A Musk spaceship will be a Musk workplace
I suppose if you went to Mars on one of Musk’s starships — at least on one of the first few missions — you’d probably be an employee of a government agency so the prevailing human resources model would be the faux-nurturing bureaucratic norm of the major Western corporation — mental-health check-ins, work-life balance and so on. But I guess, ultimately, someone’s going to wind up on a 100% Musk-owned mission — to Mars or beyond (maybe it’ll be you. It won’t be me).
And what we know about Musk as an employer and as a manager suggests the experience would be a bit more hardcore. Certainly more Darwinian than working for NASA. He’s been very publicly stripping his most recent acquisition of every trace of the cosy superstructure of the late-capitalist corporation. The massages, the vegan food, the unconscious bias training…
We read that he’s turned the place into a kind of bootcamp for eager disciples — what sociologists call a patronage network. A court where a loyal hierarchy competes for preference, like the Soviet Union after Lenin or Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet. He even brought trusted loyalists from one of his other courts to enforce the tough new culture. Fear and ambition coexist, loyalty is rewarded. And this could be much bigger than Twitter. Some think Musk’s purge might represent the beginning of the end for the liberal-tech utopia of Silicon Valley and its immitators and that hardcore Twitter could become a model for the whole industry. Lay-offs are happening everywhere. The social experiment of cheap-money hyper-meritocratic platform capitalism may be over.
So, once you’re in space on a Musk mission, what’ll it be like? The evidence suggests it’ll be pretty hard yakka — a minimum of 21-months of long shifts, arbitrary policy changes, unexpected side-missions and over-night code rewrites. Crew will dread waking up to a new pronouncement from the boss, non-compliant colleagues will be monstered on Twitter. In space, loyalty will not be optional, of course: contracts will be unforgiving (a dismissal would likely involve a long spacewalk with no tether, a disciplinary might mean a longer stay on Mars than planned). It’ll definitely be more Klingon than Star Fleet.
- This post was first published on my blog.
- It was Olga Ravn’s The Employees that got me thinking about Musk as space boss.