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Elon Musk’s 9 p.m. all-hands Tesla meeting shows what he can get away with

At an all-hands meeting Thursday, CEO Elon Musk encouraged workers to hold onto their shares.Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
  • Elon Musk’s evening all-hands at Tesla is a reminder that he can get away with more than other CEOs.

  • Having a late last-minute meeting also risks appearing disorganized, a leadership expert said.

  • The meeting with Tesla workers was a reminder of Musk’s all-in approach to work.

With any other CEO, it would have been a five-alarm emergency.

Yet, Elon Musk’s recent last-minute after-hours all-hands with Tesla workers was a reminder that the company’s front man — perhaps singularly free from the norms other chiefs abide by — can get away with a lot.

The big question is: how much?

Even though he’s convinced employees over the years to work in tents and sleep at the office, his leeway with workers, investors, and customers isn’t endless, Musk observers told Business Insider.

“There’s no version where he’s in this many things all at once, and it goes well,” Wil Schroter, founder and CEO of Startups.com, a tech accelerator, told BI.

He pointed to the sheer number of items on Musk’s to-do list — from controlling a half dozen companies, including Tesla, X, and SpaceX, to trying to remake the federal government.

Musk’s decision to hold a companywide meeting with little notice that kicked off at about 9 p.m. in Austin — after tech glitches delayed the start — sends several negative signals, said Melissa Schilling, a professor of management and organizations at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

Schilling, who has studied Musk’s career and businesses, told BI that among them is a sense of uncertainty.

“That’s a really dangerous position for someone who’s so central to the brand,” Schilling said.

Starting a meeting when bedtime routines might be underway can ding worker morale, too.

If you signal to employees that their time isn’t valuable, “you really damage that relationship,” she said.

It’s one thing to flout some corporate norms in the early stages of a company, but Musk is well past that honeymoon, according to Schilling.

“His actions affect too many people now to get away with the boys-will-be-boys behavior,” she said.

Musk didn’t respond to a request for comment from BI.

Schroter said Musk often gets given the benefit of the doubt but that if he had to deal with a major crisis, such as Tesla shares dropping 80% from their December high (they’re down by about 50%), Musk stans would be less forgiving.

In such a case, “you don’t get to go screw around with the government and do cuts,” Schroter said, referring to Musk’s other role atop Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency advisory group.


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