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August 03, 2020 12:00 AM

Transcript of Elon Musk's conversation with Automotive News

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    Editor's note: Here's a slightly edited full transcript of a July 26 conversation between Automotive News Publisher Jason Stein and Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Go to autonews.com/dailydrive to hear the podcasts that were drawn from the discussion.
    Jason Stein : It's good to talk to you again.

    Elon Musk: It's good to speak with you, Jason.

    So I know you're in the center of a hurricane at this moment, or at least a tropical storm. Tell me a little bit about -- I know you're not a weatherman -- but what is life like down in Brownsville, Texas?

    Well, I think this was a relatively light hurricane as they go. I think this maybe a Category 1 or something like that. A lot of water and a few things got blown over, but overall it was no big deal. We [laughter] -- yeah, it was fine. It was no problem. We just had some drinks, and watched the wind blow all night. It was actually was an epic scene, it looked great.

    You've had a big week. You had your first-ever streak of four consecutive quarterly profits. You have announced --

    Finally. [laughter] It took us a while. I mean there were certainly a lot of people who said that would never happen. And yeah, they had some chance of being right. But the Tesla team worked incredibly hard. It was such an honor to work with such great people, and as a consequence of their great efforts, we were able to achieve four consecutive quarters of profit -- not a lot of profit, just so people see that we're making money here. But you know, one percent, one-and-a-half percent, Q1 was, I think, point-one percent. So it's just by the skin of my teeth, really. But thanks very much to the hard work and innovation of the Tesla team.

    Some people are now lauding you as being a legitimate player on the global scene, thanks to --

    What? [laughter] Finally! Yes! I'm legit! It sure has taken a while. We've had, you know, some conversations over the years and -- what was it like, five years last time we had a conversation, or like that on--

    Five and a half. [Elon Musk was a speaker at the 2015 Automotive News World Congress.]

    Wow. Okay, so--

    Things were different then.

    Yeah, very different. So you've obviously seen the whole trajectory of Tesla, basically from nothing, where we started off with just five people, and to where we are now, and we're about 60,000 people. So yeah, from five people in early 2014, to 60,000-plus people in 2020. And it will probably be 65,000 or so by the end of the year, because we're hiring a lot of people.

    When they talk about you being one of the industry's strongest brands, and you reflect on the last few years, you must take some sense of satisfaction. The fact that now you're being lauded for the things that we talked about five and a half years ago.

    Yeah, actually I wonder -- you know, because obviously I assume that you have that recording, or at least notes -- I sort of wonder: Did the things that I said would happen, did they happen? I mean we missed -- I guess we still need to get to full self-driving, of course, but... You know what? I'm just curious. What's my report card? What's the Tesla report card, for "said we would do it" versus "did it"?

    I think it's fair to say that many of the things that you said that you were going to do, you've done.

    Oh, thank you.

    You are now producing vehicles on a regular basis, and let's just go back the last two years, where you said you were mired in "production hell." Now, you're saying, just even this past week, that you think the long-term sustainable advantage of Tesla is going to be manufacturing. So what changed?

    Oh, no, actually – well, I think the reason I say the long-term sustainable advantage of Tesla will be manufacturing is that I think it's actually the hardest thing to do in manufacturing is scale effectively. And if you say -- it really depends on what time frame. If you go a certain number of years into the future, like if you go 10 years into the future, probably almost all cars will be fully autonomous. Although sometimes, I think the industry is getting [inaudible] faster than it does. But that's just new cars, you know. There's two billion cars and trucks on the road in the fleet, and there's a hundred million made per year, roughly. So this is something I often have to remind people of - even if all cars tomorrow were electric and autonomous, it would take 20 years to replace the fleet. So you'll have this strange situation, kind of like when they had horses and automobiles going down Main Street at the same time for a few decades. Probably several decades. You'll have that with electric autonomous and fossil-fuel non-autonomous vehicles. So essentially if you assume other companies will eventually figure out autonomy, or somebody will provide them with that solution, then they will also have autonomy, and we will have autonomy. But we would just need to be better at manufacturing than them.

    And when it comes to manufacturing, you obviously feel that you've learned a lot in this journey. Now, you're going to be in a position where you have multiple plants, as you said over the next 12-18 months, running at high efficiency, and just frankly getting better.

    Yes.

    What was the biggest thing that changed?

    I'm sorry, with respect to improving manufacturing? Or how I thought about manufacturing?

