made out of bamboo, which, when coupled with lots of
|
||
LED lighting, is meant to provide an abundant amount of contrast so that
|
||
people can spot flaws on the body. For the few first months that the Model
|
||
S came off the line, Musk went to this bamboo stage to inspect every
|
||
vehicle. “He was down on all fours looking up under the wheel well,” said
|
||
Steve Jurvetson, the investor and Tesla board member.
|
||
Hundreds of people had gathered around this stage to watch as the first
|
||
dozen or so cars were presented to their owners. Many of the employees
|
||
were factory workers who had once been part of the autoworkers’ union,
|
||
lost their jobs when the NUMMI plant closed, and were now back at work
|
||
again, making the car of the future. They waved American flags and wore
|
||
red, white, and blue visors. A handful of the workers cried as the Model S
|
||
sedans were lined up on the stage. Even Musk’s most cynical critics would
|
||
have softened for a moment while watching the proceedings. Say what you
|
||
will about Tesla receiving government money or hyping up the promise of
|
||
the electric car, it was trying to do something big and different, and people
|
||
were getting hired by the thousands as a result. With machines humming in
|
||
the background, Musk gave a brief speech and then handed the owners their
|
||
keys. They drove off the bamboo platform and out the factory doors, while
|
||
the Tesla employees provided a standing ovation.
|
||
Just four weeks earlier, SpaceX had flown cargo to the International
|
||
Space Station and had its capsule returned to Earth—firsts all around for a
|
||
private company. That feat coupled with the launch of the Model S led to a
|
||
rapid transformation in the way the world outside of Silicon Valley
|
||
perceived Musk. The guy who was always promising, promising, promising
|
||
was doing—and doing spectacular things. “I may have been optimistic with
|
||
respect to the timing on some of these things, but I didn’t over-promise on
|
||
the outcome,” Musk told me during an interview after the Model S launch.
|
||
“I have done everything I said I was going to do.”
|
||
Musk did not have Riley around to celebrate with and share in this run
|
||
of good fortune. They had divorced, and Musk had begun to think about
|
||
dating again, if he could find the time. Even with this turmoil in his
|
||
personal life, however, Musk had reached a point of calm that he had not
|
||
felt in many years. “My main emotion is that there is a bit of weight off my
|
||
shoulders,” he said at the time. Musk took his boys to Maui to meet up with
|
||
Kimbal and other relatives, marking his first real vacation in a number of
|
||
years.
|
||
It was right after this holiday that Musk let me have the first substantial
|
||
glimpse into his life. Skin still peeling off his sunburnt arms, Musk met
|
||
with me at the Tesla and SpaceX headquarters, at the Tesla design studio,
|
||
and at a Beverley Hills screening of a documentary he had helped sponsor.
|
||
The film, Baseball in the Time of Cholera, was good but grim and explored
|
||
a cholera outbreak in Haiti. It turned out that Musk had visited Haiti the
|
||
previous Christmas, filling his jet with toys and MacBook Airs for an
|
||
orphanage. Bryn Mooser, the codirector of the film, told me that during a
|
||
barbecue Musk had taught the kids how to fire off model rockets and then
|
||
later went to visit a village deeper in the jungle by traveling in a dugout
|
||
canoe. After the screening, Musk and I hung out on the street for a bit away
|
||
from the crowd. I noted aloud that everyone wants to make him out as the
|
||
Tony Stark character but that he didn’t really exude that “playboy drinking
|
||
scotch while zooming through Afghanistan in an army convoy” vibe. He
|
||
fired back, pointing to the Haitian canoe ride. “I got wasted, too, on some
|
||
drink they call the Zombie,” Musk said. He smiled and then invited me to
|
||
grab some drinks across the street at Mr. Chow to celebrate the movie. All
|
||
seemed to be going well for Musk, and he savored the moment.
|
||
This restful period did not last long and soon enough Tesla’s battle for
|
||
survival resumed. The company could only produce about ten sedans per
|
||
week at the outset and had thousands of back orders that it needed to fulfill.
|
||
Short sellers, those investors who bet a company’s share price will fall, had
|
||
taken huge positions in Tesla, making it the most shorted stock out of one
|
||
hundred of the largest companies listed on the NASDAQ exchange. The
|
||
naysayers expected numerous Model S flaws to crop up and undermine the
|
||
enthusiasm for the car, to the point that people started canceling their orders
|
||
in bulk. There were also huge doubts that Tesla could ramp up production in
|
||
a meaningful way and do so profitably. In October 2012, the presidential
|
||
hopeful Mitt Romney dubbed Tesla “a loser,” while slagging off a couple of
|
||
other government-backed green technology companies (the solar panel
|
||
maker Solyndra and Fisker) during a debate with Barack Obama.14
|
||
While the doubters placed huge wagers on Tesla’s impending failure,
|
||
Musk’s bluster mode engaged. He began talking about Tesla’s goals to
|
||
become the most profitable major automobile maker in the world, with
|
||
better margins than BMW. Then, in September 2012, he unveiled something
|
||
that shocked both Tesla critics and proponents alike. Tesla had secretly been
|
||
building the first leg of a network of charging stations. The company
|
||
disclosed the location of six stations in California, Nevada, and Arizona and
|
||
promised that hundreds more would be on the way. Tesla intended to build a
|
||
global charging network that would let Model S owners making long drives
|
||
pull off the highway and recharge very quickly. And they would be able to
|
||
do so for free. In fact, Musk insisted that Tesla owners would soon be able
|
||
to travel across the United States without spending a penny on fuel. Model
|
||
S drivers would have no trouble finding these stations, not only because the
|
||
cars’ onboard computers would guide them to the nearest one but because
|
||
Musk and von Holzhausen had designed giant red and white monoliths to
|
||
herald the appearance of the stations.
|
||
The Supercharging stations, as Tesla called them, represented a huge
|
||
investment for the strapped company. An argument could easily be made
|
||
that spending money on this sort of thing at such a precarious moment in
|
||
the Model S and Tesla’s history was somewhere between daft and batshit
|
||
crazy. Surely Musk did not have the gall to try to revamp the very idea of
|
||
the automobile and build an energy network at the same time with a budget
|
||
equivalent to what Ford and ExxonMobil spend on their annual holiday
|
||
parties. But that was the exact plan. Musk, Straubel, and others inside Tesla
|
||
had mapped out this all-or-nothing play long ago and built certain features
|
||
into the Model S with the Superchargers in mind.*
|
||
While the arrival of the Model S and the charging network garnered
|
||
Tesla a ton of headlines, it remained unclear if the positive press and good
|
||
vibes would last. Serious trade-offs had been made as Tesla rushed to get
|
||
the Model S to market. The car had some spectacular, novel features. But
|
||
everyone inside of the company knew that as far as luxury sedans went, the
|
||
Model S did not match up feature to feature with cars from BMW and
|
||
Mercedes-Benz. The first few thousand Model S cars, for example, would
|
||
ship without the parking sensors and radar-assisted cruise control common
|
||
on other high-end cars. “It was either hire a team of fifty people right away
|
||
to make one of these things happen or implement things as best and as fast
|
||
as you could,” Javidan said.
|
||
The subpar fit and finish also proved hard to explain. The early adopters
|
||
could tolerate a windshield wiper going haywire for a couple of days, but
|
||
they wanted to see seats and visors that met the $100,000 price tag. While
|
||
Tesla did its best to source the highest-quality materials, it struggled at
|
||
times to convince the top suppliers to take the company seriously.15 “People
|
||
were very suspect that we would deliver one thousand Model Ss,” said von
|
||
Holzhausen. “It was frustrating because we had the drive internally to make
|
||
the car perfect but could not get the same commitment externally. With
|
||
something like the visor, we ended up having to go to a third-rate supplier
|
||
and then work on fixing the situation after the car had already started
|
||
shipping.” The cosmetic issues, though, were minor compared to a
|
||
tumultuous set of internal circumstances, revealed in detail here for the first
|
||
time, that threatened to bankrupt the company once again.
|
||
Musk had hired George Blankenship, a former Apple executive, to run
|
||
its stores and service-center operations. At Apple, Blankenship worked just
|
||
a couple of doors down from Steve Jobs and received credit for building
|
||
much of the Apple Store strategy. When Tesla first hired Blankenship, the
|
||
press and public were atwitter, anticipating that’d he do something
|
||
spectacular and at odds with the traditions of the automotive industry.
|
||
Blankenship did some of that. He expanded Tesla’s number of stores
|
||
throughout the world and imbued them with that Apple Store vibe. Along
|
||
with showcasing the Model S, the Tesla stores sold hoodies and hats and
|
||
had areas in the back where kids would find crayons and Tesla coloring
|
||
books. Blankenship gave me a tour of the Tesla store on Santana Row, the
|
||
glitzy shopping center in San Jose. He came off as a warm, grandfatherly
|
||
sort who saw Tesla as his chance to make a difference. “The typical dealer
|
||
wants to sell you a car on the spot to clear inventory off his lot,”
|
||
Blankenship said. “The goal here is to develop a relationship with Tesla and
|
||
electric vehicles.” Tesla, he said, wanted to turn the Model S into more than
|
||
a car. Ideally it would be an object of desire just like the iPod and iPhone.
|
||
Blankenship noted that Tesla had more than ten thousand reservations for
|
||
the Model S at the time, the vast majority of which had arrived without the
|
||
customers test-driving the car. A lot of this early interest resulted from the
|
||
aura surrounding Musk, who Blankenship said came off as similar to Jobs
|
||
but with a toned-down control-freak vibe. “This is the first place I have
|
||
worked that is going to change the world,” Blankenship said, taking a jab at
|
||
the sometimes trivial nature of Apple’s gadgets.
|
||
While Musk and Blankenship got along at first, their relationship fell
|
||
apart during the latter stages of 2012. Tesla did have a large number of
|
||
reservations in which people put down $5,000 for the right to buy a Model
|
||
S and get in the purchase queue. But the company had struggled to turn
|
||
these reservations into actual sales. The reasons behind this problem remain
|
||
unclear. It may have been that the complaints about the interior and the
|
||
early kinks mentioned on the Tesla forums and message boards were
|
||
causing concerns. Tesla also lacked financing options to soften the blow of
|
||
buying a $100,000 car, while uncertainty surrounded the resale market for
|
||
the Model S. You might end up with the car of the future or you might
|
||
spend six figures on a dud with a battery pack that loses its capacity, and
|
||
with no secondary buyer. Tesla’s service centers at the time were also
|
||
terrible. The early cars were unreliable and customers were being sent in
|
||
droves to centers unprepared to handle the volume. Many prospective Tesla
|
||
owners likely wanted to hang out on the sidelines for a bit longer to make
|
||
sure that the company would remain viable. As Musk put it, “The word of
|
||
mouth on the car sucked.”
|
||
By the middle of February 2013, Tesla had fallen into a crisis state. If it
|
||
could not convert its reservations to purchases quickly, its factory would sit
|
||
idle, costing the company vast amounts of money. And if anyone caught
|
||
wind of the factory slowdown, Tesla’s shares would likely plummet,
|
||
prospective owners would become even more cautious, and the short sellers
|
||
would win. The severity of this problem had been hidden from Musk, but
|
||
once he learned about it, he acted in his signature all-or-nothing fashion.
|
||
Musk pulled people from recruiting, the design studio, engineering, finance,
|
||
and wherever else he could find them and ordered them to get on the phone,
|
||
call people with reservations, and close deals. “If we don’t deliver these
|
||
cars, we are fucked,” Musk told the employees. “So, I don’t care what job
|
||
you were doing. Your new job is delivering cars.” He placed Jerome
|
||
Guillen, a former Daimler executive, in charge of fixing the service issues.
|
||
Musk fired senior leaders whom he deemed subpar performers and
|
||
promoted a flood of junior people who had been doing above-average work.
|
||
He also made an announcement personally guaranteeing the resale price of
|
||
the Model S. Customers would be able to resell their cars for the average
|
||
going rate of similar luxury sedans with Musk putting his billions behind
|
||
this pledge. And then Musk tried to orchestrate the ultimate fail-safe for
|
||
Tesla just in case his maneuvers did not work.
|
||
During the first week of April, Musk reached out to his friend Larry
|
||
Page at Google. According to people familiar with their discussion, Musk
|
||
voiced his concerns about Tesla’s ability to survive the next few weeks. Not
|
||
only were customers failing to convert their reservations to orders at the rate
|
||
Musk hoped, but existing customers had also started to defer their orders as
|
||
they heard about upcoming features and new color choices. The situation
|
||
got so bad that Tesla had to shut down its factory. Publicly, Tesla said it
|
||
needed to conduct maintenance on the factory, which was technically true,
|
||
although the company would have soldiered on had the orders been closing
|
||
as expected. Musk explained all of this to Page and then struck a handshake
|
||
deal for Google to acquire Tesla.
|
||
While Musk did not want to sell, the deal seemed like the only viable
|
||
course for Tesla’s future. Musk’s biggest fear about an acquisition was that
|
||
the new owner would not see Tesla’s goals through to their conclusion. He
|
||
wanted to make sure that the company would end up producing a massmarket
|
||
electric vehicle. Musk proposed terms under which he would remain
|
||
in control of Tesla for eight years or until it started pumping out a massmarket
|
||
car. Musk also asked for access to $5 billion in capital for factory
|
||
expansions. Some of Google’s lawyers were put off by these demands, but
|
||
Musk and Page continued to talk about the deal. Given Tesla’s value at the
|
||
time, it was thought that Google would need to pay about $6 billion for the
|
||
company.
|
||
As Musk, Page, and Google’s lawyers debated the parameters of an
|
||
acquisition, a miracle happened. The five hundred or so people whom Musk
|
||
had turned into car salesmen quickly sold a huge volume of cars. Tesla,
|
||
which only had a couple weeks of cash left in the bank, moved enough cars
|
||
in the span of about fourteen days to end up with a blowout first fiscal
|
||
quarter. Tesla stunned Wall Street on May 8, 2013, by posting its first-ever
|
||
profit as a public company—$11 million—on $562 million in sales. It
|
||
delivered 4,900 Model S sedans during the period. This announcement sent
|
||
Tesla’s shares soaring from about $30 a share to $130 per share in July. Just
|
||
a couple of weeks after revealing the first-quarter results, Tesla paid off its
|
||
$465 million loan from the government early and with interest. Tesla
|
||
suddenly appeared to have vast cash reserves at its disposal, and the short
|
||
sellers were forced to take massive losses. The solid performance of the
|
||
stock increased consumers’ confidence, creating a virtuous circle for Tesla.
|
||
With cars selling and Tesla’s value rising, the deal with Google was no
|
||
longer necessary, and Tesla had become too expensive to buy. The talks
|
||
with Google ended.*
|
||
What transpired next was the Summer of Musk. Musk put his public
|
||
relations staff on high alert, telling them that he wanted to try to have one
|
||
Tesla announcement per week. The company never quite lived up to that
|
||
pace, but it did issue statement after statement. Musk held a series of press
|
||
conferences that addressed financing for the Model S, the construction of
|
||
more charging stations, and the opening of more retail stores. During one
|
||
announcement, Musk noted that Tesla’s charging stations were solarpowered
|
||
and had batteries on-site to store extra juice. “I was joking that
|
||
even if there’s some zombie apocalypse, you’ll still be able to travel
|
||
throughout the country using the Tesla Supercharger system,” Musk said,
|
||
setting the bar very high for CEOs at other automakers. But the biggest
|
||
event by far was held in Los Angeles, where Tesla unveiled another secret
|
||
feature of the Model S.
|
||
In June 2013, Tesla cleared the prototype vehicles out of its Los
|
||
Angeles design studio and invited Tesla owners and the media for a flashy
|
||
evening soiree. Hundreds of people showed up, driving their pricey Model
|
||
S sedans through the grungy streets of Hawthorne and parking in between
|
||
the design studio and the SpaceX factory. The studio had been converted
|
||
into a lounge. The lighting was dim, and the floor had been covered in
|
||
AstroTurf and tiered to make plateaus where people could mingle or plop
|
||
down on couches. Women in tight black dresses cruised through the crowd,
|
||
serving drinks. Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” played on the sound system. A
|
||
stage had been built at the front of the room, but before Musk ascended it he
|
||
mingled with the masses. It was clear that he had become a rock star for
|
||
Tesla owners—every bit the equivalent of Steve Jobs for the Apple faithful.
|
||
People surrounded him and asked to take pictures. Meanwhile, Straubel
|
||
stood off to the side, often totally alone.
|
||
After people had a couple of drinks, Musk fought through the crowd to
|
||
the front of the room, where old TV commercials projected onto a screen
|
||
above the stage showed families stopping by Esso and Chevron stations.
|
||
The kids were so happy to see the Esso tiger mascot. “Gas is a weird thing
|
||
to love,” Musk said. “Honestly.” That’s when he brought a Model S up
|
||
onstage. A hole opened up in the floor beneath the car. It had been possible
|
||
all along, Musk said, to replace the battery pack underneath the Model S in
|
||
a matter of seconds—the company just hadn’t told anyone about this. Tesla
|
||
would now start adding battery swapping at its charging stations as a
|
||
quicker option to recharging. Someone could drive right over a pit where a
|
||
robot would take off the car’s battery pack and install a new one in ninety
|
||
seconds, at a cost equivalent to filling up with a tank of gas. “The only
|
||
decision that you have to make when you come to one of our Tesla stations
|
||
is do you prefer faster or free,” Musk said.*
|
||
In the months that followed, a couple of events threatened to derail the
|
||
Summer of Musk. The New York Times penned a withering review of the
|
||
car and its charging stations, and a couple of the Model S sedans caught fire
|
||
after being involved in collisions. Disobeying conventional public relations
|
||
wisdom, Musk went after the reporter, using data pulled from the car to
|
||
undermine the reviewer’s claims. Musk penned the feisty rebuttal himself,
|
||
while on vacation in Aspen with Kimbal, and friend and Tesla board
|
||
member Antonio Gracias. “At some other company, it would be a public
|
||
relations group putting something like this together,” Gracias said. “Elon
|
||
felt like it was the most important problem facing Tesla at the time and
|
||
that’s always what he deals with and how he prioritizes. It could kill the car
|
||
and represented an existential threat against the business. Have there been
|
||
moments where his unconventional style in these types of situations has
|
||
made me cringe? Yes. But I trust that it will work out in the end.” Musk
|
||
applied a similar approach to dealing with the fires by declaring the Model
|
||
S the safest car in America in a press release and adding a titanium
|
||
underbody shield and aluminum plates to the vehicle to deflect and destroy
|
||
debris and keep the battery pack safe.16
|
||
The fires, the occasional bad review—none of this had any effect on
|
||
Tesla’s sales or share price. Musk’s star shone brighter and brighter as
|
||
Tesla’s market value ballooned to about half that of GM and Ford.
|
||
Tesla held another press event in October 2014 that cemented Musk’s
|
||
place as the new titan of the auto industry. Musk unveiled a supercharged
|
||
version of the Model S with two motors—one in the front and one in the
|
||
back. It could go zero to 60 in 3.2 seconds. The company had turned a
|
||
sedan into a supercar. “It’s like taking off from a carrier deck,” Musk said.
|
||
“It’s just bananas.” Musk also unveiled a new suite of software for the
|
||
Model S that gave it autopilot functions. The car had radar to detect objects
|
||
and warn of possible collisions and could guide itself via GPS. “Later, you
|
||
will be able to summon the car,” Musk said. “It will come to wherever you
|
||
are. There’s also something else I would like to do. Many of our engineers
|
||
will be hearing this in real time. I would like the charge connector to plug
|
||
itself into the car, sort of like an articulating snake. I think we will probably
|
||
do something like that.”
|
||
Thousands of people waited in line for hours to see Musk demonstrate
|
||
this technology. Musk cracked jokes during the presentation and played off
|
||
the crowd’s enthusiasm. The man who had been awkward in front of media
|
||
during the PayPal years had developed a unique, slick stagecraft. A woman
|
||
standing next to me in the crowd went weak in the knees when Musk first
|
||
took the stage. A man to my other side said he wanted a Model X and had
|
||
just offered $15,000 to a friend to move up on the reservation list, so that he
|
||
could end up with model No. 700. The enthusiasm coupled with Musk’s
|
||
ability to generate attention was emblematic of just how far the little
|
||
automaker and its eccentric CEO had come. Rival car companies would kill
|
||
to receive such interest and had basically been left dumbfounded as Tesla
|
||
snuck up on them and delivered more than they had ever imagined possible.
|
||
As the Model S fever gripped Silicon Valley, I visited Ford’s small
|
||
research and development lab in Palo Alto. The head of the lab at the time
|
||
was a ponytailed, sandal-wearing engineer named T. J. Giuli, who felt very
|
||
jealous of Tesla. Inside of every Ford were dozens of computing systems
|
||
made by different companies that all had to speak to each other and work as
|
||
one. It was a mess of complexity that had evolved over time, and
|
||
simplifying the situation would prove near impossible at this point,
|
||
especially for a company like Ford, which needed to pump out hundreds of
|
||
thousands of cars per year and could not afford to stop and reboot. Tesla, by
|
||
contrast, got to start from scratch and make its own software the focus of
|
||
the Model S. Giuli would have loved the same opportunity. “Software is in
|
||
many ways the heart of the new vehicle experience,” he said. “From the
|
||
powertrain to the warning chimes in the car, you’re using software to create
|
||
an expressive and pleasing environment. The level of integration that the
|
||
software has into the rest of the Model S is really impressive. Tesla is a
|
||
benchmark for what we do here.” Not long after this chat, Giuli left Ford to
|
||
become an engineer at a stealth start-up.
|
||
There was little the mainstream auto industry could do to slow Tesla
|
||
down. But that didn’t stop executives from trying to be difficult whenever
|
||
possible. Tesla, for example, wanted to call its third-generation car the
|
||
Model E, so that its lineup of vehicles would be the Model S, E, and X—
|
||
another playful Musk gag. But Ford’s then CEO, Alan Mulally, blocked
|
||
Tesla from using Model E, with the threat of a lawsuit. “So I call up
|
||
Mulally and I was like, ‘Alan, are you just fucking with us or are you really
|
||
going to do a Model E?’” Musk said. “And I’m not sure which is worse.
|
||
You know? Like it would actually make more sense if they’re just fucking
|
||
with us because if they actually come out with a Model E at this point, and
|
||
we’ve got the Model S and the X and Ford comes out with the Model E, it’s
|
||
going to look ridiculous. So even though Ford did the Model T a hundred
|
||
years ago, nobody thinks of ‘Model’ as being a Ford thing anymore. So it
|
||
would just feel like they stole it. Like why did you go steal Tesla’s E? Like
|
||
you’re some sort of fascist army marching across the alphabet, some sort of
|
||
Sesame Street robber. And he was like, ‘No, no, we’re definitely going to
|
||
use it.’ And I was like, ‘Oh, I don’t think that’s such a good idea because
|
||
people are going to be confused because it’s not going to make sense.
|
||
People aren’t used to Ford having Model something these days. It’s usually
|
||
called like the Ford Fusion.’ And he was like, no, his guys really want to
|
||
use that. That’s terrible.” After that, Tesla registered the trademark for
|
||
Model Y as another joke. “In fact, Ford called us up deadpan and said, ‘We
|
||
see you’ve registered Model Y. Is that what you’re going to use instead of
|
||
the Model E?’” Musk said. “I’m like, ‘No, it’s a joke. S-E-X-Y. What does
|
||
that spell?’ But trademark law is a dry profession it turns out.”*
|
||
What Musk had done that the rival automakers missed or didn’t have
|
||
the means to combat was turn Tesla into a lifestyle. It did not just sell
|
||
someone a car. It sold them an image, a feeling they were tapping into the
|
||
future, a relationship. Apple did the same thing decades ago with the Mac
|
||
and then again with the iPod and iPhone. Even those who were not religious
|
||
about their affiliation to Apple were sucked into its universe once they
|
||
bought the hardware and downloaded software like iTunes.
|
||
This sort of relationship is hard to pull off if you don’t control as much
|
||
of the lifestyle as possible. PC makers that farmed their software out to
|
||
Microsoft, their chips to Intel, and their design to Asia could never make
|
||
machines as beautiful and as complete as Apple’s. They also could not
|
||
respond in time as Apple took this expertise to new areas and hooked
|
||
people on its applications.
|
||
You can see Musk’s embrace of the car as lifestyle in Tesla’s
|
||
abandonment of model years. Tesla does not designate cars as being 2014s
|
||
or 2015s, and it also doesn’t have “all the 2014s in stock must go, go, go
|
||
and make room for the new cars” sales. It produces the best Model S it can
|
||
at the time, and that’s what the customer receives. This means that Tesla
|
||
does not develop and hold on to a bunch of new features over the course of
|
||
the year and then unleash them in a new model all at once. It adds features
|
||
one by one to the manufacturing line when they’re ready. Some customers
|
||
may be frustrated to miss out on a feature here and there. Tesla, however,
|
||
manages to deliver most of the upgrades as software updates that everyone
|
||
gets, providing current Model S owners with pleasant surprises.
|
||
For the Model S owner, the all-electric lifestyle translates into a less
|
||
hassled existence. Instead of going to the gas station, you just plug the car
|
||
in at night, a rhythm familiar to anyone with a smartphone. The car will
|
||
start charging right away or the owner can tap into the Model S’s software
|
||
and schedule charging to take place late at night, when the cheapest
|
||
electricity rates are available. Tesla owners not only dodge gas stations;
|
||
they mostly get to skip out on visits to mechanics. A traditional vehicle
|
||
needs oil and transmission fluid changes to deal with all the friction and
|
||
wear and tear produced by its thousands of moving parts. The simpler
|
||
electric car design eliminates this type of maintenance. Both the Roadster
|
||
and the Model S also take advantage of what’s known as regenerative
|
||
braking, which extends the life of the brakes. During stop-and-go situations,
|
||
the Tesla will brake by kicking the motor into reverse via software and
|
||
slowing down the wheels instead of using brake pads and friction to clamp
|
||
them down. The Tesla motor generates electricity during this process and
|
||
funnels it back to the batteries, which is why electric cars get better mileage
|
||
in city traffic. Tesla still recommends that owners bring in the Model S once
|
||
a year for a checkup but that’s mostly to give the vehicle a once-over and
|
||
make sure that none of the components seems to be wearing down
|
||
prematurely.
|
||
Even Tesla’s approach to maintenance is philosophically different from
|
||
that of the traditional automotive industry. Most car dealers make the
|
||
majority of their profits from servicing cars. They treat vehicles like a
|
||
subscription service, expecting people to visit their service centers multiple
|
||
times a year for many years. This is the main reason dealerships have
|
||
fought to block Tesla from selling its cars directly to consumers.* “The
|
||
ultimate goal is to never have to bring your car back in after you buy it,”
|
||
said Javidan. The dealers charge more than independent mechanics but give
|
||
people the peace of mind that their car is being worked on by a specialist
|
||
for a particular make of vehicle. Tesla makes its profits off the initial sale of
|
||
the car and then from some optional software services. “I got the number
|
||
ten Model S,” said Konstantin Othmer,17 the Silicon Valley software whiz
|
||
and entrepreneur. “It was an awesome car, but it had just about every issue
|
||
you might have read about in the forums. They would fix all these things
|
||
and decided to trailer the car back to the shop so that they didn’t add any
|
||
miles to it. Then I went in for a one-year service, and they spruced up
|
||
everything so that the car was better than new. It was surrounded by velvet
|
||
ropes in the service center. It was just beautiful.”
|
||
Tesla’s model isn’t just about being an affront to the way carmakers and
|
||
dealers do business. It’s a more subtle play on how electric cars represent a
|
||
new way to think of automobiles. All car companies will soon follow
|
||
Tesla’s lead and offer some form of over-the-air updates to their vehicles.
|
||
The practicality and scope of their updates will be limited, however. “You
|
||
just can’t do an over-the-air sparkplug change or replacement of the timing
|
||
belt,” said Javidan. “With a gas car, you have to get under the hood at some
|
||
point and that forces you back to the dealership anyway. There’s no real
|
||
incentive for Mercedes to say, ‘You don’t need to bring the car in,’ because
|
||
it’s not true.” Tesla also has the edge of having designed so many of the key
|
||
components for its cars in-house, including the software running throughout
|
||
the vehicle. “If Daimler wants to change the way a gauge looks, it has to
|
||
contact a supplier half a world away and then wait for a series of
|
||
approvals,” Javidan said. “It would take them a year to change the way the
|
||
‘P’ on the instrument panel looks. At Tesla, if Elon decides he wants a
|
||
picture of a bunny rabbit on every gauge for Easter, he can have that done in
|
||
a couple of hours.”*
|
||
As Tesla turned into a star of modern American industry, its closest
|
||
rivals were obliterated. Fisker Automotive filed for bankruptcy and was
|
||
bought by a Chinese auto parts company in 2014. One of its main investors
|
||
was Ray Lane, a venture capitalist at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.
|
||
Lane had cost Kleiner Perkins a chance to invest in Tesla and then backed
|
||
Fisker—a disastrous move that tarnished the firm’s brand and Lane’s
|
||
reputation. Better Place was another start-up that enjoyed more hype than
|
||
Fisker and Tesla put together and raised close to $1 billion to build electric
|
||
cars and battery-swapping stations.18 The company never produced much of
|
||
anything and declared bankruptcy in 2013.
|
||
The guys like Straubel who had been at Tesla since the beginning are
|
||
quick to remind people that the chance to build an awesome electric car had
|
||
been there all along. “It’s not really like there was a rush to this idea, and
|
||
we got there first,” Straubel said. “It is frequently forgotten in hindsight that
|
||
people thought this was the shittiest business opportunity on the planet. The
|
||
venture capitalists were all running for the hills.” What separated Tesla
|
||
from the competition was the willingness to charge after its vision without
|
||
compromise, a complete commitment to execute to Musk’s standards.
|
||
11
|
||
THE UNIFIED FIELD THEORY OF ELON
|
||
MUSK
|
||
THE RIVE BROTHERS USED TO BE LIKE A TECHNOLOGY GANG.
|
||
In the late 1990s, they would jump on skateboards and zip around the
|
||
streets of Santa Cruz, knocking on the doors of businesses and asking if
|
||
they needed any help managing their computing systems. The young men,
|
||
who had all grown up in South Africa with their cousin Elon Musk, soon
|
||
decided there must be an easier way to hawk their technology smarts than
|
||
going door-to-door. They wrote some software that allowed them to take
|
||
control of their clients’ systems from afar and to automate many of the
|
||
standard tasks that companies required, such as installing updates for
|
||
applications. The software became the basis of a new company called
|
||
Everdream, and the brothers promoted their technology in some compelling
|
||
ways. Billboards went up around Silicon Valley in which Lyndon Rive, a
|
||
buff underwater hockey player,* stood naked with his pants around his
|
||
ankles, while holding a computer in front of his crotch. Up above his photo,
|
||
the tagline for the ad read, “Don’t get caught with your systems down.”
|
||
By 2004, Lyndon and his brothers, Peter and Russ, wanted a new
|
||
challenge—something that not only made them money but, as Lyndon put
|
||
it, “something that made us feel good every single day.” Near the end of the
|
||
summer that year, Lyndon rented an RV and set out with Musk for the
|
||
Black Rock desert and the madness of Burning Man. The men used to go on
|
||
adventures all the time when they were kids and looked forward to the long
|
||
drive as a way to catch up and brainstorm about their businesses. Musk
|
||
knew that Lyndon and his brothers were angling for something big. While
|
||
driving, Musk turned to Lyndon and suggested that he look into the solar
|
||
energy market. Musk had studied it a bit and thought there were some
|
||
opportunities that others had missed. “He said it was a good place to get
|
||
into,” Lyndon recalled.
|
||
After arriving at Burning Man, Musk, a regular at the event, and his
|
||
family went through their standard routines. They set up camp and prepped
|
||
their art car for a drive. This year, they had cut the roof off a small car,
|
||
elevated the steering wheel, shifted it to the right so that it was placed near
|
||
the middle of the vehicle, and replaced the seats with a couch. Musk took a
|
||
lot of pleasure in driving the funky creation.19 “Elon likes to see the
|
||
rawness of people there,” said Bill Lee, his longtime friend. “It’s his version
|
||
of camping. He wants to go and drive the art cars and see installations and
|
||
the great light shows. He dances a lot.” Musk put on a display of strength
|
||
and determination at the event as well. There was a wooden pole perhaps
|
||
thirty feet high with a dancing platform at the top. Dozens of people tried
|
||
and failed to climb it, and then Musk gave it a go. “His technique was very
|
||
awkward, and he should not have succeeded,” said Lyndon. “But he hugged
|
||
it and just inched up and inched up until he reached the top.”
|
||
Musk and the Rives left Burning Man enthused. The Rives decided to
|
||
become experts on the solar industry and find the opportunity in the market.
|
||
They spent two years studying solar technology and the dynamics of the
|
||
business, reading research reports, interviewing people, and attending
|
||
conferences along the way. It was during the Solar Power International
|
||
conference that the Rive brothers really hit on what their business model
|
||
might be. Only about two thousand* people showed up for the event, and
|
||
they all fit into a couple of hotel conference rooms for presentations and
|
||
panels. During one open discussion session, representatives from a handful
|
||
of the world’s largest solar installers were sitting onstage, and the moderator
|
||
asked what they were doing to make solar panels more affordable for
|
||
consumers. “They all gave the same answer,” Lyndon said. “They said,
|
||
‘We’re waiting for the cost of the panels to drop.’ None of them were taking
|
||
ownership of the problem.”
