There’s hardcore, and then there’s Elon Musk. Musk called an all-hands meeting at his SpaceX spacecraft factory in Boca Chica Beach, Texas — at 1 a.m. on Sunday, Feb. 23, according to a story published Thursday by Ars Technica.
Musk’s engineering team explained they needed more people to take shifts. So over the next 48 hours, SpaceX hired 252 workers, doubling the workforce at that factory, Ars Technica reported. The vignette is telling about what it is like to work for Musk.
SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell joined the rocket company in 2002 as employee No. 7. A decade and a half later, she said she still loved working for Musk. But she also admitted it is intense.
Shotwell said she had to learn to listen and to think before rejecting Musk’s bold goals.
Max Hodak, CEO at Neuralink, where Musk is leading efforts to build a machine-brain interface to connect humans with computers, has had a similar experience.
“Elon has this incredible optimism, where he will pierce through these imagined constraints and show you that really a lot more is possible that you really think is today,” Hodak said in 2019 at the California Academy of Sciences.
In a Tweet recruiting talent to work for his companies, Musk himself acknowledged he can be hard to work for.
“There are way easier places to work, but nobody ever changed the world on 40 hours a week,” Musk tweeted.“But if you love what you do, it (mostly) doesn’t feel like work,” he added.
SOURCE: CNBC
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