    Maybe improving manufacturing.

    Well, I tend to take a first principles view of things, like physics first principles view. And say like, how good could manufacturing be if you really optimized the velocity and density of a factory, such that every cubic meter was doing something useful, and the speed at which things move through the volume of the factory was maximized? You can think of a factory like a CPU or a microchip, or something like that. You bring the circuits closer together, you increase the clock speed, and then you can calculate some theoretical limits for the output of a given silicon fabrication technology. I think the same is true of factories. And so if you actually look at the volumetric efficiency and the velocity of automotive factories, their volumetric efficiency is extremely low, I would say in the low single-digit percentage or a couple percent maybe for volumetric efficiency. The speed is much slower than walking speed. A very fast automotive factory would be exiting a car roughly every 25 seconds. If the car length is 5 meters, that's only a speed of 0.2 meters per second. That is one-fifth of walking speed. So the fastest car factories in the world are only producing a car at one-fifth of walking speed. This is not very fast; it's quite slow. You have poor volumetric efficiency combined with low velocity, so you have to figure out how to increase the volumetric efficiency and increase the velocity. Then just like a microchip, you will have vastly greater output. So basically what I'm saying is, I think it is possible to improve automotive manufacturing efficiency by at least a thousand percent, and possibly ten thousand percent.

    That would be an incredible number.

    Yeah, small cars you need.

    Speaking of cars, you announced that you're going to Texas to expand your manufacturing capability. How important was that decision? And why Texas?

    Well, it's high time that we built a second automotive plant in the U.S. Right now, actually 70% of all Tesla vehicles are made in Fremont in the San Francisco Bay area, which is a pretty expensive place to make cars. It's sort of counterintuitive, to say the least. But nonetheless, 70% of all Tesla vehicles worldwide are made in the Bay Area. Now once we have Berlin operating, obviously that will shift. We will finally have a factory in Europe, and not have to build cars in California, and then put them on a ship, and send them through the Panama Canal to get all the way over to Europe, and pay import duties, and all that stuff, and then put them on a truck. It's just not very efficient. It's not good for the environment. We should really be building cars locally, or at least on the continent where the customers are. So at least, we'll have Shanghai factory, a factory in China, a factory in the U.S., a factory in Europe. But we also need a second factory in North America, because we really should not be building cars in California and then transporting them all the way to the East Coast. It's expensive, and, again, not very good for the environment to be transporting cars across the entire country. We should be closer to the East Coast, and Texas is actually our second-biggest market in the U.S., even though there are some challenges in selling in Texas. Despite that, it's our second-biggest market in the U.S. And it's good even from a logistics standpoint: relatively easy access to the East Coast and obviously the center of the country. And there was also, you know, when talking to key members of the team that would need to move to Austin from California in order to get the factory going, Austin was their top pick, to be totally frank. That was a big factor in choosing Texas and Austin, specifically Austin. I guess a lot of people from California, if you ask them what's the one place you would move outside of California, it's Austin. So that was a big factor. I went to our team and said, "Where do you want to spend time? And where would you potentially move?" And they were like, "Well, Austin is just the number one choice," so that's why we picked Austin. And I asked them, "What about Dallas?" And they're like, "Well, no." They just want to go to Austin, so I'm like, "Okay." Yeah, [we have] a very talented team, and it really makes a difference where they want to go.

    You had people in Oklahoma who also wanted you, as well.

    Oh, yeah. No, it's not a question of who wants Tesla. It's just there's a certain critical mass of engineering and management talent that are needed to create this factory and do the manufacturing and engineering. Our factories are not just making a copy. Each factory is a product, and each factory has a lot of innovation, and each factory is more advanced than the last one. So there's a massive amount of manufacturing and engineering, and that wraps back into the product engineering. So we make the car design easier to manufacture, and we improve the manufacturing system itself. So basically, a lot of smart, talented people. It's not just, "Hey, let's just drop a copy machine somewhere." The factory itself is the product, as I said on the earnings call. The factory is the product more than the car. So it matters where all these very talented people are willing to go, and what is an uphill battle. Austin was not an uphill battle, that's why we picked Austin.

    So could there be additional areas of the U.S. that you'd consider for manufacturing beyond this?