|
||
At the time, it was not easy for consumers to get solar panels on their
|
||
houses. You had to be very proactive, acquiring the panels and finding
|
||
someone else to install them. The consumer paid up front and had to make
|
||
an educated guess as to whether or not his or her house even got enough
|
||
sunshine to make the ordeal worthwhile. On top of all this, people were
|
||
reluctant to buy panels, knowing that the next year’s models would be more
|
||
efficient.
|
||
The Rives decided to make buying into the solar proposition much
|
||
simpler and formed a company called SolarCity in 2006. Unlike other
|
||
companies, they would not manufacture their own solar panels. Instead they
|
||
would buy them and then do just about everything else in-house. They built
|
||
software for analyzing a customer’s current energy bill and the position of
|
||
their house and the amount of sunlight it typically received to determine if
|
||
solar made sense for the property. They built up their own teams to install
|
||
the solar panels. And they created a financing system in which the customer
|
||
did not need to pay anything up front for the panels. The consumer leased
|
||
the panels over a number of years at a fixed monthly rate. Consumers got a
|
||
lower bill overall, they were no longer subject to the constantly rising rates
|
||
of typical utilities, and, if they sold their house, they could pass the contract
|
||
to the new owner. At the end of the lease, the homeowner could also
|
||
upgrade to new, more efficient panels. Musk had helped his cousins come
|
||
up with this structure and become the company’s chairman and its largest
|
||
shareholder, owning about a third of SolarCity.
|
||
Six years later, SolarCity had become the largest installer of solar panels
|
||
in the country. The company had lived up to its initial goals and made
|
||
installing the panels painless. Rivals were rushing to mimic its business
|
||
model. SolarCity had benefited along the way from a collapse in the price
|
||
of solar panels, which occurred after Chinese panel manufacturers flooded
|
||
the market with product. It had also expanded its business from consumers
|
||
to businesses with companies like Intel, Walgreens, and Wal-Mart signing
|
||
up for large installations. In 2012, SolarCity went public and its shares
|
||
soared higher in the months that followed. By 2014, SolarCity was valued
|
||
at close to $7 billion.
|
||
During the entire period of SolarCity’s growth, Silicon Valley had
|
||
dumped huge amounts of money into green technology companies with
|
||
mostly disastrous results. There were the automotive flubs like Fisker and
|
||
Better Place, and Solyndra, the solar cell maker that conservatives loved to
|
||
hold up as a cautionary tale of government spending and cronyism run
|
||
amok. Some of the most famous venture capitalists in history, like John
|
||
Doerr and Vinod Khosla, were ripped apart by the local and national press
|
||
for their failed green investments. The story was almost always the same.
|
||
People had thrown money at green technology because it seemed like the
|
||
right thing to do, not because it made business sense. From new kinds of
|
||
energy storage systems to electric cars and solar panels, the technology
|
||
never quite lived up to its billing and required too much government
|
||
funding and too many incentives to create a viable market. Much of this
|
||
criticism was fair. It’s just that there was this Elon Musk guy hanging
|
||
around who seemed to have figured something out that everyone else had
|
||
missed. “We had a blanket rule against investing in clean-tech companies
|
||
for about a decade,” said Peter Thiel, the PayPal cofounder and venture
|
||
capitalist at Founders Fund. “On the macro level, we were right because
|
||
clean tech as a sector was quite bad. But on the micro level, it looks like
|
||
Elon has the two most successful clean-tech companies in the U.S. We
|
||
would rather explain his success as being a fluke. There’s the whole Iron
|
||
Man thing in which he’s presented as a cartoonish businessman—this very
|
||
unusual animal at the zoo. But there is now a degree to which you have to
|
||
ask whether his success is an indictment on the rest of us who have been
|
||
working on much more incremental things. To the extent that the world still
|
||
doubts Elon, I think it’s a reflection on the insanity of the world and not on
|
||
the supposed insanity of Elon.”
|
||
SolarCity, like the rest of Musk’s ventures, did not represent a business
|
||
opportunity so much as it represented a worldview. Musk had decided long
|
||
ago—in his very rational manner—that solar made sense. Enough solar
|
||
energy hits the Earth’s surface in about an hour to equal a year’s worth of
|
||
worldwide energy consumption from all sources put together.20
|
||
Improvements in the efficiency of solar panels have been happening at a
|
||
steady clip. If solar is destined to be mankind’s preferred energy source in
|
||
the future, then this future ought to be brought about as quickly as possible.
|
||
Starting in 2014, SolarCity began to make the full extent of its
|
||
ambitions more obvious. First, the company began selling energy storage
|
||
systems. These units were built through a partnership with Tesla Motors.
|
||
Battery packs were manufactured at the Tesla factory and stacked inside
|
||
refrigerator-sized metal cases. Businesses and consumers could purchase
|
||
these storage systems to augment their solar panel arrays. Once they were
|
||
charged up, the battery units could be used to help large customers get
|
||
through the night or during unexpected outages. Customers could also pull
|
||
from the batteries instead of the grid during peak energy use periods, when
|
||
utilities tend to tack on extra charges. While SolarCity rolled the storage
|
||
units out in a modest, experimental fashion, the company expects most of
|
||
its customers to buy the systems in the years ahead to smooth out the solar
|
||
experience and help people and businesses leave the electrical grid
|
||
altogether.
|
||
Then, in June 2014, SolarCity acquired a solar cell maker called Silevo
|
||
for $200 million. This deal marked a huge shift in strategy. SolarCity would
|
||
no longer buy its solar panels. It would make them at a factory in New York
|
||
State. Silevo’s cells were said to be 18.5 percent efficient at turning light
|
||
into energy, compared to 14.5 percent for most cells, and the expectations
|
||
were that the company could reach 24 percent efficiency with the right
|
||
manufacturing techniques. Buying, rather than manufacturing, solar panels
|
||
had been one of SolarCity’s great advantages. It could capitalize on the glut
|
||
in the solar cell market and avoid the large capital expenditures tied to
|
||
building and running factories. With 110,000 customers, however, SolarCity
|
||
had started to consume so many solar panels that it needed to ensure a
|
||
consistent supply and price. “We are currently installing more solar than
|
||
most of the companies are manufacturing,” said Peter Rive, the cofounder
|
||
and chief technology officer at SolarCity. “If we do the manufacturing
|
||
ourselves and take advantage of some different technology, our costs will be
|
||
lower—and this business has always been about lowering the costs.”
|
||
After adding the leases, the storage units, and the solar cell
|
||
manufacturing together, it became clear to close observers of SolarCity that
|
||
the company had morphed into something resembling a utility. It had built
|
||
out a network of solar systems all under its control and managed by the
|
||
company’s software. By the end of 2015, SolarCity expects to have
|
||
installed 2 gigawatts’ worth of solar panels, producing 2.8 terawatt-hours of
|
||
electricity per year. “This would put us on a path to fulfill our goal to
|
||
become one of the largest suppliers of electricity in the United States,” the
|
||
company said after announcing these figures in a quarterly earnings
|
||
statement. The reality is that SolarCity accounts for a tiny fraction of the
|
||
United States’ annual energy consumption and has a long way to go to
|
||
become a major supplier of electricity in the country. There can, however,
|
||
be little doubt that Musk intends for the company to be a dominant force in
|
||
the solar industry and in the energy industry overall.
|
||
What’s more, SolarCity is a key part of what can be thought of as the
|
||
unified field theory of Musk. Each one of his businesses is interconnected
|
||
in the short term and the long term. Tesla makes battery packs that
|
||
SolarCity can then sell to end customers. SolarCity supplies Tesla’s
|
||
charging stations with solar panels, helping Tesla to provide free recharging
|
||
to its drivers. Newly minted Model S owners regularly opt to begin living
|
||
the Musk Lifestyle and outfit their homes with solar panels. Tesla and
|
||
SpaceX help each other as well. They exchange knowledge around
|
||
materials, manufacturing techniques, and the intricacies of operating
|
||
factories that build so much stuff from the ground up.
|
||
For most of their histories, SolarCity, Tesla, and SpaceX have been the
|
||
clear underdogs in their respective markets and gone to war against deeppocketed,
|
||
entrenched competitors. The solar, automotive, and aerospace
|
||
industries remain larded down by regulation and bureaucracy, which favors
|
||
incumbents. To people in these industries Musk came off as a wide-eyed
|
||
technologist who could be easily dismissed and ridiculed and who, as a
|
||
competitor, fell somewhere on the spectrum between annoying and full of
|
||
shit. The incumbents did their usual thing using their connections in
|
||
Washington to make life as miserable as possible on all three of Musk’s
|
||
companies, and they were pretty good at it.
|
||
As of 2012, Musk Co. turned into a real threat, and it became harder to
|
||
go at SolarCity, Tesla, or SpaceX as individual companies. Musk’s star
|
||
power had surged and washed over all three ventures at the same time.
|
||
When Tesla’s shares jumped, quite often SolarCity’s did, too. Similar
|
||
optimistic feelings accompanied successful SpaceX launches. They proved
|
||
Musk knew how to accomplish the most difficult of things, and investors
|
||
seemed to buy in more to the risks Musk took with his other enterprises.
|
||
The executives and lobbyists of aerospace, energy, and automotive
|
||
companies were suddenly going up against a rising star of big business—an
|
||
industrialist celebrity. Some of Musk’s opponents started to fear being on
|
||
the wrong side of history or at least the wrong side of his glow. Others
|
||
began playing really dirty.
|
||
Musk has spent years buttering up the Democrats. He’s visited the
|
||
White House several times and has the ear of President Obama. Musk,
|
||
however, is not a blind loyalist. He first and foremost backs the beliefs
|
||
behind Musk Co. and then uses any pragmatic means at his disposal to
|
||
advance his cause. Musk plays the part of the ruthless industrialist with a
|
||
fierce capitalist streak better than most Republicans and has the credentials
|
||
to back it up and earn support. The politicians in states like Alabama
|
||
looking to protect some factory jobs for Lockheed or in New Jersey trying
|
||
to help out the automobile dealership lobby now have to contend with a guy
|
||
who has an employment and manufacturing empire spread across the entire
|
||
United States. As of this writing, SpaceX had a factory in Los Angeles, a
|
||
rocket test facility in central Texas, and had just started construction on a
|
||
spaceport in South Texas. (SpaceX does a lot of business at existing launch
|
||
sites in California and Florida, as well.) Tesla had its car factory in Silicon
|
||
Valley, the design center in Los Angeles, and had started construction on a
|
||
battery factory in Nevada. (Politicians from Nevada, Texas, California, New
|
||
Mexico, and Arizona threw themselves at Musk over the battery factory,
|
||
with Nevada ultimately winning the business by offering Tesla $1.4 billion
|
||
in incentives. This event confirmed not only Musk’s soaring celebrity but
|
||
also his unmatched ability to raise funds.) SolarCity has created thousands
|
||
of white- and blue-collar clean-tech jobs, and it will create manufacturing
|
||
jobs at the solar panel factory that’s being built in Buffalo, New York. All
|
||
together, Musk Co. employed about fifteen thousand people at the end of
|
||
2014. Far from stopping there, the plan for Musk Co. calls for tens of
|
||
thousands of more jobs to be created on the back of ever more ambitious
|
||
products.
|
||
Tesla’s primary focus throughout 2015 will be bringing the Model X to
|
||
market. Musk expects the SUV to sell at least as well as the Model S and
|
||
wants Tesla’s factories to be capable of making 100,000 cars per year by the
|
||
end of 2015 to keep up with demand for both vehicles. The major downside
|
||
accompanying the Model X is its price. The SUV will start at the same lofty
|
||
prices as the Model S, which limits the potential customer base. The hope,
|
||
though, is that the Model X turns into the luxury vehicle of choice for
|
||
families and solidifies the Tesla brand’s connection with women. Musk has
|
||
pledged that the Supercharger network, service centers, and the batteryswap
|
||
stations will be built out even more in 2015 to greet the arrival of the
|
||
new vehicle. Beyond the Model X, Tesla has started work on the second
|
||
version of the Roadster, talked about making a truck, and, in all seriousness,
|
||
has begun modeling a type of submarine car that could transition from road
|
||
to water. Musk paid $1 million for the Lotus Esprit that Roger Moore drove
|
||
underwater in The Spy Who Loved Me and wants to prove that such a
|
||
vehicle can be done. “Maybe we’ll make two or three, but it wouldn’t be
|
||
more than that,” Musk told the Independent newspaper. “I think the market
|
||
for submarine cars is quite small.”
|
||
At the opposite end of the sales spectrum, or so Musk hopes, will be
|
||
Tesla’s third-generation car, or the Model 3. Due out in 2017, this four-door
|
||
car would come in around $35,000 and be the real measure of Tesla’s
|
||
impact on the world. The company hopes to sell hundreds of thousands of
|
||
the Model 3 and make electric cars truly mainstream. For comparison,
|
||
BMW sells about 300,000 Minis and 500,000 of its BMW 3 Series vehicles
|
||
per year. Tesla would look to match those figures. “I think Tesla is going to
|
||
make a lot of cars,” Musk said. “If we continue on the current growth rate, I
|
||
think Tesla will be one of the most valuable companies in the world.”
|
||
Tesla already consumes a huge portion of the world’s lithium ion battery
|
||
supply and will need far more batteries to produce the Model 3. This is why,
|
||
in 2014, Musk announced plans to build what he dubbed the Gigafactory, or
|
||
the world’s largest lithium ion manufacturing facility. Each Gigafactory will
|
||
employ about 6,500 people and help Tesla meet a variety of goals. It should
|
||
first allow Tesla to keep up with the battery demand created by its cars and
|
||
the storage units sold by SolarCity. Tesla also expects to be able to lower
|
||
the costs of its batteries while improving their energy density. It will build
|
||
the Gigafactory in conjunction with longtime battery partner Panasonic, but
|
||
it will be Tesla that is running the factory and fine-tuning its operations.
|
||
According to Straubel, the battery packs coming out of the Gigafactory
|
||
should be dramatically cheaper and better than the ones built today,
|
||
allowing Tesla not only to hit the $35,000 price target for the Model 3 but
|
||
also to pave the way for electric vehicles with 500-plus miles of range.
|
||
If Tesla actually can deliver an affordable car with 500 miles of range, it
|
||
will have built what many people in the auto industry insisted for years was
|
||
impossible. To do that while also constructing a worldwide network of free
|
||
charging stations, revamping the way cars are sold, and revolutionizing
|
||
automotive technology would be an exceptional feat in the history of
|
||
capitalism.
|
||
In early 2014, Tesla raised $2 billion by selling bonds. Tesla’s ability to
|
||
raise money from eager investors was a newfound luxury. Tesla had
|
||
bordered on bankruptcy for much of its existence and been one major
|
||
technical gaffe from obsolescence at all times. The money coupled with
|
||
Tesla’s still-rising share price and strong sales has put the company in a
|
||
position to open lots of new stores and service centers while advancing its
|
||
manufacturing capabilities. “We don’t necessarily need all of the money for
|
||
the Gigafactory right now, but I decided to raise it in advance because you
|
||
never know when there will be some bloody meltdown,” Musk said. “There
|
||
could be external factors or there could be some unexpected recall and then
|
||
suddenly we need to raise money on top of dealing with that. I feel a bit like
|
||
my grandmother. She lived through the Great Depression and some real
|
||
hard times. Once you’ve been through that, it stays with you for a long
|
||
time. I’m not sure it ever leaves really. So, I do feel joy now, but there’s still
|
||
that nagging feeling that it might all go away. Even later in life when my
|
||
grandmother knew there was really no possibility of her going hungry, she
|
||
always had this thing about food. With Tesla, I decided to raise a huge
|
||
amount of money just in case something terrible happens.”
|
||
Musk felt optimistic enough about Tesla’s future to talk to me about
|
||
some of his more whimsical plans. He hopes to redesign the Tesla
|
||
headquarters in Palo Alto, a change employees would welcome. The
|
||
building, with its tiny, 1980s-era lobby and a kitchen that can barely handle
|
||
a few people making cereal21 at the same time, has none of the perks of a
|
||
typical Silicon Valley darling. “I think our Tesla headquarters looks like
|
||
crap,” Musk said. “We’re going to spruce things up. Not to sort of the
|
||
Google level. You have to be like making money hand over fist in order to
|
||
be able to spend money the way that Google does. But we’re going to make
|
||
our headquarters much nicer and put in a restaurant.” Naturally, Musk had
|
||
ideas for some mechanical enhancements as well. “Everybody around here
|
||
has slides in their lobbies,” he said. “I’m actually wondering about putting
|
||
in a roller coaster—like a functional roller coaster at the factory in Fremont.
|
||
You’d get in, and it would take you around factory but also up and down.
|
||
Who else has a roller coaster? I’m thinking about doing that with SpaceX,
|
||
too. That one might be even bigger since SpaceX has like ten buildings
|
||
now. It would probably be really expensive, but I like the idea of it.”
|
||
What’s fascinating is that Musk remains willing to lose it all. He doesn’t
|
||
want to build just one Gigafactory but several. And he needs these facilities
|
||
to be built quickly and flawlessly, so that they’re cranking out massive
|
||
quantities of batteries right as the Model 3 arrives. If need be, Musk will
|
||
build a second Gigafactory to compete with the Nevada site and place his
|
||
own employees in competition with each other in a race to make the
|
||
batteries first. “We’re not really trying to sort of yank anyone’s chain here,”
|
||
Musk said. “It’s just like this thing needs to be completed on time. If we
|
||
suddenly find that we’re leveling the ground and laying the foundation and
|
||
we’re on a bloody Indian burial ground, then fuck. We can’t say, ‘Oh shit.
|
||
Let’s go back to the other place that we were thinking about and get a sixmonth
|
||
reset.’ Six months for this factory is a huge deal. Do the basic math
|
||
and it’s more than a billion dollars a month in lost revenue,* assuming we
|
||
use it to capacity. From a different standpoint, if we spend all the money to
|
||
prepare the car factory in Fremont to triple the volume from 150,000 per
|
||
year to 450,000 or 500,000 cars and hire and train all the people, and we’re
|
||
just sitting there waiting for the factory to come on line, we’d be burning
|
||
money like it was going out of fashion. I think that could kill the company.
|
||
“A six-month offset would be like, like Gallipoli. You have to make
|
||
sure you charge right after the bombardment. Don’t fucking sit around for
|
||
two hours so that the Turks can go back in the trenches. Timing is
|
||
important. We have to do everything we can to minimize the timing risk.”
|
||
What Musk struggles to fathom is why other automakers with deeper
|
||
pockets aren’t making similar moves. At a minimum, Tesla seems to have
|
||
influenced consumers and the auto industry enough for there to be an
|
||
expected surge in demand for electric vehicles. “I think we have moved the
|
||
needle for almost every car company,” Musk said. “Just the twenty-two
|
||
thousand cars we sold in 2013 had a highly leveraged effect in pushing the
|
||
industry toward sustainable technology.” It’s true that the supply for lithium
|
||
ion batteries is already constrained, and Tesla looks like the only company
|
||
addressing the problem in a meaningful way.
|
||
“The competitors are all sort of pooh-poohing the Gigafactory,” Musk
|
||
said. “They think it’s a stupid idea, that the battery supplier should just go
|
||
build something like that. But I know all the suppliers, and I can tell you
|
||
that they don’t like the idea of spending several billion dollars on a battery
|
||
factory. You’ve got a chicken-and-egg problem where the car companies are
|
||
not going to commit to a giant volume because they’re not sure you can sell
|
||
enough electric cars. So, I know we can’t get enough lithium ion batteries
|
||
unless we build this bloody factory, and I know no one else is building this
|
||
thing.”
|
||
There’s the potential that Tesla is setting itself up to capitalize on a
|
||
situation like the one Apple found itself in when it first introduced the
|
||
iPhone. Apple’s rivals spent the initial year after the iPhone’s release
|
||
dismissing the product. Once it became clear Apple had a hit, the
|
||
competitors had to catch up. Even with the device right in their hands, it
|
||
took companies like HTC and Samsung years to produce anything
|
||
comparable. Other once-great companies like Nokia and BlackBerry didn’t
|
||
withstand the shock. If, and it’s a big if, Tesla’s Model 3 turned into a
|
||
massive hit—the thing that everyone with enough money wanted because
|
||
buying something else would just be paying for the past—then the rival
|
||
automakers would be in a terrible bind. Most of the car companies dabbling
|
||
in electric vehicles continue to buy bulky, off-the-shelf batteries rather than
|
||
developing their own technology. No matter how much they wanted to
|
||
respond to the Model 3, the automakers would need years to come up with a
|
||
real challenger and even then they might not have a ready supply of
|
||
batteries for their vehicles.
|
||
“I think it is going to be a bit like that,” Musk said. “When will the first
|
||
non-Tesla Gigafactory get built? Probably no sooner than six years from
|
||
now. The big car companies are so derivative. They want to see it work
|
||
somewhere else before they will approve the project and move forward.
|
||
They’re probably more like seven years away. But I hope I’m wrong.”
|
||
Musk speaks about the cars, solar panels, and batteries with such
|
||
passion that it’s easy to forget they are more or less sideline projects. He
|
||
believes in the technologies to the extent that he thinks they’re the right
|
||
things to pursue for the betterment of mankind. They’ve also brought him
|
||
fame and fortune. Musk’s ultimate goal, though, remains turning humans
|
||
into an interplanetary species. This may sound silly to some, but there can
|
||
be no doubt that this is Musk’s raison d’être. Musk has decided that man’s
|
||
survival depends on setting up another colony on another planet and that he
|
||
should dedicate his life to making this happen.
|
||
Musk is now quite rich on paper. He was worth about $10 billion at the
|
||
time of this writing. When he started SpaceX more than a decade ago,
|
||
however, he had far less capital at his disposal. He didn’t have the fuck-you
|
||
money of a Jeff Bezos, who handed his space company Blue Origin a
|
||
kingly pile of cash and asked it to make Bezos’s dreams come true. If Musk
|
||
wanted to get to Mars, he would have to earn it by building SpaceX into a
|
||
real business. This all seems to have worked in Musk’s favor. SpaceX has
|
||
learned to make cheap and effective rockets and to push the limits of
|
||
aerospace technology.
|
||
In the near term, SpaceX will begin testing its ability to take people into
|
||
space. It wants to perform a manned test flight by 2016 and to fly astronauts
|
||
to the International Space Station for NASA the next year. The company
|
||
will also likely make a major move into building and selling satellites,
|
||
which would mark an expansion into one of the most lucrative parts of the
|
||
aerospace business. Along with these efforts, SpaceX has been testing the
|
||
Falcon Heavy—its giant rocket capable of flying the biggest payloads in the
|
||
world—and its reusable-rocket technology. In early 2015, SpaceX almost
|
||
managed to land the first stage of its rocket on a platform in the ocean.
|
||
Once it succeeds, it will begin performing tests on land.
|
||
In 2014, SpaceX also began construction on its own spaceport in South
|
||
Texas. It has acquired dozens of acres where it plans to construct a modern
|
||
rocket launch facility unlike anything the world has seen. Musk wants to
|
||
automate a great deal of the launch process, so that the rockets can be
|
||
refueled, stood up, and fired on their own with computers handling the
|
||
safety procedures. SpaceX wants to fly rockets several times a month for its
|
||
business, and having its own spaceport should help speed up such
|
||
capabilities. Getting to Mars will require an even more impressive set of
|
||
skills and technology.
|
||
“We need to figure out how to launch multiple times a day,” Musk said.
|
||
“The thing that’s important in the long run is establishing a self-sustaining
|
||
base on Mars. In order for that to work—in order to have a self-sustaining
|
||
city on Mars—there would need to be millions of tons of equipment and
|
||
probably millions of people. So how many launches is that? Well, if you
|
||
send up 100 people at a time, which is a lot to go on such a long journey,
|
||
you’d need to do 10,000 flights to get to a million people. So 10,000 flights
|
||
over what period of time? Given that you can only really depart for Mars
|
||
once every two years, that means you would need like forty or fifty years.
|
||
“And then I think for each flight that departs to Mars you want to sort of
|
||
launch the spacecraft into orbit and then have it be in a parking orbit and
|
||
refuel its tanks with propellant. Essentially, the spacecraft would use a
|
||
bunch of its propellant to get to orbit, but then you send up a tanker
|
||
spacecraft to fill up the propellant tanks of the spacecraft so that it can
|
||
depart for Mars at high speed and can do so and get there in three months
|
||
instead of six months and with a large payload. I don’t have a detailed plan
|
||
for Mars but I know of something at least that would work, which is sort of
|
||
this all-methane system with a big booster, a spacecraft, and a tanker
|
||
potentially. I think SpaceX will have developed a booster and spaceship in
|
||
the 2025 time frame capable of taking large quantities of people and cargo
|
||
to Mars.
|
||
“The thing that’s important is to reach an economic threshold around the
|
||
cost per person for a trip to Mars. If it costs $1 billion per person, there will
|
||
be no Mars colony. At around $1 million or $500,000 per person, I think it’s
|
||
highly likely that there will be a self-sustaining Martian colony. There will
|
||
be enough people interested who will sell their stuff on Earth and move. It’s
|
||
not about tourism. It’s like people coming to America back in the New
|
||
World days. You move, get a job there, and make things work. If you solve
|
||
the transport problem, it’s not that hard to make a pressurized transparent
|
||
greenhouse to live in. But if you can’t get there in the first place, it doesn’t
|
||
matter.
|
||
“Eventually, you’d need to heat Mars up if you want it to be an
|
||
Earthlike planet, and I don’t have a plan for that. That would take a long
|
||
time in the best of circumstances. It would probably take, I don’t know,
|
||
somewhere between a century and a millennium. There’s zero chance of it
|
||
being terraformed and Earthlike in my lifetime. Not zero, but 0.001 percent
|
||
chance, and you would have to take real drastic measures with Mars.”*
|
||
Musk spent months pacing around his home in Los Angeles late at night
|
||
thinking about these plans for Mars and bouncing them off Riley, whom he
|
||
remarried near the end of 2012.* “I mean, there aren’t that many people you
|
||
can talk to about this sort of thing,” Musk said. These chats included Musk
|
||
daydreaming aloud about becoming the first man to set foot on the Red
|
||
Planet. “He definitely wants to be the first man on Mars,” Riley said. “I
|
||
have begged him not to be.” Perhaps Musk enjoys teasing his wife or
|
||
maybe he’s playing coy, but he denied this ambition during one of our latenight
|
||
chats. “I would only be on the first trip to Mars if I was confident that
|
||
SpaceX would be fine if I die,” he said. “I’d like to go, but I don’t have to
|
||
go. The point is not about me visiting Mars but about enabling large
|
||
numbers of people to go to the planet.” Musk may not even go into space.
|
||
He does not plan to participate in SpaceX’s upcoming human test flights. “I
|
||
don’t think that would be wise,” he said. “It would be like the head of
|
||
Boeing being a test pilot for a new plane. It’s not the right thing for SpaceX
|
||
or the future of space exploration. I might be on there if it’s been flying for
|
||
three or four years. Honestly, if I never go to space, that will be okay. The
|
||
point is to maximize the probable life span of humanity.”
|
||
It’s difficult to gauge just how seriously the average person takes Musk
|
||
when he talks like this. A few years ago, most people would have lumped
|
||
him into the category of people who hype up jet packs and robots and
|
||
whatever else Silicon Valley decided to fixate on for the moment. Then
|
||
Musk filed away one accomplishment after another, transforming himself
|
||
from big talker to one of Silicon Valley’s most revered doers. Thiel has
|
||
watched Musk go through this maturation—from the driven but insecure
|
||
CEO of PayPal to a confident CEO who commands the respect of
|
||
thousands. “I think there are ways he has dramatically improved over time,”
|
||
said Thiel. Most impressive to Thiel has been Musk’s ability to find bright,
|
||
ambitious people and lure them to his companies. “He has the most talented
|
||
people in the aerospace industry working for him, and the same case can be
|
||
made for Tesla, where, if you’re a talented mechanical engineer who likes
|
||
building cars, then you’re going to Tesla because it’s probably the only
|
||
company in the U.S. where you can do interesting new things. Both
|
||
companies were designed with this vision of motivating a critical mass of
|
||
talented people to work on inspiring things.” Thiel thinks Musk’s goal of
|
||
getting humans to Mars should be taken seriously and believes it gives the
|
||
public hope. Not everyone will identify with the mission but the fact that
|
||
there’s someone out there pushing exploration and our technical abilities to
|
||
their limits is important. “The goal of sending a man to Mars is so much
|
||
more inspiring than what other people are trying to do in space,” Thiel said.
|
||
“It’s this going-back-to-the-future idea. There’s been this long wind-down
|
||
of the space program, and people have abandoned the optimistic visions of
|
||
the future that we had in the early 1970s. SpaceX shows there is a way
|
||
toward bringing back that future. There’s great value in what Elon is
|
||
doing.”
|
||
The true believers came out in full force in August 2013 when Musk
|
||
unveiled something called the Hyperloop. Billed as a new mode of
|
||
transportation, this machine was a large-scale pneumatic tube like the ones
|
||
used to send mail around offices. Musk proposed linking cities like Los
|
||
Angeles and San Francisco via an elevated version of this kind of tube that
|
||
would transport people and cars in pods. Similar ideas had been proposed
|
||
before, but Musk’s creation had some unique elements. He called for the
|
||
tube to run under low pressure and for the pods to float on a bed of air
|
||
produced by skis at their base. Each pod would be thrust forward by an
|
||
electromagnetic pulse, and motors placed throughout the tube would give
|
||
the pods added boosts as needed. These mechanisms could keep the pods
|
||
going at 800 mph, allowing someone to travel from Los Angeles to San
|
||
Francisco in about thirty minutes. The whole thing would, of course, be
|
||
solar-powered and aimed at linking cities less than a thousand miles apart.
|
||
“It makes sense for things like L.A. to San Francisco, New York to D.C.,
|
||
New York to Boston,” Musk said at the time. “Over one thousand miles, the
|
||
tube cost starts to become prohibitive, and you don’t want tubes every
|
||
which way. You don’t want to live in Tube Land.”
|
||
Musk had been thinking about the Hyperloop for a number of months,
|
||
describing it to friends in private. The first time he talked about it to anyone
|
||
outside of his inner circle was during one of our interviews. Musk told me
|
||
that the idea originated out of his hatred for California’s proposed highspeed
|
||
rail system. “The sixty-billion-dollar bullet train they’re proposing in
|
||
California would be the slowest bullet train in the world at the highest cost
|
||
per mile,” Musk said. “They’re going for records in all the wrong ways.”
|
||
California’s high-speed rail is meant to allow people to go from Los
|
||
Angeles to San Francisco in about two and a half hours upon its completion
|
||
in—wait for it—2029. It takes about an hour to fly between the cities today
|
||
and five hours to drive, placing the train right in the zone of mediocrity,
|
||
which particularly gnawed at Musk. He insisted the Hyperloop would cost
|
||
about $6 billion to $10 billion, go faster than a plane, and let people drive
|
||
their cars onto a pod and drive out into a new city.
|
||
At the time, it seemed that Musk had dished out the Hyperloop proposal
|
||
just to make the public and legislators rethink the high-speed train. He
|
||
didn’t actually intend to build the thing. It was more that he wanted to show
|
||
people that more creative ideas were out there for things that might actually
|
||
solve problems and push the state forward. With any luck, the high-speed
|
||
rail would be canceled. Musk said as much to me during a series of e-mails
|
||
and phone calls leading up to the announcement. “Down the road, I might
|
||
fund or advise on a Hyperloop project, but right now I can’t take my eye off
|
||
the ball at either SpaceX or Tesla,” he wrote.
|
||
Musk’s tune, however, started to change after he released the paper
|
||
detailing the Hyperloop. Bloomberg Businessweek had the first story on it,
|
||
and the magazine’s Web server began melting down as people stormed the
|
||
website to read about the invention. Twitter went nuts as well. About an
|
||
hour after Musk released the information, he held a conference call to talk
|
||
about the Hyperloop, and somewhere in between our numerous earlier chats
|
||
and that moment, he’d decided to build the thing, telling reporters that he
|
||
would consider making at least a prototype to prove that the technology
|
||
could work. Some people had their fun with all of this. “Billionaire unveils
|
||
imaginary space train,” teased Valleywag. “We love Elon Musk’s nutso
|
||
determination—there was certainly a time when electric cars and private
|
||
space flight seemed silly, too. But what’s sillier is treating this as anything
|
||
other than a very rich man’s wild imagination.” Unlike its early Teslabashing
|
||
days, Valleywag was now the minority voice. People seemed
|
||
mainly to believe Musk could do it. The depth to which people believed it, I
|
||
think, surprised Musk and forced him to commit to the prototype. In a weird
|
||
life-imitating-art moment, Musk really had become the closest thing the
|
||
world had to Tony Stark, and he could not let his adoring public down.
|
||
Shortly after the release of the Hyperloop plans, Shervin Pishevar, an
|
||
investor and friend of Musk’s, brought the detailed specifications for the
|
||
technology with him during a ninety-minute meeting with President Obama
|
||
at the White House. “The president fell in love with the idea,” Pishevar
|
||
said. The president’s staff studied the documents and arranged a one-on-one
|
||
with Musk and Obama in April 2014. Since then, Pishevar, Kevin Brogan,
|
||
and others, have formed a company called Hyperloop Technologies Inc.
|
||
with the hopes of building the first leg of the Hyperloop between Los
|
||
Angeles and Las Vegas. In theory, people would be able to hop between the
|
||
two cities in about ten minutes. Nevada senator Harry Reid has been briefed
|
||
on the idea as well, and efforts are under way to buy the land rights
|
||
alongside Interstate 15 that would make the high-speed transport possible.
