Friday marked the seventh anniversary of Steve Jobs’s death, which has me thinking not only about his remarkable life, but also about the man most often compared to him in terms of charisma, audacity and vision. That, of course, would be Elon Musk.
When Jobs was pushed out of Apple Inc. by then-chief executive John Sculley and the board, he was a brilliant brat, someone who led through insult as much as inspiration. Despite co-founding the company, building first the Apple II and then the Mac, he had become such a disruptive force that he had to go.
When Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, after 12 years in the wilderness, he was 42 years old. He returned as a grown-up; someone, yes, who could still be caustic, but who had learned how lead, primarily from watching Ed Catmull, the president of Pixar Inc., which Jobs had purchased in 1986. As Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli have pointed out in their 2015 biography, “Becoming Steve Jobs,” he managed the company with a maturity that had been entirely lacking during his earlier stint at Apple. He molded his top executives — Tim Cook, Jonathan Ive, Eddy Cue and others — into a cohesive team that could dream up great products and execute them brilliantly.
A grown-up CEO doesn’t go on a crusade against short-sellers; he or she “beats” the shorts by increasing revenue and earnings, and by satisfying the marketplace — by performing — not by calling for short-selling to be outlawed, an absurd idea that Musk has voiced.
A grown-up CEO is able to hold onto key executives instead of watching them race for the exits. According to Business Insider, 15 top executives have left this year alone, in such key roles as director of manufacturing engineering, head of human relations, chief accounting officer, and head of global supply management.
A grown-up CEO doesn’t overpromise and underdeliver, which has been Musk’s trademark ever since he took Tesla public in 2010.
A grown-up CEO doesn’t sleep on the factory floor; he or she hires skilled factory managers who can solve problems that crop up and keep the assembly line running.
A grown-up CEO doesn’t spend all his time on Twitter.
A grown-up CEO doesn’t take time from his incredibly demanding day job to get involved in a cave rescue in Thailand — and then call one of the rescuers a “pedophile” when his solution isn’t used.
A grown-up CEO assembles a board that combines expertise and independence. There isn’t a single person on the Tesla board, other than Musk himself, who has experience in the auto industry. Although the company lists seven of its nine directors as “independent,” that’s a joke. All but two of the directors have some kind of relationship with Musk — they either once worked at SolarCity, the company he folded into Tesla in 2016, or helped finance Tesla. The two truly independent board members, James Murdoch and Linda Johnson Rice, are both media executives who were handed their high positions by their fathers. (And let’s not forget that Musk put his brother on the board. What grown-up CEO does that?)