    Yeah, I think at some point there will be a third Gigafactory. I'd probably imagine, you know, closer up in the Northeast most likely. But I'm not sure at this point. We've got our hands full between building Giga Berlin and Giga Texas. That's for sure. And all the vehicle programs that are coming down the pike, with the Cybertruck, semi, the new Roadster. Obviously on the solar side, we've got the Solar Glass Roof, the Powerwalls, the Megapack, the Powerpack. We have to make sure we solve the autonomy question. So there's a massive amount of stuff to do. But do I think at some point we will have a third plant in North America? I think that's very likely.

    Over what kind of time frame? Can you even see the time horizon at this point?

    Probably four or five years?

    Okay.

    I would guess we would start construction probably -- this is not 'I know you just asked me, but let me consult my strategic plan.' This is actually just a spur of the moment, rough guess. Probably we would start construction in four years-ish? That's just my, sort of, stream-of-consciousness guess.

    Sure. Are you still considering moving your headquarters out of California?

    Well, that's going to require a lot more thought. Obviously, there's no question that our headquarters will remain in California in the short term. Long term, we will have to see. Certainly the vast majority of the Tesla management and engineering staff is in California. So that is certainly our headquarters for now, and for some time in the future.

    Is it hard manufacturing in California? There have been some issues with paint quality, that's been well-documented, and one major reason is that the cars are made in an environment where there are stringent EPA guidelines and restrictions. Does that lead to a discussion about, maybe, the wisdom of building cars in California going forward?

    I mean, for sure the permitting process in California is extremely onerous. Probably the Bay Area and LA are, they might be the hardest places to do any kind of emissions on Earth. Which means you have to be extremely clean in your manufacturing in those areas, which I do actually agree with, by the way. I would not lay blame on California for any paint issues that Tesla's had. I think I would internalize that responsibility and say that's kind of our fault, not the state. I do wish the state would process documents faster, and maybe consolidate some of the regulatory bodies. There's just so many regulators and so many regulatory agencies. Yeah, they all had a reason for being there at some point in the past, but I think it would be wise to just take a look at how many regulatory agencies there are and say, "Maybe we should combine some of these and not have, like, 12 referees on the field." We need referees on the field, but how many referees do you want on the field? You don't want more referees than players; that would be weird.But fundamentally, this is not California's fault. It's our fault.

    We've had some issues, and in some case it was -- you know, the thing where we outsourced, like a bumper to a supplier, which was a mistake. And I think it's because they just had trouble doing paint matching, and it was -- Anyway, we just brought that bumper painting back in-house, and actually now it's good. I think actually our paint quality right now is pretty good, to be clear. We just had a few bumps in the road. Also, we were able to activate our south paint shop. So there's two major paint shops - north paint and south paint. And that was gigantic. And for a while, we were basically just operating out of north paint, and now we've almost got south paint fully activated, I think pretty close. And so we can focus north paint just on Model 3 and Model Y, and south paint on [Model] S and [Model] X. That allows us to really just hone in on the quality of those vehicles, instead of putting all four vehicles, which are very different sizes and shapes, through one paint job.

    Related Podcast
    DAILY DRIVE PODCAST: July 31, 2020 | Elon Musk one-on-one exclusive: Tesla is 'finally legit' (Part 1)

    'm sure you follow some of the J.D. Power IQS or the APEAL surveys, and Tesla doesn't allow J.D. Power to survey owners in 15 states where the approval is required. Can I ask you why not? And would your position change as you become more mainstream?

    I don't even know. I think zero about J.D. Power. Meaning, I don't know even know what J.D. Power is doing. At one point, I made a joke like [laughter], everybody's got a J.D. Power award. I don't know anyone who doesn't have a J.D. Power award. You know, to be totally frank, they do give out a lot of awards. So at the end of the day, the thing that really matters is consumer satisfaction. And if you look at consumer satisfaction about Teslas, [it's] the highest of any car on the market. So all things considered, there's no question that people are happiest with our cars than any other vehicle. And that's true if you looked at Consumer Reports. When they do their survey, or J.D. Power does their survey, we actually are the highest on consumer satisfaction. So we may not be perfect in every respect, but what really matters as a consumer, what really matters if you're buying car, is your satisfaction after the purchase, all things considered. And Tesla has the highest in the industry.

    From that perspective, let's talk a little bit about product for a minute, you mentioned some of the expansion areas that you're looking at. What type of customer research did you do in developing the Cybertruck?