|
||
For employees like Gwynne Shotwell and J. B. Straubel, working with
|
||
Musk means helping develop these sorts of wonderful technologies in
|
||
relative obscurity. They’re the steady hands that will forever be expected to
|
||
stay in the shadows. Shotwell has been a consistent presence at SpaceX
|
||
almost since day one, pushing the company forward and suppressing her
|
||
ego to ensure that Musk gets all the attention he desires. If you’re Shotwell
|
||
and truly believe in the cause of sending people to Mars, then the mission
|
||
takes precedence over personal desires. Straubel, likewise, has been the
|
||
constant at Tesla—a go-between whom other employees could rely on to
|
||
carry messages to Musk, and the guy who knows everything about the cars.
|
||
Despite his stature at the company, Straubel was one of several longtime
|
||
employees who confessed they were nervous to speak with me on the
|
||
record. Musk likes to be the guy talking on his companies’ behalf and
|
||
comes down hard on even his most loyal executives if they say something
|
||
deemed to be out of line with Musk’s views or with what he wants the
|
||
public to think. Straubel has dedicated himself to making electric cars and
|
||
didn’t want some dumb reporter wrecking his life’s work. “I try really hard
|
||
to back away and put my ego aside,” Straubel said. “Elon is incredibly
|
||
difficult to work for, but it’s mostly because he’s so passionate. He can be
|
||
impatient and say, ‘God damn it! This is what we have to do!’ and some
|
||
people will get shell-shocked and catatonic. It seems like people can get
|
||
afraid of him and paralyzed in a weird way. I try to help everyone to
|
||
understand what his goals and visions are, and then I have a bunch of my
|
||
own goals, too, and make sure we’re in synch. Then, I try and go back and
|
||
make sure the company is aligned. Ultimately, Elon is the boss. He has
|
||
driven this thing with his blood, sweat, and tears. He has risked more than
|
||
anyone else. I respect the hell out of what he has done. It just could not
|
||
work without Elon. In my view, he has earned the right to be the front
|
||
person for this thing.”
|
||
The rank-and-file employees tend to describe Musk in more mixed
|
||
ways. They revere his drive and respect how demanding he can be. They
|
||
also think he can be hard to the point of mean and come off as capricious.
|
||
The employees want to be close to Musk, but they also fear that he’ll
|
||
suddenly change his mind about something and that every interaction with
|
||
him is an opportunity to be fired. “Elon’s worst trait by far, in my opinion,
|
||
is a complete lack of loyalty or human connection,” said one former
|
||
employee. “Many of us worked tirelessly for him for years and were tossed
|
||
to the curb like a piece of litter without a second thought. Maybe it was
|
||
calculated to keep the rest of the workforce on their toes and scared; maybe
|
||
he was just able to detach from human connection to a remarkable degree.
|
||
What was clear is that people who worked for him were like ammunition:
|
||
used for a specific purpose until exhausted and discarded.”
|
||
The communications departments of SpaceX and Tesla have witnessed
|
||
the latter forms of behavior more than any other group of employees. Musk
|
||
has burned through public relations staffers with comical efficiency. He
|
||
tends to take on a lot of the communications work himself, writing news
|
||
releases and contacting the press as he sees fit. Quite often, Musk does not
|
||
let his communications staff in on his agenda. Ahead of the Hyperloop
|
||
announcement, for example, his representatives were sending me e-mails to
|
||
find out the time and date for the press conference. On other occasions,
|
||
reporters have received an alert about a teleconference with Musk just
|
||
minutes before it started. This was not a function of the PR people being
|
||
incompetent in getting word of the event out. The truth was that Musk had
|
||
only let them know about his plans a couple of minutes in advance, and
|
||
they were scrambling to catch up to his whims. When Musk does delegate
|
||
work to the communications staff, they’re expected to jump in without
|
||
missing a beat and to execute at the highest level. Some of this staff,
|
||
operating under this mix of pressure and surprise, only lasted between a few
|
||
weeks and a few months. A few others have hung on for a couple of years
|
||
before burning out or being fired.
|
||
The granddaddy example of Musk’s seemingly callous interoffice style
|
||
occurred in early 2014 when he fired Mary Beth Brown. To describe her as
|
||
a loyal executive assistant would be grossly inadequate. Brown often felt
|
||
like an extension of Musk—the one being who crossed over into all of his
|
||
worlds. For more than a decade, she gave up her life for Musk, traipsing
|
||
back and forth between Los Angeles and Silicon Valley every week, while
|
||
working late into the night and on weekends. Brown went to Musk and
|
||
asked that she be compensated on par with SpaceX’s top executives, since
|
||
she was handling so much of Musk’s scheduling across two companies,
|
||
doing public relations work and often making business decisions. Musk
|
||
replied that Brown should take a couple of weeks off, and he would take on
|
||
her duties and gauge how hard they were. When Brown returned, Musk let
|
||
her know that he didn’t need her anymore, and he asked Shotwell’s assistant
|
||
to begin scheduling his meetings. Brown, still loyal and hurt, didn’t want to
|
||
discuss any of this with me. Musk said that she had become too comfortable
|
||
speaking on his behalf and that, frankly, she needed a life. Other people
|
||
grumbled that Brown and Riley clashed and that this was the root cause of
|
||
Brown’s ouster.* (Brown declined to be interviewed for this book, despite
|
||
several requests.)
|
||
Whatever the case, the optics of the situation were terrible. Tony Stark
|
||
doesn’t fire Pepper Potts. He adores her and takes care of her for life. She’s
|
||
the only person he can really trust—the one who has been there through
|
||
everything. That Musk was willing to let Brown go and in such an
|
||
unceremonious fashion struck people inside SpaceX and Tesla as
|
||
scandalous and as the ultimate confirmation of his cruel stoicism. The tale
|
||
of Brown’s departure became part of the lore around Musk’s lack of
|
||
empathy. It got bundled up into the stories of Musk dressing employees
|
||
down in legendary fashion with vicious barb after vicious barb. People also
|
||
linked this type of behavior to Musk’s other quirky traits. He’s been known
|
||
to obsess over typos in e-mails to the point that he could not see past the
|
||
errors and read the actual content of the messages. Even in social settings,
|
||
Musk might get up from the dinner table without a word of explanation to
|
||
head outside and look at the stars, simply because he’s not willing to suffer
|
||
fools or small talk. After adding up this behavior, dozens of people
|
||
expressed to me their conclusion that Musk sits somewhere on the autism
|
||
spectrum and that he has trouble considering other people’s emotions and
|
||
caring about their well-being.
|
||
There’s a tendency, especially in Silicon Valley, to label people who are
|
||
a bit different or quirky as autistic or afflicted with Asperger’s syndrome.
|
||
It’s armchair psychology for conditions that can be inherently funky to
|
||
diagnose or even codify. To slap this label on Musk feels ill-informed and
|
||
too easy.
|
||
Musk acts differently with his closest friends and family than he does
|
||
with employees, even those who have worked alongside him for a long
|
||
time. Among his inner circle, Musk is warm, funny, and deeply emotional.*
|
||
He might not engage in the standard chitchat, asking a friend how his kids
|
||
are doing, but he would do everything in his considerable power to help that
|
||
friend if his child were sick or in trouble. He will protect those close to him
|
||
at all costs and, when deemed necessary, seek to destroy those who have
|
||
wronged him or his friends.
|
||
Musk’s behavior matches up much more closely with someone who is
|
||
described by neuropsychologists as profoundly gifted. These are people
|
||
who in childhood exhibit exceptional intellectual depth and max out IQ
|
||
tests. It’s not uncommon for these children to look out into the world and
|
||
find flaws—glitches in the system—and construct logical paths in their
|
||
minds to fix them. For Musk, the call to ensure that mankind is a
|
||
multiplanetary species partly stems from a life richly influenced by science
|
||
fiction and technology. Equally it’s a moral imperative that dates back to his
|
||
childhood. In some form, this has forever been his mandate.
|
||
Each facet of Musk’s life might be an attempt to soothe a type of
|
||
existential depression that seems to gnaw at his every fiber. He sees man as
|
||
self-limiting and in peril and wants to fix the situation. The people who
|
||
suggest bad ideas during meetings or make mistakes at work are getting in
|
||
the way of all of this and slowing Musk down. He does not dislike them as
|
||
people. It’s more that he feels pained by their mistakes, which have
|
||
consigned man to peril that much longer. The perceived lack of emotion is a
|
||
symptom of Musk sometimes feeling like he’s the only one who really
|
||
grasps the urgency of his mission. He’s less sensitive and less tolerant than
|
||
other people because the stakes are so high. Employees need to help solve
|
||
the problems to the absolute best of their ability or they need to get out of
|
||
the way.
|
||
Musk has been pretty up front about these tendencies. He’s implored
|
||
people to understand that he’s not chasing momentary opportunities in the
|
||
business world. He’s trying to solve problems that have been consuming
|
||
him for decades. During our conversations, Musk went back to this very
|
||
point over and over again, making sure to emphasize just how long he’d
|
||
thought about electric cars and space. The same patterns are visible in his
|
||
actions as well. When Musk announced in 2014 that Tesla would opensource
|
||
all of its patents, analysts tried to decide whether this was a publicity
|
||
stunt or if it hid an ulterior motive or a catch. But the decision was a
|
||
straightforward one for Musk. He wants people to make and buy electric
|
||
cars. Man’s future, as he sees it, depends on this. If open-sourcing Tesla’s
|
||
patents means other companies can build electric cars more easily, then that
|
||
is good for mankind, and the ideas should be free. The cynic will scoff at
|
||
this, and understandably so. Musk, however, has been programmed to
|
||
behave this way and tends to be sincere when explaining his thinking—
|
||
almost to a fault.
|
||
The people who get closest to Musk are the ones who learn to relate to
|
||
this mode of thinking.22 They’re the ones who can identify with his vision
|
||
yet challenge him intellectually to complete it. When he asked me during
|
||
one of our dinners if I thought he was insane, it was a test of sorts. We had
|
||
talked enough that he knew I was interested in what he was doing. He had
|
||
started to trust me and open up but wanted to make sure—one final time—
|
||
that I truly grasped the importance of his quest. Many of his closest friends
|
||
have passed much grander, more demanding tests. They’ve invested in his
|
||
companies. They’ve defended him against critics. They helped him keep the
|
||
wolves at bay during 2008. They’ve proven their loyalty and their
|
||
commitment to his cause.
|
||
People in the technology industry have tended to liken Musk’s drive and
|
||
the scope of his ambition to that of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. “Elon has that
|
||
deep appreciation for technology, the no-holds-barred attitude of a
|
||
visionary, and that determination to go after long-term things that they both
|
||
had,” said Edward Jung, a child prodigy who worked for Jobs and Gates
|
||
and ended up as Microsoft’s chief software architect. “And he has that
|
||
consumer sensibility of Steve along with the ability to hire good people
|
||
outside of his own comfort areas that’s more like Bill. You almost wish that
|
||
Bill and Steve had a genetically engineered love child and, who knows,
|
||
maybe we should genotype Elon to see if that’s what happened.” Steve
|
||
Jurvetson, the venture capitalist who has invested in SpaceX, Tesla, and
|
||
SolarCity, worked for Jobs, and knows Gates well, also described Musk as
|
||
an upgraded mix of the two. “Like Jobs, Elon does not tolerate C or D
|
||
players,” said Jurvetson. “But I’d say he’s nicer than Jobs and a bit more
|
||
refined than Bill Gates.”*
|
||
But the more you know about Musk, the harder it becomes to place him
|
||
among his peers. Jobs is another CEO who ran two, large industry-changing
|
||
companies—Apple and Pixar. But that’s where the practical similarities
|
||
between the two men end. Jobs dedicated far more of his energy to Apple
|
||
than Pixar, unlike Musk, who has poured equal energy into both companies,
|
||
while saving whatever was left over for SolarCity. Jobs was also legendary
|
||
for his attention to detail. No one, however, would suggest that his reach
|
||
extended down as far as Musk’s into overseeing so much of the companies’
|
||
day-to-day operations. Musk’s approach has its limitations. He’s less artful
|
||
with marketing and media strategy. Musk does not rehearse his
|
||
presentations or polish speeches. He wings most of the announcements
|
||
from Tesla and SpaceX. He’ll also fire off some major bit of news on a
|
||
Friday afternoon when it’s likely to get lost as reporters head home for the
|
||
weekend, simply because that’s when he finished writing the press release
|
||
or wanted to move on to something else. Jobs, by contrast, treated every
|
||
presentation and media moment as precious. Musk simply does not have the
|
||
luxury to work that way. “I don’t have days to practice,” he said. “I’ve got
|
||
to give impromptu talks, and the results may vary.”
|
||
As for whether Musk is leading the technology industry to new heights
|
||
like Gates and Jobs, the professional pundits remain mixed. One camp
|
||
holds that SolarCity, Tesla, and SpaceX offer little in the way of real hope
|
||
for an industry that could use some blockbuster innovations. For the other
|
||
camp, Musk is the real deal and the brightest shining star of what they see
|
||
as a coming revolution in technology.
|
||
The economist Tyler Cowen—who has earned some measure of fame in
|
||
recent years for his insightful writings about the state of the technology
|
||
industry and his ideas on where it may go—falls into that first camp. In The
|
||
Great Stagnation, Cowen bemoaned the lack of big technological advances
|
||
and argued that the American economy has slowed and wages have been
|
||
depressed as a result. “In a figurative sense, the American economy has
|
||
enjoyed lots of low-hanging fruit since at least the seventeenth century,
|
||
whether it be free land, lots of immigrant labor, or powerful new
|
||
technologies,” he wrote. “Yet during the last forty years, that low-hanging
|
||
fruit started disappearing, and we started pretending it was still there. We
|
||
have failed to recognize that we are at a technological plateau and the trees
|
||
are more bare than we would like to think. That’s it. That is what has gone
|
||
wrong.”
|
||
In his next book, Average Is Over, Cowen predicted an unromantic
|
||
future in which a great divide had occurred between the Haves and the
|
||
Have Nots. In Cowen’s future, huge gains in artificial intelligence will lead
|
||
to the elimination of many of today’s high-employment lines of work. The
|
||
people who thrive in this environment will be very bright and able to
|
||
complement the machines and team effectively with them. As for the
|
||
unemployed masses? Well, many of them will eventually find jobs going to
|
||
work for the Haves, who will employ teams of nannies, housekeepers, and
|
||
gardeners. If anything Musk is doing might alter the course of mankind
|
||
toward a rosier future, Cowen can’t find it. Coming up with true
|
||
breakthrough ideas is much harder today than in the past, according to
|
||
Cowen, because we’ve already mined the bulk of the big discoveries.
|
||
During a lunch in Virginia, Cowen described Musk not as a genius inventor
|
||
but as an attention seeker, and not a terribly good one at that. “I don’t think
|
||
a lot of people care about getting to Mars,” he said. “And it seems like a
|
||
very expensive way to drive whatever breakthroughs you might get from it.
|
||
Then, you hear about the Hyperloop. I don’t think he has any intention of
|
||
doing it. You have to wonder if it’s not meant just to be publicity for his
|
||
companies. As for Tesla, it might work. But you’re still just pushing the
|
||
problems back somewhere else. You still have to generate power. It could
|
||
be that he is challenging convention less than people think.”
|
||
These sentiments are not far off from those of Vaclav Smil, a professor
|
||
emeritus at the University of Manitoba. Bill Gates has hailed Smil as an
|
||
important writer for his tomes on energy, the environment, and
|
||
manufacturing. One of Smil’s latest works is Made in the USA, an
|
||
exploration of America’s past manufacturing glories and its subsequent,
|
||
dismal loss of industry. Anyone who thinks the United States is making a
|
||
natural, clever shift away from manufacturing and toward higher-paying
|
||
information-worker jobs will want to read this book and have a gander at
|
||
the long-term consequences of this change. Smil presents numerous
|
||
examples of the ways in which the manufacturing industry generates major
|
||
innovations and creates a massive ecosystem of jobs and technical smarts
|
||
around them. “For example, when some three decades ago the United States
|
||
stopped making virtually all ‘commodity’ consumer electronic devices and
|
||
displays, it also lost its capacity to develop and mass-produce advanced flat
|
||
screens and batteries, two classes of products that are quintessential for
|
||
portable computers and cell phones and whose large-scale imports keep
|
||
adding to the US trade deficit,” Smil wrote. A bit later in the book, Smil
|
||
emphasized that the aerospace industry, in particular, has been a huge boon
|
||
to the U.S. economy and one of its major exporters. “Maintaining the
|
||
sector’s competitiveness must be a key component of efforts to boost US
|
||
exports, and the exports will have to be a large part of the sector’s sales
|
||
because the world’s largest aerospace market of the next two decades will
|
||
be in Asia, above all in China and India, and American aircraft and
|
||
aeroengine makers should benefit from this expansion.”
|
||
Smil is consumed by the United States’ waning ability to compete with
|
||
China and yet does not perceive Musk or his companies as any sort of
|
||
counter to this slide. “As, among other things, a historian of technical
|
||
advances I simply must see Tesla as nothing but an utterly derivative
|
||
overhyped toy for showoffs,” Smil wrote to me. “The last thing a country
|
||
with 50 million people on food stamps and 85 billion dollars deeper into
|
||
debt every month needs is anything to do with space, especially space with
|
||
more joyrides for the super rich. And the loop proposal was nothing but
|
||
bamboozling people who do not know anything about kindergarten physics
|
||
with a very old, long publicized Gedankenexperiment in kinetics. . . . There
|
||
are many inventive Americans, but in that lineup Musk would be trailing far
|
||
behind.”
|
||
The comments were blunt and surprising given some of the things Smil
|
||
celebrated in his recent book. He spent a good deal of time showing the
|
||
positive impact that Henry Ford’s vertical integration had on advancing the
|
||
car industry and the American economy. He also wrote at length about the
|
||
rise of “mechatronic machines,” or machines that rely on a lot of electronics
|
||
and software. “By 2010 the electronic controls for a typical sedan required
|
||
more lines of software code than the instructions needed to operate the
|
||
latest Boeing jetliner,” Smil wrote. “American manufacturing has turned
|
||
modern cars into remarkable mechatronic machines. The first decade of the
|
||
twenty-first century also brought innovations ranging from the deployment
|
||
of new materials (carbon composites in aviation, nanostructures) to wireless
|
||
electronics.”
|
||
There’s a tendency among critics to dismiss Musk as a frivolous
|
||
dreamer that stems first and foremost from a misunderstanding of what
|
||
Musk is actually doing. People like Smil seem to catch an article or
|
||
television show that hits on Musk’s quest to get to Mars and immediately
|
||
lump him with the space tourism crowd. Musk, though, hardly ever talks
|
||
about tourism and has, since day one, built up SpaceX to compete at the
|
||
industrial end of the space business. If Smil thinks Boeing selling planes is
|
||
crucial to the American economy, then he should be enthused about what
|
||
SpaceX has managed to accomplish in the commercial launch market.
|
||
SpaceX builds its products in the United States, has made dramatic
|
||
advances in aerospace technology, and has made similar advances in
|
||
materials and manufacturing techniques. It would not take much to argue
|
||
that SpaceX is America’s only hope of competing against China in the next
|
||
couple of decades. As for mechatronic machines, SpaceX and Tesla have set
|
||
the example of fusing together electronics, software, and metal that their
|
||
rivals are now struggling to match. And all of Musk’s companies, including
|
||
SolarCity, have made dramatic use of vertical integration and turned inhouse
|
||
control of components into a real advantage.
|
||
To get a sense of how powerful Musk’s work may end up being for the
|
||
American economy, have a think about the dominant mechatronic machine
|
||
of the past several years: the smartphone. Pre-iPhone, the United States was
|
||
the laggard in the telecommunications industry. All of the exciting cell
|
||
phones and mobile services were in Europe and Asia, while American
|
||
consumers bumbled along with dated equipment. When the iPhone arrived
|
||
in 2007, it changed everything. Apple’s device mimicked many of the
|
||
functions of a computer and then added new abilities with its apps, sensors,
|
||
and location awareness. Google charged to market with its Android
|
||
software and related handsets, and the United States suddenly emerged as
|
||
the driving force in the mobile industry. Smartphones were revolutionary
|
||
because of the ways they allowed hardware, software, and services to work
|
||
in unison. This was a mix that favored the skills of Silicon Valley. The rise
|
||
of the smartphone led to a massive industrial boom in which Apple became
|
||
the most valuable company in the country, and billions of its clever devices
|
||
were spread all over the world.
|
||
Tony Fadell, the former Apple executive credited with bringing the iPod
|
||
and iPhone to market, has characterized the smartphone as representative of
|
||
a type of super-cycle in which hardware and software have reached a
|
||
critical point of maturity. Electronics are good and cheap, while software is
|
||
more reliable and sophisticated. Their interplay is now resulting in science
|
||
fiction–worthy ideas we were promised long ago becoming a reality.
|
||
Google has its self-driving cars and has acquired dozens of robotics
|
||
companies as it looks to merge code and machine. Fadell’s company Nest
|
||
has its intelligent thermostats and smoke alarms. General Electric has jet
|
||
engines packed full of sensors taught to proactively report possible
|
||
anomalies to its human mechanics. And a host of start-ups have begun
|
||
infusing medical devices with powerful software to help people monitor and
|
||
analyze their bodies and diagnose conditions. Tiny satellites are being put
|
||
into orbit twenty at a time, and instead of being given a fixed task for their
|
||
entire lifetimes, like their predecessors, they’re being reprogrammed on the
|
||
fly for a wide variety of business and scientific tasks. Zee Aero, a start-up in
|
||
Mountain View, has a couple of former SpaceX staffers on hand and is
|
||
working on a secretive new type of transport. A flying car at last? Perhaps.
|
||
For Fadell, Musk’s work sits at the highest end of this trend. “He could
|
||
have just made an electric car,” Fadell said. “But he did things like use
|
||
motors to actuate the door handles. He’s bringing the consumer electronics
|
||
and the software together, and the other car companies are trying to figure
|
||
out a way to get there. Whether it’s Tesla or SpaceX taking Ethernet cables
|
||
and running them inside of rocket ships, you are talking about combining
|
||
the old-world science of manufacturing with low-cost, consumer-grade
|
||
technology. You put these things together, and they morph into something
|
||
we have never seen before. All of a sudden there is a wholesale change,” he
|
||
said. “It’s a step function.”
|
||
To the extent that Silicon Valley has searched for an inheritor to Steve
|
||
Jobs’s role as the dominant, guiding force of the technology industry, Musk
|
||
has emerged as the most likely candidate. He’s certainly the “it” guy of the
|
||
moment. Start-up founders, proven executives, and legends hold him up as
|
||
the person they most admire. The more mainstream Tesla can become, the
|
||
more Musk’s reputation will rise. A hot-selling Model 3 would certify Musk
|
||
as that rare being able to rethink an industry, read consumers, and execute.
|
||
From there, his more fanciful ideas start to seem inevitable. “Elon is one of
|
||
the few people that I feel is more accomplished than I am,” said Craig
|
||
Venter, the man who decoded the human genome and went on to create
|
||
synthetic lifeforms. At some point he hopes to work with Musk on a type of
|
||
DNA printer that could be sent to Mars. It would, in theory, allow humans
|
||
to create medicines, food, and helpful microbes for early settlers of the
|
||
planet. “I think biological teleportation is what is going to truly enable the
|
||
colonization of space,” he said. “Elon and I have been talking about how
|
||
this might play out.”
|
||
One of Musk’s most ardent admirers is also one of his best friends:
|
||
Larry Page, the cofounder and CEO of Google. Page has ended up on
|
||
Musk’s house-surfing schedule. “He’s kind of homeless, which I think is
|
||
sort of funny,” Page said. “He’ll e-mail and say, ‘I don’t know where to stay
|
||
tonight. Can I come over?’ I haven’t given him a key or anything yet.”
|
||
Google has invested more than just about any other technology
|
||
company into Musk’s sort of moon-shot projects: self-driving cars, robots,
|
||
and even a cash prize to get a machine onto the moon cheaply. The
|
||
company, however, operates under a set of constraints and expectations that
|
||
come with employing tens of thousands of people and being analyzed
|
||
constantly by investors. It’s with this in mind that Page sometimes feels a
|
||
bit envious of Musk, who has managed to make radical ideas the basis of
|
||
his companies. “If you think about Silicon Valley or corporate leaders in
|
||
general, they’re not usually lacking in money,” Page said. “If you have all
|
||
this money, which presumably you’re going to give away and couldn’t even
|
||
spend it all if you wanted to, why then are you devoting your time to a
|
||
company that’s not really doing anything good? That’s why I find Elon to
|
||
be an inspiring example. He said, ‘Well, what should I really do in this
|
||
world? Solve cars, global warming, and make humans multiplanetary.’ I
|
||
mean those are pretty compelling goals, and now he has businesses to do
|
||
that.”
|
||
“This becomes a competitive advantage for him, too. Why would you
|
||
want to work for a defense contractor when you can work for a guy who
|
||
wants to go to Mars and he’s going to move heaven and earth to make it
|
||
happen? You can frame a problem in a way that’s really good for the
|
||
business.”
|
||
At one point, a quotation from Page made the rounds, saying that he
|
||
wanted to leave all of his money to Musk. Page felt he was misquoted but
|
||
stood by the sentiment. “I’m not leaving my money to him at the moment,”
|
||
Page said. “But Elon makes a pretty compelling case for having a
|
||
multiplanetary society just because, you know, otherwise we might all die,
|
||
which seems like it would be sad for all sorts of different reasons. I think
|
||
it’s a very doable project, and it’s a relatively modest resource that we need
|
||
to set up a permanent human settlement on Mars. I was just trying to make
|
||
the point that that’s a really powerful idea.”
|
||
As Page puts it, “Good ideas are always crazy until they’re not.” It’s a
|
||
principle he’s tried to apply at Google. When Page and Sergey Brin began
|
||
wondering aloud about developing ways to search the text inside of books,
|
||
all of the experts they consulted said it would be impossible to digitize
|
||
every book. The Google cofounders decided to run the numbers and see if it
|
||
was actually physically possible to scan the books in a reasonable amount
|
||
of time. They concluded it was, and Google has since scanned millions of
|
||
books. “I’ve learned that your intuition about things you don’t know that
|
||
much about isn’t very good,” Page said. “The way Elon talks about this is
|
||
that you always need to start with the first principles of a problem. What are
|
||
the physics of it? How much time will it take? How much will it cost? How
|
||
much cheaper can I make it? There’s this level of engineering and physics
|
||
that you need to make judgments about what’s possible and interesting.
|
||
Elon is unusual in that he knows that, and he also knows business and
|
||
organization and leadership and governmental issues.”
|
||
Some of the conversations between Musk and Page take place at a
|
||
secret apartment Google owns in downtown Palo Alto. It’s inside of one of
|
||
the taller buildings in the area and offers views of the mountains
|
||
surrounding the Stanford University campus. Page and Brin will take
|
||
private meetings at the apartment and have their own chef on call to prepare
|
||
food for guests. When Musk is present, the chats tend toward the absurd
|
||
and fantastic. “I was there once, and Elon was talking about building an
|
||
electric jet plane that can take off and land vertically,” said George Zachary,
|
||
the venture capitalist and friend of Musk’s. “Larry said the plane should be
|
||
able to land on ski slopes, and Sergey said it needed to be able to dock at a
|
||
port in Manhattan. Then they started talking about building a commuter
|
||
plane that was always circling the Earth, and you’d hop up to it and get
|
||
places incredibly fast. I thought everyone was kidding, but at the end I
|
||
asked Elon, ‘Are you really going to do that?’ And he said, ‘Yes.’”
|
||
“It’s kind of our recreation, I guess,” said Page.23 “It’s fun for the three
|
||
of us to talk about kind of crazy things, and we find stuff that eventually
|
||
turns out to be real. We go through hundreds or thousands of possible things
|
||
before arriving at the ones that are most promising.”
|
||
Page talked about Musk at times as if he were a one-of-a-kind, a force
|
||
of nature able to accomplish things in the business world that others would
|
||
never even try. “We think of SpaceX and Tesla as being these tremendously
|
||
risky things, but I think Elon was going to make them work no matter what.
|
||
He’s willing to suffer some personal cost, and I think that makes his odds
|
||
actually pretty good. If you knew him personally, you would look back to
|
||
when he started the companies and say his odds of success would be more
|
||
than ninety percent. I mean we just have a single proof point now that you
|
||
can be really passionate about something that other people think is crazy
|
||
and you can really succeed. And you look at it with Elon and you say,
|
||
‘Well, maybe it’s not luck. He’s done it twice. It can’t be luck totally.’ I
|
||
think that means it should be repeatable in some sense. At least it’s
|
||
repeatable by him. Maybe we should get him to do more things.”
|
||
Page holds Musk up as a model he wishes others would emulate—a
|
||
figure that should be replicated during a time in which the businessmen and
|
||
politicians have fixated on short-term, inconsequential goals. “I don’t think
|
||
we’re doing a good job as a society deciding what things are really
|
||
important to do,” Page said. “I think like we’re just not educating people in
|
||
this kind of general way. You should have a pretty broad engineering and
|
||
scientific background. You should have some leadership training and a bit
|
||
of MBA training or knowledge of how to run things, organize stuff, and
|
||
raise money. I don’t think most people are doing that, and it’s a big
|
||
problem. Engineers are usually trained in a very fixed area. When you’re
|
||
able to think about all of these disciplines together, you kind of think
|
||
differently and can dream of much crazier things and how they might work.
|
||
I think that’s really an important thing for the world. That’s how we make
|
||
progress.”
|
||
The pressure of feeling the need to fix the world takes its toll on Musk’s
|
||
body. There are times when you run into Musk and he looks utterly
|
||
exhausted. He does not have bags under his eyes but rather deep, shadowy
|
||
valleys. During the worst of times, following weeks of sleep deprivation,
|
||
his eyes seem to have sunk back into his skull. Musk’s weight moves up
|
||
and down with the stress, and he’s usually heavier when really overworked.
|
||
It’s funny in a way that Musk spends so much time talking about man’s
|
||
survival but isn’t willing to address the consequences of what his lifestyle
|
||
does to his body. “Elon came to the conclusion early in his career that life is
|
||
short,” Straubel said. “If you really embrace this, it leaves you with the
|
||
obvious conclusion that you should be working as hard as you can.”
|
||
Suffering, though, has always been Musk’s thing. The kids at school
|
||
tortured him. His father played brutal mind games. Musk then abused
|
||
himself by working inhumane hours and forever pushing his businesses to
|
||
the edge. The idea of work-life balance seems meaningless in this context.
|
||
For Musk, it’s just life, and his wife and kids try to fit into the show where
|
||
they can. “I’m a pretty good dad,” Musk said. “I have the kids for slightly
|
||
more than half the week and spend a fair bit of time with them. I also take
|
||
them with me when I go out of town. Recently, we went to the Monaco
|
||
Grand Prix and were hanging out with the prince and princess of Monaco. It
|
||
all seemed quite normal to the kids, and they were blasé about it. They are
|
||
growing up having a set of experiences that are extremely unusual, but you
|
||
don’t realize experiences are unusual until you are much older. They’re just
|
||
your experiences. They have good manners at meals.”
|
||
It bothers Musk a bit that his kids won’t suffer like he did. He feels that
|
||
the suffering helped to make him who he is and gave him extra reserves of
|
||
strength and will. “They might have a little adversity at school, but these
|
||
days schools are so protective,” he said. “If you call someone a name, you
|
||
get sent home. When I was going to school, if they punched you and there
|
||
was no blood, it was like, ‘Whatever. Shake it off.’ Even if there was a little
|
||
blood, but not a lot, it was fine. What do I do? Create artificial adversity?
|
||
How do you do that? The biggest battle I have is restricting their video
|
||
game time because they want to play all the time. The rule is they have to
|
||
read more than they play video games. They also can’t play completely
|
||
stupid video games. There’s one game they downloaded recently called
|
||
Cookies or something. You literally tap a fucking cookie. It’s like a Psych
|
||
101 experiment. I made them delete the cookie game. They had to play
|
||
Flappy Golf instead, which is like Flappy Bird, but at least there is some
|
||
physics involved.”
|
||
Musk has talked about having more kids, and it’s on this subject that he
|
||
delivers some controversial philosophizing vis-à-vis the creator of Beavis
|
||
and Butt-head. “There’s this point that Mike Judge makes in Idiocracy,
|
||
which is like smart people, you know, should at least sustain their
|
||
numbers,” Musk said. “Like, if it’s a negative Darwinian vector, then
|
||
obviously that’s not a good thing. It should be at least neutral. But if each
|
||
successive generation of smart people has fewer kids, that’s probably bad,
|
||
too. I mean, Europe, Japan, Russia, China are all headed for demographic
|
||
implosion. And the fact of the matter is that basically the wealthier—
|
||
basically wealth, education, and being secular are all indicative of low birth
|
||
rate. They all correlate with low birth rate. I’m not saying like only smart
|
||
people should have kids. I’m just saying that smart people should have kids
|
||
as well. They should at least maintain—at least be a replacement rate. And
|
||
the fact of the matter is that I notice that a lot of really smart women have
|
||
zero or one kid. You’re like, ‘Wow, that’s probably not good.’”
|
||
The next decade of Musk Co. should be quite something. Musk has
|
||
given himself a chance to become one of the greatest businessmen and
|
||
innovators of all time. By 2025 Tesla could very well have a lineup of five
|
||
or six cars and be the dominant force in a booming electric car market.
|
||
Playing off its current growth rate, SolarCity will have had time to emerge
|
||
as a massive utility company and the leader in a solar market that had
|
||
finally lived up to its promise. SpaceX? Well, it’s perhaps the most
|
||
intriguing. According to Musk’s calculations, SpaceX should be conducting
|
||
weekly flights to space, carrying humans and cargo, and have put most of
|
||
its competitors out of business. Its rockets should be capable of doing a
|
||
couple of laps around the moon and then landing with pinpoint accuracy
|
||
back at the spaceport in Texas. And the preparation for the first few dozen
|
||
trips to Mars should be well under way.
