The brilliant business strategy behind Elon Musk's flamethrowers

Four days, 500 flamethrowers, $10 million

The Boring Company Flamethrower.
(Image credit: Courtesy The Boring Company.)

Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and inventor, is known for a many number of things: his attempts to revolutionize space travel with SpaceX; his groundbreaking electric car company Tesla; his foray into solar panel proliferation via his acquisition of SolarCity. But one thing you probably don't associate with Musk? Zombies. Or, more specifically, how you'd survive in the event of a zombie apocalypse. Which is what makes the fact that he's selling millions of dollars worth of flamethrowers so seemingly bizarre. How does this fit in with his bigger business plans?

To understand Musk's thinking here, we have to do a little backtracking. Musk founded something called The Boring Company back in 2016. Its focus, he said, would be on digging underground tunnels (get it? "boring"?). The idea was to link cities, stop traffic congestion, and help weary drivers avoid road rage. Certainly, flamethrowers weren't part of the business plan. And yet, we learned last week that The Boring Company was selling 20,000 flamethrowers for $500 a piece. And sales have been booming. By Tuesday, he'd sold 17,500 units. By Thursday, he'd sold out entirely, raking in $10 million in the process. Who knew there was a market hungry for flamethrowers?

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Lana Bandoim

Lana Bandoim is a freelance writer and editor. Her work has appeared on Yahoo! News, CNN iReport, The Huffington Post, Lifescript, Healthline, and many other publications.