    Oh, zero. [laughter] There's customer research? [laughter] No, I mean, we just made a car we thought was awesome. It looks super weird, but I just wanted to make like a futuristic battle tank. You know, something that looks like it could come out of Blade Runner, or Aliens, or something like that, but that is also highly functional. So it has incredible capabilities, basically it was, like, faster than a Porsche 911, and a bit more towing power and more trucking capability than the F-150. So it's a better sports car than 911, a better truck than the F-150, and it's armored, and it looks sort of kickass, from the future. That was the goal, you know, recognizing that this could be a complete failure [laughter], and feel like, "Wow, you're crazy. That car doesn't look like any other car. We are not going to buy it." That could have been one of the outcomes. But I wasn't super worried about that, because I was like, "Okay, if it turns out nobody wants to buy our weird-looking truck, then we'll build a normal truck. No problem." There's lots of normal trucks out there that look pretty much the same. You can hardly tell the difference. Sure we could just do some copycat truck; that's easy. So that's our fallback strategy, so I didn't think it was all that risky coming out with the Cybertruck. It might have just been some weird niche product that not that many people were interested in, but then we could always just revert to a truck that's much more like other trucks. Now, as it turns out, the reaction has been amazing. We've had several hundred thousand people place orders for the truck, and we've seen more excitement about the Cybertruck than any product we've ever unveiled.

    Do you still see it classified as a medium-duty, say on par with a Ford Super Duty or a Silverado 2500? Or would it bemore in line with an F-150?

    It's going to be better than an F-150. And at one point, I was like, "Man this truck's pretty big. I wonder if it's too big?" And I should say, we sort of made the decision to not make this a world truck. So it does not comply with a lot of specifications, like it doesn't comply with EU's specs and stuff. But that's okay, we can always build a slightly smaller truck that does comply with the EU's specs in the future. Maybe there is some slight chance of getting a pass. Maybe we can get, I don't know, some exceptions to EU rules depending on how it's classified.

    But we're really fundamentally making this truck as a North American ass-kicker, basically. And it's goal is to kick the most amount of ass possible with this truck. So we want it to be something that you could use to, you know, tow out a boat, a horse trailer, pull tree stumps out of the ground, go off-roading. You don't have to worry about scratching the paint, because there is no paint. So you can just be smashing boulders and be fine. I think it'd be great. So it's like some badass off-roading, you know, and it's going to have the ability to access the battery pack. You don't even need a generator, because it's got really high power, like 240-volt as well as 110, high amperage. It'll easily power any kind of power tool situation that you want. And it even has a compressor built in if you need an air compressor, because we have that for the air suspension settings, so just tap the air compressor. You could use it for, like if you're running a construction site, you can use it. It's going to be great for construction sites, great as a utility car, great as a fun car. It has literally the body panels that are bulletproof to a handgun, so it's probably helpful in the apocalypse. Things are seeming more apocalyptic these days, so let me tell you, the truck you want in the apocalypse is the Cybertruck.

    'A truck for the apocalypse,' that sounds like a good marketing tagline.

    Yes, we wish to be the leaders in apocalypse technology.

    [laughter] Are you targeting a different type of customer than the more traditional fiercely loyal pickup customers that are out there?

    Well, I don't know. We're not really trying to target anyone. If they like the Cybertruck, cool. If they don't -- But yeah. So I don't know that we're necessarily trying to -- we're not doing any marketing targeting. Honestly, we just made a car that we love and we think is cool. And those who share that feeling will buy it, and those who do not will not. We're not trying to play some marketing game. We're just trying to create products that we think people will love.

    With the Model Y out, Cybertruck, semi, Roadster looming, how much bigger can the portfolio get?

    I guess over time, it would make sense to address all of the key functional areas. Probably it would make sense at some point to do a more compact vehicle, and to do like a van or minivan that's capable of being a utility van, as well as a van for people. Maybe we wouldn't do a minivan, just a van-van, or something in between a minivan and a van. Yeah, that sounds like a good idea.

    So there's still plenty of segments that you think Tesla could compete in.

    Yeah, absolutely.

    Anything really exciting?

    You know, one thing would be like, "Can you make a minivan that looks good?" Nobody has ever done that.

    So that's something that could be in the queue. And anything else that would be really appealing?

    Well, like I said we've got a lot of parts that we still have to complete. All of the design for manufacturing stuff, and build the factory, and all that. So our product roadmap is already pretty full, but you know, there's at least the van/minivan thing, and the sort of compact car. You want something that, you know, you could park in a tight space in downtown Paris, or something like that.

