The Six Productivity Hacks Elon Musk Sent To His Staff
I had to laugh when I compared it to what we did in the police
In a leaked memo, Elon Musk sent every employee in Tesla his six rules for productivity. Whatever your opinion of the man, his rules made sense.
I had to laugh when I compared it to what we did in the police. What we did, didn’t make sense— and I bet they are still doing it.
Elon Musk’s Productivity Hacks
1. Leave a meeting if you are not contributing
Walk out of a meeting or hang up the phone the second you realise you are not contributing. If you are not adding value — get the hell out of there. It is not rude to leave; it is rude to waste other people’s time.
I was about to walk out of a planning meeting, once — Chief Inspector Chumley wasn’t pleased.
“Wait,” said Chumley, “one more thing. What about getting the horsey section to attend the Town Fayre?”
“If you mean the mounted police, that is what they are for,” I replied.
“See if they can supply two horses and two riders. That should do it.”
“I think the riders come as standard, sir. The horses can’t patrol on their own.”
I toddled off.
Later, I contacted the mounted section. They couldn’t have been more helpful. They told me they’d supply two horses and two riders. No problem. Fayres are their forte.
The next day I sat in on the hindsight meeting, and at the end, Chief Inspector Chumley asked,
“How did you get on with the horsey section?”
“The mounted division is more than happy to assist. They will send two horses and riders for high viz patrols.”
Mid-sentence, the mischievous imp living in my brain sparked in all directions.
“Only one problem, Chief Inspector. They require a sweeper supplied by our division.”
“A sweeper?”
“Yes. Someone to follow the horses with a brush and shovel to pick up the horse manure. They can’t supply one on that day.”
“You are kidding!”
“I know it’s a bit shitty, but according to them, they can’t do the patrol unless we supply a sweeper. Too many complaints from the public.”
“Do you have someone in mind?”
“No, sir. Everyone has a job. I could ask the resource management unit to see if they can get someone.”
“Good. If we don’t ask, we don’t get.”
The next morning, at the end of the hindsight meeting, Chumley asked,
“How did you get on with arranging the sweeper?”
“Yes. But there is a problem. Resource management says they can’t supply anyone for that job. Nobody will do it.”
“Dam them, what happened to doing what they are told? There’s no discipline anymore.”
“We could offer overtime, sir.”
“Well, just do that. I suppose they deserve it for that job.”
The following morning, it was the first thing he asked,
“Did you get a sweeper for the horsey section?”
“It is against the overtime policy, sir. Resource Management has strict guidelines about what they can pay overtime for and sweeping up horse dung doesn’t fall into that category.”
“Oh, for God’s sake! That is unbelievable. You know what? I’ll bloody well go down there and do it myself!”
I stood up and headed for the door, trying not to laugh.
“Where are you going?” Chumley asked.
“I’m just heading down to the garage to see if we have a pair of wellies that will fit you, sir!”
2. Avoid large meetings
Was Elon Musk copying Jeff Bezos?
“The ‘two pizza rule’ is the secret to productive meetings that helped Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos become one of the world’s richest men.” — Business Insider.
According to the article, Jeff Bezos meets with Amazon investors for only six hours a year. And he avoids early morning meetings at all costs.
Personally, I wondered how he put up with the investors for six hours, but the next bit of his strategy had me confused. The ‘two pizza rule’. His theory is the more people you pack into a meeting, the less productive the meeting will be.
Bezos’ solution —
Never hold a meeting where two pizzas couldn’t feed the entire group.
I bet you are doing what I did at first.
Nodding your head in agreement, right? It makes sense, doesn’t it? Maybe that is just one of the little bits of wisdom we all need to do our jobs better. That one little gem could propel us from the mediocre to meritorious.
Ahem! Can I stop you there?
The ‘two pizza rule’ is absolutely bonkers.
What does it even mean?
Are they big pizzas or small pizzas? Can you cut them into twelve slices (12 slices x 2 = 24 people) or do we get one each (1 x 2 = 2 one for me and one for you)?
Let’s be honest, I could eat two pizzas on my own (and I have). That would make meetings more productive. My meeting would only last as long as it took me to eat the two pizzas. I’d eat them in front of the TV and have them with a beer while I watch repeats of Friends.
Maybe the ‘two pizza rule’ means just ‘two people’, like having a romantic dinner and a nice glass of wine. I mean, c’mon the ‘two pizza rule?’ Does it mean two, four, six or twenty-four people?
Just tell us and stop dicking around with pizza metaphors.
Why not consider the flavour of the pizza? Serve pineapple and anchovy pizza. That would get everyone back to work pronto.