|
||
If all of this were taking place, Musk, then in his mid-fifties, likely
|
||
would be the richest man in the world and among its most powerful. He
|
||
would be the majority shareholder in three public companies, and history
|
||
would be preparing to smile broadly on what he had accomplished. During
|
||
a time in which countries and other businesses were paralyzed by indecision
|
||
and inaction, Musk would have mounted the most viable charge against
|
||
global warming, while also providing people with an escape plan—just in
|
||
case. He would have brought a substantial amount of crucial manufacturing
|
||
back to the United States while also providing an example for other
|
||
entrepreneurs hoping to harness a new age of wonderful machines. As Thiel
|
||
said, Musk may well have gone so far as to give people hope and to have
|
||
renewed their faith in what technology can do for mankind.
|
||
This future, of course, remains precarious. Huge technological issues
|
||
confront all three of Musk’s companies. He’s bet on the inventiveness of
|
||
man and the ability of solar, battery, and aerospace technology to follow
|
||
predicted price and performance curves. Even if these bets hit as he hopes,
|
||
Tesla could face a weird, unexpected recall. SpaceX could have a rocket
|
||
carrying humans blow up—an incident that could very well end the
|
||
company on the spot. Dramatic risks accompany just about everything
|
||
Musk does.
|
||
By the time our last dinner had come around, I had decided that this
|
||
propensity for risk had little to do with Musk being insane, as he had
|
||
wondered aloud several months earlier. No, Musk just seems to possess a
|
||
level of conviction that is so intense and exceptional as to be off-putting to
|
||
some. As we shared some chips and guacamole and cocktails, I asked Musk
|
||
directly just how much he was willing to put on the line. His response?
|
||
Everything that other people hold dear. “I would like to die on Mars,” he
|
||
said. “Just not on impact. Ideally I’d like to go for a visit, come back for a
|
||
while, and then go there when I’m like seventy or something and then just
|
||
stay there. If things turn out well, that would be the case. If my wife and I
|
||
have a bunch of kids, she would probably stay with them on Earth.”
|
||
EPILOGUE
|
||
ELON MUSK IS A BODY THAT REMAINS VERY MUCH IN
|
||
MOTION.
|
||
By the time this book reaches your hands, it’s quite possible that Musk
|
||
and SpaceX will have managed to land a rocket on a barge at sea or back on
|
||
a launchpad in Florida. Tesla Motors may have unveiled some of the special
|
||
features of the Model X. Musk could have formally declared war on the
|
||
artificial intelligence machines coming to life inside of Google’s data
|
||
centers. Who knows?
|
||
What’s clear is that Musk’s desire to take on more keeps growing. Just
|
||
as I was putting the finishing touches on this book, Musk unfurled a number
|
||
of major initiatives. The most dramatic of which is a plan to surround the
|
||
Earth with thousands of small communications satellites. Musk wants, in
|
||
effect, to build a space-based Internet in which the satellites would be close
|
||
enough to the planet to beam down bandwidth at high speeds. Such a
|
||
system would be useful for a couple of reasons: In areas too poor or too
|
||
remote to have fiber-optic connections, it would provide people with highspeed
|
||
Internet for the first time. It could also function as an efficient
|
||
backhaul network for businesses and consumers.
|
||
Musk, of course, also sees this space Internet as key to his long-term
|
||
ambitions around Mars. “It will be important for Mars to have a global
|
||
communications network,” he said. “I think this needs to be done, and I
|
||
don’t see anyone else doing it.” SpaceX will build these satellites at a new
|
||
factory and will also look to sell more satellites to commercial customers as
|
||
it perfects the technology. To fund part of this unbelievably ambitious
|
||
project, SpaceX secured $1 billion from Google and Fidelity. In a rare
|
||
moment of restraint, Musk declined to provide an exact delivery date for his
|
||
space Internet, which he forecasts will cost more than $10 billion to build.
|
||
“People should not expect this to be active sooner than five years,” he said.
|
||
“But we see it as a long-term revenue source for SpaceX to be able to fund
|
||
a city on Mars.”
|
||
Meanwhile, SolarCity has purchased a new research and development
|
||
facility near the Tesla factory in Silicon Valley that’s intended to aid its
|
||
manufacturing work. The building it acquired was the old Solyndra
|
||
manufacturing plant—another symbol of Musk’s ability to thrive in the
|
||
green technology industry that has destroyed so many other entrepreneurs.
|
||
And Tesla continues to build its Gigafactory in Nevada at pace, while its
|
||
network of charging stations has saved upward of four million gallons of
|
||
gas. During a quarterly earnings announcement, J. B. Straubel promised that
|
||
Tesla would start producing battery systems for home use in 2015 that
|
||
would let people hop off the grid for periods of time. Musk then one-upped
|
||
Straubel, bragging that he thinks Tesla could eventually be more valuable
|
||
than Apple and could challenge it in the race to be the first $1 trillion
|
||
company. A handful of groups have also set to work building prototype
|
||
Hyperloop systems in and around California. Oh, and Musk starred in an
|
||
episode of The Simpsons titled “The Musk Who Fell to Earth,” in which
|
||
Homer became his inventive muse.
|
||
The heady expansion plans and triumphant rhetoric from Musk were
|
||
still not quite enough to hide all of Musk Co.’s flaws. Early 2015 marked
|
||
the vociferous return of Musk’s detractors on Wall Street. Tesla’s sales in
|
||
China were lackluster by any measure, and some analysts renewed their
|
||
doubts about how much long-term demand there would be for the Model S.
|
||
Tesla’s shares slumped and, for the first time in a while, Musk sounded
|
||
flustered trying to defend the company’s position.
|
||
The personal costs of Musk’s lifestyle were more severe. Musk
|
||
announced that, once again, he would be divorcing Talulah Riley.
|
||
According to Musk, Riley wanted a simpler, smaller life in England and had
|
||
come to despise Los Angeles. “Tried to talk her out of it, but she insisted,”
|
||
Musk told me. “It is possible that she will change her mind at some point,
|
||
but not anytime soon.”
|
||
After finishing my reporting and writing for this book, I had a chance to
|
||
speak with some of Musk’s confidantes and employees in a more relaxed
|
||
manner and bounce various ideas off of them. I’m more convinced than
|
||
ever that Musk is, and has always been, a man on a quest, and that his brand
|
||
of quest is far more fantastic and consuming than anything most of us will
|
||
ever experience. It seems that he’s become almost addicted to expanding his
|
||
ambitions and can’t quite stop himself from announcing things like the
|
||
Hyperloop and the space Internet. I’m also more convinced than ever that
|
||
Musk is a deeply emotional person who suffers and rejoices in an epic
|
||
fashion. This side of him is likely obscured by the fact that he feels most
|
||
deeply about his own humanity-altering quest and so has trouble
|
||
recognizing the strong emotions of those around him. This tends to make
|
||
Musk come off as aloof and hard. I would argue, however, that his brand of
|
||
empathy is unique. He seems to feel for the human species as a whole
|
||
without always wanting to consider the wants and needs of individuals. And
|
||
it may well be the case that this is exactly the type of person it takes to
|
||
make a freaking space Internet real.
|
||
APPENDIX 1
|
||
THE TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY LOVES MESSY FOUNDING
|
||
TALES. A bit of backstabbing? A hearty helping of deceit? Perfect. And
|
||
yet, the press has never really dug into the alleged intrigue surrounding
|
||
Musk’s formation of Zip2, nor have reporters examined the very serious
|
||
allegations of inconsistencies in Musk’s academic record.
|
||
In April 2007, a physicist named John O’Reilly filed a lawsuit alleging
|
||
that Musk had stolen the idea for Zip2. According to the lawsuit, filed with
|
||
the Superior Court of California in Santa Clara, O’Reilly first met Musk in
|
||
October 1995. O’Reilly had started a company called Internet Merchant
|
||
Channel, or IMC, which planned to let businesses create primitive,
|
||
information-packed online ads. A restaurant, for example, could build an ad
|
||
that would display its menu and perhaps even turn-by-turn directions to its
|
||
location. O’Reilly’s ideas were mostly theoretical, but Zip2 did end up
|
||
providing a very similar service. O’Reilly alleged that Musk had first heard
|
||
about this type of technology while trying to get a job working as a
|
||
salesman for IMC. He and Musk met on at least three occasions, according
|
||
to the lawsuit, to talk about the job. O’Reilly then went on an overseas trip
|
||
and struggled to get back in touch with Musk upon his return.
|
||
O’Reilly declined to discuss his case against Musk with me. But in the
|
||
lawsuit, he claimed to have learned about Zip2 through happenstance many
|
||
years after meeting Musk. While reading a book in 2005 about the Internet
|
||
economy, O’Reilly stumbled upon a passage that mentioned Musk’s
|
||
founding of Zip2 and its 1999 sale to Compaq Computer for $307 million in
|
||
cash. The physicist was blown away as he realized that Zip2 sounded a lot
|
||
like IMC, which had never amounted to much of a business. O’Reilly’s
|
||
mind raced back to his encounters with Musk. He began to suspect that
|
||
Musk had avoided him on purpose and that instead of becoming an IMC
|
||
salesman, Musk had run off to pursue the same concept on his own.
|
||
O’Reilly wanted to be compensated for coming up with the original
|
||
business idea. He spent about two years making his case against Musk. The
|
||
case file at the court runs hundreds of pages. O’Reilly has affidavits from
|
||
people that back up parts of his version of events. A judge, however, found
|
||
that O’Reilly lacked the necessary legal standing to bring this case against
|
||
Musk due to issues around how his businesses had been dissolved. The
|
||
judge ordered O’Reilly to shell out $125,000 for Musk’s legal fees in 2010.
|
||
All these years later, Musk still hasn’t made O’Reilly pay.
|
||
While playing detective, O’Reilly unearthed some information about
|
||
Musk’s past that’s arguably more interesting than the allegations in the
|
||
lawsuit. He found that the University of Pennsylvania granted Musk’s
|
||
degrees in 1997—two years later than what Musk has cited. I called Penn’s
|
||
registrar and verified these findings. Copies of Musk’s records show that he
|
||
received a dual degree in economics and physics in May 1997. O’Reilly
|
||
also subpoenaed the registrar’s office at Stanford to verify Musk’s
|
||
admittance in 1995 for his doctorate work in physics. “Based on the
|
||
information you provided, we are unable to locate a record in our office for
|
||
Elon Musk,” wrote the director of graduate admissions. When asked during
|
||
the case to produce a document verifying Musk’s enrollment at Stanford,
|
||
Musk’s attorney declined and called the request “unduly burdensome.” I
|
||
contacted a number of Stanford physics professors who taught in 1995, and
|
||
they either failed to respond or didn’t remember Musk. Doug Osheroff, a
|
||
Nobel Prize winner and department chair at the time, said, “I don’t think I
|
||
knew Elon, and am pretty sure that he was not in the Physics Department.”
|
||
In the years that have followed, Musk’s enemies have been quick to
|
||
bring up the ambiguities around his admission to Stanford. When Martin
|
||
Eberhard sued Musk, his attorney introduced O’Reilly’s research into the
|
||
case. And during the course of my interviews, a number of Musk’s
|
||
detractors from the Zip2, PayPal, and early Tesla days said flat out that they
|
||
think Musk fibbed about getting into Stanford in a bid to boost his
|
||
credentials as a fledgling entrepreneur and then had to stick with the story
|
||
after Zip2 took off.
|
||
At first, I, too, felt like there were a lot of oddities surrounding Musk’s
|
||
academic record, particularly the Stanford days. But, as I dug in, there were
|
||
solid explanations for all of the inconsistencies and plenty of evidence to
|
||
undermine the cases of Musk’s detractors.
|
||
During the course of my reporting, for example, I found evidence that
|
||
contradicted O’Reilly’s timeline of events. Peter Nicholson, the banker
|
||
whom Musk had worked for in Canada, took a stroll with Musk along the
|
||
boardwalk in Toronto before Musk left for Stanford and chatted about the
|
||
incarnations of something like Zip2. Musk had already started writing some
|
||
of the early software to support the idea he’d outlined to Kimbal. “He was
|
||
agonizing whether to do a PhD at Stanford or take this piece of software
|
||
he’d made in his spare time and make a business out of it,” Nicholson said.
|
||
“He called the thing the Virtual City Navigator. I told him there was this
|
||
crazy Internet thing going on, and that people will pay big money for damn
|
||
near anything. This software was a golden opportunity. He could do a PhD
|
||
anytime.” Kimbal and other members of Musk’s family have similar
|
||
memories.
|
||
Musk, speaking at length for the first time on the subject, denied
|
||
everything alleged by O’Reilly and does not even recall meeting the man.
|
||
“He’s a total scumbag,” Musk said. “O’Reilly is like a failed physicist who
|
||
became a serial litigate. And I told the guy, ‘Look, I’m not going to settle an
|
||
unjust case. So it’s just like don’t even try.’ But he still kept at it. His case
|
||
was tossed out twice on demur, which means that basically even if all the
|
||
facts in his case were true, he would still lose.
|
||
“He’d tried his best to like torture me through my friends and personally
|
||
[by filing the lawsuit]. And then we’ve got summary judgment. He lost the
|
||
summary judgment. He appealed summary judgment, then several months
|
||
later lost the appeal and I was like, ‘Okay, fuck it. Let’s file for fees.’ And
|
||
we were awarded fees from when he appealed. And that’s when we sent the
|
||
sheriff after him and he claimed that he had no money basically. Whether he
|
||
did or didn’t I don’t know. He certainly claimed he had no money. So we
|
||
were like either we’ve got to like impound his car or tap his wife’s income.
|
||
Those didn’t seem like great choices. So, we decided that he doesn’t have to
|
||
pay back the money he owes me, so long as he doesn’t sue anyone else on
|
||
frivolous grounds. And, in fact, late last year or early this year [2014], he
|
||
tried to do just that thing. But, whoever he sued was aware of the nature of
|
||
my judgment and contacted the lawyer I used, who then told O’Reilly,
|
||
‘Look, you need to drop the case against these guys or everyone’s going to
|
||
ask for the money. It’s kind of pointless to sue them on frivolous grounds
|
||
because you’re going to have fork over the winnings to Elon.’ It’s like go
|
||
do something productive with your life.”
|
||
As for his academic records, Musk produced a document for me dated
|
||
June 22, 2009, that came from Judith Haccou, the director of graduate
|
||
admissions in the office of the registrar at Stanford University. It read, “As
|
||
per special request from my colleagues in the School of Engineering, I have
|
||
searched Stanford’s admission data base and acknowledge that you applied
|
||
and were admitted to the graduate program in Material Science Engineering
|
||
in 1995. Since you did not enroll, Stanford is not able to issue you an
|
||
official certification document.”
|
||
Musk also had an explanation for the weird timing on his degrees from
|
||
Penn. “I had a History and an English credit that I agreed with Penn that I
|
||
would do at Stanford,” he said. “Then I put Stanford on deferment. Later,
|
||
Penn’s requirements changed so that you don’t need the English and History
|
||
credit. So then they awarded me the degree in ’97 when it was clear I was
|
||
not going to go to grad school, and their requirement was no longer there.
|
||
“I finished everything that was needed for a Wharton degree in ’94.
|
||
They’d actually mailed me a Wharton degree. I decided to spend another
|
||
year and finished the physics degree, but then there was that History and
|
||
English credit thing. I was only reminded about the History and English
|
||
thing when I tried to get an H-1B visa and called the school to get a copy of
|
||
my graduation certificate, and they said I hadn’t graduated. Then they
|
||
looked into the new requirements, and said it was fine.”
|
||
APPENDIX 2
|
||
WHILE MUSK HAS REFLECTED PUBLICLY ABOUT HIS TIME AT
|
||
PAYPAL AND THE COUP, he went into far greater detail than ever before
|
||
during one of our longer interviews. Years had passed since the tumultuous
|
||
days surrounding his ouster, and Musk had been able to meditate more on
|
||
what went right, what went wrong, and what might have been. He started by
|
||
discussing his decision to go out of the country, mixing business with a
|
||
delayed honeymoon, and ended with an explanation of how the finance
|
||
industry still hasn’t solved the problems X.com wanted to tackle.
|
||
“The problem with me going away was that I was not there to reassure
|
||
the board on a few things. Like, the brand change, I think it would have
|
||
been the right move, but it didn’t need to happen right then. At the time it
|
||
was this weird almost hybrid brand with X.com and PayPal. I think X was
|
||
the right long-term brand for something that wants to be the central place
|
||
where all transactions happen. That’s the X. It’s like the X is the transaction.
|
||
PayPal doesn’t make sense in that context, when we’re talking about
|
||
something more than a personal payment system. I think X was the more
|
||
sensible approach but timing-wise it didn’t need to happen then. That
|
||
should have probably waited longer.
|
||
“As for the technology change, that’s not really well understood. On the
|
||
face of it, it doesn’t sound like it makes much sense for us to be writing our
|
||
front-end code in Microsoft C++ instead of Linux. But the reason is that the
|
||
programming tools for Microsoft and a PC are actually extremely powerful.
|
||
They’re developed for the gaming industry. I mean, this is going to sound
|
||
like heresy in a sort of Silicon Valley context, but you can program faster,
|
||
you can get functionality faster in the PC C++ world. All of the games for
|
||
the Xbox are written in Microsoft C++. The same goes for games on the
|
||
PC. They’re incredibly sophisticated, hard things to do, and these great
|
||
tools have been developed thanks to the gaming industry. There were more
|
||
smart programmers in the gaming industry than anywhere else. I’m not sure
|
||
the general public understands this. It was also 2000, and there were not the
|
||
huge software libraries for Linux that you would find today. Microsoft had
|
||
huge support libraries. So you could get a DLL that could do anything, but
|
||
you couldn’t get—you couldn’t get Linux libraries that could do anything.
|
||
“Two of the guys that left PayPal went off to Blizzard and helped
|
||
created World of Warcraft. When you look at the complexity of something
|
||
like that living on PCs and Microsoft C++, it’s pretty incredible. It blows
|
||
away any website.
|
||
“In retrospect, I should have delayed the brand transition, and I should
|
||
have spent a lot more time with Max getting him comfortable on the
|
||
technology. I mean, it was a little difficult because like the Linux system
|
||
Max had created was called Max Code. So Max has had quite a strong
|
||
affinity for Max Code. This was a bunch of libraries that Max and his
|
||
friends had done. But it just made it quite hard to develop new features.
|
||
And if you look at PayPal today, I mean, part of the reason they haven’t
|
||
developed any new features is because it’s quite difficult to maintain the old
|
||
system.
|
||
“Ultimately, I didn’t disagree with the board’s decision in the PayPal
|
||
case, in the sense that with the information that the board had I would have
|
||
made maybe the same decision. I probably would have, whereas in the case
|
||
of Zip2 I would not have. I thought they just simply made a terrible
|
||
decision based on information they had. I don’t think the X.com board
|
||
made a terrible decision based on the information they had. But it did make
|
||
me want to be careful about who invested in my companies in the future.
|
||
“I’ve thought about trying to get PayPal back. I’ve just been too strung
|
||
out with other things. Almost no one understands how PayPal actually
|
||
worked or why it took off when other payment systems before and after it
|
||
didn’t. Most of the people at PayPal don’t understand this. The reason it
|
||
worked was because the cost of transactions in PayPal was lower than any
|
||
other system. And the reason the cost of transactions was lower is because
|
||
we were able to do an increasing percentage of our transactions as ACH, or
|
||
automated clearinghouse, electronic transactions, and most importantly,
|
||
internal transactions. Internal transactions were essentially fraud-free and
|
||
cost us nothing. An ACH transaction costs, I don’t know, like twenty cents
|
||
or something. But it was slow, so that was the bad thing. It’s dependent on
|
||
the bank’s batch processing time. And then the credit card transaction was
|
||
fast, but expensive in terms of the credit card processing fees and very
|
||
prone to fraud. That’s the problem Square is having now.
|
||
“Square is doing the wrong version of PayPal. The critical thing is to
|
||
achieve internal transactions. This is vital because they are instant, fraudfree,
|
||
and fee-free. If you’re a seller and have various options, and PayPal
|
||
has the lowest fees and is the most secure, it’s obviously the right thing to
|
||
use.
|
||
“When you look at like any given business, like say a business is
|
||
making 10 percent profitability. They’re making 10 percent profit when
|
||
they may net out all of their costs. You know, revenue minus expenses in a
|
||
year, they’re 10 percent. If using PayPal means you pay 2 percent for your
|
||
transactions and using some other systems means you pay 4 percent, that
|
||
means using PayPal gives you a 20 percent increase in your profitability.
|
||
You’d have to be brain dead not to do that. Right?
|
||
“So because about half of PayPal’s transactions in the summer of 2001
|
||
were internal or ACH transactions, then our fundamental costs of
|
||
transactions were half because we’d have half credit cards, we’d have that
|
||
and then the other half would be free. The question then is how do you give
|
||
people a reason to keep money in the system.
|
||
“That’s why we created a PayPal debit card. It’s a little counterintuitive,
|
||
but the easier you make it for people to get money out of PayPal, the less
|
||
they’ll want to do it. But if the only way for them to spend money or access
|
||
it in any way is to move it to a traditional bank, that’s what they’ll do
|
||
instantly. The other thing was the PayPal money market fund. We did that
|
||
because if you consider the reasons that people might move the money out,
|
||
well, they’ll move it to either conduct transactions in the physical world or
|
||
because they’re getting a higher interest rate. So I instituted the highestreturn
|
||
money market fund in the country. Basically, the money market fund
|
||
was at cost. We didn’t intend to make any money on it, in order to
|
||
encourage people to keep their money in the system. And then we also had
|
||
like the ability to pay regular bills like your electricity bill and that kind of
|
||
thing on PayPal.
|
||
“There were a bunch of things that should have been done like checks.
|
||
Because even though people don’t use a lot of checks they still use some
|
||
checks. So if you force people to say, ‘Okay, we’re not going to let you use
|
||
checks ever,’ they’re like, ‘Okay, I guess I have to have a bank account.’
|
||
Just give them a few checks, for God’s sake.
|
||
“I mean, it’s so ridiculous that PayPal today is worse than PayPal circa
|
||
end of 2001. That’s insane.
|
||
“None of these start-ups understand the objective. The objective should
|
||
be—what delivers fundamental value. I think it’s important to look at things
|
||
from a standpoint of what is actually the best thing for the economy. If
|
||
people can conduct their transactions quickly and securely that’s better for
|
||
them. If it’s simpler to conduct their financial life it’s better for them. So, if
|
||
all your financial affairs are seamlessly integrated one place it’s very easy to
|
||
do transactions and the fees associated with transactions are low. These are
|
||
all good things. Why aren’t they doing this? It’s mad.”
|
||
APPENDIX 3
|
||
From: Elon Musk
|
||
Date: June 7, 2013, 12:43:06 AM PDT
|
||
To: All <All@spacex.com>
|
||
Subject: Going Public
|
||
Per my recent comments, I am increasingly concerned about
|
||
SpaceX going public before the Mars transport system is in place.
|
||
Creating the technology needed to establish life on Mars is and
|
||
always has been the fundamental goal of SpaceX. If being a public
|
||
company diminishes that likelihood, then we should not do so until
|
||
Mars is secure. This is something that I am open to reconsidering,
|
||
but, given my experiences with Tesla and SolarCity, I am hesitant to
|
||
foist being public on SpaceX, especially given the long term nature
|
||
of our mission.
|
||
Some at SpaceX who have not been through a public company
|
||
experience may think that being public is desirable. This is not so.
|
||
Public company stocks, particularly if big step changes in
|
||
technology are involved, go through extreme volatility, both for
|
||
reasons of internal execution and for reasons that have nothing to do
|
||
with anything except the economy. This causes people to be
|
||
distracted by the manic-depressive nature of the stock instead of
|
||
creating great products.
|
||
It is important to emphasize that Tesla and SolarCity are public
|
||
because they didn’t have any choice. Their private capital structure
|
||
was becoming unwieldy and they needed to raise a lot of equity
|
||
capital. SolarCity also needed to raise a huge amount of debt at the
|
||
lowest possible interest rate to fund solar leases. The banks who
|
||
provide that debt wanted SolarCity to have the additional and
|
||
painful scrutiny that comes with being public. Those rules, referred
|
||
to as Sarbanes-Oxley, essentially result in a tax being levied on
|
||
company execution by requiring detailed reporting right down to
|
||
how your meal is expensed during travel and you can be penalized
|
||
even for minor mistakes.
|
||
YES, BUT I COULD MAKE MORE MONEY IF
|
||
WE WERE PUBLIC
|
||
For those who are under the impression that they are so clever that
|
||
they can outsmart public market investors and would sell SpaceX
|
||
stock at the “right time,” let me relieve you of any such notion. If
|
||
you really are better than most hedge fund managers, then there is
|
||
no need to worry about the value of your SpaceX stock, as you can
|
||
just invest in other public company stocks and make billions of
|
||
dollars in the market.
|
||
If you think: “Ah, but I know what’s really going on at SpaceX
|
||
and that will give me an edge,” you are also wrong. Selling public
|
||
company stock with insider knowledge is illegal. As a result, selling
|
||
public stock is restricted to narrow time windows a few times per
|
||
year. Even then, you can be prosecuted for insider trading. At Tesla,
|
||
we had both an employee and an investor go through a grand jury
|
||
investigation for selling stock over a year ago, despite them doing
|
||
everything right in both the letter and spirit of the law. Not fun.
|
||
Another thing that happens to public companies is that you
|
||
become a target of the trial lawyers who create a class action lawsuit
|
||
by getting someone to buy a few hundred shares and then pretending
|
||
to sue the company on behalf of all investors for any drop in the
|
||
stock price. Tesla is going through that right now even though the
|
||
stock price is relatively high, because the drop in question occurred
|
||
last year.
|
||
It is also not correct to think that because Tesla and SolarCity
|
||
share prices are on the lofty side right now, that SpaceX would be
|
||
too. Public companies are judged on quarterly performance. Just
|
||
because some companies are doing well, doesn’t mean that all
|
||
would. Both of those companies (Tesla in particular) had great first
|
||
quarter results. SpaceX did not. In fact, financially speaking, we had
|
||
an awful first quarter. If we were public, the short sellers would be
|
||
hitting us over the head with a large stick.
|
||
We would also get beaten up every time there was an anomaly
|
||
on the rocket or spacecraft, as occurred on flight 4 with the engine
|
||
failure and flight 5 with the Dragon prevalves. Delaying launch of
|
||
V1.1, which is now over a year behind schedule, would result in
|
||
particularly severe punishment, as that is our primary revenue
|
||
driver. Even something as minor as pushing a launch back a few
|
||
weeks from one quarter to the next gets you a spanking. Tesla
|
||
vehicle production in Q4 last year was literally only three weeks
|
||
behind and yet the market response was brutal.
|
||
BEST OF BOTH WORLDS
|
||
My goal at SpaceX is to give you the best aspects of a public and
|
||
private company. When we do a financing round, the stock price is
|
||
keyed off of approximately what we would be worth if publicly
|
||
traded, excluding irrational exuberance or depression, but without
|
||
the pressure and distraction of being under a hot public spotlight.
|
||
Rather than have the stock be up during one liquidity window and
|
||
down during another, the goal is a steady upward trend and never to
|
||
let the share price go below the last round. The end result for you (or
|
||
an investor in SpaceX) financially will be the same as if we were
|
||
public and you sold a steady amount of stock every year.
|
||
In case you are wondering about a specific number, I can say
|
||
that I’m confident that our long term stock price will be over $100 if
|
||
we execute well on Falcon 9 and Dragon. For this to be the case, we
|
||
must have a steady and rapid cadence of launch that is far better
|
||
than what we have achieved in the past. We have more work ahead
|
||
of us than you probably realize. Let me give you a sense of where
|
||
things stand financially: SpaceX expenses this year will be roug[h]ly
|
||
$800 to $900 million (which blows my mind btw). Since we get
|
||
revenue of $60M for every F9 flight or double that for a FH or F9-
|
||
Dragon flight, we must have about twelve flights per year where
|
||
four of those flights are either Dragon or Heavy merely in order to
|
||
achieve 10% profitability!
|
||
For the next few years, we have NASA commercial crew
|
||
funding that helps supplement those numbers, but, after that, we are
|
||
on our own. That is not much time to finish F9, FH, Dragon V2 and
|
||
achieve an average launch rate of at least one per month. And bear
|
||
in mind that is an average, so if we take an extra three weeks to
|
||
launch a rocket for any reason (could even be due to the satellite),
|
||
we have only one week to do the follow-on flight.
|
||
MY RECOMMENDATION
|
||
Below is my advice about regarding selling SpaceX stock or
|
||
options. No complicated analysis is required, as the rules of thumb
|
||
are pretty simple.
|
||
If you believe that SpaceX will execute better than the average
|
||
public company, then our stock price will continue to appreciate at a
|
||
rate greater than that of the stock market, which would be the next
|
||
highest return place to invest money over the long term. Therefore,
|
||
you should sell only the amount that you need to improve your
|
||
standard of living in the short to medium term. I do actually
|
||
recommend selling some amount of stock, even if you are certain it
|
||
will appreciate, as life is short and a bit more cash can increase fun
|
||
and reduce stress at home (so long as you don’t ratchet up your
|
||
ongoing personal expenditures proportionately).
|
||
To maximize your post tax return, you are probably best off
|
||
exercising your options to convert them to stock (if you can afford
|
||
to do this) and then holding the stock for a year before selling it at
|
||
our roughly biannual liquidity events. This allows you to pay the
|
||
capital gains tax rate, instead of the income tax rate.
|
||
On a final note, we are planning to do a liquidity event as soon
|
||
as Falcon 9 qualification is complete in one to two months. I don’t
|
||
know exactly what the share price will be yet, but, based on initial
|
||
conversations with investors, I would estimate probably between
|
||
$30 and $35. This places the value of SpaceX at $4 to $5 billion,
|
||
which is about what it would be if we were public right now and,
|
||
frankly, an excellent number considering that the new F9, FH and
|
||
Dragon V2 have yet to launch.
|
||
Elon
|
||
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
||
FROM A PROCESS PERSPECTIVE, this will always be two books
|
||
instead of one in my mind. There’s the time Before Elon, and the time After
|
||
Elon.
|
||
The first eighteen months or so of reporting were filled with tension,
|
||
sorrow, and joy. As mentioned in the main text, Musk initially opted against
|
||
helping me with the project. This left me going from interview subject to
|
||
interview subject, giving a huge windup each time to try to talk an ex-Tesla
|
||
employee or an old schoolmate into an interview. The highs came when
|
||
people agreed to talk. The lows came when key people said no and to not
|
||
bother them again. String four or five of those no’s together in a row, and it
|
||
felt at times like writing a proper book about Musk was impossible.
|
||
The thing that keeps you going is that a few people do say yes and then
|
||
a few more, and—interview by interview—you start to figure out how the
|
||
past fits together. I’ll be forever grateful to the hundreds of people who
|
||
were willing to give freely of their time and especially to those who let me
|
||
come back again and again with questions. There are too many of these
|
||
people to list, but gracious souls—like Jeremy Hollman, Kevin Brogan,
|
||
Dave Lyons, Ali Javidan, Michael Colonno, and Dolly Singh—each
|
||
provided invaluable insights and abundant technical help. Heartfelt thanks
|
||
go as well to Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning, both of whom added
|
||
crucial, rich parts to the Tesla story.
|
||
Even in this Before Elon period, Musk did permit some of his closer
|
||
friends to speak with me, and they were generous with their time and
|
||
intellect. That’s a special thanks then to George Zachary and Shervin
|
||
Pishevar, and especially to Bill Lee, Antonio Gracias, and Steve Jurvetson,
|
||
who really went out of their way for Musk and for me. And I obviously owe
|
||
a tremendous debt of gratitude to Justine Musk, Maye Musk, Kimbal Musk,
|
||
Peter Rive, Lyndon Rive, Russ Rive, and Scott Haldeman for their time and
|
||
for letting me hear some of the family stories. Talulah Riley was kind
|
||
enough to let me interview her and keep prying into her husband’s life. She
|
||
really brought out some aspects of Musk’s personality that I had not
|
||
encountered elsewhere, and she helped build a much deeper understanding
|
||
of him. This meant a lot to me, and, I think, it will to the readers as well.
|
||
Once Musk agreed to work with me, much of the tension that
|
||
accompanied the reporting went away and was replaced by excitement. I
|
||
got access to people like JB Straubel, Franz von Holzhausen, Diarmuid
|
||
O’Connell, Tom Mueller, and Gwynne Shotwell, who are all among the
|
||
most intelligent and compelling figures I’ve run into during years of
|
||
reporting. I’m forever grateful for their patience explaining bits of company
|
||
history and technological basics to me and for their candor. Thanks as well
|
||
to Emily Shanklin, Hannah Post, Alexis Georgeson, Liz Jarvis-Shean, and
|
||
John Taylor, for dealing with my constant requests and pestering, and for
|
||
setting up so many interviews at Musk’s companies. Mary Beth Brown,
|
||
Christina Ra, and Shanna Hendriks were no longer part of Musk Land near
|
||
the end of my reporting but were all amazing in helping me learn about
|
||
Musk, Tesla, and SpaceX.
|
||
My biggest debt of gratitude, of course, goes to Musk. When we first
|
||
started doing the interviews, I would spend the hours leading up to our chats
|
||
full of nerves. I never knew how long Musk would keep participating in the
|
||
project. He might have given me one interview or ten. There was real
|
||
pressure to get my most crucial questions answered up front and to be to the
|
||
point in my initial interviewing. As Musk stuck around, though, the
|
||
conversations went longer, were more fluid, and became more enlightening.