    Why do you think Tesla has captured the public's interest and had market success, that maybe some of the legacy OEMs haven't managed to do despite having more established brands?

    You know, I think it's just that our approach is we make products that we love. All the way down, you see little details. We even have these fun video games on the car, Easter eggs, and obviously we've got autonomy. We're leaders in autonomy, or at least in driver-assistance autonomy right now. We were pretty good with like the phone app, and we make the buying experience very easy. You can buy a Tesla in just two minutes by going to our website. You can literally order a Tesla, and two minutes, maybe one minute if you're really fast, and then you're done. The car will just be delivered to you, if you want, and it's just painless and super easy. And then if you don't like the car, you can just give it back.

    That digital-first retail model now, that's all dealers are talking about, given COVID-19. Has it kind of proven itself in the post-COVID world? That digital-first retail model?

    Yeah. Yeah. I mean, we still have strong orders through the whole pandemic. We still have good order volume, because I guess people are less inclined to want to go to a dealership and do test drives, and hang out in the lobby, and that kind of thing.

    So many dealers are changing that model.

    Yeah. It seems to be what people want, or at least [what] a lot of people want.

    Do you feel you were a little ahead of the game there?

    Sure. From the beginning, that was fundamental. We're going to -- I would not do Tesla if it was not for direct sales.

    And you had told me five and a half years ago that you were even considering adding dealers, at some point, but maybe that's something that --

    Having a traditional dealer situation, I think seems increasingly unnecessary. I think probably the pandemic just reinforced that. We really didn't see big changes to our sales as a function of where we had stores.

    So in that way, there's just validation there in many ways. Correct?

    Yeah. It seems like the future is really headed towards online ordering.

    And then you can always go take a test drive, but a lot of people, the way they get a test drive is from a friend of theirs who has the car. So their driving the friends' cars and they're like, "Hey, this car's great," and then they just go and order it online while they're still in their friend's car. Literally.

    Let's talk about your stock price. You said recently that it was priced too high, and that was just in May when it was around $700. Now, you're double that. What do you think of that? What do you think's going on?

    I'm not sure. It's difficult to understand the mindset of the stock market. A little over a year ago, we were at $180 or something, and then I think we went up to $1,800. I mean, it was something like a factor of 10 difference, and that's just in a year. I mean, what a difference the year makes.

    No kidding. Do you think you have to manage investors' expectations or just let the market do its own thing?

    I don't think we try to manage investor expectations. What really matters is are we making great cars and ensuring that customers are happy. And if so, life will be good, and the stock market will figure itself out over time. It's not worth trying to massage the stock market and just manage investor expectations. You know at the end of the day, if you make great cars, and the company's healthy, and you're making great products, investors will be happy.

    Yeah, indeed.

    But if you make lousy products, your customers will be unhappy, and then your investors will be unhappy. Just in general, my advice to corporate America or companies worldwide is to spend less time on marketing presentations and more time on your product. See, that should be the number one thing taught in business schools -- put down that spreadsheet and that PowerPoint presentation, and go and make your product better.

    Simple advice. When you and I talked in Detroit in 2015, we talked about Detroit embracing EVs. How encouraged are you by that level of embracement by other automakers? And not just Detroit, from BMW, to Mercedes, to General Motors.

    I've been surprised at the slow pace of change. I'm glad that the change is occurring, I think we have reached some sort of inflection point in automotive where I think almost every car company, or at least most of the car companies, have made it clear that they're going to make a lot of EVs. Some of them have said that they see the future as being only EV. I think there's still a few that are on the fence about the hydrogen fuel cell B.S., but they'll get off that fence. The market world will teach them a lesson.

    There are hundreds of EV models now headed to the U.S. in the coming years, but with the exception of Tesla, there's actually little sign of any real demand. How do you view that?

    Well, how many--? I mean, are there a bunch of electric cars that are being made that they can't sell? Or are they just not making a lot of electric cars?

    I think there are electric cars that are not selling, and the public has been --

    Are they like piling up in the dealer lots? I actually don't know, because I don't really pay much attention to this stuff. So I'm just just wondering, you know? I don't know what's going on there. Like I said, I don't really look at competitors. I'm just looking at what are we doing to make our products better and engage [inaudible] self-improvement. So I actually just don't know what their -- yeah, I'm not really looking at what the competitors are doing. I honestly just don't know.

