His track record in terms of reliability, range and magnitude of success is unprecedented and signals that despite all his apparent personal faults he possesses a skill, sensitivity or decision making capability that puts him ahead of thousands of other very smart, hardworking people.
Does anyone have any insight, based on what they've read, seen or know about working at his companies that provides an explanation for this?
Between FSD, the $25,000 EV and uh... X, I'm getting pretty convinced that publicly recognized success isn't the goal anymore.
https://companiesmarketcap.com/automakers/largest-automakers...
When looking at revenue there is no magic there for any of these companies. It’s just about fundraising.
Additionally, his control over social media has significantly contributed to his ability to attract substantial capital. With this capital, he can pursue various initiatives. He has a knack for crafting a compelling story that encourages people to invest in his company in both time and money.
Far less attention is given to the fact that he must be hiring lots of extremely talented people and motivating them to deliver above average outcomes. As a stereotypical manager of managers he bestows upon himself all the credit in public. Thus further enhancing his reputation.
His private life is further proof of his complete disregard for norms and conventions. Elon shows a cavalier disregard of public institutions, e.g. SEC, yet manages to avail his companies to billions in government subsidies.
If you want some granularity in that: risk taking, going against the grain, breaking rules, drive, grandiosity, good physics skills and poor people skills (lack of empathy). I read somewhere that the laws of physics constrain his engineering companies, whereas absolutely nothing constrains the "social" business, though the section 230 free ride may be grinding to a halt.
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/judges-rule-big-techs-fre...
Sadly, Musk-style “decision making capability” works as long as the right people profit from it. Sociopathic personalities too often succeed, because they don’t care about other people and think the rules don’t apply to them. I don’t think we should admire or emulate those people.
Musk has cleverly learned how to extract handouts from the government while criticizing government handouts, and how to focus attention away from his trail of failures by promising something even more distracting next year.