3. Communicate directly, irrespective of hierarchy
Communication should travel via the path necessary to get the job done, not through the chain of command.
Elon is strict about this and instructed,
“Any manager who attempts to enforce communication through the chain of command will find themselves working elsewhere.”
Chief Inspector Chumley didn’t take a leaf out of Elon Musk’s book.
Chumley had this thing about telling people off. Instead of speaking to them, he would tell everyone else in the office he was going to give So-And-So a bollocking. They would pass the message on to So-And-So — job done.
I was told several times Chief Inspector Chumley was gunning for me, but he never, ever, gave me a row face-to-face.
4. Quit using nonsense words and technical jargon
Don’t use acronyms or nonsense words for objects, software or processes at Tesla. Anything requiring an explanation inhibits communication. We don’t want to force people to memorise a glossary just to function at Tesla.
I once sat in a meeting for three hours.
It was jam-packed with people full of their own importance, each with a fondness for hearing their own voice, and those voices said nothing but management speak. We accomplished nothing, not a jot.
I made some notes. Definitions for some management-speak they used —
In terms of… means — I don’t know what to say, so I will just repeat what someone else has said so it looks like I know what I am talking about.
We need to drill down the figures… means — We need to pretend that we will look at the figures and draw some conclusions, but I will do nothing until I get promoted or transferred and then I’ll pass this on to someone else.
The crux of the matter is… means — I don’t know what to say, but what I say next will not be the crux of the matter.
Obviously… means — This isn’t obvious unless you overheard me talking to a drunk lifeguard in Timbuktu, seven years ago, about the price of a camel.
We need to link in with our partners… means — I need to speak to someone at the Social Work Department, but I won’t because I am waiting to get promoted or transferred then I won’t need to speak to anyone.
There is a piece of work ongoing at present… means — We agreed I would do some work after the last meeting, but I did nothing and will continue to avoid doing the work I agreed to do until I get promoted or transferred.
In terms of drilling down on the figures, the crux of the matter is that obviously, we need to link in with our partners to drill down the figures in terms of the piece of work that is ongoing at the present… means — I definitely think I should be promoted.
5. Ditch frequent meetings
Get rid of those regular meetings unless you are dealing with an extremely urgent matter. Meeting frequency should drop rapidly once the urgent matter is resolved.
So what did the police do?
We had a morning meeting at each station. Chaired by the local chief inspector, we’d sit around the table with everyone above the rank of a cop. Then technology came along and fucked it all up.
We linked up to a TV conference call.
Instead of a chief inspector running a meeting for their area, a superintendent ran the meeting for the entire force. It meant three chief inspectors piping their meetings electronically to everyone else, with the superintendent as chair.
I groaned when I heard the news.
A morning meeting that took half an hour to forty-five minutes now took three times as long.
When my chief inspector was on holiday, it became my responsibility to run the morning meeting. I began our meeting half an hour early, sped through our business for our area, and dismissed everyone so they could get back to work.
When the TV conference began, I looked at my split screens and saw the superintendent sitting with the F division chief inspector and all his entourage, the C division chief inspector and all his entourage. They looked at their screens and saw little old me, all on my own.
“Where is everyone, Inspector McEwan?” the superintendent asked.
“Sir, we have concluded our business. I have tasked them all up, and I have dismissed them to get on with those jobs. I can answer any questions you have.”
“Right, okay, um, let’s get on with it then.”
I suspect the superintendent wasn’t happy, but I stuck to my guns. It made sense. Why have ten officers sit for an hour listening to things they didn’t need to listen to?
Progress isn’t about being able to crowd forty or fifty people into a meeting via TV conferencing. Progress is about freeing up those forty or fifty people to get on with some work.
Meetings drag the life and soul out of people.
You watch the next time you leave a large meeting; everyone scurries off as fast as they can, not to get on with the jobs tasked to them but to get caffeine into their system.
It is a good forty-five minutes before people can function again.
6. Always pick common sense as your guide
I remember being told as a rookie cop that policing is all about common sense. Police officers should have common sense in abundance.
A rational, reasonable, and logical approach to things worked for me.
I didn’t always come up with the best solutions, but if someone else did and it made sense, I was always happy to change my decision or take the appropriate action because that was the common sense thing to do.
I’ll give you an example:
- You have thirteen heavy boxes on the ground floor of a building and you have to get them up to the twentieth floor.
- Because the boxes are so heavy, you can only lift two at a time.
- It takes you twenty minutes to carry two boxes up twenty flights of stairs
- But only nine minutes to carry one box up twenty flights of stairs.
What do you do?
The commonsense answer is: take the elevator.






