KEY POINTS
  • In conversations with 35 current and former Tesla employees, CEO Elon Musk is described as a polarizing figure who inspires but micromanages to an extreme.
  • Musk has been known to approve expensive, high-tech projects against the advice of his own direct reports.
  • Employees also say Tesla relies on disconnected custom apps that make it hard to keep track of project budgets and parts.
Elon Musk, Tesla CEO

It was late 2016. Tesla CEO Elon Musk had confidently told investors that his company would be cranking out 500,000 electric cars a year by 2018.

To hit those mass-market volumes, the CEO ordered a team of engineers to figure out how to "automate everything" about Model 3 assembly. The Model 3 was the future of Tesla. At $35,000 for the base model, it was supposed to be an affordable electric car that would vault Tesla from a niche car maker for the wealthy to a company that could serve everyone.