|
||
They were the things I most looked forward to every month. Whether Musk
|
||
will change the course of human history in a massive way remains to be
|
||
seen, but it was certainly a thrilling privilege to get to pick the brain of
|
||
someone who is reaching so high. While reticent at first, once Musk
|
||
committed to the project, he committed fully, and I’m thankful and honored
|
||
that things turned out that way.
|
||
On a professional front, I’d like to thank my editors and coworkers over
|
||
the years—China Martens, James Niccolai, John Lettice, Vindu Goel, and
|
||
Suzanne Spector—each of whom taught me different lessons about the craft
|
||
of writing. Special thanks go to Andrew Orlowski, Tim O’Brien, Damon
|
||
Darlin, Jim Aley, and Drew Cullen, who have had the most impact on how I
|
||
think about writing and reporting and are among the best mentors anyone
|
||
could hope for. I must also offer up infinite thanks to Brad Wieners and
|
||
Josh Tyrangiel, my bosses at Bloomberg Businessweek, for giving me the
|
||
freedom to pursue this project. I doubt there are two people doing more to
|
||
support quality journalism.
|
||
A special brand of thanks goes to Brad Stone, my colleague at the New
|
||
York Times and then at Businessweek. Brad helped me shape the idea for
|
||
this book, coaxed me through dark times, and was an unrivaled sounding
|
||
board. I feel bad for pestering Brad so incessantly with my questions and
|
||
doubts. Brad is a model colleague, always there to help anyone with advice
|
||
or to step up and take on work. He’s an amazing writer and an incredible
|
||
friend.
|
||
Thanks as well to Keith Lee and Sheila Abichandani Sandfort. They are
|
||
two of the brightest, kindest, most genuine people I know, and their
|
||
feedback on the early text was invaluable.
|
||
My agent David Patterson and editor Hilary Redmon were instrumental
|
||
in helping pull this project off. David always seemed to say the right thing
|
||
at low moments to pick up my spirits. Frankly, I doubt the book would have
|
||
happened without the encouragement and momentum he provided during
|
||
the initial part of the project. Once things got going, Hilary talked me
|
||
through the trickiest moments and elevated the book to an unexpected
|
||
place. She tolerated my hissy fits and made dramatic improvements to the
|
||
writing. It’s wonderful to finish something like this and come out the other
|
||
side with a pair of such good friends. Thanks so much to you both.
|
||
Last, I have to thank my family. This book turned into a living,
|
||
breathing creature that made life difficult on my family for more than two
|
||
years. I didn’t get to see my young boys as much as I would have liked
|
||
during this time, but when I did they were there with energizing smiles and
|
||
hugs. I’m thankful that they both seem to have picked up an interest in
|
||
rockets and cars as a result of this project. As for my wife, Melinda, well,
|
||
she was a saint. From a practical perspective, this book could not have
|
||
happened without her support. Melinda was my best reader and ultimate
|
||
confidante. She was that best friend who knew when to try to energize me
|
||
and when to let things go. Even though this book disrupted our lives for a
|
||
long while, it brought us closer together in the end. I’m blessed to have such
|
||
a partner, and I will forever remember what Melinda did for our family.
|
||
NOTES
|
||
1. Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association, 1995.
|
||
2. http://queensu.ca/news/alumnireview/rocket-man.
|
||
3. http://www.marieclaire.com/sex-love/relationship-issues/millionaire-starter-wife.
|
||
4. The investor Bill Lee, one of Musk’s close friends, originated this phrase.
|
||
5. http://archive.wired.com/science/space/magazine/15-06/ff_ space_musk?currentPage=all.
|
||
6. http://news.cnet.com/Electric-sports-car-packs-a-punch%2C-but-will-it-sell/2100-11389_3-
|
||
6096377.xhtml.
|
||
7. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/19/business/19electric.xhtml.
|
||
8. A southern gentleman, Currie could never get used to Musk’s swearing—“he curses like a sailor
|
||
and does it in mixed company”—or the way he would churn through prized talent. “He’d search
|
||
through the woods, turn over every rock and dig through brambles to find the one person with
|
||
the specific expertise and skill he wanted,” Currie said. “Then, that guy would be gone three
|
||
months to a year later if he didn’t agree with Elon.” Currie, though, remembers Musk as
|
||
inspirational. Even as Tesla’s funds dwindled, Musk urged the employees to do their jobs well
|
||
and vowed to give them what they needed to be successful. Currie, like many people, also found
|
||
Musk’s work ethic astonishing. “I would be in Europe or China and send him an email at two
|
||
thirty in the morning his time,” Currie said. “Five minutes later, I’d get an answer back. It’s just
|
||
unbelievable to have support on that level.”
|
||
9. http://www.mercurynews.com/greenenergy/ci_7641424.
|
||
10. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/3666994/One-more-giant-leap.xhtml.
|
||
11. http://www.sia.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/2013_SSIR_ Final.pdf.
|
||
12. Another moment like this occurred in late 2010 during a launch attempt in Florida. One of the
|
||
SpaceX technicians had left a hatch open overnight at the launchpad, which allowed rain to
|
||
flood a lower-level computing room. The water caused major issues with SpaceX’s computing
|
||
equipment, and another technician had to fly out from California right away with Musk’s
|
||
American Express card in hand to fix the emergency in the days leading up to the launch.
|
||
The SpaceX engineers bought new computing gear right away and set it up in the room.
|
||
They needed to run the equipment through standard tests to make sure it could maintain a
|
||
certain voltage level. It was late at night on a Sunday, and they couldn’t get access on short
|
||
notice to a device that could simulate the high electrical load. One of the engineers improvised
|
||
by going to a hardware store where he bought twenty-five headlamps for golf carts. The SpaceX
|
||
crew strung them all together back at the launchpad and hung them from a wall. They then put
|
||
on their sunglasses and lit everything up, knowing that if a power supply for the computing
|
||
equipment could survive this test, it would be okay for the flight. The process was repeated for
|
||
numerous power supplies, and the team worked from 9 P.M. that night until 7 A.M. and finished
|
||
in time to keep the launch on track.
|
||
13. http://www.space.com/15874-private-dragon-capsule-space-station-arrival.xhtml.
|
||
14. At the conclusion of the debate, Musk and I exchanged a couple of emails. He wrote, “Oil and
|
||
gas is firmly in the Romney camp and they are feeding his campaign these talking points. Until
|
||
recently, they didn’t care about Tesla, as they thought we would fail.
|
||
“Ironically, it is because they are starting to think Tesla might not fail that they are attacking
|
||
us. The reason is that society has to function, so the less there seems to be a viable alternative to
|
||
burning hydrocarbons, the less pressure there is to curb carbon emissions. If an electric car
|
||
succeeds, it spoils that argument.
|
||
“Overall though, I think it is great that he mentioned us :) ‘Romney Tesla’ is one of the top
|
||
Google searches!”
|
||
I reached out to Romney’s camp months later, as sales of Tesla’s soared, to see if he wanted
|
||
to change his position but was rebuffed.
|
||
15. As Tesla has grown in size, the company has commanded more respect from suppliers and been
|
||
able to get better parts and better deals. But outsourcing components still bothers Musk, and for
|
||
understandable reasons. When it tried to ramp up production in 2013, Tesla ran into periodic
|
||
issues because of its suppliers. One of them made what should have been an inconsequential 12-
|
||
volt lead acid battery that handled a few auxiliary functions in the car. Tesla bought the part
|
||
from an American supplier, which in turn outsourced the part from a company in China, which
|
||
in turn outsourced the part from a company in Vietnam. By the time the battery arrived at Tesla’s
|
||
factories, it didn’t work, adding cost and delays during a crucial period in the Model S’s history.
|
||
It’s situations like these that typically result in Tesla playing a much more active role with its
|
||
suppliers when compared to other automakers. For something like an ABS braking controller,
|
||
Tesla will work hand-in-hand with its supplier—in this case Bosch—to tune the hardware and
|
||
software for the Model S’s specific characteristics. “Most companies just hand their cars over to
|
||
Bosch, but Tesla goes in with a software engineer,” said Ali Javidan. “We had to change their
|
||
mind-set and let them know we wanted to work on a very deep level.”
|
||
16. Tesla does seem to promote an obsession with safety that’s unmatched in the industry. J. B.
|
||
Straubel explained the company’s thinking as follows: “With the safety stuff, it seems like car
|
||
companies have evolved to a place where their design objectives are set by whatever is regulated
|
||
or has been standardized. The rule says, ‘Do this and nothing more.’ That is amazingly boring
|
||
engineering. It leaves you maybe fiddling with the car’s shape or trying to make it a bit faster.
|
||
We have more crumple zones, better deceleration, a lower center of gravity. We went in
|
||
wondering, ‘Can we make this car twice as safe as anything else on the road?’”
|
||
17. Othmer has lined up to be the lucky owner of the first Roadster II.
|
||
Musk has developed an unconventional policy to determine the order in which cars are sold.
|
||
When a new car is announced and its price is set, a race begins in which the first person to hand
|
||
Musk a check gets the first car. With the Model S, Steve Jurvetson, a Tesla board member, had a
|
||
check at the ready in his wallet and slid it across the table to Musk after spying details on the
|
||
Model S in a packet of board meeting notes.
|
||
Othmer caught a Wired story about a planned second version of the Roadster and emailed
|
||
Musk right away. “He said, ‘Okay, I will sell it to you, but you have to pay two hundred
|
||
thousand dollars right now.’” Othmer agreed, and Tesla had him come to the company’s
|
||
headquarters on a Sunday to sign some paperwork, acknowledging the price of the car and the
|
||
fact that the company didn’t quite know when it would arrive or what its specifications would
|
||
be. “My guess is that it will be the fastest car on the road,” Othmer said. “It’ll be four-wheel
|
||
drive. It’s going to be insane. And I don’t really think that will be the real price. I just don’t
|
||
think Elon wanted me to buy it.”
|
||
18. Musk suspected Better Place came up with battery swapping as a plan after its CEO, Shai
|
||
Agassi, heard about the technology during a tour of the Tesla factory
|
||
19. Musk had made a number of art cars over the years at Burning Man, including an electric one
|
||
shaped like a rocket. In 2011, he also received a lot of grief from the Wall Street Journal for
|
||
having a high-end camp. “Elon Musk, chief executive of electric-car maker Tesla Motors and
|
||
co-founder of eBay Inc.’s PayPal unit, is among those eschewing the tent life,” the paper wrote.
|
||
“He is paying for an elaborate compound consisting of eight recreational vehicles and trailers
|
||
stocked with food, linens, groceries and other essentials for himself and his friends and family,
|
||
say employees of the outfitter, Classic Adventures RV. . . . Classic is one of the festival’s few
|
||
approved vendors. It charges $5,500 to $10,000 per RV for its Camp Classic Concierge
|
||
packages like Mr. Musk’s. At Mr. Musk’s RV enclave, the help empties septic tanks, brings
|
||
water and makes sure the vehicles’ electricity, refrigeration, air conditioning, televisions, DVD
|
||
players and other systems are ship shape. The staff also stocked the campers with Diet Coke,
|
||
Gatorade and Cruzan rum.” Once the story hit, Musk’s group felt like Classic Adventures had
|
||
leaked the information to drum up business, and they tried to move to a new, undisclosed
|
||
location.
|
||
20. http://www.sandia.gov/~jytsao/Solar%20FAQs.pdf.
|
||
21. Tesla employees have been known to sneak across the street to the campus of the software
|
||
maker SAP and to take advantage of its sumptuous, subsidized cafes.
|
||
22. Shotwell talks about going to Mars as much as Musk and has dedicated her life to space
|
||
exploration. Straubel has demonstrated the same type of commitment with electric vehicles and
|
||
can sound a lot like Musk at times. “We are not trying to corner the market on EVs,” Straubel
|
||
said. “There are 100 million cars built per year and 2 billion already out there. Even if we got to
|
||
5 or 10 percent of the market, that does not solve the world’s problems. I am bullish we will
|
||
keep up with demand and drive the whole industry forward. Elon is committed to this.”
|
||
23. Page presented one of his far-out ideas to me as follows: “I was thinking it would be pretty cool
|
||
to have a prize to fund a project where someone would have to send something lightweight to
|
||
the moon that could sort of replicate itself. I went over to the NASA operation center here at
|
||
AMES in Mountain View when they were doing a mission and literally flying a satellite into the
|
||
south pole of the moon. And they like hurled this thing into the moon at a high velocity and then
|
||
it exploded and it sent matter out into space. And then they looked at that with telescopes, and
|
||
they discovered water on the south pole of the moon, which sounds really exciting. I started
|
||
thinking that if there’s a lot of water on the south pole of the moon, you can make rocket fuel
|
||
from the hydrogen and oxygen. The other cool thing about the south pole is like it almost always
|
||
gets sun. There’s like places high up that get sun and there’s places that are kind of in the craters
|
||
that are very cold. So you have like a lot of energy then where you could run solar cells. You
|
||
could almost run like a steam turbine there. You have rocket fuel ingredients, and you have solar
|
||
cells that can be powered by sun, and you could probably run a power plant turbine. Power plant
|
||
turbines aren’t that heavy. You could send that to the moon. You have like a gigawatt of power
|
||
on the moon and make a lot of rocket fuel. It would make a good prize project. You send
|
||
something to the moon that weights five pounds and have it make rocket fuel so that you could
|
||
launch stuff off the moon or have it make a copy of itself, so that you can make more of them.”
|
||
|
||
* Two years after the birth of his son, John Elon began to show signs of diabetes. The condition
|
||
amounted to a death sentence at the time and, despite being only thirty-two, John Elon learned
|
||
that he would likely have six months or so to live. With a bit of nursing experience behind her,
|
||
Almeda took it upon herself to discover an elixir or treatment that would extend John Elon’s life.
|
||
According to family lore, she hit on chiropractic procedures as an effective remedy, and John
|
||
Elon lived for five years following the original diabetes diagnosis. The life-giving procedures
|
||
established what would become an oddly rich chiropractic tradition in the Haldeman family.
|
||
Almeda studied at a chiropractic school in Minneapolis and earned her doctor of chiropractic, or,
|
||
D.C., degree in 1905. Musk’s great-grandmother went on to set up her own clinic and, as far as
|
||
anyone can tell, became the first chiropractor to practice in Canada.
|
||
* Haldeman also entered politics, trying to start his own political party in Saskatchewan, publishing
|
||
a newsletter, and espousing conservative, antisocialist ideas. He would later make an unsuccessful
|
||
run for Parliament and chair the Social Credit Party.
|
||
* The journey took them up the African coast, across the Arabian Peninsula, all the way through
|
||
Iran, India, and Malaysia and then down the Timor Sea to Australia. It required one year of
|
||
preparation just to secure all of the necessary visas and paperwork, and they suffered from
|
||
constant stomach bugs and an erratic schedule along the way. “Dad passed out crossing the Timor
|
||
Sea, and mum had to take over until they hit Australia. He woke up right before they landed,”
|
||
said Scott Haldeman. “It was fatigue.”
|
||
* Both Joshua and Wyn were accomplished marksmen and won national shooting competitions. In
|
||
the mid-1950s, they also tied for first place in the eight-thousand-mile Cape Town to Algiers
|
||
Motor Rally, beating pros in their Ford station wagon.
|
||
* Musk couldn’t remember this particular conversation. “I think they might be having creative
|
||
recollection,” he said. “It’s possible. I had lots of esoteric conversations the last couple years of
|
||
high school, but I was more concerned about general technology than banking.”
|
||
* When Maye went to Canada to check out places to live, a fourteen-year-old Tosca seized the
|
||
moment and put the family house in South Africa up for sale. “She had sold my car as well and
|
||
was in the midst of putting our furniture up for sale, too,” Maye said. “When I got back, I asked
|
||
her why. She said, ‘There is no need to delay. We are getting out of here.’”
|
||
* The Musk brothers were not the most aggressive businessmen at this point. “I remember from
|
||
their business plan that they were originally asking for a ten-thousand-dollar investment for
|
||
twenty-five percent of their company,” said Steve Jurvetson, the venture capitalist. “That is a
|
||
cheap deal! When I heard about the three-million-dollar investment, I wondered if Mohr
|
||
Davidow had actually read the business plan. Somehow, the brothers ended up raising a normal
|
||
venture round.”
|
||
* Musk also got to show off the new office to his mother, Maye, and Justine. Maye sometimes sat
|
||
in on meetings and came up with the idea of adding a “reverse directions” button on the Zip2
|
||
maps, which let people flip around their journeys and ended up becoming a popular feature on all
|
||
mapping services.
|
||
* At one point, the founders thought the easiest way to solve their problems would just be to buy a
|
||
bank and revamp it. While that didn’t happen, they did snag a high-profile controller from Bank
|
||
of America, who in turn explained, in painful detail, the complexities of sourcing loans,
|
||
transferring money, and protecting accounts.
|
||
* Fricker disputed that he yearned to be CEO, saying instead that the other employees had
|
||
encouraged him to take over because of Musk’s struggles getting the business off the ground.
|
||
Fricker and Musk, once close friends, remain unimpressed with each other. “Elon has his own
|
||
code of ethics and honor and plays the game extraordinarily hard,” Fricker said. “When it comes
|
||
down to it, for him, business is war.” According to Musk, “Harris is very smart, but I don’t think
|
||
he has a good heart. He had a really intense desire to be running the show, and he wanted to take
|
||
the company in ridiculous directions.” Fricker went on to have a very successful career as CEO of
|
||
GMP Capital, a Canadian financial services company. Payne founded a private equity firm in
|
||
Toronto.
|
||
* Musk had been pushed out as CEO of X.com by the company’s investors, who wanted a more
|
||
seasoned executive to lead the company toward an IPO. In December 1999, X.com hired Bill
|
||
Harris, the former CEO of the financial software maker Intuit, as its new chief. After the merger,
|
||
many in the company turned on Harris, he resigned, and Musk returned as the CEO.
|
||
* After feeling ill for a few days, Musk went to Stanford Hospital and informed them that he’d
|
||
been in a malaria zone, although the doctors could not find the parasite during tests. The doctors
|
||
performed a spinal tap and diagnosed him with viral meningitis. “I may very well have also had
|
||
that, and they treated me for it, and it did get better,” Musk said. The doctors discharged Musk
|
||
from the hospital and warned him that some symptoms would recur. “I started feeling bad a few
|
||
days later, and it got progressively worse,” Musk said. “Eventually, I couldn’t walk. It was like,
|
||
‘Okay, this is even worse than the first time.’” Justine took Musk to a general practitioner in a
|
||
cab, and he lay on the floor of the doctor’s office. “I was so dehydrated that she couldn’t take my
|
||
vitals,” Musk said. The doctor called an ambulance, which transported Musk to Sequoia Hospital
|
||
in Redwood City with IVs in both arms. Musk faced another misdiagnosis—this time of the type
|
||
of malaria. The doctors declined to give Musk a more aggressive treatment that came with nasty
|
||
side effects including heart palpitations and organ failure.
|
||
* When Zubrin and some of the other Mars buffs heard of Musk’s plant project, they were upset. “It
|
||
didn’t make any sense,” Zubrin said. “It was a purely symbolic thing to do, and the second they
|
||
opened that door, millions of microbes would escape and plague all of NASA’s contamination
|
||
protocols.”
|
||
* Most of the stories written about Musk that touch on this period say he went to Moscow three
|
||
times. According to Cantrell’s detailed records, this is not the case. Musk met with the Russians
|
||
twice in Moscow, and once in Pasadena, California. He also met with Arianespace in Paris, and in
|
||
London with Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., which Musk considered buying.
|
||
* Buzza knew Hollman’s work at Boeing and coaxed him to SpaceX about six months after the
|
||
company started.
|
||
* Including a 1,300-pound hunk of copper.
|
||
* Before returning to El Segundo, Hollman used a drill press to remove the glasses’ safety shield.
|
||
“I didn’t want to look like a nerd on the flight home,” he said.
|
||
* Hollman left the company after this incident in November 2007 and then returned for a spell to
|
||
train new personnel. A number of people I interviewed for the book said that Hollman was so key
|
||
to SpaceX’s early days that they feared the company might flame out without him.
|
||
* In a press release announcing the funding round, Musk was not listed as a founder of the
|
||
company. In the “About Tesla Motors” section, the company stated, “Tesla Motors was founded
|
||
in June 2003 by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning to create efficient electric cars for people
|
||
who love to drive.” Musk and Eberhard would later spar over Musk’s founder status.
|
||
* This was how the employee remembered the text. I did not see the actual e-mail. Musk later told
|
||
the same employee, “I want you to think ahead and think so hard every day that your head hurts. I
|
||
want your head to hurt every night when you go to bed.”
|
||
* Musk fought to set the record straight, as he saw it, on the Huffington Post and wrote a 1,500-
|
||
word essay. Musk maintained that two months of negotiations with independent parties had gone
|
||
into the postnuptial agreement, which kept the couple’s assets separate so that Musk could get the
|
||
spoils from his companies and Justine could get the spoils from her books. “In mid 1999, Justine
|
||
told me that if I proposed to her, she would say yes,” Musk wrote. “Since this was not long after
|
||
the sale of my first company, Zip2, to Compaq, and the subsequent cofounding of PayPal, friends
|
||
and family advised me to separate whether the marriage was for love or money.” After the
|
||
settlement, Musk asked Arianna Huffington to remove his essay about the divorce from her
|
||
website. “I don’t want to dwell on past negativity,” Musk said. “You can always find things on the
|
||
Internet. So it’s not like it’s gone. It’s just not easily found.”
|
||
* The pair have continued to have their difficulties. For a long time, Musk ran all of the childsharing
|
||
scheduling through his assistant Mary Beth Brown rather than dealing directly with
|
||
Justine. “I was really pissed-off about that,” Justine said. And the time Justine cried the most
|
||
during our conversation came as she weighed the pros and cons of the children growing up on a
|
||
grand stage where they’re whisked away to the Super Bowl or Spain in a private jet on a
|
||
moment’s notice or asked to play at the Tesla factory. “I know the kids really look up to him,” she
|
||
said. “He takes them everywhere and provides a lot of experiences for them. My role as the
|
||
mother is to create this reality where I provide a sense of normalcy. They are not growing up in a
|
||
normal family with a normal dad. Their life with me is a lot more low-key. We value different
|
||
things. I am a lot more about empathy.”
|
||
* Musk recalled their meeting as follows: “She did look great, but what was going through my
|
||
mind was ‘Oh, I guess they are a couple of models.’ You know, you can’t actually talk to most
|
||
models. You just can’t have a conversation. But, you know, Talulah was really interested in
|
||
talking about rockets and electric cars. That was the interesting thing.”
|
||
* He asked Riley to go with him, but she turned Musk down.
|
||
* By this time, Musk had built up a reputation as the hardest-charging man in the space business.
|
||
Before settling on the Falcon 9, Musk planned to build something called the BFR, a.k.a. the Big
|
||
Falcon Rocket or Big Fucking Rocket. Musk wanted it to have the biggest rocket engine in
|
||
history. Musk’s bigger, faster mentality amused, horrified and impressed some of the suppliers
|
||
that SpaceX occasionally turned to for help, like Barber-Nichols Inc., a Colorado-based maker of
|
||
rocket engine turbo pumps and other aerospace machinery. A few executives at Barber-Nichols—
|
||
Robert Linden, Gary Frey, and Mike Forsha—were kind enough to recount their first meeting
|
||
with Musk in the middle of 2002 and their subsequent dealings with him. Here’s a snippet:
|
||
“Elon showed up with Tom Mueller and started telling us it was his destiny to launch things
|
||
into space at lower costs and to help us become space faring people. We thought the world of
|
||
Tom but weren’t quite sure whether to take Elon too seriously. They began asking us for the
|
||
impossible. They wanted a turbo pump to be built in less than a year for under one million
|
||
dollars. Boeing might do a project like that over five years for one hundred million. Tom told us
|
||
to give it our best shot, and we built it in thirteen months. Build quick and learn quickly was
|
||
Elon’s philosophy. He was relentless in wanting the costs to come down. Regardless of what we
|
||
showed him on paper with regard to the cost of materials, he wanted the cost lower because that
|
||
was part of his business model. It could be very frustrating to work with Elon. He has a singular
|
||
view and doesn’t deviate from that. We don’t know too many people that have worked for him
|
||
that are happy. That said, he has driven the cost of space down and been true to his original
|
||
business plan. Boeing, Lockheed, and the rest of them have become overly cautious and spend a
|
||
lot of money. SpaceX has balls.”
|
||
* To provide a glimpse of how well Musk knows the rockets, here he is explaining what happened
|
||
from memory six years after the fact: “It was because we had upgraded the Merlin engine to a
|
||
regeneratively cooled engine and the thrust transient of that engine was a few seconds longer. It
|
||
was only like one percent thrust for about another 1.5 seconds. And the chamber pressure was
|
||
only ten PSI, which is one percent of the total. But that’s below sea level pressure. On the test
|
||
stand, we didn’t notice anything. We thought it was fine. We thought it was just the same as
|
||
before, but actually it just had this slight difference. The ambient sea level pressure was higher at
|
||
roughly fifteen PSI, which disguised some effects during the test. The extra thrust caused the first
|
||
stage to continue moving after stage separation and recontact the other stage. And the upper stage
|
||
then started the engine inside the interstage, which caused the plasma blowback which destroyed
|
||
that upper stage.”
|
||
* Musk would later discover the identity of this employee in an ingenious way. He copied the text
|
||
of the letter into a Word document, checked the size of the file, sent it to a printer, and looked
|
||
over the logs of printer activity to find one of the same size. He could then trace that back to the
|
||
person who had printed the original file. The employee wrote a letter of apology and resigned.
|
||
* Griffin had pined to build a massive new spacecraft that would solidify his mark on the industry.
|
||
But, with the election of Barack Obama in 2008, the Bush appointee knew that his time as NASA
|
||
chief was coming to an end and that SpaceX appeared poised to build the most interesting
|
||
machines moving forward.
|
||
* It should be noted that there are many people in the space industry who doubt reusable rockets
|
||
will work, in large part because of the stress the machines and metal go through during launch.
|
||
It’s not clear that the most prized customers will even consider the reused spacecraft for launches
|
||
due to their inherent risks. This is a big reason that other countries and companies have not
|
||
pursued the technology. There’s a camp of space experts who think Musk is flat-out wasting his
|
||
time, and that engineering calculations already prove the reusable rockets to be a fool’s errand.
|
||
* Blue Origin also hired away a large chunk of SpaceX’s propulsion team.
|
||
* Musk has taken exception to Blue Origin and Bezos filing for patents around reusable rocket
|
||
technology as well. “His patent is completely ridiculous,” Musk said. “People have proposed
|
||
landing on a floating platform in the ocean for a half century. There’s no chance whatsoever of
|
||
the patent being upheld because there’s five decades of prior art of people who proposed that six
|
||
ways to Sunday in fiction and nonfiction. It’s like Dr. Seuss, green eggs and fucking ham. That’s
|
||
how many ways it’s been proposed. The issue is doing it and like actually creating a rocket that
|
||
can make that happen.”
|
||
* Michael Colonno.
|
||
* According to Musk, “The early Dragon Version 1 work was just me and maybe three or four
|
||
engineers, as we were living hand to mouth and had no idea if NASA would award us a contract.
|
||
Technically, there was Magic Dragon before that, which was much simpler, as it had no NASA
|
||
requirements. Magic Dragon was just me and some high altitude balloon guys in the U.K.”
|
||
* NASA researchers studying the Dragon design have noticed several features of the capsule that
|
||
appear to have been purpose built from the get-go to accommodate a landing on Mars. They’ve
|
||
published a couple of papers explaining how it could be feasible for NASA to fund a mission to
|
||
Mars in which a Dragon capsule picks up samples and returns them to Earth.
|
||
* The politicking in the space business can get quite nasty. Lori Garver, the former deputy
|
||
administrator of NASA, spent years fighting to open up NASA contracts so that private
|
||
companies could bid on things like resupplying the ISS. Her position of fostering a strong
|
||
relationship between NASA and the private sector won out in the end but at a cost. “I had death
|
||
threats and fake anthrax sent to me,” she said. Garver also ran across SpaceX competitors that
|
||
tried to spread unfounded gossip about the company and Musk. “They claimed he was in
|
||
violation of tax laws in South Africa and had another, secret family there. I said, ‘You’re making
|
||
this stuff up.’ We’re lucky that people with such long-term visions as Elon, Jeff Bezos, and
|
||
Robert Bigelow [founder of the aerospace company that bears his name] got rich. It’s nuts that
|
||
people would want to vilify Elon. He might say some things that rub people the wrong way, but,
|
||
at some point, the being nice to everyone thing doesn’t work.”
|
||
* On this flight, SpaceX secretly placed a wheel of cheese inside the Dragon capsule. It was the
|
||
same one Jeff Skoll had given Musk back in the mice-to-Mars days.
|
||
* Musk explained the look to me in a way that only he can. “I went for a similar style to the Model
|
||
S (it uses the same screens as Model S upgraded for space ops), but kept the aluminum isogrid
|
||
uncovered for a more exotic feel.”
|
||
* Rather insanely, NASA is building a next-generation, giant spaceship that could one day get to
|
||
Mars even though SpaceX is building the same type of craft—the Falcon Heavy—on its own.
|
||
NASA’s program is budgeted to cost $18 billion, although government studies say that figure is
|
||
very conservative. “NASA has no fucking business doing this,” said Andrew Beal, the billionaire
|
||
investor and onetime commercial space entrepreneur. “The whole space shuttle system was a
|
||
disaster. They’re fucking clueless. Who in their right mind would use huge solid boosters,
|
||
especially ones built in segments requiring dynamic seals? They are so lucky they only had one
|
||
disastrous failure of the boosters.” Beal’s firm criticisms come from years of watching the
|
||
government compete against private space companies by subsidizing the construction of
|
||
spacecraft and launches. His company Beal Aerospace quit the business because the government
|
||
kept funding competing rockets. “Governments around the world have spent billions trying to do
|
||
what Elon is doing, and they have failed,” he said. “We have to have governments, but the idea
|
||
that the government goes out and competes with companies is fucking nuts.”
|
||
* The volume level on the sound system naturally goes to 11—an homage to This Is Spinal Tap and
|
||
a reflection of Musk’s sense of humor.
|
||
* And it’s not just that the Model S and other electric cars are three to four times more efficient
|
||
than internal combustion vehicles. They can also tap into power that is produced in centralized,
|
||
efficient ways by power plants and solar arrays.
|
||
* When the very first Roadster arrived, it came in a large plywood crate. Tesla’s engineers
|
||
unpacked it furiously, installed the battery pack, and then let Musk take it for a spin. About
|
||
twenty Tesla engineers jumped in prototype vehicles and formed a convoy that followed Musk
|
||
around Palo Alto and Stanford.
|
||
* At some point from late 2007 to 2008, Musk also tried to hire Tony Fadell, an executive at Apple
|
||
who is credited with bringing the iPod and iPhone to life. Fadell remembered being recruited for
|
||
the CEO job at Tesla, while Musk remembered it more as a chief operating officer type of
|
||
position. “Elon and I had multiple discussions about me joining as Tesla’s CEO, and he even
|
||
went to the lengths of staging a surprise party for me when I was going to visit their offices,”
|
||
Fadell said. Steve Jobs caught wind of these meetings and turned on the charm to keep Fadell.
|
||
“He was sure nice to me for a while,” Fadell said. A couple of years later, Fadell left Apple to
|
||
found Nest, a maker of smart-home devices, which Google then acquired in 2014.
|
||
* It took a couple of years, from about 2007 to 2009, for the Energy Department application to
|
||
morph into the actual possibility of a loan from the government.
|
||
* The deal had two parts. Tesla would keep making battery packs and associated technology that
|
||
other companies might use, and it would produce its own electric vehicles at a manufacturing
|
||
facility in the United States.
|
||
* Musk had received a lot of pushback internally for trying to locate a car factory in or near
|
||
California. “All the guys in Detroit said it needs to be in a place where the labor can afford to live
|
||
and be happy,” Lloyd said. “There’s a lot of learned skill on an assembly line, and you can’t
|
||
afford turnover.” Musk responded that SpaceX had found a way to build rockets in Los Angeles,
|
||
and that Tesla would find a way to build cars in Northern California. His stubbornness ended up
|
||
being fortuitous for the company. “If it hadn’t been for that DOE loan, and the NUMMI plant,
|
||
there’s no way Tesla would have ended up being so successful, so fast,” Lloyd said.
|
||
* Boeing used to make fuselages for the 747 in the SpaceX building and painted them in what
|
||
became the Tesla design studio.
|
||
* “He picks the most visible place on purpose,” said the investor and Tesla board member Steve
|
||
Jurvetson. “He’s at Tesla just about every Saturday and Sunday and wants people to see him and
|
||
know they can find him. Then, he can also call suppliers on the weekend, and let them know that
|
||
he’s personally putting in the hours on the factory floor and expects the same from them.”
|
||
* Tesla got its start using the same lithium ion batteries that go into consumer electronics like
|
||
laptops. During the early days of the Roadster, this proved a risky but calculated choice. Tesla
|
||
wanted to tap into Asia’s mature battery suppliers and get access to cheap products that would
|
||
keep improving over time. The press played up Tesla’s use of these types of batteries, and
|
||
consumers were fascinated by the idea that a car could be powered by the same energy source
|
||
sitting inside of their gizmos.
