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Eric Jorgenson

Appeared on:Modern Wisdom
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Quotes & Clips from Eric Jorgenson

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Simplification is the ultimate engineering goal

β€œThe most common error is optimizing a thing that should not exist in the first place. Elon's process always starts with 'delete the part' before you try to make it better or faster. He’s obsessed with the idea that the best part is no part and the best process is no process, which leads to radical simplicity in his engineering.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Philosophy drives business decisions over profit

β€œElon's worldview is much closer to a philosopher-king than a traditional CEO interested in a five-year exit strategy. He sees the light of consciousness as something fragile in the universe that needs to be protected and extended. Every business he starts is ultimately a tool designed to solve a specific existential threat to humanity's long-term survival.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Simplification is the ultimate engineering goal

β€œThe most common error is optimizing a thing that should not exist in the first place. Elon's process always starts with 'delete the part' before you try to make it better or faster. He’s obsessed with the idea that the best part is no part and the best process is no process, which leads to radical simplicity in his engineering.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

First principles thinking replaces traditional blueprints

β€œHe has this incredible ability to ignore the 'industry standard' and go back to the literal laws of physics. If a rocket part costs a million dollars, he doesn't ask for a discount; he asks what the raw materials cost and why it can't be made for that amount. This first principles approach is what allows him to achieve these massive step-function improvements in cost.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Speed is Musk's core competitive advantage

β€œThe thing that really stands out when you look at how Elon operates is that speed is his primary moat. Most people think it's the technology or the capital, but it's actually the rate at which they iterate and learn from failure. He has created a culture where the cost of a slow decision is seen as much higher than the cost of a wrong but fast decision.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Philosophy drives business decisions over profit

β€œElon's worldview is much closer to a philosopher-king than a traditional CEO interested in a five-year exit strategy. He sees the light of consciousness as something fragile in the universe that needs to be protected and extended. Every business he starts is ultimately a tool designed to solve a specific existential threat to humanity's long-term survival.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

First principles thinking replaces traditional blueprints

β€œHe has this incredible ability to ignore the 'industry standard' and go back to the literal laws of physics. If a rocket part costs a million dollars, he doesn't ask for a discount; he asks what the raw materials cost and why it can't be made for that amount. This first principles approach is what allows him to achieve these massive step-function improvements in cost.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Incrementalism is the enemy of innovation

β€œOne of the methods we discuss is the idea that you should never accept a requirement from a department, only from a specific person. This stops the 'incrementalism creep' where everyone adds a small safety margin that eventually makes the whole project impossible. By holding individuals accountable for constraints, he forces the team to innovate rather than just add layers.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Speed is Musk's core competitive advantage

β€œThe thing that really stands out when you look at how Elon operates is that speed is his primary moat. Most people think it's the technology or the capital, but it's actually the rate at which they iterate and learn from failure. He has created a culture where the cost of a slow decision is seen as much higher than the cost of a wrong but fast decision.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Incrementalism is the enemy of innovation

β€œOne of the methods we discuss is the idea that you should never accept a requirement from a department, only from a specific person. This stops the 'incrementalism creep' where everyone adds a small safety margin that eventually makes the whole project impossible. By holding individuals accountable for constraints, he forces the team to innovate rather than just add layers.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

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