homehome Home chatchat Notifications


What Elon Musk's CV looks like -- all in one page

Elon Musk is one of the most influential entrepreneurs in the tech industry. Here's his one-page resume.

Mihai Andrei
April 25, 2016 @ 5:08 pm

share Share

Elon Musk is one of the most influential entrepreneurs in the tech industry, being involved (among others) in spaceflight, solar energy, and electric cars. But as a new start-up illustrated, even his CV can be brilliantly displayed in a single page.

Resumes (or CVs, whatever you may call them) have gotten longer and longer in recent years, and this trend is quite worrying. You put all your skills there, you exaggerate a bit, you add that Spanish course you took in high school… all in the hope that it will give you that extra edge for the job. It’s clear – in today’s work environment, CVs have to stand out.

But outstanding doesn’t necessarily mean ‘long’, as a new start-up has shown. Novo Resume believes everyone’s CV can fit on a page, and to make their point they’ve chosen one of the most difficult people in the world to describe: Elon Musk.

Musk is famous for starting Paypal, selling it, starting a PhD, then quitting the PhD to get into business. He created three major companies:SolarCity, Tesla Motors, and SpaceX, all of which revolve around his vision to change the world and humanity. His goals include reducing global warming through sustainable energy production and consumption, and reducing the “risk of human extinction” by “making life multi-planetary”. He’s also famous for being an extreme workaholic, pulling 16-20 hour work days and being a very rough boss. He once described himself as a ‘nano-manager’, being even more strict than a micro-manager.

So it’s quite a task, but I think they worked it out pretty well. I’d very much like to see resumes become shorter and more to the point, as this could save a lot of time and even money while making the applicants’ skills stand out better.

 

share Share

Neanderthals Turned Cave Lion Bone into a 130,000-Year-Old 'Swiss Army Knife'

130,000-year-old discovery reveals a new side to our ancient cousins.

This Bionic Knee Plugs Into Your Bones and Nerves, and Feels Just Like A Real Body Part

No straps, no sockets: MIT team created a true bionic knee and successfully tested it on humans.

This New Bioplastic Is Clear Flexible and Stronger Than Oil-Based Plastic. And It’s Made by Microbes

New material mimics plastic’s versatility but biodegrades like a leaf.

Researchers Recreate the Quintessentially Roman Fish Sauce

Would you like some garum with that?

Why Warmer Countries Have Louder Languages

Language families in hotter regions evolved with more resonant, sonorous words, researchers find.

What Happens When You Throw a Paper Plane From Space? These Physicists Found Out

A simulated A4 paper plane takes a death dive from the ISS for science.

A New Vaccine Could Stop One of the Deadliest Forms of Breast Cancer Before It Starts

A phase 1 trial hints at a new era in cancer prevention

After 700 Years Underwater Divers Recovered 80-Ton Blocks from the Long-Lost Lighthouse of Alexandria

Divered recover 22 colossal blocks from one of the ancient world's greatest marvels.

Scientists Discover 9,000 Miles of Ancient Riverbeds on Mars. The Red Planet May Have Been Wet for Millions of Years

A new look at Mars makes you wonder just how wet it really was.

This Is Why Human Faces Look So Different From Neanderthals

Your face stops growing in a way that neanderthals' never did.