|
||
There’s a major misconception that Tesla still depends on these types of batteries. Yes, the
|
||
batteries inside the Model S look like those found in a laptop. Tesla, however, started developing
|
||
its own battery chemistry in conjunction with partners like Panasonic dating back to late models
|
||
of the Roadster. Tesla can still use the same manufacturing equipment as consumer electronics
|
||
companies while ending up with a battery that’s safer and better tuned to the intense charging
|
||
demands of its cars. Along with the secret formula for the battery cells themselves, Tesla has
|
||
improved the performance of its batteries by developing its own techniques for linking the cells
|
||
together and cooling them. The battery cells have been designed to vent heat in a very particular
|
||
way, and there’s coolant running throughout the entire battery pack. The battery packs are
|
||
assembled at the Tesla factory in an area hidden from visitors.
|
||
The chemistry, the batteries, the battery pack design—these are all elements of a large,
|
||
continuous system that Tesla has built from the ground up to allow its cars to charge at record
|
||
speed. To control the heat produced during the charging process, Tesla has designed an
|
||
interlinked system of radiators and chillers to cool both the batteries and the chargers. “You’ve
|
||
got all that hardware plus the software management system and other controllers,” said J. B.
|
||
Straubel. “All of these things are running at maximum rate.” A Model S can recharge 150 miles
|
||
of range in 20 minutes at one of Tesla’s charging stations with DC power pumping straight into
|
||
the batteries. By comparison, a Nissan Leaf that maxes out at 80 miles of range can take 8 hours
|
||
to recharge.
|
||
* Google’s attorneys had asked to make a presentation to Tesla’s board. Before he would permit
|
||
this, Musk asked for the right to call on Google for a loan in case Tesla encountered cash flow
|
||
issues after acquisition talks became public, as there would otherwise be no way for Tesla to raise
|
||
money. Google hesitated on this for a few weeks, by which time Tesla ended up in the clear.
|
||
* Following the demonstration, Tesla struggled to deliver on the battery swap technology. Musk
|
||
had promised that the first few stations would arrive in late 2013. A year after the event, though,
|
||
Tesla had yet to open a single station. According to Musk, the company ended up needing to deal
|
||
with more pressing issues. “We’re going to do it because we said we’d do it,” Musk said. “It may
|
||
not be on the schedule that we’d like but we always come through in the end.”
|
||
* As for the origins of the Model S name, Musk said, “Well, I like calling things what they are. We
|
||
had the Roadster, but there was no good word for a sedan. You can’t call it the Tesla Sedan.
|
||
That’s boring as hell. In the U.K., they say ‘saloon,’ but then it’s sort of like, ‘What are you? A
|
||
cowboy or something?’ We went through a bunch of iterations, and the Model S sounded the best.
|
||
And it was like a vague nod to Ford being the Model T in that electric cars preceded the Model T,
|
||
and in a way we’re coming full circle and the thing that proceeded the Model T is now going into
|
||
production in the twenty-first century, hence the Model S. But that’s sort of more like reversing
|
||
the logic.”
|
||
* A handful of lawsuits have been filed against Tesla with auto dealers arguing that the company
|
||
should not be able to sell its cars directly. But even in those states that have banned Tesla’s stores,
|
||
prospective customers can usually request a test drive, and someone from Tesla will show up with
|
||
a vehicle. “Sometimes you have to put something out there for people to attack,” Musk said. “In
|
||
the long run, the stores won’t be important. The way things will really grow is by word of mouth.
|
||
The stores are like a viral seed to get things going.”
|
||
* Or as Straubel put it, “Watching people drive the Model S across the country is phenomenal.
|
||
There is no way you can do that in anything else. It’s not about putting a charging station in the
|
||
desert as a stunt. It’s about realizing where this is going to go. We will end up launching the thirdgeneration
|
||
car into a world where this charging network is free and ubiquitous. It bugs me when
|
||
people compare us to a car company. The cars are absolutely our main product, but we are also an
|
||
energy company and a technology company. We are going down to the dirt and having
|
||
discussions with mining companies about the materials for our batteries and going up to
|
||
commercialize all the pieces that make up an electronic vehicle and all the pieces that make an
|
||
awesome product.”
|
||
* No, really. Both Lyndon and his wife play underwater hockey and used these skills to secure
|
||
green cards, meeting the criteria for the “exceptional abilities” the United States desires. They
|
||
ultimately played for the U.S. national teams.
|
||
* Thirteen thousand people showed up in 2013.
|
||
* If you assume an average selling price of $40,000 per car for 300,000 cars sold in a year, that’s
|
||
$12 billion in annual revenue, or $1 billion per month.
|
||
* For the space buffs, here’s Musk talking more about the physics and chemistry of the spaceship:
|
||
“The final piece of the puzzle for figuring out the Mars architecture is a methane engine. You
|
||
need to be able to generate the propellant on the surface. Most of the fuel used in rockets today is
|
||
a form of kerosene, and creating kerosene is quite complex. It’s a series of long-chain
|
||
hydrocarbons. It’s much easier to create either methane or hydrogen. The problem with hydrogen
|
||
is it’s a deep cryogen. It’s only a liquid very close to absolute zero. And because it’s a small
|
||
molecule you have these issues where hydrogen will seep its way through a metal matrix and
|
||
embrittle or destroy metal in weird ways. Hydrogen’s density is also very porous, so the tanks are
|
||
enormous and it’s expensive to create and store hydrogen. It’s not a good choice as a fuel.
|
||
“Methane, on the other hand, is much easier to handle. It’s liquid at around the same
|
||
temperature as liquid oxygen so you can do a rocket stage with a common bulkhead and not
|
||
worry about freezing one or the other solid. Methane is also the lowest-cost fossil fuel on Earth.
|
||
And there needs to be a lot of energy to go to Mars.
|
||
“And then on Mars, because the atmosphere is carbon dioxide and there’s a lot of water or ice
|
||
in the soil, the carbon dioxide gets you CO2, the water gives you H2O. With that you create CH4
|
||
and O2, which gives you combustion. So it’s all sort of nicely worked out.
|
||
“And then one of the key questions is can you get to the surface of Mars and back to Earth on
|
||
a single stage. The answer is yes, if you reduce the return payload to approximately one-quarter
|
||
of the outbound payload, which I thought made sense because you are going to want to transport
|
||
a lot more to Mars than you’d want to transfer from Mars to Earth. For the spacecraft, the heat
|
||
shield, the life support system, and the legs will have to be very, very light.”
|
||
* Musk and Riley were divorced for less than year. “I refused to speak with him for as long it took
|
||
for the divorce to be finalized,” Riley said. “And then, once it was finalized, we immediately got
|
||
back together.” As for what caused the breakup, Riley said, “I just wasn’t happy. I thought maybe
|
||
I had made the wrong decision for my life.” And, about what brought her back to Musk, Riley
|
||
said, “One reason was the lack of viable alternatives. I looked around, and there was no one else
|
||
nice to be with. Number two is that Elon doesn’t have to listen to anyone in life. No one. He
|
||
doesn’t have to listen to anything that doesn’t fit into his worldview. But he proved he would take
|
||
shit from me. He said, ‘Let me listen to her and figure these things out.’ He proved that he valued
|
||
my opinion on things in life and was willing to listen. I thought it was quite a telling thing for the
|
||
man—that he made the effort. And then, I loved him and missed him.”
|
||
* As Musk recalled, “I told her, ‘Look, I think you’re very valuable. Maybe that compensation is
|
||
right. You need to take two weeks’ vacation, and I’m going to assess whether that’s true our not.’
|
||
Before this came up, I had offered her multiple all-expenses-paid vacations. I really wanted her to
|
||
take a vacation. When she got back, my conclusion was just that the relationship was not going to
|
||
work anymore. Twelve years is a good run for any job. She’ll do a great job for someone.”
|
||
According to Musk, he offered Brown another position at the company. She declined the offer by
|
||
never showing up at the office again. Musk gave her twelve months’ severance and has not
|
||
spoken to her since.
|
||
* According to Riley, “Elon is kind of cheeky and funny. He is very loving. He is devoted to his
|
||
children. He is funny—really, really, really funny. He’s quite mercurial. He’s genuinely the oddest
|
||
person I have ever met. He has moments of self-awareness and lucidity, which for me always
|
||
bring him back around. He’ll say something cheeky or funny and have this grin. He’s smart in all
|
||
sorts of areas. He’s very well read and has this incredible wit. He loves movies. We went to see
|
||
the new Lego Movie and afterwards he insisted on being referred to as Lord Business. He tries to
|
||
come home early for family dinners with me and the kids and maybe play some computer games
|
||
with the boys. They will tell us about their day, and we’ll put them to bed. Then we’ll chat and
|
||
watch something together on the laptop like The Colbert Report. On the weekends, we’re
|
||
traveling. The kids are good travelers. There were bajillions of nannies before. There was even a
|
||
nanny manager. Things are a bit more normal now. We try and do stuff just as a family when we
|
||
can. We have the kids four days a week. I like to say that I am the disciplinarian. I want them to
|
||
have the sense of an ordinary life, but they live a very odd life. They were just on a trip with
|
||
Justin Bieber. They go to the rocket factory and are like, ‘Oh no, not again.’ It’s not cool if your
|
||
dad does it. They’re used to it.
|
||
“People don’t realize that Elon has this incredible naiveté. There are certain times when he is
|
||
incapable of anything other than pure joy. And then other times pure anger. When he feels
|
||
something, he feels it so completely and purely. Nothing else can impose on it. There are so few
|
||
people who can do that. If he sees something funny, he will laugh so loudly. He won’t realize we
|
||
are in a crowded theater and that other people are there. He is like a child. It’s sweet and amazing.
|
||
He says this random stuff like, ‘I am a complicated man with very simple but specific needs’ or
|
||
‘No man is an island unless he is large and buoyant.’ We make these lists of things we want to do.
|
||
His latest contributions were to walk on a beach at sunset and whisper sweet nothings in each
|
||
other’s ear and to take more horseback rides. He likes reading, playing video games, and being
|
||
with friends.”
|
||
* Jurvetson elaborated by saying, “Elon has that engineering prowess of Gates, but he’s more
|
||
interpersonal. You have to be out there on the spectrum with Gates. Elon has more interpersonal
|
||
charms. He’s like Jobs in that neither of them suffer fools. But with Jobs there was more of a
|
||
hero-shit roller coaster where employees went from in favor to out of favor. I also think Elon has
|
||
accomplished more.”
|
||
|
||
I really like computer games, but then if I made
|
||
really great computer games, how much effect would
|
||
that have on the world? – Elon Musk
|
||
When people today talk about modern-day success
|
||
stories in entrepreneurship, engineering, and
|
||
technological innovation, Elon Musk's name
|
||
inevitably garners much of the discussion. Musk is
|
||
the name behind some of the most recognizable,
|
||
trailblazing, and talked-about companies this
|
||
century. He is constantly ranked among the
|
||
wealthiest business magnates in the world whilst
|
||
also maintaining a persona akin to a rock star
|
||
which only serves to contribute to his popularity.
|
||
A look at the background and beginnings of Elon
|
||
Reeve Musk reveals where he gets much of his
|
||
innovative and exploring spirit. His father, Errol
|
||
Musk, is an electromechanical engineer, sailor and
|
||
pilot. Meanwhile, his mother Maye, is a model and
|
||
a dietician. Musk's father is a native of South
|
||
Africa, while his mother is originally from
|
||
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. Musk's ancestry
|
||
includes British, American, and Pennsylvania Dutch
|
||
roots.
|
||
Musk was born in Pretoria, Transvaal, South Africa
|
||
on June 28, 1971. Pretoria, a city in the northern
|
||
region of Gauteng, is one of South Africa's
|
||
capital cities and is known to be a center of
|
||
academic study, with three major universities, the
|
||
Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
|
||
(CSIR), and the South African Bureau of Standards
|
||
within its territory. Pretoria is the birthplace
|
||
of many other notable South Africans, including
|
||
athlete Oscar Pistorius, entrepreneur Sammy Marks,
|
||
South African Republic president Paul Kruger, and
|
||
venture capitalist Roelof Botha.
|
||
As a child, Musk showed an early love for reading,
|
||
devouring several books at a time. The young Musk
|
||
was an introvert compared to his younger siblings
|
||
Kimbal and Tosca. Much of his childhood was spent
|
||
in the suburbs of Pretoria, particularly
|
||
Waterkloof, an affluent area where many foreign
|
||
diplomats resided. Musk's parents divorced in
|
||
1980, and he mostly lived with his father.
|
||
Recreation included thoroughbred horses, trips on
|
||
their father's yacht, and holiday travels to
|
||
Europe, Hong Kong, and the United States.
|
||
Although it was common for wealthy South African
|
||
families to hire household staff, Errol determined
|
||
early on to train his children to do their own
|
||
household chores and learn to cook their own
|
||
meals. "I guess I was a bit of an autocratic
|
||
father — do this, do that. I was a single parent,
|
||
and they simply had to help out," Errol said in an
|
||
interview to The Mercury News .
|
||
Musk's passion for reading eventually led to an
|
||
early interest in computers. He owned a Commodore
|
||
Vic 20, a Spectra video, and an IBM, all of which
|
||
added to his interest in learning more about
|
||
computing and computer programming. In fact, at
|
||
the age of 12, he successfully taught himself
|
||
programming and designed the code for a BASICbased
|
||
video game called Blastar. The space-themed
|
||
PC game looks like a mix between Space Invaders
|
||
and Asteroid, with the player's mission to destroy
|
||
alien spacecraft carrying hydrogen bombs and
|
||
destroyer machines. A 12-year-old Elon was able to
|
||
sell the code for Blastar to the magazine PC and
|
||
Office Technology for $500.
|
||
Unfortunately, Musk was not spared from being
|
||
bullied throughout his childhood. Because he was
|
||
bookish and socially awkward, interested more in
|
||
science fiction and computers, classmates picked
|
||
on him constantly. At one time, Musk's classmates
|
||
pushed him down a long, concrete stairwell. In
|
||
another instance, the young Musk was beaten so
|
||
severely that he had to be taken to the hospital.
|
||
Recalling his childhood experience with bullying,
|
||
Musk recalled one instance when the bullies used
|
||
his best friend to lure him out of hiding, and
|
||
then they proceeded to beat him up. “For some
|
||
reason they decided that I was it, and they were
|
||
going to go after me nonstop. That’s what made
|
||
growing up difficult.” Musk said this bullying
|
||
lasted for many years with no end in sight. He
|
||
would get chased by the gangs at school who wanted
|
||
to beat him up, and they would follow him home.
|
||
“It would just be awful there as well,” he said.
|
||
Still, Musk showed resilience despite the
|
||
difficulties. A former geography teacher of his,
|
||
Ewyn van den Aardweg, recalls a smart and
|
||
inquisitive child. "I would see him frequently in
|
||
or around the library. Musk had an above-average
|
||
interest in matters outside the normal curriculum,
|
||
and the library — these were pre-Internet years —
|
||
was the place to gain further knowledge."
|
||
Van den Aardweg also noticed that Musk's school
|
||
uniform was always neat and clean compared to the
|
||
other boys in school, indicating that even though
|
||
he was superior to the others in intellect and
|
||
out-of-the-box thinking, he put a priority on
|
||
self-discipline and the value of hard work.
|
||
Because his father was a wealthy and successful
|
||
engineer, Musk went to private schools in the
|
||
Pretoria suburbs, such as the Waterkloof House
|
||
Preparatory School, an English-speaking private
|
||
school with boarding facilities. Waterkloof House
|
||
counts among its notable pupils the professional
|
||
golfer Richard Sterne, novelist Tony Peake, and
|
||
journalist Deon Chang.
|
||
Musk went on to graduate from the Pretoria Boys
|
||
High School. He was a member of the high school
|
||
chess team at the prestigious learning
|
||
institution, but he stopped competing when he
|
||
realized that humans could not beat the computers
|
||
that were playing chess. After graduating high
|
||
school, Musk studied for a short time at the
|
||
University of Pretoria, but his sights were soon
|
||
set elsewhere.
|
||
In 1989, at the age of 17, Elon decided he would
|
||
move to Canada because he wanted to attend the
|
||
Queen's School of Business in Kingston, Ontario.
|
||
This was at a time when the country of South
|
||
Africa was undergoing much political upheaval,
|
||
with the apartheid system of racial segregation
|
||
being torn down. With the uncertainty in the
|
||
country's political and economic climate, many
|
||
South Africans were leaving the country for
|
||
England, Australia, and North America in search of
|
||
better opportunities. Musk also intended to move
|
||
to Canada to avoid mandatory service in the
|
||
military.
|
||
Elon's brother Kimbal also moved to Canada shortly
|
||
thereafter to attend Queen's. A friend of the
|
||
brothers at the school, Dominic Thompson, recalls
|
||
the intelligence and deep knowledge of Elon in
|
||
many fields of study. "It’s rare to have the mix
|
||
of business knowledge with the understanding of
|
||
physics and science, along with raw intelligence,
|
||
and focus. He’s always known what he wanted to
|
||
do," Thompson said.
|
||
It was not all smooth sailing for Musk when he
|
||
first moved to Canada. He worked various odd jobs
|
||
to support himself, such as tending vegetables and
|
||
shoveling out grain bins at a farm owned by his
|
||
cousin, cutting logs using a chain saw in
|
||
Vancouver, and even cleaning a lumber mill's
|
||
boiler room, a job that paid $18 an hour.
|
||
Musk recalls having to wear a hazmat suit and then
|
||
trying to fit through a very little tunnel as part
|
||
of the job, then having to use a shovel to take
|
||
sand, goop, and other steaming hot residue out
|
||
through the same hole. “Someone else on the other
|
||
side has to shovel it into a wheelbarrow. If you
|
||
stay in there for more than thirty minutes, you
|
||
get too hot and die."
|
||
His hard work and enterprising spirit went on all
|
||
throughout his college years. From his dorm room,
|
||
Musk would sell computer parts and personal
|
||
computers to earn extra money. "I could build
|
||
something to suit their needs like a tricked-out
|
||
gaming machine or a simple word processor that
|
||
cost less than what they could get in a store,"
|
||
according to Musk. "Or if their computer didn't
|
||
boot properly or had a virus, I'd fix it. I could
|
||
pretty much solve any problem."
|
||
The passion and competitiveness displayed by Musk
|
||
today was already very evident during his stay at
|
||
Queen's, where he liked to join public speaking
|
||
competitions and compare test notes with his
|
||
classmates. Musk's roommate Navaid Farooq recounts
|
||
their many hours of studying together or playing
|
||
board games, but also Musk's superior intellect.
|
||
"When Elon gets into something, he develops just
|
||
this different level of interest in it than other
|
||
people. That is what differentiates Elon from the
|
||
rest of humanity."
|
||
After two years at Queen's, Musk decided to
|
||
transfer to the University of Pennsylvania after
|
||
being offered a scholarship. He pursued dual
|
||
degrees—a bachelor's degree in physics from the
|
||
College of Arts and Sciences, and an economics
|
||
degree from the university's Wharton School of
|
||
Business.
|
||
Musk's mother Maye says he became more sociable
|
||
and gained more friends at Penn, particularly
|
||
people who enjoyed the same interests as him, and
|
||
were pretty much at his level of intellect and
|
||
discourse. “There were some nerds there,” Maye
|
||
recounts. “He so enjoyed them. I remember going
|
||
for lunch with them, and they were talking physics
|
||
things ... They would laugh out loud. It was cool
|
||
to see him so happy."
|
||
One person who became a very close friend of Elon
|
||
at this time is Adeo Rossi. Together, the two
|
||
would move out of the university's freshman dorm
|
||
and rent their own ten-bedroom fraternity house,
|
||
where they would invite their friends for parties
|
||
and social events. Ressi would convert the home
|
||
into a nightclub during the weekends. He described
|
||
the atmosphere as like a full-on “speakeasy” with
|
||
as many as many as five hundred people showing up
|
||
to party. “We would charge five dollars, and it
|
||
would be pretty much all you could drink—beer and
|
||
Jell-O shots and other things," according to
|
||
Ressi.
|
||
Despite their residence being a center of college
|
||
parties, Musk was not a big drinker, only
|
||
partaking of vodka and Diet Coke every once in a
|
||
while. "Somebody had to stay sober during these
|
||
parties. I was paying my own way through college
|
||
and could make an entire month's rent in one
|
||
night. Adeo was in charge ... around the house,
|
||
and I would run the party."
|
||
Ressi described Elon as “the most straight-laced
|
||
dude” he ever met. “He never drank. He never did
|
||
anything. Zero. Literally nothing," Ressi said.
|
||
It was also during his years studying at Penn that
|
||
Musk developed his interest in harnessing solar
|
||
power and other sources of renewable energy. For
|
||
one of his classes, Musk had to put together a
|
||
business plan, and he wrote a paper entitled "The
|
||
Importance of Being Solar" discussing renewable
|
||
energy and predicting an increase in the adoption
|
||
of solar power technology as materials improved.
|
||
In the paper, Musk discussed in detail how solar
|
||
power can become more accessible, detailing how
|
||
solar cells operate and how they can be made more
|
||
efficient.
|
||
Musk also drew a "power station of the future"
|
||
before concluding the paper, showing solar arrays
|
||
from space sending power down to Earth using
|
||
microwave beams and a receiving antenna. Musk's
|
||
professor gave him a grade of 98 for the paper,
|
||
noting that it was very well-written and
|
||
interesting.
|
||
Other topics that Musk wrote about in college
|
||
include a database for research documents, books,
|
||
and optical character recognition, as well as
|
||
ultracapacitors for energy storage. Regarding
|
||
energy storage, Musk wrote that the end result
|
||
signifies a new means of storing sizeable amounts
|
||
of electrical energy, not seen since the
|
||
development of the battery and fuel cell. He also
|
||
postulated that because the ultracapacitor has the
|
||
same basic properties of a capacitor, “it can
|
||
deliver its energy over one hundred times faster
|
||
than a battery of equivalent weight, and be
|
||
recharged just as quickly." He was graded a 97 for
|
||
this paper.
|
||
While in college, Musk toyed with the idea of
|
||
getting into the video game business after
|
||
graduation. After all, he loved playing video
|
||
games, and he already had experience coding a
|
||
computer game when he was 12. He even held a
|
||
gaming internship, so it seemed like a match for
|
||
his skills. But eventually, Musk decided that a
|
||
video game business was not a worthy pursuit, and
|
||
he could do better.
|
||
Musk said in the book Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX,
|
||
and the Quest for a Fantastic Future , written
|
||
about his life, "I really like computer games, but
|
||
then if I made really great computer games, how
|
||
much effect would that have on the world? It
|
||
wouldn't have a big effect.” Musk had an affinity
|
||
for video games since his childhood, but for some
|
||
reason he could not picture himself developing
|
||
video games for the rest of his life, knowing he
|
||
could use his talents for bigger, better things
|
||
that could benefit more people and leave a true
|
||
impact upon the world.
|
||
His ideas began to revolve more and more around
|
||
the Internet, developing renewable energy, and
|
||
space travel. Elon had the foresight to see that
|
||
these three areas would be where he could make his
|
||
biggest impact. Even while he was studying, he
|
||
already had a pretty good idea where he wanted to
|
||
focus his talents. "I really was thinking about
|
||
this stuff in college," Elon said. "It is not some
|
||
invented story after the fact. I don't want to
|
||
seem like ... I'm chasing a fad or just being
|
||
opportunistic.”
|
||
Musk did not want to be known as an investor, and
|
||
wanted to stay away from the label. Instead, he
|
||
declared, “I like to make technologies real that I
|
||
think are important for the future and useful in
|
||
some sort of way."
|
||
After he graduated with dual degrees, Musk went to
|
||
California's Stanford University, intending to
|
||
pursue a PhD in energy physics. He was already
|
||
accepted into the program and was about to start,
|
||
but Musk decided to defer his admission to start
|
||
an Internet company. It was 1995, and the Internet
|
||
boom was underway. In the next chapter, we will
|
||
look at Musk’s beginnings as an entrepreneur.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
Elon Musk was born in Pretoria, South Africa on
|
||
June 28, 1971 to Errol and Maye Musk.
|
||
He grew up in a city that is known as an academic
|
||
center, and was educated in private schools.
|
||
Early in life, he already displayed much of the
|
||
intellect and competitiveness that have continued
|
||
to define him today.
|
||
At the age of 12, he taught himself computer
|
||
programming and sold a code for a computer game
|
||
for $500.
|
||
Elon graduated from Pretoria Boys High School,
|
||
then moved to Canada to attend the Queen's School
|
||
of Business.
|
||
He transferred to the University of Pennsylvania
|
||
where he completed dual degrees in economics and
|
||
physics.
|
||
Chapter Two: The Young Entrepreneur
|
||
––––––––
|
||
I think the best way to attract venture capital is
|
||
to try and come up with a demonstration of
|
||
whatever product or service it is and ideally take
|
||
that as far as you can. Just see if you can sell
|
||
that to real customers and start generating some
|
||
momentum. The further along you can get with that,
|
||
the more likely you are to get funding. – Elon
|
||
Musk
|
||
Just two days after being accepted into Stanford,
|
||
Elon Musk decided to drop out and start his very
|
||
first company, Zip2. The web software company was
|
||
founded by Elon along with his brother Kimbal and
|
||
Greg Kouri, in Palo Alto, California. They were
|
||
able to start the company with $28,000 from Errol
|
||
Musk, plus an additional $6,000 from Kouri.
|
||
Zip2 was first known as Global Link Information
|
||
Network. When it was first started by the Musk
|
||
brothers and Kouri in 1995, the company serviced
|
||
local businesses in the Palo Alto area by
|
||
connecting them with online searchers and
|
||
providing directions to their place of business.
|
||
The initial system used a Navteq database and a
|
||
Palo Alto business database, merged to provide
|
||
data. Renamed Zip2 the following year, it became
|
||
an online city guide and provided licensed Webbased
|
||
city guide software to newspaper publishers
|
||
across the area.
|
||
In 1996, the company received an investment of $3
|
||
million from Mohr Davidow Ventures, and it moved
|
||
from local business sales to national newspaper
|
||
directories. Zip2 was able to score successful
|
||
deals with major national newspaper stalwarts such
|
||
as the Hearst Corporation, The New York Times ,
|
||
Knight Ridder and the Chicago Tribune . Zip2
|
||
became a big player in what the Editor & Publisher
|
||
described as the U.S. newspaper industry's answer
|
||
to the online city guide industry, competing with
|
||
Yahoo! and America Online which were the big names
|
||
at the time.
|
||
Two years after rebranding to Zip2 and shifting
|
||
its strategy, the company was partnered with about
|
||
160 newspapers around the U.S., developing backend
|
||
online city guides. Zip2 was also providing
|
||
newspapers with other services such as a calendar,
|
||
online directory, and e-mail services. Another
|
||
product of Zip2, the Auto Guide, allowed online
|
||
newspaper users to connect with local car
|
||
dealerships or private car sellers.
|
||
By April of 1998, Zip2 had become successful
|
||
enough to attempt to merge with its main rival,
|
||
CitySearch. The online city guide founded in La
|
||
Crescenta, California by Jeffrey Brewer, Caskey
|
||
Dickson, Brad Haaugard, Tamar Halpern, and Taylor
|
||
Wescoatt also served businesses in the United
|
||
States. Talks of the merger soon commenced between
|
||
the two companies, and the deal was estimated to
|
||
be worth around $300 million.
|
||
The merged entity would have retained the
|
||
CitySearch brand and brought together 700
|
||
employees, covering 175 cities in the U.S.
|
||
Regarding leadership, CitySearch chief executive
|
||
Charles Conn would serve as executive chairman,
|
||
while Musk would serve as vice chairman and
|
||
executive vice president of product and
|
||
technology.
|
||
Initially, Musk was optimistic about the planned
|
||
agreement, calling it a "true merger of equals."
|
||
He also announced that the reason for the merger
|
||
was to meet the market demand as well as to retain
|
||
leadership in their category. An IPO was also
|
||
planned for the merger. However, more than a month
|
||
after the talks were announced, Zip2 and
|
||
CitySearch called off the merger plans, with both
|
||
parties pointing to "incompatibilities in cultures
|
||
and technology" as the reason for the failed
|
||
merger. By August of that same year, CitySearch
|
||
had merged with Ticketmaster Online instead. It
|
||
was later revealed that it was Musk himself who
|
||
convinced the board of Zip2 not to go through with
|
||
the merger.
|
||
Meanwhile, another acquisition would soon take
|
||
place, but this time from a much larger entity
|
||
from the outside. Compaq Computer announced in
|
||
February 1999 that it was acquiring Zip2 for $307
|
||
million, with the private company becoming a unit
|
||
of Compaq's AltaVista web search service. Zip2's
|
||
board of directors approved the cash purchase of
|
||
Zip2's outstanding shares, and this time Musk did
|
||
not object. Elon earned $22 million from the
|
||
Compaq sale, while his brother Kimbal, also a cofounder
|
||
of Zip2, netted $15 million.
|
||
After his success with Zip2, Musk had another plan
|
||
on hand. In March of 1999, a little more than a
|
||
month after Compaq's purchase of Zip2, he cofounded
|
||
a Web-based financial services and e-mail
|
||
payment company called X.com, using about $10
|
||
million he netted from the Zip2 sale.
|
||
X.com operated pretty much as an online bank, with
|
||
its deposits insured by the FDIC. The following
|
||
year, X.com merged with another company,
|
||
Confinity, which was operating an online money
|
||
transfer service dubbed as PayPal. After the
|
||
merger, the company decided to focus its attention
|
||
on the burgeoning PayPal service, with a popular
|
||
marketing campaign aggressively recruiting new
|
||
customers who were receiving money via PayPal.
|
||
The merged company started with Musk as CEO (as
|
||
well as the biggest shareholder). However, he soon
|
||
had disagreements with the rest of the company
|
||
leaders regarding the direction of X.com/PayPal,
|
||
particularly his interest in transferring the
|
||
infrastructure of PayPal from Unix to Microsoft
|
||
Windows. PayPal's core team did not like this
|
||
idea, and the board decided to oust Musk as CEO
|
||
and replace him with Peter Thiel.
|
||
This took place while Musk was on a flight heading
|
||
to Australia, on what would have been his first
|
||
vacation in several years. "That's the problem
|
||
with vacations," Musk would later say, while
|
||
admitting that he was not aligned philosophically
|
||
with the founders of PayPal, citing Thiel’s
|
||
perspective in particular as “pretty odd”. "He’s
|
||
(Thiel) a contrarian from an investing standpoint
|
||
and thinks a lot about the singularity,” Musk
|
||
said. On the contrary, he said he is less excited
|
||
about that aspect of business. “I’m pro-human,"
|
||
Musk said.
|
||
Musk remained on the board even after his ouster
|
||
as CEO, and he owned 11% of the company’s stock.
|
||
As PayPal grew, it caught the attention of yet
|
||
another online giant, eBay, and in 2002 eBay
|
||
announced it was acquiring PayPal. Before the
|
||
acquisition, the online auction giant had its own
|
||
online payment service, eBay Payments by
|
||
Billpoint. However, most of its customers
|
||
preferred to use PayPal instead, with Merrill
|
||
Lynch and analyst Justin Baldauf referring to
|
||
PayPal as "the gorilla in the online payment
|
||
market".
|
||
The decision to acquire its rival, rather than try
|
||
to beat it, made perfect sense for eBay. With a
|
||
price tag of $1.5 billion in stock, the PayPal
|
||
purchase allowed eBay to retain more control over
|
||
the payment services on its platform. It was also
|
||
a giant payday for Musk, and the newly-acquired
|
||
wealth from the sale of PayPal enabled him to set
|
||
his sights elsewhere—out of Silicon Valley.
|
||
In the next chapter, we will take a look at
|
||
SpaceX, the company Musk started out of his love
|
||
for space travel, and how Musk's innovation has
|
||
revolutionized rocket science.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
Zip2 was the first company started by Elon Musk.
|
||
The web software company licensed Web-based city
|
||
guide software programs and provided other
|
||
services to businesses.
|
||
In 1999, Compaq Computer acquired Zip2 for $307
|
||
million, turning Zip2 into a unit of AltaVista.
|
||
Elon Musk's second business enterprise was X.com,
|
||
an online financial services and payment provider.
|
||
Musk was the CEO of the merged X.com/PayPal, but
|
||
he soon became at odds with the board and was
|
||
ousted from his position while on his way to
|
||
Australia for a vacation.
|
||
X.com merged with Confinity in 2000 and soon
|
||
became PayPal, the leading online payment
|
||
provider.
|
||
In 2002, eBay acquired PayPal in a $1.5 billion
|
||
deal.
|
||
Chapter Three: The Rise Of SpaceX
|
||
––––––––
|
||
The next big moment will be life becoming multiplanetary.
|
||
– Elon Musk
|
||
When PayPal was bought by eBay, Elon Musk, who was
|
||
PayPal's largest shareholder, received $165
|
||
million. This big sum of money allowed him to now
|
||
focus his attention on something he had loved
|
||
since childhood: space travel. With his pockets
|
||
now awash with cash, Musk set out to start Space
|
||
Exploration Technologies Corporation, or SpaceX.
|
||
SpaceX grew out of Musk's concept of landing a
|
||
miniature greenhouse on Mars and growing plants.
|
||
He conceptualized this plan in his Mars Oasis
|
||
project in 2001, trying to shore up waning public
|
||
interest in space exploration and technology while
|
||
also lobbying to increase the budget allocation
|
||
for the National Aeronautics and Space
|
||
Administration (NASA).
|
||
In the Mars Oasis project, Musk wanted to grow
|
||
food crops on Mars using refurbished
|
||
intercontinental ballistic missiles from Russia.
