So true Lee, Elon is a visionary and puts rubber to the road accomplishing what 
few others have been able to do, all the while avoiding soaking of the 
taxpayer…..

I’ve often read he’s this country’s next Steve Jobs.  

A collection of companies that are working to free transportation from 
pollutants, the Tesla is making great strides, his Gigafactory has already 
halved the cost of producing the batteries and increased their longevity by 
60%.   

His Solar shingles ( not solar panels) will power our homes and excess energy 
will be stored in his Powerwall battery pack for the home

His recently released prototype of a Tesla Semi is amazing, zero to 60 in 5 
seconds, mileage with a full load of 500 miles….the trucker’s that witnessed 
the unveiling were wildly enthusiastic…

Stepping outside the norm his Flame Thrower, see the article below, there may 
have been madness to this product.

It’s enjoyable to watch his ideas unfold.

John

The brilliant business strategy behind Elon Musk's flamethrowers
Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and inventor, is known for a many 
number of things: his attempts to revolutionize space travel with SpaceX; his 
groundbreaking electric car company Tesla; his foray into solar panel 
proliferation via his acquisition of SolarCity. But one thing you probably 
don't associate with Musk? Zombies. Or, more specifically, how you'd survive in 
the event of a zombie apocalypse. Which is what makes the fact that he's 
selling millions of dollars worth of flamethrowers so seemingly bizarre. How 
does this fit in with his bigger business plans?

To understand Musk's thinking here, we have to do a little backtracking. Musk 
founded something called The Boring Company back in 2016. Its focus, he said, 
would be on digging underground tunnels (get it? "boring"?). The idea was to 
link cities, stop traffic congestion, and help weary drivers avoid road rage. 
Certainly, flamethrowers weren't part of the business plan. And yet, we learned 
last week that The Boring Company was selling 20,000 flamethrowers for $500 a 
piece. And sales have been booming. By Tuesday, he'd sold 17,500 units. By 
Thursday, he'd sold out entirely, raking in $10 million in the process. Who 
knew there was a market hungry for flamethrowers?

Musk knew. Or at least he knew that by introducing an outrageous off-brand 
product and marketing it toward an oddball niche market — apocalypse 
aficionados — he could generate buzz for his fledgling company, and lay the 
groundwork for some much loftier goals.

Musk started dropping hints about the flamethrower last December. When the 
pre-order page went live, he tweeted about the benefits of having one at your 
disposal during a zombie apocalypse 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__twitter.com_elonmusk_status_957441956874919936&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=pCDxlTnHMluyH4PnmyCWurZ5mzDU9qpC1TygtzGhDJE&s=cjGLlkFwXX3F6gS6_k6YL__vuJNAyhjwKp55XwlmjAo&e=>.
 "Works against hordes of the undead or your money back!" he said. You've got 
to hand it to the guy — Musk knows a lucrative market when he sees one. 
Americans are obsessed with zombies; the genre rakes in a ton of money. One 
report 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.nbcnews.com_id_45079546_ns_business-2Dstocks-5Fand-5Feconomy_t_zombies-2Dworth-2Dover-2Dbillion-2Deconomy_-23.WnSIX5M-2Dfow&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=pCDxlTnHMluyH4PnmyCWurZ5mzDU9qpC1TygtzGhDJE&s=e9GUydJSHscPitwJPy8DQdcW1j92wc9ezGOPnXJsnNw&e=>
 from 2011 put the zombie economy's worth at more than $5 billion — and even 
said that was probably a low-ball estimate.

Musk promised the flamethrowers would "liven up any party 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.boringcompany.com_flamethrower&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=pCDxlTnHMluyH4PnmyCWurZ5mzDU9qpC1TygtzGhDJE&s=-xnQXWVnLFf3Ebkv7fzJB1Z4bnbeIPTrL8z0h5hadT0&e=>."
 He even used some reverse psychology in an Instagram video 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.instagram.com_p_BeeYW0NA1HU_-3Futm-5Fsource-3Dig-5Fembed&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=pCDxlTnHMluyH4PnmyCWurZ5mzDU9qpC1TygtzGhDJE&s=NCR8W4MQfgP-26dbNWQt69hCEoJQKIFvqIRZALau_9g&e=>
 to discourage people from buying the flamethrower while clearly having fun 
playing with one himself. Musk is also selling an accompanying fire 
extinguisher for $30. The company admits it's overpriced, but hey, it does come 
with a cool sticker! It seems the low-key, tongue-in-cheek marketing efforts 
worked. Orders started rolling in.

Back to our original question: Why is Musk selling flamethrowers? Aside from 
the obvious answers (because he can; because lighting stuff on fire is fun), 
the first and most obvious reason is money. Making a cool $10 million in a few 
days is a great way to generate revenue for The Boring Company, which is 
privately funded. Surely it doesn't cost $500 to make a flamethrower (The Verge 
aptly describes them 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.theverge.com_tldr_2018_2_1_16954950_elon-2Dmusk-2Dflamethrowers-2Dsold-2Dout&d=DwIFaQ&c=OAG1LQNACBDguGvBeNj18Swhr9TMTjS-x4O_KuapPgY&r=F2GFXrjLFqVo3VwvIlo_XYeEiRRjHv15rxcenz7A21woG2aFGcrzndoSsskxfmOs&m=pCDxlTnHMluyH4PnmyCWurZ5mzDU9qpC1TygtzGhDJE&s=CDtMIPavxEAbGIEHD_aBOCnw_G43qTFZtLQYf2Tmjuo&e=>
 as "roof torches strapped to Airsoft rifles"), so the profit margin on these 
babies should be pretty high. And by limiting the pool of available units, Musk 
is also forcing people to make a fast shopping decision with a common scarcity 
tactic: If you don't buy one now, you won't be able to get one later. Smart.

Another reason may be be proof of concept. If Musk can show that his company is 
able to raise capital with silly products, then surely he'll be able to finance 
underground tunnels when it's time to build them. This is key. Right now, The 
Boring Company is busy trying to get approval for a tunnel in Los Angeles. The 
goal is to build a 6.5-mile tunnel from Hawthorne to L.A., but the Culver City 
council has to sign off on it first. Getting this approval may be harder than 
convincing social media fans to buy an overpriced toy. The council has raised 
concerns about a privately owned company controlling transportation. 
Nevertheless, The Boring Company made a strong presentation and insisted on its 
ability to build the tunnels without public funding, and has already started to 
work on the tunnel beneath Hawthorne.

And then there's the buzz generated by such an off-brand product. Tunnels 
aren't very exciting on their own, and Musk isn't the only one who wants to 
build them. So media and public interest in The Boring Company can only help 
his case. Bravo, Musk.




> On Feb 7, 2018, at 8:25 AM, Lee Larson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On Feb 6, 2018, at 8:25 PM, John Robinson <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
>> Once the launch draws near the cameras capture the most amazing feat….by 
>> private enterprise…
> 
> Let’s not forget the millions of hours of research done by government 
> scientists and engineers that these new guys got to use for free. The next 
> big step is often taken while standing on the shoulders of giants.
> 
> ---
> Lee Larson
> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> 
> ‌‌
> ‌Alf Todd,’ said Ukridge, soaring to an impressive burst of imagery, ‘has 
> about as much chance as a one-armed blind man in a dark room trying to shove 
> a pound of melted butter into a wild-cat’s ear with a red-hot needle.’ — ‌P. 
> G. Wodehouse
> 
> ‌Ukridge, 1924‌
> 
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