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Grands
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How much physics helped Musk in creating his companies ?
Wikipedia.In 1995, at age 24, Musk moved to California to begin a PhD in applied physics and materials science at Stanford University, but left the program after two days to pursue his entrepreneurial aspirations in the areas of the Internet, renewable energy and outer space.
What sort of answer are you looking for? I don't know how to quantify this. Like on a scale from 1-10?Grands said:I read his wiki page and his biography but I still can't find the answer to my question.
Have you listened to some interviews with him? He seems to be very well versed in physics and electronics. Perhaps not at the "get down and design a motor control from the ground up" level, but enough to have intelligent and challenging discussions with his engineering teams.Grands said:The question is: he uses his skills in physics to run his business?
My impression is not, because a physics degree, generally doesn't give any technical skills that can be necessary for his companies, especially the bachelor's degree.
I am certain that he does use his knowledge of physics for order of magnitude estimations of the possible.Grands said:The question is: he uses his skills in physics to run his business?
Grands said:After that he get an offer to do a PhD in physics at Stanford University, but che quit after 2 days to start his companies.
Which person is so confident about himself to quit a PhD at a such a great university to start a company that might won't work, in my honest opinione it's unbelievable.
applied and were admitted to the graduate program in Material Science Engineering in 1995. Since you did not enroll..."
Grands said:I read his wiki page and his biography but I still can't find the answer to my question.
Generally or specifically? He almost certainly never used a specific technical skill he learned in college to solve an engineering problem at one of his companies - he's too high up for that. But it is also almost certainly true that he used his general understating of technical issues to understand how technical issues relate to his strategic decisions.Grands said:The question is: he uses his skills in physics to run his business?
My impression is not, because a physics degree, generally doesn't give any technical skills that can be necessary for his companies, especially the bachelor's degree.
I think you answered your own question and I think if you look around at examples from the tech industry and industry beyond, you will find that most of what what makes a startup work is generally a combination of (roughly in order):Grands said:Which person is so confident about himself to quit a PhD at a such a great university to start a company that might not work, in my honest opinion it's unbelievable.
Although he studied physics he create software program and web software like zip2 and paypal, that only a persone that studied how to code in deep can do.
My idea is that he was surrounded by the right people that helped him to create his ideas, in fact he didn't make this projects by themself.
I think he didn't have the skills to do that alone...
Even Tesla wasn't his personal idea, he get the company from a computer and electrical engineer and he start to run it, and I don't think he had the skills to create the motors of a fully electric car, he was good at picking engineers and make them to create it.
My question is, is he good at creating new technology or he is good just at manage companies ?
This is why I think physics doesn't helped him so much.
I realize people get hung up on this as part of the mythology of such people, but I think that what is key to breaking the myth isn't correcting the wrong fact, but rather realizing just how irrelevant it is. It doesn't matter if it was two days before enrolling, two days after or just before graduation; school was just something going on in the background while such people and their visions germinated.StoneTemplePython said:This is in fact wrong and part of the founding myth of Musk. Per office of registrar at Stanford, via correspondence with Musk, they acknowledge to him that (i.e. they address him as 'you')
This was in the School of Engineering. It wasn't in the physics department and he did not drop out in 2 days. He never enrolled.
I agree that the founder (or higher level executive) isn't going to directly use their technical skills, but I think it may be pretty common (and helpful) to have some technical background.russ_watters said:... it isn't very important to have, as a founder of such a company, is technical skill. That's something you can rent anywhere for not much money, so it isn't as critical as people tend to [want to] believe. ...
russ_watters said:I realize people get hung up on this as part of the mythology of such people, but I think that what is key to breaking the myth isn't correcting the wrong fact, but rather realizing just how irrelevant it is. It doesn't matter if it was two days before enrolling, two days after or just before graduation; school was just something going on in the background while such people and their visions germinated.
russ_watters said:I think you answered your own question and I think if you look around at examples from the tech industry and industry beyond, you will find that most of what what makes a startup work is generally a combination of (roughly in order):
1. Killer idea
2. Strategic vision
3. Risk taking (with money)
4. Money
And you can pretty much combine those into two things. One thing that isn't on the list because it isn't very important to have, as a founder of such a company, is technical skill. That's something you can rent anywhere for not much money, so it isn't as critical as people tend to [want to] believe.
There are, of course, exceptions (Zuckerberg and from an artistic sense, Jobs), but I think it is usually the case.
Certainly. For everyone who succeeds there are thousands to millions who do not (at least not at this level), and there is a lot of luck involved. There were multiple points where Musk's companies could have gone bankrupt - and we would never have heard of him. Like we never heard of all the other people who got to such a point and then had bad luck.Choppy said:It's important to remember that people like Elon Musk are outliers in terms of what a typical person, even a brilliant one, can expect to accomplish. Sure, Musk has a background in physics and there's no doubt that that background helped him. But I think it's a little misguided to start thinking along the lines of 'If I pursue a PhD in physics I'll end up accomplishing just as much as he has.'
He hired experts. As an example, Tom Mueller, one of the leading rocket propulsion experts, is one of the founding employees of the company.Grands said:The crazy thing is that he build an empire like Tesla o SpaceX with no technical skills.
There were several fully electric cars around before Tesla, and he had a bunch of experts in his company. It has been the first successful car startup in the US for a very long time, however.Grands said:He didn't just create a new car, but the first fully electrical car with no skills
Having a track record of successful companies and investing a lot of personal money helps I guess.Grands said:It's also difficult to understand how did he get so much money from investors and how this last ones believed in his idea.
He is the CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, he has the majority of voting shares of SpaceX and a significant fraction of shares of Tesla.If he hired experts to create his companies from 0, and those ones work in creating his projects and ideas, why is he the most important person in that company?
What did he to to become so rich ?mfb said:Because he founded SpaceX and co-founded Tesla, both partially with his own money.
But he have about 15 billions, how does he made them?mfb said:He made most of his current money with these two companies, but he was a millionaire before already - from Zip2 ($22 million) and PayPal ($165 million).
Out of this, he invested $100 million into SpaceX. With a bit of external capital that was sufficient to develop Falcon 1 and launch it four times. The fourth flight was a success, and that gave the company more investor money.
All of this is easy to look up.
I'm really not sure why this is so hard to understand: he created those companies basically from nothing. That's why he's the most important person in them and that's why he's made so much money. On a nuts and bolts level, the money comes from being the largest shareholder: the other investors gave the company money, which is to say, they paid him.Grands said:But he have about 15 billions, how does he made them?
russ_watters said:I'm really not sure why this is so hard to understand: he created those companies basically from nothing. That's why he's the most important person in them and that's why he's made so much money. On a nuts and bolts level, the money comes from being the largest shareholder: the other investors gave the company money, which is to say, they paid him.
I quoted the amount he made with PayPal in an earlier post already.Grands said:I understand that he made lots of money with Paypal, but I don't think that he earned the 15 billions he have today.
That‘s not how companies work.This mean that the total earned money was divided in more parts.
Right: almost all is in stocks.Grands said:Ok, so when google says that musk has 19.3 billions, that means that this money are just part of the company and not cash money?