Infographic: What does Elon Musk really talk about on Twitter?

Elon Musk is known for his unique and candid use of Twitter, just one piece of the disruptive ethos helping to market himself and his companies to a broad audience. But what subjects does Musk actually cover in his tweets, and how have they developed over the years?

Visual Capitalist mapped out Musk’s tweets in an impressive infographic, and the results are telling, to say the least. The publication compiled about 15,000 of his tweets into a dataset and separated them by topic, frequency and total volume of tweets per period of time.

The most commonly tweeted subjects included Musk’s companies Tesla and SpaceX, detailing many of the automaker’s major releases and the space exploration company’s rocket launches.

Other subjects Musk regularly discussed — although he tweeted less often about them — included his other projects, The Boring Company, Neuralink, SpaceX’s Starlink and Tesla Solar, and broader topics such as sustainability, finance and cryptocurrency, manufacturing and politics.

Upon claiming his profile and the @ElonMusk tag back in 2010, Musk used his first tweet to acknowledge that a prior user had been using the handle to pretend to be him. In the tweet, Musk wrote, “Please ignore prior tweets, as that was someone pretending to be me.”

Twitter: Visual Capitalist

The following tweet would not come for over a year, at the end of 2011, in which Musk shared 42 tweets in December 2011 — accounting for all of his tweets the entire year. Then, the following year Musk’s total number of tweets went up to 270, before going up to 422 tweets in 2013 and dropping back to 189 in 2014.

By 2015, Musk consistently posted over 500 tweets per year, reaching his first year with over a thousand in 2017. In 2020 and 2021, Musk posted totals of 3,367 and 3,113 tweets, respectively.

The content of Musk’s tweets has been broad over the years and is based mainly on current events. The billionaire even sometimes airs opinions with wide-reaching implications. Some examples include encouraging a Bolivian coup for lithium, claiming to take Tesla private at $420 per share, polling his audience to see whether he should sell 10 percent of his stock or deliver Starlink hardware to Ukraine amidst a Russian invasion in recent weeks.

The topics Musk tweets about matter, both because of his huge following and his vast wealth and influence. Musk surpassed 25 million followers on Twitter in 2019 and had nearly reached 80 million followers by mid-March. He’s currently the 11th most followed person on the platform.

Beyond the simple implications of his words, Musk’s tweets have had a real-world influence. His access to a social media platform has allowed him to pave his own road without the aid of traditional media — which he recently called a “relentless hatestream.”

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Source: Visual Capitalist