The Tweet Heard 'Round the World
The crisis came to a head on August 7, 2018. Elon Musk tweeted, “Am considering taking Tesla private at $420. Funding secured.” The market went into a frenzy. Was it a joke? A serious proposal? For the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), it was a potential case of securities fraud. A CEO cannot simply announce a multi-billion dollar corporate action on social media, especially if the “funding secured” part is, as it turned out, not entirely solid. This single tweet triggered an SEC investigation, shareholder lawsuits, and a firestorm of media attention. For any other publicly traded company, a CEO engaging in such reckless behavior would likely have been shown the door by the board immediately. It was a textbook example of a self-inflicted
wound that put the entire enterprise at risk.
Fighting a War on Two Fronts
While Musk was battling the SEC and feuding with critics online, a more important battle was being waged inside Tesla’s factories. The company was mired in what Musk himself called “production hell”—a desperate, high-stakes push to mass-produce the Model 3, the sedan meant to turn Tesla from a niche luxury brand into a mainstream automaker. The company was burning through cash at an alarming rate, and many analysts predicted bankruptcy was imminent if it couldn’t scale production. This operational crisis was the backdrop to the CEO drama. But crucially, while the world was watching Musk, Tesla’s engineers and factory workers were slowly, painfully solving the manufacturing puzzle. Every car that rolled off the assembly line was a counter-argument to the narrative of chaos. The company was succeeding at its core mission even as its leadership appeared to be spiraling.
The Power of a Cult Brand
A conventional company would have seen its brand equity torched. But Tesla isn’t a conventional company. For years, Musk had cultivated a powerful brand identity that fused his personal image with the company's mission. To his legions of fans and loyal customers, Musk wasn’t just a CEO; he was a visionary fighting against entrenched interests—Big Oil, legacy automakers, and Wall Street short-sellers. When the media and regulators attacked Musk, this fanbase didn’t abandon the company; they rallied around it. They saw the criticism not as a legitimate response to erratic behavior, but as an attack on the mission itself. This created a powerful shield. While the stock price gyrated, demand for Tesla's cars remained robust, insulated from the reputational damage that would have crippled a brand like Ford or General Motors.
A Board That Bent, But Didn't Break
The SEC ultimately settled with Musk and Tesla. The agreement required Musk to step down as chairman of the board for three years, pay a $20 million fine (matched by the company), and, most famously, have his tweets about the company pre-approved by a lawyer. The settlement was seen by many as a slap on the wrist. The board, full of longtime Musk loyalists, did not oust him as CEO. From a traditional corporate governance perspective, this was a failure. Yet, the board made a calculated bet: Tesla without Musk at the helm was a bigger risk than a Tesla with a volatile Musk in charge. They chose to manage the chaos rather than risk losing the driving force behind the company's innovation and vision. They installed a new, more independent chair (Robyn Denholm) to satisfy regulators, but kept their singular, irreplaceable, and problematic founder right where he was.















