Elon Musk, the man often hailed as the visionary behind Tesla, was not actually one of its original founders.
Musk understood that in the high-stakes world of Silicon Valley, being seen as the mastermind behind a revolutionary company was just as important as building it.
Elon Musk didn't enter the picture until February 2004 when he led Tesla's first major investment round, injecting $6.5 million of his own money and becoming chairman of the board.
Through strategic storytelling, legal maneuvers, and relentless self-promotion, Musk ensured that history would remember Tesla as his brainchild.