Musk's Notorious Promises: Tesla's Future Success Might Not Be In His Hands

 | Nov 26, 2019 12:29AM ET

This article is Part 9 of an 11-part series analysis of Tesla, Elon Musk and EV Revolution. You can read other parts here .

Elon Musk is unlike any leader we’ve ever seen. For most people, building PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) would have been an incredible achievement. Not for Musk; he built Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), a vertically integrated car company and the first new U.S. car company to survive this long since 1930.

But Tesla is not just a car company that is on its way to producing a few hundred thousand electric cars a year. It is a company building a charging network that covers not just the U.S. but Western Europe and parts of Asia. It’s a company that designed a self-driving processor for its own cars. I can keep going, and I will. Elon also built SpaceX, a company that is able to send rockets into space at a 10x lower cost than NASA – and land the rockets back on a barge parked in the middle of the ocean.

He is working on a company, Neuralink, that wires your brain to a computer. OK, I’ll stop. I’d argue that even if Tesla goes bankrupt tomorrow, Elon has succeeded – he has accelerated human progress decades into the future.

Elon Musk (along with Tesla stock) is polarizing in the investing community. He sets impossible goals and achieves half of them several years late. The other half he either will not achieve or just hasn’t achieved yet – we don’t know. There appear to be two motivations behind his seemingly unrealistic goals. On one side, just like Steve Jobs, he has created a reality distortion field and convinced people with his charisma and confidence that they can achieve seemingly unachievable dreams.