    Okay.

    But I'm curious, if you know.

    Sure, I think that there's been tepid demand outside of Tesla, would be my analysis. So maybe that points back to not having cars that are as interesting.

    Yeah, I think maybe the range is not good enough? Or they're too expensive, or they don't have good autonomy? I actually don't really know, because I haven't tried them. What do you think they should do?

    Make attractive, interesting vehicles. [laughter]

    Okay, sounds good. [laughter] I do think expectations for range are growing over time. The goalposts are moving, so where 250 miles is currently an acceptable standard for range. I think over time that will become 260 miles, 270 miles, and long-term, I think 300 miles will be kind of what people expect as normal for an electric car. And for the Model S, we're already over 400 miles.

    And you only see that increasing, I'm guessing.

    Yes.

    What kind of range can we hit at some point?

    Well, technically we could make a 500-mile range car right now. We'd have to sacrifice -- it would be add cost, and reduce cargo capability, but there's increases in the energy density at the cell level and at the pack level, and improvements in efficiency of the drive unit, and the tires, and the drag coefficient, and the parasitic effect of the HVAC system, and other electronics in the vehicle. So yeah, but now people probably want about 300 miles over time. That'll be the long-term goal.

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    Let's talk China. Your Chinese plant is really going strong. You've benefited quite a bit from some support from the Chinese government, while some Chinese startups are really struggling. What's the state of China's EV market? And what role will it play in advancing EV technology?

    Well, to be clear, I don't think we've gotten more help from the Chinese government than other Chinese car companies. That would be inaccurate. I would say that we've gotten less help than domestic companies in China, as you would expect. But we have received -- they have been supportive, but obviously it would be weird if they were the most supportive to a non-Chinese company. They're not the most supportive to a non-Chinese company. It's just not correct. And right now in the U.S., we are at a significant disadvantage relative to other electric cars, from automakers who still have access to the $7,500 tax credit, where we do not. So Tesla often gets criticized, for like, "Hey you just got all these tax credits," and we're like, "Yeah, not really. Actually our competitors have a $7,500 tax credit advantage over us per vehicle, right now." Then they'll say, "Oh, what about that loan that you got in 2009?" Well first of all, we didn't get a loan in 2009. The first disbursement was, like March of 2010, after the crisis was over, they didn't bail us out. And we paid that loan off early with interest while everyone else didn't. So I would say Tesla -- I want to emphasize this -- Tesla's had the least government support of any car company. Not the most, the least. I'll repeat that -- the least.

    And how about China as an EV strategy leader in the world?

    China rocks, in my opinion. The energy in China is great. People there, there's a lot of smart hard-working people, and they're really not entitled. They're not complacent. Whereas, I see in the United States increasingly much more complacency and entitlement, especially in places like the Bay Area, and LA, and New York. So yeah, here's the thing. When you've been winning for too long, you sort of take things for granted. The United States, and especially California and New York, have been winning for too long. And when you've been winning for too long, you take things for granted. So just like some pro sports team that won the championship a bunch of times in a row, they get complacent and they start losing.

    Let me ask you about your management style, Tesla versus SpaceX. How do you compare your management style on those two entities? And do you ever see yourself taking a more operationally hands-off stance with Tesla? I'm guessing not, but--

    I mean, eventually yes. I'll be super old, and will not be able to do it because I will be infirm. But I hope for some number of years in the future, I will continue to run the company in a way that will enable us to make great products that people love, and provide those products all around the world, and just kind of complete the roadmap that we've laid out for many years. I think it's probably fair to say that I must be doing something right. As far as my management style is concerned, Tesla's worth twice as much as the rest of the U.S. automotive industry combined. So I must be doing something right.

    Do you think about succession?

    Yeah, I mean, not a lot. But at some point, obviously nobody lives forever, and somebody will need to take Tesla at some point that's not me. I'm not thinking about that right now. I'm thinking about getting things done, we have to get Giga Berlin, Giga Texas going, we have to get Cybertruck into production. So yeah, a lot of stuff.

    Does the company need to be structured differently as it grows and becomes a bit of a different automaker?

