Tesla offers remote job despite Musk’s opposition to work-from-home

AUSTIN, UNITED STATES — In a surprising turn of events, Tesla, the electric vehicle giant led by Elon Musk, has recently posted a job opening for a remote position. The move seemingly contradicts Musk’s well-known stance against work-from-home arrangements.
This development has caught the attention of industry observers and job seekers alike, given Musk’s previous statements criticizing remote work as “morally wrong.”
Tesla’s remote job offering
Despite Musk’s vocal opposition to remote work, Tesla’s careers page recently advertised at least one remote position for a senior project engineer. The role requires a bachelor’s degree in engineering or equivalent experience, along with 5-10 years of relevant experience as an electrical or project engineer. The salary range for this position is impressive, spanning from $79,200 to $270,000, depending on the candidate’s qualifications and experience.
This remote job posting stands out among the hundreds of in-person positions listed on Tesla’s website, many of which are based at the company’s Gigafactories in California, Nevada, and Texas.
However, following media reports of the remote position, the job opening is no longer accessible in their website.
Musk’s stance on remote work
Elon Musk has been a vocal critic of remote work, particularly since the summer of 2022 when he imposed a strict in-office policy at Tesla, SpaceX, and Twitter.
He has argued that remote work is unfair to those who must be physically present to perform their jobs, stating, “It’s like really, you’re going to work from home and you’re going to make everyone else who made your car come in [to] the factory?”
Musk has emphasized the importance of factory workers seeing senior staff working alongside them and has called remote work a “moral issue” as much as a productivity concern.
Industry reactions
The apparent contradiction between Musk’s philosophy and Tesla’s job postings has sparked discussion in the business world.
Nick Gallimore, director of innovation at Advanced People Management, commented on the challenges Musk might face: “Musk’s comments – that remote work simply can’t be as effective or as productive as working from a physical location – put him in a small minority of business owners who are betting the future of their organizations on the organization design principles of the past.”
Meanwhile, Nicole Penn, president of the EGC Group, added her perspective: “Every employee has environments that either increase or decrease their productivity. If Tesla’s culture is built on collaboration and ideas born on the factory floor, it’s not possible for a remote team member to plug into that efficiently.”
As the debate over remote work continues, Tesla’s job postings suggest that even companies with strong in-office cultures may need to adapt to changing workforce expectations and the realities of a global talent pool.