Elon Musk took centre stage at Tesla's investor day in Texas, accompanied by 16 executives a little more than one year ago, who delivered comprehensive presentations on the company's technological advancements and expansion strategies. Subsequently, they stood behind Musk, demonstrating unity and solidarity with their leader.


According to a Reuters analysis, a minimum of five members of that team have departed. 


“We’ve obviously got significant bench strength here,” Musk said at the time in Texas, addressing investor apprehensions regarding the dominance of a single individual within the world's most valuable automaker.


According to a report by The Information, Musk recently emailed senior managers detailing plans for additional layoffs involving hundreds of employees, including two top executives. “Hopefully, these actions are making it clear that we need to be absolutely hardcore about headcount and cost reduction,” Musk wrote in the email, as per the report.


Two top executives who stood alongside Musk during last year's investor day have departed: Zach Kirkhorn, the former CFO, resigned with a confidentiality agreement, as per Tesla's regulatory filings. Drew Baglino, Tesla's former chief battery engineer, left during the recent round of layoffs instructed by Musk. Upon departure, Baglino sold $181 million worth of Tesla stock.


Rebecca Tinucci, who led Tesla's charging team, was one of the two women on stage during last March's investor day. "We have understood since Day One that a great charging experience is the linchpin to electric vehicle adoption," Tinucci stated as she took the stage. Over the following year, nearly all competing automakers in the US agreed to adhere to Tesla's charging standards and struck deals to allow their electric vehicle customers to charge at Tesla stations.


However, Tinucci and much of her team were let go this week. In a post on his social media platform X, Musk mentioned that Tesla intends “to grow the Supercharger network, just at a slower pace for new locations and more focus on 100 per cent uptime and expansion of existing locations.”


Colin Campbell, the former vice president of powertrain engineering, was another executive who departed after appearing on stage. 


Also Read: Tesla Layoffs: Elon Musk Fires Entire Tesla Charging Network Team