    Yeah, for sure the company's structurewill have to change and evolve as it gets bigger. It's just like a creature, or like where a human starts out as one cell, and then bunch of cells, and then those cells communicate via osmosis. But then as you start getting older, differentiation starts sprouting arms and legs, and then you sprout a tail and then hopefully the tail disappears, and then you start having a circulatory system, a heartbeat, a nervous system for communication. And so you kind of need to reinvent the company and restructure the company, because what worked at a small scale does not work at a large scale. A company of 60,000 people can't communicate via osmosis. So you have to restructure the company and reinvent the company probably with at least every order of magnitude of output. So if you go from -- maybe at least every half-order of magnitude, but at least every order of magnitude. So if you go from making 20,000 cars a year to 200,000 cars a year, then those are two different-looking companies. One's doing 10 times as much as the other, it's gonna need a lot more systems in place and a lot more sophistication than a smaller company. I think part of why Tesla's gotten some criticism over the years for sort of management attrition or whatever, but I think our retention of top talent has actually been excellent. But we have had to restructure the company because we've gone through so many orders of magnitude of growth. Just think of it in terms of people. You go from 5 people to 500 people to 5,000 people to 50,000 people. There's going to be radical restructuring needed at least at every order of magnitude, if not more frequently. We have relentlessly recruited from both the technology industry and the automotive industry, because, I don't know, they want something like Tesla pixie dust or something. We have the 'pixie dust' problem, it's like, "Oh, you worked for Tesla? Tesla's the most valuable car company in the world. Well, you must be a genius so we're going to hire you. Can you make this other company like Tesla too?" That seems to be the general idea.

    Is Rivian poaching your employees, as you have alleged in a lawsuit?

    Yeah, absolutely. Of course.

    To what extent?

    I mean, it's not a massive percentage but they've definitely taken a bunch of Tesla intellectual property on thumb drives and on computers and stuff. It's not cool to steal our IP and for people to violate their confidentiality agreements, and non-disclosure agreements, that kind of thing. So, yeah, and they're doing bad things. So we sue them.

    How much is the question on regulatory credits? Can you give any insight into where those credits are coming from?

    I mean, I think that's in our disclosures. More than that, we will not provide.

    Okay. All right.

    I mean, I don't know what's in our disclosures, but I don't see any obvious reason to provide more detail than what is required.

    Okay, how about the insurance business --

    Oh, there's one thing I can say in principle, which is that we would not be able to get these credits if other car companies just made electric cars that were compelling. So that's the only reason we're getting these credits.

    You see that continuing?

    Yeah, I mean at least for some period of time. I don't know. The thing that would make it stop, us stop getting credits from these other car companies -- I think it's important to appreciate that we're getting these credits from other car companies, not from the government. Meaning all those other car companies would have to do, is make compelling electric cars, and we would not be able to get credits. I don't think people understand this, and so it's really just your guess is as good as mine. If they make compelling electric cars, then we would not be able to sell credits to them.

    Fair enough. German court has just declared that the Autopilot name was misleading. What was your reaction to that?

    Well, they should probably rename the Autobahn too. Who might think of that the car just works automatically on the Autobahn?

    Do you think that the Autopilot name needs to be rethought?

    No, absolutely not. That's ridiculous. It's literally named after autopilot from aircraft, and all that does is maintain altitude and heading.

    There are some consumers, I'm sure you've seen the videos of folks sleeping behind the wheel or sitting in the backseat because they're on Autopilot. Does it need some clarity?

    No, they obviously know -- Have you used Autopilot?

    Yes.

    Okay, the people who --

    -- and I didn't fall asleep.

    You do fall asleep?

    No, I did not.

    Oh, you didn't fall asleep. The few people who misuse Autopilot, it's not because they're new to it and don't understand it. The people who first use Autopilot are extremely paranoid about it. So it's not like, "Oh wow, if you just had used a different name, I really would have treated it differently." The people that tend to -- what just happened is because somebody is misusing it and using it directly contrary to how we've said it should be used. They've ignored the car beeping at them, flashing warnings, doing everything it can possibly do. It's not like some newbie who just got the car and based on the name, thought they would instantly trust this car to drive itself. That's the idiotic premise of being upset with the Autopilot name. Idiotic.

    Let me ask you a question. You're 49, and 11 months from next week you're going to be 50. What do you want to accomplish by the time you're 50?

    You mean in one year?

    Right.

    Hopefully we get the, from a Tesla standpoint, get Giga Berlin and Giga Texas operating next year. That'd be cool. And maybe we could be lucky enough to get Cybertruck into production towards the end of next year; that'd be cool. That's what we're trying.