|
||
The refurbished ICBMs would carry the payloads to
|
||
space, guided from Earth. In October 2001, Musk
|
||
travelled to Moscow accompanied by Adeo Ressi, his
|
||
college buddy, and Jim Cantrell, an aerospace
|
||
equipment and supplies fixer. The three met with
|
||
several Russian companies such as NPO Lavochkin
|
||
and Kosmotras.
|
||
Ressi, who was Musk's close friend since their
|
||
college days, was trying his best to discourage
|
||
the project. He thought of the space exploration
|
||
idea as a waste of Musk's money, and tried to
|
||
dissuade him by sending videos of exploding
|
||
European, American, and Russian rockets. Ressi
|
||
even tried to stage interventions with the help of
|
||
other friends of Musk's, but his friend was
|
||
determined.
|
||
Cantrell, however, said in an interview with
|
||
Bloomberg that the meetings with the Russians did
|
||
not go as planned, especially because the Russians
|
||
did not take Musk seriously, viewing him as a
|
||
novice. "One of their chief designers spit on me
|
||
and Elon because he thought we were full of s***,"
|
||
according to Cantrell. Musk and his cohorts were
|
||
not able to finalize any deals for refurbished
|
||
rockets, and they returned to the United States.
|
||
Another trip to Russia in 2002 yielded the same
|
||
results, the team coming up empty-handed.
|
||
Flying home from the second Russian trip, Musk
|
||
then realized that with his resources, he could
|
||
instead start his own company and build the
|
||
cheaper space rockets that he needed for his Mars
|
||
exploration goals. Doing the calculations, Musk
|
||
found that the cost of the raw materials to build
|
||
his own rocket would only be 3 percent of what he
|
||
would shell out if he bought them from the
|
||
Russians.
|
||
With the new plan in mind, Musk set out to find
|
||
staff for his space company. He networked with
|
||
different space experts, bringing them together at
|
||
events he hosted in California. Scientists from
|
||
NASA were among those Musk consulted with. In
|
||
particular, Musk talked to rocket engineer and
|
||
designer Tom Mueller, who agreed to work for
|
||
Musk's company. Mueller became one of the founding
|
||
employees of SpaceX.
|
||
Mueller brought a lot of engineering and rocket
|
||
design experience to SpaceX. Before joining Musk's
|
||
team, Mueller was affiliated with aerospace firm
|
||
TRW, based in Redondo Beach, California. In his
|
||
spare time, Mueller built his own engines and
|
||
launched them in the Mojave Desert, often with
|
||
friends and aerospace aficionados from the
|
||
Reaction Research Society. When Musk found out
|
||
about Mueller and met with him in January of 2002,
|
||
he saw a homemade rocket engine Mueller was
|
||
building, and asked, "Can you build something
|
||
bigger?"
|
||
It was the start of Mueller's career with Musk's
|
||
SpaceX. The company now has over 6,000 employees,
|
||
and Mueller is the Chief Technology Officer of
|
||
Propulsion. His work on the TR-10, Merlin Rocket
|
||
Engines, and Dragon spacecraft propulsion are
|
||
highly regarded throughout the industry. When
|
||
Popular Mechanics interviewed Mueller in 2009
|
||
regarding his experience working for Musk’s
|
||
SpaceX, he compared it to his previous company,
|
||
saying, "TRW is a huge company with a tiny
|
||
propulsion department. Here, I'm kind of king."
|
||
SpaceX has been at the forefront of many space
|
||
rocket achievements, including the first orbit of
|
||
a private venture liquid-fuelled rocket (Falcon 1
|
||
Flight 4, September 28, 2008); first company to
|
||
use private funding; first funded company to be
|
||
successful in launching, orbiting, and recovering
|
||
a spacecraft (Falcon 9 Flight 2, December 9,
|
||
2010); first spacecraft from a privately-owned
|
||
company to be sent to the ISS (Falcon 9, May 25,
|
||
2012); the very first successful re-launch and
|
||
landing from space of a used orbital rocket; first
|
||
controlled return trip and recovery of a payload
|
||
fairing rocket (Falcon 9, March 30, 2017); and
|
||
many other notable milestones.
|
||
The goal of SpaceX as a company is to develop
|
||
rocket technology and make humanity a spacefaring
|
||
civilization using space launch vehicles. From its
|
||
founding in 2002, SpaceX focused on designing
|
||
space launch and spacecraft vehicles with superior
|
||
engineering. Its track record allowed SpaceX to be
|
||
awarded a contract with NASA to continue
|
||
developing and testing the Falcon 9 and Dragon
|
||
spacecraft for transporting cargo to the
|
||
International Space Station. NASA also awarded
|
||
SpaceX a $1.6 billion contract in 2008 for the
|
||
Commercial Resupply Services program to the Space
|
||
Station, which was previously handled by the US
|
||
Space Shuttle.
|
||
SpaceX is now considered the world's largest
|
||
private producer of rocket engines, far outpacing
|
||
the Russian companies Musk intended to work with
|
||
when he first envisioned his space exploration
|
||
plans. SpaceX holds the current record for a
|
||
rocket engine's highest thrust-to-weight ratio
|
||
(Merlin 1D). There are about 100 Merlin 1D engines
|
||
in operation today in the world.
|
||
So why all the energy, investment, and effort into
|
||
SpaceX? Musk believes that space travel is a
|
||
necessary step in the preservation and expansion
|
||
of the human race, and there may come a time when
|
||
humans must occupy other planets in order to
|
||
ensure the survival of the species. In an
|
||
interview with Esquire , Musk said the next big
|
||
moment of human life will be becoming a multiplanetary
|
||
species, and this would serve to
|
||
progress the diversity of human collective
|
||
consciousness.
|
||
"It would also serve as a hedge against the myriad
|
||
—and growing—threats to our survival," Musk said.
|
||
The entrepreneur certainly views an asteroid hit
|
||
or a super-volcanic eruption as credible threats
|
||
to the survival of humankind, but he is also
|
||
concerned about other threats, not experienced
|
||
yet, by other species, such as an engineered
|
||
virus, a nuclear war, the accidental creation of a
|
||
micro black hole, or the discovery of a yetunknown
|
||
technology that could bring about the end
|
||
of life as we know it. “Sooner or later, we must
|
||
expand life beyond our little blue mud ball," Musk
|
||
reiterates, or humankind will become extinct.
|
||
Passionate as he may be about exploring the worlds
|
||
beyond Earth, Musk has not lost any interest in
|
||
making life better for our home planet. In the
|
||
next chapter, we will explore another company that
|
||
Musk founded – Tesla.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
Elon Musk founded Space Exploration Technologies
|
||
Corp. or SpaceX using part of the money he
|
||
received from the sale of PayPal to eBay.
|
||
Musk's space exploration interest was
|
||
conceptualized in his Mars Oasis project, which
|
||
sought to land greenhouses and grow crops on Mars.
|
||
When his first attempts to buy affordable space
|
||
rockets from Russian suppliers failed, Musk
|
||
decided to start his own space rocket company.
|
||
SpaceX has scored numerous contracts with NASA and
|
||
is now the leading private rocket engine company
|
||
in the world.
|
||
Musk is determined to make the human race a multiplanetary
|
||
species, believing that space travel
|
||
will save humans from becoming extinct in the
|
||
future.
|
||
Chapter Four: Tesla Hits The Road
|
||
––––––––
|
||
Either I went all in, or Tesla dies. – Elon Musk
|
||
Elon Musk already had his hands full with SpaceX,
|
||
but somehow, he still found the time to venture
|
||
into another company. Tesla Inc., formerly known
|
||
as Tesla Motors, was started in 2003 by Martin
|
||
Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning, with co-founders Ian
|
||
Wright, JB Straubel, and Musk. Tesla is an
|
||
automotive company known for its innovations in
|
||
electric-powered cars, lithium-ion batteries for
|
||
energy storage, and residential solar panels (via
|
||
SolarCity, its subsidiary).
|
||
As CEO of Tesla, Musk wants to produce affordable,
|
||
efficient, mass market electric cars that would
|
||
reduce pollution and dependence on oil. The
|
||
company is named after Nikola Tesla, the
|
||
electrical engineer and physicist known for his
|
||
invention of the induction motor, alternating
|
||
current power transmission, and other trailblazing
|
||
concepts. Musk himself looks up to Tesla, along
|
||
with Thomas Edison.
|
||
The idea for Tesla came about when automaker GM
|
||
recalled its EV1 electric cars in 2003. Musk said
|
||
in a recent tweet that very few people are aware
|
||
of how they started toying with the idea of Tesla
|
||
when GM forcibly recalled all electric cars from
|
||
customers in 2003 and then proceeded to destroy
|
||
the vehicles. As the big car companies were ending
|
||
their EV programs for a number of reasons, their
|
||
only hope to keep the electric vehicle dream alive
|
||
was to start their own EV company, even though it
|
||
(Tesla) was almost certain to fail, Musk said in a
|
||
series of tweets.
|
||
Initial funding for Tesla came from Eberhard and
|
||
Tapperning. Musk led the Series A round in
|
||
February of 2004, and joined the board of
|
||
directors, assuming the chairmanship. Most of the
|
||
money he invested in Tesla came from personal
|
||
funds. Also, Musk thought of a direction for Tesla
|
||
that would prove to be pivotal to its eventual
|
||
success in the market.
|
||
The first vehicle designed and produced by Tesla
|
||
was a high-end sports car, mostly targeted at
|
||
early adopters. Musk envisioned that if early
|
||
adopters bought the Tesla Roadster, and word
|
||
spread about its energy efficiency and ability to
|
||
beat other high-performance sports cars from
|
||
Porsche or Ferrari, succeeding models which would
|
||
be more affordable for the mass market would not
|
||
need advertising or marketing campaigns.
|
||
Musk, in fact, is known in the industry as someone
|
||
who has always disliked the traditional
|
||
advertising methods. He has put most of his
|
||
company's resources towards product improvement,
|
||
letting the superior quality speak for themselves.
|
||
Tesla, for the most part, does not spend on
|
||
advertising campaigns. Instead, free cash flow
|
||
into Tesla is invested heavily in research and
|
||
development, engineering, design, and
|
||
manufacturing, all with the goal of building the
|
||
best car possible, according to Musk.
|
||
Musk used the money from the first high-end Tesla
|
||
vehicles towards building even better and more
|
||
affordable electric vehicles rather than
|
||
maintaining a highly visible presence in mass
|
||
media. He banked on word-of-mouth doing its part
|
||
in spreading information about Tesla’s product
|
||
offerings. Musk put a premium on the Tesla
|
||
vehicles, so he could rely on the superior quality
|
||
of the vehicles to generate positive feedback and
|
||
be the best form of advertising.
|
||
This strategy of utilizing word-of-mouth has
|
||
certainly worked in Tesla’s favor. Throughout the
|
||
Internet, you will find dozens of community forums
|
||
and online groups of Tesla’s devoted followers.
|
||
All are committed to promoting Tesla’s brand with
|
||
the firm belief that the vehicles are the wave of
|
||
the future, and hold the answer to the many
|
||
environmental problems facing the world due to
|
||
pollution from traditional oil-powered cars. To
|
||
these passionate Tesla-lovers, they are not just
|
||
buying a vehicle, but becoming an active part of
|
||
the future in automobile technology.
|
||
In his statement when the Tesla Roadster was
|
||
launched, Musk acknowledged that the highperformance
|
||
sports car was an expensive vehicle
|
||
even for its class, but the company intended to
|
||
channel earnings from the Roadster to produce more
|
||
affordable electric vehicles. Musk explained that
|
||
their strategy at Tesla was to enter the high end
|
||
of the market first, targeting those customers who
|
||
are prepared to pay a premium, and then drive down
|
||
the market as quickly as they could, with higher
|
||
unit volume and lower prices as newer models were
|
||
produced.
|
||
He then announced that the second model in the
|
||
works at Tesla was a four-door family car, to be
|
||
produced and shipped at around half the price tag
|
||
of the Tesla Roadster, and a third model would
|
||
also be produced soon at an even lower price tag.
|
||
This strategy became a hit among Tesla fans, who
|
||
warmed to the idea of forking out big bucks for an
|
||
electric vehicle that would help in the
|
||
development of more affordable electric cars down
|
||
the line. Soon, pre-orders and production demand
|
||
for Tesla vehicles were more than the company
|
||
could handle.
|
||
The Tesla Roadster was the very first production
|
||
automobile to utilize lithium-ion battery cells,
|
||
and the first EV to achieve a range higher than
|
||
200 miles per charge. From its launch in 2008
|
||
until March of 2012, more than 2,250 Roadsters
|
||
were sold by Tesla in 31 countries around the
|
||
world.
|
||
Tesla launched its IPO on NASDAQ on June 29, 2019;
|
||
with 13 million shares of common stock made
|
||
available to the public at $17 per share. Tesla's
|
||
IPO raised $226 million. By June 2012, Tesla's
|
||
popular Model S sedan began shipping across key
|
||
markets, with Musk announcing that they were
|
||
determined to show the world that "an electric car
|
||
can in fact be the best car in the world." He
|
||
boasted of the technology, interface, styling,
|
||
performance, and safety of the Model S, calling it
|
||
"fundamentally better" than anything else in its
|
||
class. By December 2015, more than 100,000 Model S
|
||
cars had been sold all over the world.
|
||
In 2017, Tesla achieved another milestone by
|
||
briefly surpassing both Ford Motor Company and
|
||
General Motors in market capitalization, making it
|
||
the most valuable automaker in the American
|
||
market. Tesla also appeared in the Fortune 500
|
||
list for the first time in June 2017. Considering
|
||
that Musk had thought Tesla was almost certain to
|
||
fail at the beginning, this was a remarkable feat
|
||
indeed.
|
||
With his foray into electric cars underway, Musk
|
||
continued to explore even more ways to develop
|
||
renewable energy sources. This time, he would
|
||
become involved in solar power, and in the next
|
||
chapter we will look at Solar City and how it is
|
||
paving the way in its own niche.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
Tesla was founded in 2003 by Martin Eberhard, Marc
|
||
Tapperning, Ian Wright, JB Straubel, and Elon
|
||
Musk.
|
||
Much of the initial funds for Tesla came from
|
||
Musk's personal funds.
|
||
Tesla is now a leading innovator in electric
|
||
powered vehicles and lithium-ion batteries for
|
||
energy storage.
|
||
Instead of advertising on mass media, Musk wanted
|
||
Tesla to focus on designing and producing topquality
|
||
electric cars, and relying on word-ofmouth
|
||
to boost sales.
|
||
By 2017, Tesla had entered the Fortune 500 list
|
||
and become one of the most valuable American
|
||
automotive companies.
|
||
Chapter Five: SolarCity Shines Through
|
||
––––––––
|
||
To solve the sustainable-energy question, we need
|
||
sustainable-energy production, which is going to
|
||
come primarily in the form of solar. – Elon Musk
|
||
A subsidiary of Tesla , Inc., SolarCity
|
||
Corporation was founded on July 4, 2006 by Lyndon
|
||
and Peter Rive, cousins of Elon Musk. The company
|
||
has its main offices in San Mateo, California, and
|
||
is involved in the marketing, manufacturing,
|
||
installation, and maintenance of residential and
|
||
commercial solar panels across the United States.
|
||
After its merger with Tesla, Inc. in 2016,
|
||
SolarCity began offering energy storage services,
|
||
such as a turnkey residential battery backup
|
||
solution compatible with Powerwall.
|
||
The idea for SolarCity, not surprisingly, came
|
||
from Musk's concept. Musk presented the Rive
|
||
brothers with a concept for a solar company, and
|
||
even offered to help them start the company.
|
||
Lyndon was then a tech entrepreneur in Silicon
|
||
Valley, looking for ways to give back to the
|
||
community. He warmed to the idea of alternative
|
||
energy, and along with his brother Peter started
|
||
the solar installation start-up.
|
||
It helped that they resided in California, the
|
||
biggest solar market in the United States.
|
||
SolarCity offered extensive warranties
|
||
guaranteeing the optimum performance of its solar
|
||
modules, and provided remote monitoring so its
|
||
systems were always working. By 2009, SolarCity's
|
||
installed solar panels were producing 440
|
||
megawatts of power.
|
||
A study by GTM Research in 2013 showed SolarCity
|
||
as the top residential solar installation company
|
||
in the U.S. Meanwhile, Solar Power World magazine
|
||
hailed SolarCity as the No. 2 overall solar
|
||
installation company, behind Arizona's First
|
||
Solar. By 2015, SolarCity panels were generating
|
||
870 megawatts of solar power, or roughly 28
|
||
percent of all non-utility solar power
|
||
installation in the U.S.
|
||
In June of 2016, Tesla floated an acquisition
|
||
offer to SolarCity for up to $3 billion, with Musk
|
||
declaring that it would be a seamless integration
|
||
between Tesla's battery products and the solar
|
||
power products of SolarCity. SolarCity accepted
|
||
the offer on August 1, 2016 for $2.6 billion.
|
||
SolarCity has been at the forefront of the growth
|
||
of solar power adoption across the U.S., and it is
|
||
constantly finding ways to make solar power more
|
||
accessible and affordable to homeowners and
|
||
business owners, pursuant to Musk's vision. One of
|
||
the very first solar leasing programs of
|
||
SolarCity, started in 2008, allowed qualified
|
||
homeowners to pay less than what they were paying
|
||
for electricity from their local utility company.
|
||
The lease program of SolarCity leases rooftop
|
||
solar to homeowners without having to pay any
|
||
upfront or installation costs, while in return
|
||
having to pay for 20 years for the solar power
|
||
generated. This business model, while proving to
|
||
be very popular with residential customers,
|
||
drained cash reserves from SolarCity. In 2017, the
|
||
company announced a shift in its business model,
|
||
requiring customers to purchase the solar power
|
||
systems via cash or financing.
|
||
Aside from residential solar power installations,
|
||
SolarCity also has commercial solar projects. In
|
||
2008, SolarCity completed a commercial solar
|
||
installation for eBay's North Campus in San Jose,
|
||
California, and another for San Francisco's
|
||
British Motor Car Distributors, which was made up
|
||
of 1,606 solar photovoltaic panels. SolarCity has
|
||
also introduced different financing options
|
||
specifically for businesses since 2009, and has
|
||
ongoing solar projects for Intel, Walmart, and the
|
||
United States military.
|
||
SolarCity purchased the SolSource Energy business
|
||
of Clean Fuel Connections in 2009, and then
|
||
subsequently started its electric car charging
|
||
services. A partnership in 2011 with Rabobank
|
||
allowed owners of Tesla electric vehicles to
|
||
charge their cars for free when travelling along
|
||
Route 101 between Los Angeles and San Francisco.
|
||
With Tesla's acquisition of SolarCity, where is
|
||
Musk leading the partnership? Aside from the new
|
||
financing options, Musk wants to make the roof
|
||
solar panels more aesthetically appealing to
|
||
customers, with two types of tiles—solar and nonsolar—
|
||
to be used for the installation. Buyers can
|
||
customize the design based on their house's style,
|
||
choosing from four main options, namely, Slate
|
||
Glass Tile, Smooth Glass Tile, Tuscan Glass Tile,
|
||
and Textured Glass Tile. The tiles come with an
|
||
infinity warranty.
|
||
Many insiders believe that Musk's push to bring
|
||
SolarCity into the Tesla fold is part of his
|
||
grander plan to eventually produce a solar-powered
|
||
car. Musk had already hinted in 2016 that a solar
|
||
roof for vehicles is likely to be offered as an
|
||
option for future Tesla customers.
|
||
For his part, however, the entrepreneur says the
|
||
deal is all part of a long-term vision that one
|
||
day, his will be a diversified renewable energy
|
||
company with product offerings generating
|
||
electricity from sustainable means, storing it for
|
||
long-term capabilities, and powering residences
|
||
and vehicles without the need for fossil fuels.
|
||
Speaking to the press in June 2016, Musk remarked
|
||
that production of sustainable energy in the
|
||
future will come primarily from solar. Combined
|
||
with stationary storage and electric cars, it will
|
||
be an all-around and full-scale solution to a
|
||
future that is sustainable in energy, Musk said,
|
||
reiterating that all three components are needed,
|
||
and Tesla should be right there with the
|
||
solution.
|
||
It is a strategic position indeed for Musk’s Tesla
|
||
and SolarCity ventures, especially with the
|
||
increased awareness regarding renewable energy and
|
||
the growing call among many sectors in society to
|
||
lessen dependence on fossil fuels, particularly in
|
||
developed nations. With Musk at the helm,
|
||
SolarCity is poised to lead the way and become a
|
||
profitable enterprise in the years to come.
|
||
What are some important lessons we can learn from
|
||
the colourful life of Elon Musk? We will explore
|
||
some of these takeaways in the next chapter.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
SolarCity was started in 2006 by Elon Musk's
|
||
cousins Lyndon and Peter Rive.
|
||
SolarCity a leading solar power installation
|
||
company in the United States.
|
||
As of 2016, a merger between Tesla Inc. and
|
||
SolarCity was approved, bringing two Muskaffiliated
|
||
ventures under one company.
|
||
SolarCity's business model of leasing solar roof
|
||
installations to customers will cease in 2017,
|
||
with new customers now being given the option to
|
||
either pay cash or purchase via financing.
|
||
There are speculations that Musk will soon offer
|
||
electric-powered vehicles under the Tesla and
|
||
SolarCity umbrella.
|
||
Chapter Six: Valuable Lessons
|
||
––––––––
|
||
If things are not failing, you are not innovating
|
||
enough. - Elon Musk
|
||
Elon Musk has proven himself to be a visionary and
|
||
an effective leader, and this is evident from the
|
||
many interviews and quotes attributed to him, as
|
||
well as anecdotes from the people around him who
|
||
know him on a personal level. It is also quite
|
||
evident that he is using his influence, the best
|
||
that he can, to inspire others around him to aim
|
||
for excellence and reach for something better.
|
||
What key aspects can we learn from Musk's success
|
||
so far?
|
||
First, it is important to have a vision in life .
|
||
Vision encompasses your overall goals or ambitions
|
||
in life, referring both to general aspirations as
|
||
well as more specific targets. Having a vision in
|
||
life will endow you with a drive to keep going
|
||
regardless of obstacles that may come up. Vision
|
||
also keeps you on track, lessening diversions from
|
||
the tasks and responsibilities at hand, especially
|
||
when there are distractions that lurk along the
|
||
way and may derail you from your aspirations in
|
||
life.
|
||
Very early on in his life, Musk already had a
|
||
vision to make a difference in several key areas
|
||
that he knew would have a notable impact on the
|
||
world, including the Internet, renewable energy,
|
||
space exploration, artificial intelligence, and
|
||
the possibility of life outside Earth . Throughout
|
||
his ventures, business decisions, and
|
||
acquisitions, he always had his end goal in sight.
|
||
Each step he took was one step closer towards his
|
||
bigger vision.
|
||
Another key lesson from Musk is his insistence on
|
||
setting the standard rather than following
|
||
everyone else in the traditional path . Musk is a
|
||
trailblazer who is always looking for ways to
|
||
shake things up and improve the products and
|
||
services that people are already using. In setting
|
||
the standard, Musk is often seen as too radical or
|
||
progressive, but he stands up for what he believes
|
||
in and continues to prove the naysayers wrong. He
|
||
sticks to his ideas despite any opposition because
|
||
he already set his mind to going against the trend
|
||
instead of following it.
|
||
What is the traditional, standard, accepted
|
||
practice in your industry or profession, and how
|
||
can you go the extra mile to further improve your
|
||
product or service while also creating better
|
||
value for your target market? Always remember that
|
||
any attempt you make to raise the standard for
|
||
your peers or competitors should have the goal of
|
||
improving processes, services, or products.
|
||
Intended change should be positive and contribute
|
||
to enhancement and a higher level of quality.
|
||
One of the interesting components of Musk’s
|
||
passion to elevate the standard is his decision to
|
||
share Tesla Motors’ patented electric vehicle
|
||
technologies with other automobile manufacturers
|
||
in good faith. This came about due to his desire
|
||
to really see electric vehicles take over and
|
||
become the norm in the near future, thereby
|
||
reducing pollution and global dependence on oil.
|
||
Because of this commitment, he was willing to set
|
||
aside competition, sharing the technologies with
|
||
his industry peers with the hopes of advancing the
|
||
entire group.
|
||
Musk, in his years of proven success as a business
|
||
owner, CEO, engineer, and innovator, realized that
|
||
for him to continue growing and improving in his
|
||
various pursuits, he had to welcome the critiques
|
||
of the people around him and take criticism in a
|
||
positive way so that he could get even better at
|
||
his craft. In fact, he took this lesson so
|
||
seriously that he only focused his attention on
|
||
the negative comments from those around him.
|
||
Musk starts off by always assuming that he is
|
||
wrong about something, whether it is an idea or a
|
||
proposal, and must be corrected . He is quoted as
|
||
saying, “You should take the approach that you’re
|
||
wrong. Your goal is to be less wrong.” With this
|
||
perspective, it becomes easier for Musk to take in
|
||
harsh criticism from peers or employees because he
|
||
has already established that he needs correction
|
||
instead of walking around with a chip on his
|
||
shoulder thinking he has the best idea.
|
||
Granted, Musk almost always has the best ideas,
|
||
and he is indeed a brilliant man with a lot to
|
||
offer. But he is still open to improvement and he
|
||
is always seeking out feedback instead of avoiding
|
||
it. Musk once talked about the importance of
|
||
having a feedback loop in your organization, where
|
||
each individual is thinking about what he has done
|
||
and how it could be done better.
|
||
It’s remarkable how Musk still seeks out negative
|
||
feedback from people around him whom he trusts,
|
||
considering how intelligent he truly is. Remember
|
||
that he taught himself computer programming at 10
|
||
years old and by the following year already sold
|
||
the code for a video game for US$500. His concepts
|
||
for the SpaceX rockets, electric cars and
|
||
powertrains, the Hyperloop mass transport system,
|
||
and other innovations are now considered to be
|
||
genius and ground-breaking. Yet at this stage in
|
||
his life, he still values the comments of others
|
||
in the know.
|
||
Be ready and willing to listen to the voices of
|
||
those who have gone before you and can share their
|
||
experiences with you, and be open to critique from
|
||
those in your target audience who are seeking out
|
||
excellence and quality in products or services
|
||
they patronize. These types of feedback will be
|
||
part of your learning and development, helping to
|
||
mould you into a leader that is aware and willing
|
||
to change for the better.
|
||
You must also look at how Musk views failure. He
|
||
was not always successful the first time he tried
|
||
something. In fact, he understood failure and
|
||
recognized that it was a possibility in so many of
|
||
his ventures and innovations. But he also knew it
|
||
was part of the risk of being an innovator and
|
||
wanting to change the current system, so he did
|
||
not allow himself or his companies to be sidetracked
|
||
by failures. Instead, he used his past
|
||
failures to become more resolute, improve ideas,
|
||
and eventually come out with more successful
|
||
innovations.
|
||
Because Musk was always looking at the bigger
|
||
picture, he came to accept failure as just another
|
||
outcome he must endure, so he was not afraid to
|
||
gamble and put all he had into achieving what he
|
||
wanted to achieve. Also, those mistakes served to
|
||
give him and his team lessons on what to avoid
|
||
next time and how to become better at what they
|
||
do. Nowadays, SpaceX has different contracts with
|
||
NASA and other private groups for its rocket
|
||
technology, and is making a profit. Tesla Motors
|
||
is leading the way in electric vehicle technology.
|
||
The failures of the past made Musk and his
|
||
companies stronger and better prepared.
|
||
Failure builds character . Character is borne from
|
||
patience and perseverance, two qualities which are
|
||
sorely lacking at a time when information is
|
||
available at everyone’s fingertips, and appliances
|
||
and gadgets have permeated daily life, as people
|
||
have become so used to getting what they want very
|
||
quickly. Failure teaches you the reality that a
|
||
lot of times, if your goal is to create something
|
||
of substance, you will have to work hard for it
|
||
and fine-tune the concept until it works exactly
|
||
how you envisioned it to.
|
||
Consider failure as an essential part of your
|
||
learning and development . The reason why Musk’s
|
||
ventures are even more successful these days is
|
||
because they have been through very public
|
||
failures in the past, all of which made them grow
|
||
as a team and afforded them with more insights for
|
||
improvement. Consider failure as an ally rather
|
||
than an enemy, greet it with a positive mindset,
|
||
and you will reap the benefits in your endeavours,
|
||
much like Musk did.
|
||
Another remarkable thing about Musk and his life
|
||
story, is his quest to find a greater purpose in
|
||
what he is doing . Many people in today’s
|
||
materialistic, success-oriented society are
|
||
working for things that do not really last or can
|
||
only provide temporary happiness with no real or
|
||
lasting results beyond one’s lifetime. The focus
|
||
of much of modern-day society is on earning more
|
||
money, climbing up the corporate ladder, amassing
|
||
bigger houses and newer cars, visiting the most
|
||
exotic destinations, and fulfilling just about
|
||
every luxury or extravagance the world has to
|
||
offer. While these things are not wrong, they
|
||
should not be all that life is about.
|
||
Musk could have easily decided to pursue a career
|
||
as a video game developer, as we discussed in a
|
||
previous chapter. Given his love for video games
|
||
and his abilities, he could have set out to
|
||
develop video games and earn big bucks in doing
|
||
so. But Musk knew he had the unique position to
|
||
aim for much better things, and he realized he
|
||
could use his skills to truly make a difference in
|
||
the world around him.
|
||
His love for reading books on philosophy and
|
||
spirituality played a vital role in shaping his
|
||
decision to aim higher. He once talked about
|
||
having an existential crisis in his younger years,
|
||
trying to come up with an answer to the question,
|
||
"What does it all mean?" He concluded, after much
|
||
soul-searching, that if he could take part in
|
||
advancing the knowledge of humankind, and do his
|
||
part in expanding the scope and scale of
|
||
consciousness within the realm of human
|
||
experience, he could come closer to enlightenment
|
||
and reach the right answers.
|
||
This quest for purpose continues to fuel his many
|
||
entrepreneurial ventures. Musk became passionate
|
||
about becoming part of the solution for many
|
||
problems facing the world today, including the
|
||
dependence on oil, increased pollution from
|
||
vehicles and its effects on the environment, and
|
||
even unlocking the traffic jams of major
|
||
metropolitan areas such as Southern California.
|
||
Using money that he made from successful ventures
|
||
in Zip2 and PayPal, he poured his wealth into
|
||
Tesla, SpaceX, and SolarCity, with the long-term
|
||
goal of global transformation.
|
||
There have been countless times when Musk’s
|
||
exploits were seen as too revolutionary,
|
||
disruptive, or simply unattainable. However, he
|
||
forged on and did not mind all the negative
|
||
conversation around him, because he had a clear
|
||
purpose in mind and he knew that one day, people
|
||
will see what he was already envisioning in his
|
||
mind. This purpose-filled determination is now
|
||
being seen, of course, in the achievements already
|
||
driving the industries where Musk’s businesses are
|
||
leading the pack.
|
||
A few years ago, the electric vehicle industry was
|
||
doomed for failure, with major automakers giving
|
||
up or refusing to even consider it as a viable
|
||
alternative. Musk saw this as an opportunity to
|
||
lead, and with the success of Tesla’s vehicles,
|
||
electric vehicles are becoming more common
|
||
throughout the world. In addition, the technology
|
||
used for Tesla’s automobiles are now the blueprint
|
||
of similar designs for other automakers embarking
|
||
on their own electric vehicle programs, and it is
|
||
no longer considered unrealistic to envision a
|
||
future where the world relies primarily on
|
||
electricity to power sustainable transport
|
||
options.
|
||
Musk is also an example of hard work, and the
|
||
value of a work ethic, even though he is already
|
||
brilliant and naturally talented. He still puts in
|
||
close to 100 hours of work every week, even saying
|
||
once that an entrepreneur putting in 100 hours a
|
||
week will achieve in just four months what others
|
||
logging 40 hours weekly will achieve in a year's
|
||
time.
|
||
It has been said that Musk does not regularly take
|
||
lunch breaks either, instead turning his lunch
|
||
hour into office meetings or a time to catch up on
|
||
e-mails. He maximizes his hours and seeks to
|
||
become more productive by trying to squeeze in as
|
||
much work as possible in the same 24-hour period
|
||
given to him as everyone else.
|
||
Musk once likened creating a company to having a
|
||
child, and said that is why he is willing to
|
||
commit as many hours as needed to make sure that
|
||
everything goes as smoothly as planned. He does
|
||
not balk at logging many hours each week, or
|
||
reaching into his personal funds to finance his
|
||
ventures, just to keep his companies going during
|
||
rough times, because of his intense commitment and
|
||
passion to succeed.
|
||
Even after failures, Musk would show up at the
|
||
office, because he knows that a strong work ethic
|
||
entails showing up, even on days when he would
|
||
rather be somewhere else, instead of overseeing
|
||
responsibilities. Imagine how it must have been at
|
||
the office for Elon Musk the day after his very
|
||
publicly discussed rocket launch failures. His
|
||
employees would have totally understood if he had
|
||
taken the day off to just gather his thoughts or
|
||
relax. But Musk's intense work ethic and powerful
|
||
passion to succeed engaged him to still show up
|
||
and move on, focusing on what needed to be
|
||
accomplished to ensure that the next launch would
|
||
succeed.
|
||
Successful entrepreneurs never stop learning, and
|
||
Musk is the best example of this characteristic.
|
||
Jim Cantrell, the first vice-president for
|
||
business development at SpaceX and one of Musk’s
|
||
first aerospace consultants, saw with his own eyes
|
||
how Musk devoured several textbooks at a time to
|
||
learn about rocket science. Despite his busy
|
||
schedule running different businesses, Musk would
|
||
set aside time to read books lent to him by
|
||
Cantrell, such as Rocket Propulsion Elements,
|
||
Aerothermodynamics of Gas Turbine and Rocket
|
||
Propulsion, or International Reference Guide to
|
||
Space Launch Systems . He did not just read the
|
||
books, but even quoted passages from them. “He
|
||
became very conversant in the material," Cantrell
|
||
said.
