Saturday, December 14, 2019
What Elon Musk just taught us about becoming indispensable
What Elon Musk just taught us about becoming indispensableWhat Elon Musk just taught us about becoming indispensableBillionaire Elon Musk, the CEO of three companies, is a busy man who is trying to colonize the solar system, stop the A.I. takeover, and make electric cars go mainstream in our lifetimes. But these visionary goals come at a cost.Multiple anecdotes from employees and partners have shown that Musk can prioritize his work at all costs- even at the expense of his professional and personal relationships.According to a biography of his life by Ashlee Vance,Musk once told a Tesla employee who complained of being overworked that Tesla employees will get to see their families a lot when we go bankrupt.In that same biography, a story about his longtime personal assistant asking for a raise story teaches us two lessons, depending on if you take the side of Musk or the assistant in this story. If you agree with Musks decision to fire his assistant from her role, it teaches you the importance of making yourself as indispensable as possible before asking for a raise. If you side with the assistant, its a valuable reminder to not go years with being underpaid and undervalued.According to the Vance biography portrayal, Mary Beth Brown welches more than just an executive assistant to Musk she was also someone who made business decisions for his companies. And by 2014, she had decided she would like to be paid as more than an assistant.Musk Before you get this raise, Ill do your jobIn the biography, Brown decided that she wanted to be paid like a SpaceX top executive. When she went to Musk about a raise, he said he was open to the idea - but first, he would conduct an experiment to decide if she merited an executive salary.For the next few weeks, Musk gave Brown time off and took over her duties. When Brown returned, Musk decided that he didnt need her anymore and that her job was no longer available.That Musk was willing to let Brown go and in such an unceremoni ous fashion struck people inside SpaceX and Tesla as scandalous and as the ultimate confirmation of his cruel stoicism, Vance writes.In Vances interview with Musk about this story, Musk said that my conclusion was just that the relationship was not going to work anymore.Musk offered Brown another position at the company, but she turned down the offer, and he gave her 12 months severance.The story is corroborated in a Quora post made by Musks ex-wife, Justine Musk, who said that she was also submitted to a similar experiment.This reminds me of something similar he once said to me, many years ago, after I came back from a weeks visit with my family in Canada - that his life had operated quite smoothly in my absence, she wrote. He was letting me know that I was an incompetent house manager.No employee is indispensable, but you can make it harder for you to be replacedAs a general rule, rating your personal relationships like science experiments wont endear you to your partners. As an employee, however, you should always come prepared to assess your value before you ask others to rate it for you in a salary negotiation.Making yourself valuableis often a key to winning raises. Workplace expert Lynn Taylor told Business Insider that she advised employees to do regular audits of their responsibilitiesso that they could evaluate how integral they were to their companys success.Bottom-line no employee is truly indispensable, but by taking on projects and responsibilities, you can add value to your organization and make yourself harder to replace.If you notice that your work is being consistently undervalued, you also have the right to make your case, and leave if the offers not good enough. When youve gone years without a raise, maybe its not the time to reevaluate what you can do better, but what your company should be doing better.According to the biography, thats what Brown decided. After having her salary raise rejected and turning down the other position, Musk to ld Vance she never showed up at the office again.
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