    Let me ask it a different way. In about five years, you're going to be 55. What do you want to accomplish by the time you're 55?

    I think we want to have reached volume production in all the products that have been announced, and maybe a few that haven't, and have the company be operating in a very solid way that is robust, that even if I were to die the company would still do really well for a long time.

    That's a fair goal.

    Yeah. We want to try to make a real dent in sustainable transport and sustainable energy production and storage.

    And what would that look like?

    Well, this is very much a long-term aspiration, so I'm not saying this is happening in five years. It probably isn't. I think if we could replace 1 percent of the global fleet per year, I could say we're moving the needle on global, sustainable transport. So there's two billion cars and trucks in the world. If we were to make 20 million a year, that would that would be 1 percent, or maybe a little more than 1 percent, of the vehicles in the world. I think we want to try to aim for 20 million cars a year in order to change at least 1 percent of the fleet per year.

    Okay. Can I ask you about COVID? How did it affect your life?

    I mean, we've kind of seen the COVID movie twice. first it sort of played out in China. And actually that was handled pretty well in China, and the Chinese economy is really back up at full steam and even better than it was before. I think it's been much more haphazard here in the U.S., and it's just very random what rules were put in place by different regions, by different states, and in the case of California, even by the county. There's not really any good rhyme or reason to it. It's still a bit of a hodgepodge in the U.S. right now. But obviously overall we soldiered through it, and the team's done great except for a few weeks down time in China and like six or seven weeks downtime in U.S., we've been manufacturing at full steam this entire time. People are healthy and doing well with no serious issues.

    Did you manage to keep things running, I mean, for yourself personally? Did you manage to continue working? Were you in a lockdown situation?

    Well, like I said, in China we were shut down for two, maybe three weeks on production. U.S. was six to seven weeks.

    But I guess, I mean for you personally.

    Nope. I was not locked down at all.

    Full speed ahead.

    Yeah, I went to work every day. I was out on the factory floor, no problem. I'm not sitting [inaudible]. I'm working the factory floor.

    Sure. Sure. How did your kids fare with it?

    I guess they're doing okay. I think people are generally just going a little stir-crazy about not seeing friends and family that much, just being cooped up at home kind of thing.

    Sure.

    The whole country's kind of feeling it. Humans are social creatures, and it feels weird to get cooped up in your house for a long period of time and not see friends. I know friends, I haven't seen them since February. Because there's quarantined in various parts of the country and the world.

    Yeah, for sure. Just a couple more things. The Mach-E that Ford owns the rights to, have you given up on trying to get those naming rights? And are you surprised or frustrated that they haven't given you the name to use yet?

    No, we've given up on that. That's fine. 'Three' is kind of like 'e' on the Internet, so it's close enough. I think it actually kind of looks cooler as 'S-3-X-Y' than 'S-E-X-Y'.

    [laughter] Does anybody tell you 'no'? Who tells you, "No, you can't do something?"

    Nobody ever tells me no. Nobody would dare tell me no. [laughter] I will strike them with lightning. No, I mean, people tell me I'm wrong all the time, and certainly if you ever want somebody to tell you that you're a giant pile of shit, just go on Twitter. [laughter] "You're a festering pile of shit, you're the worst human being we have ever encountered," and then they'll engage in psychological warfare and like taunt you in every possible way.

    Right. It's a dangerous thing.

    Yeah. [laughter] From a management standpoint, [inaudible] everyone is wrong some of the time, obviously I'm no exception. The first mistakes that I'd like to correct are the ones that I make, and so please identify when I've said something incorrect or you think I said something incorrect, and definitely don't do it just because I said it. And moreover, tell the rest of the team that about you, so that that propagates all way down the management chain. Managers always take the attitude that they're there to serve their team. Teams aren't there to serve them, they're there to serve the team, and help them be as effective as possible. Just always remember, we're always -- it's not a question of if you're wrong, it's just how wrong are you? And can you be slightly less wrong from one day to the next. And if you just be slightly less wrong from one day to the next, that's a big victory. Most of the time you won't succeed.

    It's been too long, five and a half years. Let's not wait another five and a half before we do this again.

    Sure, we should do this at least every two years. [laughter]

    At least every two years.

    Sure. Sounds good, let's do it again in two years.

    Thanks, Elon.

    Alright, thanks Jason.

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