|
||
This love for reading, of course, was developed in
|
||
Musk while he was a child, as can be attested to
|
||
by his brother Kimbal. As a child, Elon read close
|
||
to two books every day on a wide range of
|
||
subjects, such as computer programming, science
|
||
fiction, religion, and biographies of successful
|
||
business people and scientists. He loved books
|
||
that tackled physics, technology, product design,
|
||
and business management. It is no surprise, then,
|
||
that Musk has reached the pinnacle of success
|
||
where he is today. He invested in reading and
|
||
learning, and did not stop even as he got older
|
||
and became busy with different things.
|
||
If you aspire to become a great leader just like
|
||
Musk, openness to learning is a critical
|
||
requirement. Leaders and entrepreneurs cannot
|
||
afford to sit on their laurels and just bask in
|
||
past achievements. Successful people like Musk
|
||
never cease exploring new ideas, discovering new
|
||
perspectives, and experimenting with new processes
|
||
that widen one's knowledge and expand the horizons
|
||
beyond what is already known. The best learners
|
||
also transform into the best leaders, as you can
|
||
plainly see in the life of Elon Musk.
|
||
The best part about studying the life of Musk is
|
||
the fact that he is still at the prime of his
|
||
career. With all the notable milestones he has
|
||
already reached, he still has so many dreams, and
|
||
he has barely scratched the surface of what he
|
||
really wants to achieve. Many followers lovingly
|
||
refer to him as the real-world version of Tony
|
||
Stark from the Marvel universe, and like the
|
||
beloved character, the whole world is waiting to
|
||
see what Musk will do next. His plans, outrageous
|
||
though some of them may seem at the moment, could
|
||
very well be the driving force of innovation
|
||
within just a few years. From what it looks like,
|
||
Musk is determined to take on the world and the
|
||
universe beyond, and all of us will be taken along
|
||
for the ride.
|
||
Now it is up to you to decide whether you will
|
||
take Musk’s life lessons and apply them to your
|
||
own journey, or be content to just be a spectator.
|
||
Are you willing to invest the same amount of
|
||
commitment, passion, work ethic, self-learning,
|
||
and risk as he is in his endeavors? The world is
|
||
constantly in need of entrepreneurs, leaders, and
|
||
innovators just like Musk who are willing to lay
|
||
it all on the line and commit to positive
|
||
transformation.
|
||
Too many are content to just sit on the sidelines
|
||
and live mundane, ordinary lives. But true success
|
||
comes to those who are ready to seize new
|
||
opportunities and become agents of change. It is
|
||
not just about personal gain, but about finding
|
||
your place in the world and leaving a legacy that
|
||
future generations will still benefit from, long
|
||
after you are gone.
|
||
Chapter Summary
|
||
Elon Musk started with a vision early in life, and
|
||
he wanted to make an impact on the world.
|
||
Musk refused to be mediocre; his desire was always
|
||
to raise the bar higher.
|
||
Musk is never afraid to admit that he is wrong,
|
||
and is open to correction.
|
||
Musk viewed failures as opportunities.
|
||
A desire to find a greater purpose embodies
|
||
everything that Musk sets out to achieve.
|
||
Despite being intelligent, Musk works hard just
|
||
like everyone else.
|
||
He never stops learning.
|
||
Chapter Seven: 40 Little Known Facts
|
||
1. Like many famous entrepreneurs, including Steve
|
||
Jobs, Musk’s salary at Tesla Motors is the very
|
||
modest sum of $1.
|
||
2. The Musk foundation is a group set up by Elon
|
||
Musk that is dedicated to discovering clean energy
|
||
sources and space exploration. The Musk Mars
|
||
Desert Observatory telescope in Utah is run by the
|
||
foundation.
|
||
3. The Musk Foundation also runs a simulated Mars
|
||
environment that allows visitors to experience
|
||
what life on Mars could be like. Including wasteburning
|
||
toilets!
|
||
4. Wet Nellie, the Lotus Esprit submarine car from
|
||
the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me, was
|
||
purchased by Musk in 2013 for $866,000.
|
||
Disappointed that the car can’t actually turn into
|
||
a submarine Musk stated: “What I’m going to do is
|
||
upgrade it with a Tesla electric powertrain and
|
||
try to make it transform for real.”
|
||
5. It was only at the age of 31, in 2002, that
|
||
Musk became an American citizen.
|
||
6. Musk once proposed nuking Mars. During an
|
||
appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,
|
||
he was asked his potential ideas regarding
|
||
colonizing Mars. He replied: “Eventually, you
|
||
could transform Mars into an Earth-like planet...
|
||
You could warm it up.” When Colbert asked him to
|
||
elaborate, Musk said, “There’s the fast way and
|
||
the slow way. The fast way is drop thermonuclear
|
||
weapons over the poles.” He later clarified that
|
||
this idea was to create two suns nears Mars due to
|
||
nuclear fusion.
|
||
7. The National Highway Safety Administration
|
||
awarded the Tesla Model S a 5.4 out of 5 safety
|
||
rating. The highest ever given to an automobile.
|
||
8. At 41, Musk had surgery to fix a deviated
|
||
septum due to the violent childhood bullying he
|
||
suffered. During his recovery, while full of
|
||
painkillers, he was tweeting his future ideas
|
||
about Tesla.
|
||
9. Musk has managed to reduce the cost of reaching
|
||
the International Space Station down from $1
|
||
billion per mission to $60 million. A very
|
||
impressive decrease in cost of 90%!
|
||
10. The Falcon rocket gets its name from Star
|
||
Wars' Millennium Falcon.
|
||
11. Musk was one of the inspirations for Robert
|
||
Downey Jr.’s character, Tony Stark, in the Iron
|
||
Man films. Downey had a tour of the SpaceX
|
||
headquarters prior to filming and absorbed some of
|
||
what he would call “accessible eccentricities.”
|
||
Jon Favreau, the director, also explained that
|
||
Musk had inspired Downey’s interpretation of the
|
||
character. Musk earned himself a cameo in Iron Man
|
||
2.
|
||
12. Early on in his career he purchased an F1
|
||
McLaren as a reward for the sale of Zip2. He later
|
||
went on to create the Tesla Model S, a car that
|
||
can reach 0-60 mph even quicker.
|
||
13. He has been married three times, including
|
||
twice to the British actress Talulah Riley.
|
||
14. After an expensive divorce from his first wife
|
||
and during the Great Recession, Musk was living
|
||
off loans from friends. He put his last $35
|
||
million into Tesla which is now valued at around
|
||
$50 billion. Musk himself is now estimated to be
|
||
worth $19.3 billion.
|
||
15. He once made a guest appearance on The Big
|
||
Bang Theory. The scene takes place in a soup
|
||
kitchen on Thanksgiving and Musk is washing
|
||
dishes.
|
||
16. He also made a guest appearance on The
|
||
Simpsons, playing himself.
|
||
17. During a Reddit AMA in 2015, one user asked
|
||
about his learning process. Musk used a tree
|
||
analogy to explain: “I do kinda feel like my head
|
||
is full! My context switching penalty is high and
|
||
my process isolation is not what it used to be.
|
||
Frankly, though, I think most people can learn a
|
||
lot more than they think they can. They sell
|
||
themselves short without trying. One bit of
|
||
advice: It is important to view knowledge as sort
|
||
of a semantic tree —make sure you understand the
|
||
fundamental principles, i.e. the trunk and big
|
||
branches, before you get into the leaves/details
|
||
or there is nothing for them to hang on to.”
|
||
18. Musk has five sons (one set of twins and one
|
||
set of triplets), whom he shares custody of with
|
||
his first wife, Canadian fantasy author Justine
|
||
Wilson.
|
||
19. He has confessed to naming one of his sons,
|
||
Xavier, after Professor Xavier of the X-Men.
|
||
20. As a child, Musk would often gaze into the
|
||
distance while his parents were talking to him.
|
||
This led them to believe he may be deaf and he
|
||
even had his adenoids removed. It made no
|
||
difference as it turned out he was just
|
||
daydreaming. His mother explained: “He goes into
|
||
his brain, and then you just see he is in another
|
||
world. ... Now I just leave him be because I know
|
||
he is designing a new rocket or something.”
|
||
21. Musk owns five mansions in the Southern
|
||
Californian upmarket neighborhood of Bel Air.
|
||
Totaling a value of more than $70 million, Musk
|
||
ensured they are all eco-friendly covering each
|
||
one in solar panels.
|
||
22. He believes humanity’s biggest threat is
|
||
Artificial Intelligence. Musk worries that AI
|
||
could become too intelligent to handle and
|
||
eventually wipe out mankind. In an interview
|
||
with Vanity Fair, Musk explained that it’s
|
||
technically not a robot that would become too
|
||
powerful, but a computer algorithm. “The important
|
||
thing is that if we do get some sort of runaway
|
||
algorithm, then the human AI collective can stop
|
||
the runaway algorithm. But if there’s a large,
|
||
centralized AI that decides, then there’s no
|
||
stopping it.”
|
||
23. In hope of combatting the threat of AI, Musk
|
||
launched Neuralink. This ambitious venture hopes
|
||
to eventually implant computers in human brains to
|
||
ward off any threat of AI. He also co-founded
|
||
OpenAI in 2015. OpenAI is a nonprofit whose sole
|
||
purpose is to carry out research that ensures AI
|
||
doesn’t destroy mankind.
|
||
24. Esquire magazine named Musk one of the 75 most
|
||
influential people of the 21st century.
|
||
25. When it comes to humor, many are surprised to
|
||
discover Musk has a raunchy approach. When naming
|
||
the Tesla Model 3, Musk originally wanted to call
|
||
it the Model E for what he described as “dumb
|
||
obvious humor reasons.” If he’d had his way, the
|
||
cars would be Models S, E and X. Unfortunately,
|
||
due to a Ford trademark lawsuit, Musk had to
|
||
settle for the Model 3 instead.
|
||
26. Musk stated his primary reason for starting
|
||
Tesla Motors and SolarCity was to fight global
|
||
warming and work towards a more sustainable
|
||
future.
|
||
27. Earlier in life, Musk would drink eight cans
|
||
of Diet Coke and several cups of coffee a day. It
|
||
was how he used to cope with 100-hour work weeks
|
||
during the process of setting up and running new
|
||
companies. He once stated that while following
|
||
this routine: "I got so freaking jacked that I
|
||
seriously started to feel like I was losing my
|
||
peripheral vision.”
|
||
28. Fortune named Musk “Business Person of the
|
||
Year” in 2013.
|
||
29. A user on Reddit once asked him, “What daily
|
||
habit do you believe has the largest positive
|
||
impact on your life?” Musk didn't respond with one
|
||
of the usual suspects—waking up early, expressing
|
||
gratitude, meditating - but “showering.”
|
||
30. After moving from South Africa to Canada, a
|
||
young Elon Musk was broke. He would often only
|
||
spend $1 a day, living on a diet consisting of hot
|
||
dogs and oranges.
|
||
31. Despite Musk’s obvious current success, it
|
||
almost didn’t turn out this way. The Roadster,
|
||
Tesla’s first electric car, faced constant
|
||
production problems and SpaceX had three launch
|
||
failures before the fourth and final effort was a
|
||
success.
|
||
32. SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft is the first
|
||
commercial vehicle to attach to the International
|
||
Space Station.
|
||
33. Musk has the ambitious plan to cover the world
|
||
with space-based internet. Through SpaceX, he
|
||
plans to launch 4,425 satellites into orbit that
|
||
would provide internet coverage all around the
|
||
world. Currently there are only just over 4,000
|
||
satellites (active and inactive) in orbit.
|
||
34. Along with Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, Mark
|
||
Zuckerberg, Sir Richard Branson and many others,
|
||
Elon Musk has signed the giving pledge. This is a
|
||
promise to eventually donate the majority of his
|
||
wealth to philanthropic causes.
|
||
35. Musk is often referred to as a
|
||
“thrillionaire.” This is a new class of high-tech
|
||
entrepreneurs looking to use their wealth to make
|
||
science-fiction dreams into a modern reality.
|
||
36. Musk was awarded the FAI Gold Space Medal by
|
||
the Federation Aronautique Internationale for
|
||
designing the first privately developed rocket to
|
||
reach orbit. This award is the organization’s most
|
||
significant and has also been awarded to Neil
|
||
Armstrong.
|
||
37. Musk has developed an idea for a “fifth mode
|
||
of transport.” The Hyperloop – an underground high
|
||
speed transit tube. Speaking in an interview, Musk
|
||
claims, “It would never crash, it would be immune
|
||
to weather and it would get passengers from Los
|
||
Angeles to San Francisco in under 30 minutes. It
|
||
would be energy efficient, maybe even selfpowering
|
||
with help from solar panels, which would
|
||
keep costs well below an airline ticket.”
|
||
38. Musk doesn’t actually have a proper desk. When
|
||
speaking of his working environment, he explains,
|
||
“I always move my desk to wherever—I don’t really
|
||
have a desk actually—I move myself to wherever the
|
||
biggest problem is in Tesla. I really believe that
|
||
one should lead from the front lines, and that’s
|
||
why I’m here.”
|
||
39. Musk believes he will be the first private
|
||
citizen to pioneer outer space. He also believes
|
||
that the journey will cost lives. Speaking to
|
||
Esquire, he stated that “there will probably be a
|
||
lot of people that die in the process.”
|
||
40. It is no secret that Musk plans to eventually
|
||
colonize Mars. Not too many people know what the
|
||
Mars Colonial Transporters are called though. Musk
|
||
recently revealed that their codenames are BFR
|
||
(‘Big F***ing Rocket’) and BFS (‘Big F***ing
|
||
Spaceship’)!
|
||
Chapter Eight: 60 Greatest Quotes
|
||
"When something is important enough, you do it
|
||
even if the odds are not in your favor."
|
||
"Some people don't like change, but you need
|
||
to embrace change if the alternative is disaster."
|
||
"Failure is an option here. If things are not
|
||
failing, you are not innovating enough."
|
||
"The path to the CEO's office should not be
|
||
through the CFO's office, and it should not be
|
||
through the marketing department. It needs to be
|
||
through engineering and design."
|
||
"Persistence is very important. You should not
|
||
give up unless you are forced to give up."
|
||
"There's a tremendous bias against taking risks.
|
||
Everyone is trying to optimize their asscovering."
|
||
"It's OK to have your eggs in one basket as long
|
||
as you control what happens to that basket."
|
||
"Brand is just a perception, and perception will
|
||
match reality over time. Sometimes it will be
|
||
ahead, other times it will be behind. But brand is
|
||
simply a collective impression some have about a
|
||
product."
|
||
"It is a mistake to hire huge numbers of people to
|
||
get a complicated job done. Numbers will never
|
||
compensate for talent in getting the right answer,
|
||
will tend to slow down progress, and will make the
|
||
task incredibly expensive."
|
||
"A company is a group organized to create a
|
||
product or service, and it is only as good as its
|
||
people and how excited they are about creating. I
|
||
do want to recognize a ton of super-talented
|
||
people. I just happen to be the face of the
|
||
companies."
|
||
"People work better when they know what the goal
|
||
is and why. It is important that people look
|
||
forward to coming to work in the morning and enjoy
|
||
working."
|
||
"I say something, and then it usually happens.
|
||
Maybe not on schedule, but it usually happens."
|
||
"I do think there is a lot of potential if you
|
||
have a compelling product and people are willing
|
||
to pay a premium for that. I think that is what
|
||
Apple has shown. You can buy a much cheaper cell
|
||
phone or laptop, but Apple's product is so much
|
||
better than the alternative, and people are
|
||
willing to pay that premium."
|
||
"I don't spend my time pontificating about highconcept
|
||
things; I spend my time solving
|
||
engineering and manufacturing problems."
|
||
"I always invest my own money in the companies
|
||
that I create. I don't believe in the whole thing
|
||
of just using other people's money. I don't think
|
||
that's right. I'm not going to ask other people to
|
||
invest in something if I'm not prepared to do so
|
||
myself."
|
||
"My biggest mistake is probably weighing too much
|
||
on someone's talent and not someone's personality.
|
||
I think it matters whether someone has a good
|
||
heart."
|
||
"I don't believe in process. In fact, when I
|
||
interview a potential employee and he or she says
|
||
that 'it's all about the process,' I see that as a
|
||
bad sign. The problem is that at a lot of big
|
||
companies, process becomes a substitute for
|
||
thinking. You're encouraged to behave like a
|
||
little gear in a complex machine. Frankly, it
|
||
allows you to keep people who aren't that
|
||
smart, who aren't that creative."
|
||
"Starting and growing a business is as much about
|
||
the innovation, drive, and determination of the
|
||
people behind it as the product they sell."
|
||
"The first step is to establish that something is
|
||
possible; then probability will occur."
|
||
"There are really two things that have to occur in
|
||
order for a new technology to be affordable to the
|
||
mass market. One is you need economies of scale.
|
||
The other is you need to iterate on the design.
|
||
You need to go through a few versions."
|
||
"Talent is extremely important. It's like a sports
|
||
team, the team that has the best individual player
|
||
will often win, but then there's a multiplier from
|
||
how those players work together and the strategy
|
||
they employ."
|
||
"Work like hell. I mean you just have to put in 80
|
||
to 100 hour weeks every week. [This]improves the
|
||
odds of success. If other people are putting in 40
|
||
hour workweeks and you're putting in 100 hour
|
||
workweeks, then even if you're doing the same
|
||
thing, you know that you will achieve in four
|
||
months what it takes them a year to achieve."
|
||
"I've actually not read any books on time
|
||
management."
|
||
"I'm interested in things that change the world or
|
||
that affect the future and wondrous, new
|
||
technology where you see it, and you're like,
|
||
'Wow, how did that even happen? How is that
|
||
possible?'"
|
||
"Really pay attention to negative feedback and
|
||
solicit it, particularly from friends. ... Hardly
|
||
anyone does that, and it's incredibly helpful."
|
||
"If you get up in the morning and think the future
|
||
is going to be better, it is a bright day.
|
||
Otherwise, it's not."
|
||
"What makes innovative thinking happen?... I think
|
||
it's really a mindset. You have to decide."
|
||
"People should pursue what they're passionate
|
||
about. That will make them happier than pretty
|
||
much anything else."
|
||
"I wouldn't say I have a lack of fear. In fact,
|
||
I'd like my fear emotion to be less because it's
|
||
very distracting and fries my nervous system."
|
||
"If you're trying to create a company, it's like
|
||
baking a cake. You have to have all the
|
||
ingredients in the right proportion."
|
||
"I think most of the important stuff on the
|
||
Internet has been built. There will be continued
|
||
innovation, for sure, but the great problems of
|
||
the Internet have essentially been solved."
|
||
"I think we have a duty to maintain the light of
|
||
consciousness to make sure it continues into the
|
||
future."
|
||
"When Henry Ford made cheap, reliable cars, people
|
||
said, 'Nah, what's wrong with a horse?' That was a
|
||
huge bet he made, and it worked."
|
||
"When somebody has a breakthrough innovation, it
|
||
is rarely one little thing. Very rarely, is it one
|
||
little thing. It's usually a whole bunch of things
|
||
that collectively amount to a huge innovation."
|
||
"You shouldn't do things differently just because
|
||
they're different. They need to be... better."
|
||
"I would just question things... It would
|
||
infuriate my parents... That I wouldn't just
|
||
believe them when they said something 'cause I'd
|
||
ask them why. And then I'd consider whether that
|
||
response made sense given everything else I knew."
|
||
"It's very important to like the people you work
|
||
with, otherwise life [and] your job is gonna be
|
||
quite miserable."
|
||
"We have a strict 'no-assholes policy' at SpaceX."
|
||
"Disruptive technology where you really have a big
|
||
technology discontinuity... tends to come from new
|
||
companies."
|
||
"As much as possible, avoid hiring MBAs. MBA
|
||
programs don't teach people how to create
|
||
companies."
|
||
"Don't delude yourself into thinking something's
|
||
working when it's not, or you're gonna get fixated
|
||
on a bad solution."
|
||
"If something has to be designed and invented, and
|
||
you have to figure out how to ensure that the
|
||
value of the thing you create is greater than the
|
||
cost of the inputs, then that is probably my core
|
||
skill."
|
||
"I always have optimism, but I'm realistic. It was
|
||
not with the expectation of great success that I
|
||
started Tesla or SpaceX... It's just that I
|
||
thought they were important enough to do anyway.
|
||
“Going from PayPal, I thought: ‘Well, what are
|
||
some of the other problems that are likely to most
|
||
affect the future of humanity?’ Not from the
|
||
perspective, ‘What’s the best way to make money?”
|
||
“(Physics is) a good framework for thinking. ...
|
||
Boil things down to their fundamental truths and
|
||
reason up from there.”
|
||
“You want to have a future where you’re expecting
|
||
things to be better, not one where you’re
|
||
expecting things to be worse.”
|
||
“You have to be pretty driven to make it happen.
|
||
Otherwise, you will just make yourself miserable.”
|
||
“If you go back a few hundred years, what we take
|
||
for granted today would seem like magic – being
|
||
able to talk to people over long distances, to
|
||
transmit images, flying, accessing vast amounts of
|
||
data like an oracle. These are all things that
|
||
would have been considered magic a few hundred
|
||
years ago.”
|
||
“Let’s think beyond the normal stuff and have an
|
||
environment where that sort of thinking is
|
||
encouraged and rewarded and where it’s okay to
|
||
fail as well. Because when you try new things, you
|
||
try this idea, that idea... well a large number of
|
||
them are not gonna work, and that has to be okay.
|
||
If every time somebody comes up with an idea it
|
||
has to be successful, you’re not gonna get people
|
||
coming up with ideas.”
|
||
“I came to the conclusion that we should aspire to
|
||
increase the scope and scale of human
|
||
consciousness in order to better understand what
|
||
questions to ask. Really, the only thing that
|
||
makes sense is to strive for greater collective
|
||
enlightenment.”
|
||
“Patience is a virtue, and I’m learning patience.
|
||
It’s a tough lesson.”
|
||
“When I was in college, I wanted to be involved in
|
||
things that would change the world. Now I am.”
|
||
“I think it’s very important to have a feedback
|
||
loop, where you’re constantly thinking about what
|
||
you’ve done and how you could be doing it better.
|
||
I think that’s the single best piece of advice:
|
||
constantly think about how you could be doing
|
||
things better and questioning yourself.”
|
||
“Life is too short for long-term grudges.”
|
||
“I think life on Earth must be about more than
|
||
just solving problems... It’s got to be something
|
||
inspiring, even if it is vicarious.”
|
||
“The idea of lying on a beach as my main thing
|
||
just sounds like the worst. It sounds horrible to
|
||
me. I would go bonkers. I would have to be on
|
||
serious drugs. I’d be super-duper bored. I like
|
||
high intensity.”
|
||
“Don’t be afraid of new arenas.”
|
||
“I think it is possible for ordinary people to
|
||
choose to be extraordinary.”
|
||
“I could either watch it happen or be a part of
|
||
it.”
|
||
“Being an Entrepreneur is like eating glass and
|
||
staring into the abyss of death”
|
||
Chapter Nine: Elon Musk’s 15 Rules For Success
|
||
Work Ridiculously Hard .
|
||
Musk is known for his fierce work ethic. Even
|
||
present day as a global superstar he is still
|
||
putting in 100-hour work weeks, splitting his time
|
||
between Tesla and SpaceX. Back when Elon and his
|
||
brother co-founded PayPal, they would sleep in the
|
||
office and shower at the local YMCA. He believes
|
||
this is the bedrock to his success and there is no
|
||
getting around it.
|
||
“Work like hell. I mean you just have to put in 80
|
||
to 100 hour weeks every week. [This] improves the
|
||
odds of success. If other people are putting in 40
|
||
hour work weeks and you’re putting in 100 hour
|
||
work weeks, then even if you’re doing the same
|
||
thing you know that... you will achieve in 4
|
||
months what it takes them a year to achieve.”
|
||
Be a Trendsetter.
|
||
Instead of competing with others in well
|
||
established markets, Musk prefers to solve
|
||
problems in emerging markets that have little
|
||
competition. During it’s early years, PayPal was
|
||
the only email money transferring system in the
|
||
world. Tesla was created just as electric cars
|
||
were being written off and SpaceX is the first
|
||
private company to send a spacecraft to the
|
||
International Space Station.
|
||
Focus on innovation instead of competition. If you
|
||
innovate correctly, there will be no competition.
|
||
Creating a monopoly leads to lasting value and
|
||
reaps the majority of the rewards available in
|
||
that particular market segment.
|
||
Make Failure an Option.
|
||
“Failure is an option here. If things are not
|
||
failing, you are not innovating enough.”
|
||
Originally, Musk believed Tesla would fail. Why
|
||
would he start a company he believed almost
|
||
certain to fail? Musk’s answer:
|
||
“If something is important enough you should try
|
||
even if the probable outcome is failure.”
|
||
Electric cars were seen as slow and ugly. Musk
|
||
took on the difficult task of changing almost the
|
||
entire populations opinion on them. It was no easy
|
||
feat but the introduction The Tesla Model S
|
||
achieved this topping Consumer Reports’ annual
|
||
customer satisfaction ratings two years in a row.
|
||
Focus on Work that is Important to You.
|
||
At the age of 27 Elon sold Zip2 to Compaq for $307
|
||
million dollars. He personally netted $22 million
|
||
dollars from the sale, quite easily enough to
|
||
retire on. Instead he decided to continue on,
|
||
working harder than ever because he recognizes the
|
||
importance of his work and how he his changing the
|
||
world in the process. Working on projects that are
|
||
important to you can provide the best of both
|
||
worlds - financial rewards and job satisfaction.
|
||
Focus on Signal over Noise.
|
||
Musk firmly believes the quality of the product or
|
||
service should always come first. An amazing
|
||
product is the best type of marketing there is. In
|
||
his commencement speech at USC in 2014, Musk
|
||
states:
|
||
“A lot of companies spend money on things that
|
||
don’t actually make the product better. For
|
||
example, at Tesla we’ve never spent any money on
|
||
advertising. We put all the money into R+D, and
|
||
manufacturing and design to try to make the car as
|
||
good as possible. And I think that’s the way to
|
||
go. For any given company just keep thinking ‘are
|
||
the efforts that people are expending resulting in
|
||
a better product or service?’ If they’re not –
|
||
stop those efforts.”
|
||
Create a superior product above all else.
|
||
Seek out Constructive Criticism.
|
||
Nobody enjoys to have their work criticized as it
|
||
can often feel like a personal attack upon
|
||
yourself. Musk is able to take his ego out of the
|
||
equation and realize that constructive criticism
|
||
is essential to improvement. Through seeking out
|
||
this information you gain valuable information
|
||
from a whole set of fresh eyes as to which areas
|
||
need to be improved. Musk expands upon this point
|
||
in an interview he gave.
|
||
“I think it’s important for people to pay close
|
||
attention to negative feedback and rather than
|
||
ignore negative feedback, you have to listen to it
|
||
carefully. Ignore it if the underlying reason for
|
||
the negative feedback doesn’t make sense but
|
||
otherwise, people should adjust their behavior.
|
||
I’m not perfect at it, for sure, but I do think
|
||
it’s really important to solicit negative
|
||
feedback, particularly from people who have your
|
||
best interest in mind.”
|
||
Attract Great People
|
||
A company is just a group of people working
|
||
together to create a service or product. During
|
||
his commencement speech at USC, Musk stated that
|
||
the most important part of creating a company is
|
||
to attract the right people. He further explains,
|
||
“depending upon how talented and hardworking that
|
||
group is, and the degree to which they’re focused
|
||
cohesively in a good direction, that will
|
||
determine the success of the company. So do
|
||
everything you can to gather great people if
|
||
you’re creating a company.” If you have no desire
|
||
in creating a company Musk instead advises, “Join
|
||
a group that is amazing that you really respect.”
|
||
Invest Profits into new Businesses.
|
||
Whenever Musk cashes in on one of his companies
|
||
for millions, he has always invested at least 45%
|
||
of his earnings into a brand new business within a
|
||
12-month period. After banking $22 million for the
|
||
sale of Zip2, Musk invested $10 million into
|
||
creating X.com (eventually PayPal). The sale of
|
||
PayPal netted Musk a cool $165 million, he would
|
||
go on to invest $100 million of that into the
|
||
founding of SpaceX. Musk never believes he has
|
||
‘made it’, each success is just a stepping stone
|
||
onto bigger and more important challenges.
|
||
Be Tenacious.
|
||
Tenacious Definition: Adjective. Not readily
|
||
relinquishing a position, principle, or course of
|
||
action; determined.
|
||
Tesla and SpaceX have both been on the verge of
|
||
bankruptcy. The determination shown by Musk is a
|
||
big part of the reason they are both now thriving.
|
||
The SpaceX Falcon 1 launch was initially a
|
||
success, the vehicle made it through the most
|
||
complex stage of breaking away from Earth’s
|
||
gravitational pull. Soon after, the rocket failed
|
||
and communication was lost. The mission was a
|
||
failure.
|
||
The 300+ individuals in attendance who had worked
|
||
on the project thought it was game over. Musk
|
||
promptly stood up and started to speak to the
|
||
crowd, reassuring them he had secured more funding
|
||
for future launches. He concluded the speech by
|
||
proclaiming not what his employees should do, but
|
||
what he was going to do. “For my part, I will
|
||
never give up... and I mean never.”
|
||
As we all know, the next launch was a success.
|
||
Reason from First Principles over Analogy.
|
||
Large battery packs are expensive to make;
|
||
therefore, they will always cost a lot. This is
|
||
logical and would be the thinking of most. Not
|
||
Musk. Musk believes in stripping things back to
|
||
first principles. When you strip back the
|
||
components of batteries, (nickel, aluminum,
|
||
cobalt, carbon etc.) these are not actually
|
||
expensive parts and if made by yourself, costs can
|
||
be dramatically reduced. Common thought goes:
|
||
“That’s just how it is, always has been and always
|
||
will be.” Musk advises us to challenge reality and
|
||
to dive deep into the fundamentals.
|
||
“I think it’s important to reason from first
|
||
principles rather than by analogy. The normal way
|
||
we conduct our lives is we reason by analogy.
|
||
[With analogy] we are doing this because it’s like
|
||
something else that was done, or it is like what
|
||
other people are doing. [With first principles]
|
||
you boil things down to the most fundamental
|
||
truths...and then reason up from there.”
|
||
Be Overly Ambitious.
|
||
It doesn’t come much more ambitious than planning
|
||
to colonize mars. When Musk initially publicized
|
||
his plans, most thought he was crazy. After the
|
||
success of SpaceX and securing a $1.6 billion
|
||
contract with NASA, his plan is starting to look a
|
||
lot more realistic. This isn’t just a business
|
||
decision for Musk but a potential savior for the
|
||
human race. He has revealed he hopes to have
|
||
established a colony on Mars by 2040, with a
|
||
population of 80,000.
|
||
Improvise.
|
||
There will always be roadblocks on the road to
|
||
success, this is where improvisation is key. When
|
||
the Russians wouldn’t sell Elon the
|
||
intercontinental ballistic missiles he needed, he
|
||
built his own. When SpaceX was told they would
|
||
need to wait before launching rockets in the U.S,
|
||
he went and found a Pacific island he could use
|
||
immediately. When Tesla needed to test a prototype
|
||
model in cold conditions, he hired an ice-cream
|
||
truck with a big refrigerated trailer. The
|
||
problems will always be there, but if you are
|
||
willing to improvise, they can nearly always be
|
||
overcome.
|
||
Begin with a Premium Product.
|
||
The strategy Musk used with the creation Tesla was
|
||
quite unique, but worked perfectly. Step one
|
||
started by creating a premium product to the very
|
||
rich with the high end luxury Tesla. This changed
|
||
the general view of electric cars being uncool and
|
||
slow and the revenues from this model provided the
|
||
funds for step two. This was the creation of the
|
||
mid-priced, mid-volume produced models which then
|
||
produced the funds for the low priced, high volume
|
||
cars available for the masses.
|
||
Constantly Improve.
|
||
Musk believes in the Japanese concept of Kaizen,
|
||
translated to constant improvement. When asked
|
||
about the single best piece of advice he could
|
||
give to someone, Musk advised: “Constantly think
|
||
about how you can be doing things better.” The
|
||
only thing better than a perfectly executed plan
|
||
is perfect execution of a better plan. Start by
|
||
finding your drive and refining your execution,
|
||
then think about how you can do things better and
|
||
question how your plan can be improved.
|
||
Take Risks.
|
||
All worthwhile achievements come with an element
|
||
of risk. Through following the previous 14
|
||
principles, risks can be lowered but never wiped
|
||
out completely. Greater risks, usually have the
|
||
potential to provide greater rewards but you
|
||
should always weigh up the pros and cons. When
|
||
Musk poured so much of his money into SpaceX and
|
||
Tesla, at one point he had to borrow money off
|
||
friends just to cover his living expenses. Today
|
||
SpaceX, Tesla, and Solar City are thriving and
|
||
Elon is several billion dollars wealthier.
|
||
Conclusion
|
||
The amazing thing about Elon Musk isn’t his
|
||
achievements, it’s his persistence through
|
||
the failures in his life. He had so many setbacks,
|
||
catastrophes, and so much hardship in his life
|
||
that it’s amazing to see how he overcame all of
|
||
life’s challenges.
|
||
That’s what makes Elon Musk. It’s his tenacity ,
|
||
determination , and inability to consider
|
||
failure that has allowed him to succeed .
|
||
|
||
|