Strategic Pattern1 book · 3 highlights

Mule-Car Conviction Theater

Books Teaching This Pattern

Evidence

Power Play by Tim Higgins — book cover

Power Play

Tim Higgins · 3 highlights

  1. “To win over Panasonic, Straubel needed to convince Yamada that Tesla meant business. He had a plan. It harked back to how Tesla had cajoled early investors into taking a chance on a little startup. To stoke Daimler and Toyota for the Model S, years before it was ready, they had worked up mule cars—dummies that were close enough to the real thing to give their audience a taste of what was to come. Tesla needed something they could showcase, a mule factory. Blueprints for a factory, however, failed to capture the kind of excitement their prototype cars had. The Tesla team became convinced that they needed to demonstrate to Panasonic and other suppliers how serious they were about the project. Quietly, they forged a deal with landowners in Sparks and began preparing the site for construction. They called bulldozers and earth movers from around the state, erected massive lights, began moving tons of dirt. The bill was enormous, climbing to $2 million a day. Straubel wanted to have a site prepped for a demonstration to Tesla’s would-be partners. He had to make it convincing enough to suggest that Tesla was charging forward—with or without them.”

  2. “Back in LA, Musk had dinner at a Beverly Hills steakhouse with a friend and early Tesla investor, Jason Calacanis. Musk was in a dark place. His third rocket had just exploded on liftoff, and SpaceX would go under if the fourth did. Calacanis had read that Tesla only had four weeks of money left; he asked Musk if that was true. No, Musk said. Three weeks. Musk confided that a friend had loaned him money so he could cover his personal expenses. There were other benefactors: Bill Lee, Al Gore’s son-in-law, invested $2 million, and Sergey Brin put in $500,000. Some employees were even writing checks, not sure they’d ever see the money again. Things looked bleak. Still, Musk said he wanted to show Calacanis something. He pulled out his BlackBerry and revealed a picture of a clay mockup of the Model S. “That’s gorgeous,” Calacanis said. “How much can you make it for?” “Well, it’s going to go 200 miles,” Musk said. “I think we can make it for $50,000 or $60,000.” That night Calacanis returned home and wrote out two checks for $50,000 each and a note to Musk: “Elon, looks like an incredible car…I’ll take two!””

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