
Elon Musk on when he just wanted a job at Netscape and was rejected because …
Tesla
CEO
Elon Musk
revealed he never intended to become an entrepreneur, he simply wanted a job at
Netscape
in 1995. Speaking at
Y Combinator
's
AI Startup School
in San Francisco this week, the billionaire shared how Marc Andreessen's browser company ignored his application, inadvertently launching one of history's most successful entrepreneurial careers.
"I sent my resume into Netscape and nobody responded," Musk told Y Combinator CEO
Garry Tan
during the fireside chat. "So, I'm like man, this is ridiculous, so I'll just write software myself and see how it goes."
The rejection forced Musk to drop out of
Stanford
's PhD program and pivot to building his own company. Despite holding physics and business degrees from Wharton and pursuing graduate studies in applied physics, his lack of computer science credentials apparently didn't impress Netscape's hiring team.
From rejection to riches: The $300 million outcome
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That "see what happens" mindset led to Zip2, Musk's first startup, which he built while sleeping in the office and showering at the YMCA. The company sold for $300 million in 1999, with Musk earning $20 million, money he immediately reinvested into his next venture, X.com.
"I kept the chips on the table," Musk explained, describing his decision to risk everything on subsequent ventures rather than playing it safe.
Back to the 'main quest' after political detour
Now worth $366 billion according to Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, Musk reflected on his recent involvement with government efficiency initiatives as a "side quest." He emphasized his return to technology development as his "main quest," noting the contrast between engineering's demand for truth and politics' inherent noise.
The Tesla founder, whose companies now include
SpaceX
(valued at $350 billion) and
xAI
, offered simple advice to aspiring entrepreneurs: "Try to be as useful as possible! You do whatever it takes to succeed!"

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