Lectio Socialis, cilt.2026, sa.1797163, ss.1-14, 2026 (TRDizin)
Elon Musk, a prominent figure in 21st-century innovation, has reshaped industries including electric vehicles, space exploration, artificial intelligence, and satellite communications. This psychobiographical study analyzes Musk’s leadership from 2002 to 2025 through organizational psychology, organizational behavior, and techno-political lenses, using primary sources like shareholder letters, company filings, speeches, interviews, and Musk’s digital communications, alongside secondary academic, journalistic, and think-tank analyses. It contextualizes his decisions within sociocultural, economic, and geopolitical frameworks, identifying three key themes: 1) identity-mission fusion, where Musk frames SpaceX and Neuralink as civilizational imperatives, not mere businesses; 2) innovation-turbulence tension, driven by high-risk decisions, rapid scaling, and governance crises; and 3) state-market blurring, as Musk’s control over critical infrastructures like Starlink and xAI positions him as a quasi-state actor in security-sensitive domains. The findings highlight the dual nature of Musk’s techno-entrepreneurship, driving societal transformation while posing governance challenges. Theoretically, the study refines organizational behavior models by showing how charismatic, mission-driven leadership can both inspire and destabilize performance, integrating psychological risk tolerance as a key factor. Practically, it urges business leaders to balance ambition with robust oversight and policymakers to address the security implications of private firms shaping global architectures. By applying psychobiography to a contemporary business leader, this study illuminates how influential individuals accelerate technological progress while creating governance dilemmas, offering insights for managing ambition in high-stakes contexts.
Keywords: Elon Musk , techno-politics , geopolitics , security strategies , leadership