Elon Musk: "If you punish people too much for failure, then they will respond accordingly, and the innovation you will get will be very incrementalist
Nobody's gonna try anything bold for fear of getting fired or being punished in some way. So risk-reward must be balanced and favor taking bold moves, otherwise it will not happen"
Give me someone who can be responsible for an entire area--someone who can design, hire, and sort to achieve the goal--and I can be comfortable things will go well. These are the most important people to choose and manage well. Senior managers must be capable of higher-level thinking, and understand the difference between goals and tasks--otherwise you will have to do their jobs for them. The ability to see and value goals is largely innate, though it improves with experience. It can be tested for, though no tests are perfect. #principleoftheday
Difficulty is necessary.
But chosen difficulty is more powerful.
The pain you donāt control teaches you how to handle life.
The pain you choose builds discipline, resilience, and experience.
Donāt just endure, seek it.
Elon Musk has 237M followers.
If we all follow each otherā¦
Then technically, we can all reach 237M too. š
This isnāt a joke. Itās a strategy.
Follow me, I follow back.
Letās grow together, not alone. š
Reply with āHiā if youāre in.
Operation excellency can be measured through!
1.Daily operation Time usage Effectiveness, 2. Security of assets(e.g , 3. Creation of sustainability ( e.g - A healthy routine), 4 emergency alarms !(For opportunities)
While holding vision and strategic points at direction ā¬ļøā¬ļø
Sky full of stars.
Following a successful lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts captured this breathtaking photo of our galaxy, the Milky Way, on April 7, 2026.
ALT A starfield filled with thousands of stars and shining clouds of dust. The Milky Way\u2019s elegant spiral structure is dominated by just two arms wrapping off the ends of a central bar of stars. Spanning more than 100,000 light-years, Earth is located along one of the galaxy\u2019s spiral arms, about halfway from the center. Credit: NASA