Day: November 21, 2025
What Is an American?
Win McNamee/Getty Images; BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images
- VC partner Shaun Maguire outlined key traits that help people succeed at an Elon Musk company.
- He also named another tech CEO who has a lot in common with Musk.
- Maguire has led investments in several Musk companies, including SpaceX.
If you want to succeed at one of Elon Musk’s companies, you might try listening to Shaun Maguire.
As a partner at Sequoia Capital, Maguire has led investments in several of Musk’s companies, including The Boring Company, xAI, and SpaceX. He said that three key traits help people excel at Musk’s businesses on an episode of “Relentless,” which aired on November 17.
Anyone who works for Musk can volunteer to take on a task, said Maguire, who The Information has dubbed the “Musk Whisperer.” Continuously raising your hand and delivering will help you move up.
“Being extremely competent and being willing to bet on your own competence, and always delivering,” Maguire said on the podcast. “And knowing your limit.”
It’s OK, he said, to admit when you can’t do something, or when someone else might be better for the task.
“The next thing is very, very quickly learning that you need to go five levels deep,” Maguire said. “You need to be able to handle five levels of questions or so in anything.”
Lastly, Maguire said that loyalty is crucial — but that doesn’t mean “blind loyalty.” Instead, he said it’s about trusting the system and that Musk “sees things other people don’t see.”
Though Maguire said Musk as an individual is hugely impressive, he added that part of the billionaire’s strength lies in “Elon the collective.” He didn’t name the group, but said it includes around 20 people who have worked for Musk for years and built tremendous trust.
“They can almost read his mind, and they know what he would want to have done in some situation,” Maguire said of the group.
Beyond that inner circle, Maguire said Musk looks for certain traits in capital investors: being willing to work hard, not letting information slip, and being there through good and bad.
“Most investors are leaky,” Maguire said. “This is a very low bar, but just not leaking things.”
Musk is famous for his work ethic and warned Tesla engineers last year that they might have to sleep on the manufacturing line at the Texas factory.
In turn, Maguire said Musk is good at attracting investors through marquee events, like when Optimus robots took center stage at an event last year.
For all that sets him apart, Maguire said Musk has “a lot in common” with another tech leader: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Maguire said that he bought Nvidia stock in 1999 as a 13-year-old, but “underestimated” Huang at first.
“He’s really pushed his advantage in an incredible way, and he’s been so aggressive,” Maguire said. The podcast aired just one day before Nvidia reported blowout earnings.
Maguire came under fire earlier this year for comments he made calling New York City mayoral elect Zohran Mamdani an “Islamist.” Musk was among those who came to Maguire’s defense as other tech leaders criticized him.
Artur Widak via Reuters Connect
- Western soldiers are using Xbox controllers to fly interceptor drones.
- The drones, part of the Merops system, have been used in Ukraine and are now being deployed by NATO.
- A US soldier training on Merops said the Xbox controller makes it easy to work the system.
NOWA DĘBA, Poland — Western soldiers are using off-the-shelf Xbox controllers to pilot $15,000 interceptor drones that are combat-proven in Ukraine and now part of NATO’s toolbox for battling a growing threat.
The Merops system, an American-made air-defense setup that comes with an Xbox controller for the operators, launches interceptor drones capable of destroying enemy drone threats midair. US, Polish, and Romanian troops have been training on it as NATO rushes to field affordable air defenses across Eastern Europe.
A US soldier who pilots the interceptors told Business Insider that the Xbox controller is an ideal choice.
“It’s compact and easy to pack and store, and Xbox controllers are very rugged,” Army Sgt. Riley Hiner said on the sidelines of a Merops demonstration in southeast Poland this week.
‘Very intuitive’
The US and other global militaries have long used Xbox-style controllers to support operations, including those involving drones. The practice has expanded to the war in Ukraine and is now being applied to the Merops system.
Staff Sgt. Cashmere Jefferson, 7th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment
Controllers akin to those of Microsoft’s Xbox or other video game systems have been increasingly integrated into military systems. The controls are often easier for soldiers who grew up playing with something similar to operate. They adapt right away, something that might not happen with an overly engineered system built to meet specialized military specifications.
Microsoft didn’t respond to Business Insider’s request for comment on the use of its gamepad in a military system.
Hiner said that he has experience playing video games on Xbox and believes that being a gamer can translate into being a good pilot. With the Merops system, there’s already a level of familiarity with the controls.
“I feel like a lot of soldiers nowadays do play Xbox,” he said. “It’s very intuitive. Once you learn the scheme of the controls, you just send them out, and you can fly.”
Other American soldiers, as well as Ukrainian operators, have said gamers make good drone pilots, and Hiner agreed, saying that troops with experience playing video games tend to have few problems handling the Merops system. The biggest challenge is just figuring out the best course for interception.
Jose Colon/Anadolu via Getty Images
The first-person-view (FPV) drones that dominate the battlefield in Ukraine tend to require similar equipment to video games — controllers, screens, and headsets — but Ukrainian operators have stressed that the real missions are far more complicated with serious consequences. It’s often life or death.
For the Merops system, it’s a similar situation. A failed intercept means the target threat is likely to fly on to find its mark, potentially delivering death and destruction, as many Shahed-type drones in Ukraine have done.
Merops, developed by the American initiative Project Eagle, consists of a ground control station, launch platforms that are capable of firing from the bed of a pickup truck, and the “Surveyor” interceptor drone. It is operated by a team of four, including a commander, a pilot, and two technicians.
Ready in weeks, not months or years
Merops has been used extensively by Ukraine to intercept Russian strike and reconnaissance drones; US military officials said Kyiv has logged over 1,000 kills of the Shahed-type one-way attack drones Russia uses to bombard Ukrainian cities.
Now, NATO forces are training on the Merops system after Poland and Romania decided to purchase and deploy it to defend their airspace following a string of Russian drone incursions. The US is involved with the training program but has not procured the technology.
Jake Epstein/Business Insider
Merops, like other interceptor drone systems, comes delivered to the buyer with the necessary Xbox controller, the same exact system someone somewhere is using to play Call of Duty. If it breaks, soldiers can just purchase another off the shelf; they sell for as little as $30 on Amazon.
Soldiers training on the Merops system undergo a two-week course, a significantly expedited commitment compared to what’s required for other weapons. Part of the process involves simulated operations and drawing from lessons learned in Ukraine.
US Army Brig. Gen. Curtis King, the head of the 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, described Merops as a user-friendly system and said some of the NATO soldiers involved in training have never flown a drone before.
“Within days, they’re able to figure out how to operate the capability,” King said on the sidelines of this week’s technology demonstration. Within two weeks, soldiers will be able to “demonstrate how to effectively kill a drone. So this doesn’t take six months, it doesn’t take a year.”
