Elon Musk Says There Are Too Many Non-technical Managers At Boeing

Elon Musk.
Anna Webber/Variety/Getty Images
- Tesla CEO Elon Musk suggested Boeing has "too many" non-technical managers.
- Musk's tweet comes hours before Boeing's Starliner makes its first launch attempt.
- Tesla continued its wave of layoffs over the weekend.
Elon Musk is chiding Boeing on social media for employing "too many" non-technical managers amid a wave of ongoing layoffs at his own company, Tesla.
Musk fired off his thoughts on X this week, responding to reporting on Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which is set to make a launch attempt on Monday evening after years of delays and setbacks.
In 2014, NASA granted Boeing $4.2 billion and Musk's SpaceX $2.6 billion to develop a commercial crew system that could transport astronauts to the International Space Station. Despite working with a little more than half of the money that Boeing received, SpaceX beat the company to launch, testing its Crew Dragon capsule in May 2020.
Although Boeing got $4.2 billion to develop an astronaut capsule and SpaceX only got $2.6 billion, SpaceX finished 4 years sooner.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) May 6, 2024
Note, the crew capsule design of Dragon 2 has almost nothing in common with Dragon 1.
Too many non-technical managers at Boeing. https://t.co/bTXWAfxfrh
Musk seemed to imply in his Monday tweet that part of the reason Boeing racked up more than a billion dollars in cost overruns is because of its approach to management.
"Too many non-technical managers at Boeing," Musk tweeted.
Technical managers typically oversee technical projects, offering hands-on experience and subject matter expertise in hard skills like coding and software engineering. Non-technical managers, meanwhile, tend to be focused on broader aspects of a company like strategic planning, communication, and decision-making.
Boeing did not immediately respond to Business Insider's response for comment.
Musk has opined about non-technical managers in the past, writing in a May 2020 tweet that he "strongly" believes "all managers in a technical area much be technically excellent."
"Managers in software must write great software or it's like being a cavalry captain who can't ride a horse!" the billionaire wrote.
Musk's Monday post came just hours after Tesla sent out a fourth round of layoff notices on Sunday evening. The company announced it was cutting more than 10% of its workforce last month. Musk cited a "duplication of roles and job functions in certain areas" as the reason for the cuts.
The house-cleaning has impacted multiple different teams, including several executives. Musk told higher-ups last week that Tesla needed to be "absolutely hardcore about headcount," The Information reported.