Welcome Note
Thanks for tuning in to the fifteenth episode of The Advantage. A short, weekly note where I share what I am working on, something worth watching, a lesson from history, and one practical edge you can try right away.
Petfolk Expanding
We opened location #37 this week for Petfolk! Targeting 50 by year's end and 350 by 2035! LFG!!!
April Will Change Tesla Forever. Here’s Why
This week’s Worth Watching is a 21-minute video called April Will Change Tesla Forever. Here’s Why. And while the title is about Tesla, I think the real lesson is much bigger than Tesla.
What struck me most is not any single product announcement or timeline. It is the visible convergence of a decade of ambition. Robotaxis. Full self-driving. Optimus. Compute. Payments. SpaceX overlap. Manufacturing. You can argue with the dates, and people always do, but at some point, the exact month matters less than the fact that so many massive bets are now starting to touch each other.
That is what makes Elon so hard to evaluate with normal founder logic. He misses timelines constantly. But he also seems to understand better than almost anyone what can be built over a 10-year horizon. He publishes master plans that run for years. He structured his compensation around long-term value creation. He keeps aiming at futures so large that even partial execution ends up changing industries.
Most people do the opposite. They think too small, plan too short, and then wonder why the result is linear.
The video captures something I think many people miss about Elon. The point is not that he hits every date. He clearly does not. The point is that he builds toward futures so large that a few months, or even a few years, are almost beside the point. When you are trying to rewire transportation, robotics, AI infrastructure, manufacturing, and payments at the same time, the calendar is not the real story. The architecture is.
That is why April feels important. Not because every promised piece will land perfectly, but because it offers evidence that a long-range vision is becoming visible all at once. The Cybercab matters. FSD matters. Optimus matters. Cortex matters. Even things like X Money and the Roadster reveal matter, not because each one stands alone, but because together they show a founder building an ecosystem, not a product line.
That is the lesson I would want every founder and operator to take from this. Think bigger. Think in decades. Accept that the timeline will be messy on the way to something nonlinear. Most of us will never operate at this level, but that is not really the point. If you can apply even a fraction of this kind of long-term ambition to your own work, the results can still be extraordinary.
April Is Really About Convergence: The biggest insight from the video is that this is not a single Tesla catalyst. It is multiple long-building bets starting to converge at once: Cybercab production, FSD progress, Optimus, AI compute, payments infrastructure, and SpaceX adjacency. The signal is not the individual announcements. It is the system taking shape.
Missed Timelines Are Not the Main Story: Elon’s biggest criticism is fair. He misses dates all the time. But the more useful lens is that he is building against a decade-long horizon, not a quarterly one. At that scale, delays matter less than whether the core architecture keeps moving closer to reality.
Big Futures Change the Game Even in Partial Form: The lesson here is not “be Elon.” It is that when the target is large enough, even partial execution can produce outsized outcomes. Most people set goals that are far too small because they underestimate what can actually be built over 10 years.
This Is What BHAG Thinking Looks Like in Real Life: We talk a lot about ambitious goals in theory. This is what it looks like in practice: public master plans, long-duration bets, huge swings, public skepticism, messy timelines, and eventually enough convergence that the original ambition starts to look less crazy than everyone thought.
The Automobile Was a Convergence, Not a Miracle
The automobile did not come from one lone inventor in one isolated place. Karl Benz patented the Motorwagen in Germany in 1886. At nearly the same time, Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach were building their own motorized vehicles. France moved quickly, with Panhard and Levassor producing true automobiles within a few years, and the United States followed soon after with the Duryea brothers’ successful gasoline-powered car in 1892–93. These builders were separated by borders, languages, and limited communication. They still arrived at roughly the same destination because the parts underneath the breakthrough had matured at the same time: engines, fuels, metalworking, carriage design, and manufacturable mechanical systems. The car was not a miracle. It was the moment the ecosystem became ready.
Important inventions do not appear in a vacuum. They show up when enough adjacent conditions become true at once. That is why multiple people often reach the same breakthrough in a compressed window. The real signal is not the inventor. It is the environment. Once the surrounding system is in place, what looked impossible starts to become obvious to everyone paying attention.
That is where we are with AI. The model is not the whole story. The infrastructure, tooling, talent, distribution, and market education are all moving together. That is why this moment should not be read with caution. It should be read with urgency. We are heading into a Cambrian explosion of startups because entire categories that were previously impossible are now becoming buildable at once. Founders should stop waiting for perfect originality and start building while the ecosystem is opening. Investors should stop mistaking crowding for weakness. When the environment shifts this hard, a crowded field is often proof that the timing is real.
Put the Vacation on the Calendar Early
A great trip starts long before the plane takes off. The moment you book it, you create something rare: positive anticipation. You have something to look forward to, something to plan around, and something that pulls your mind out of the day-to-day grind.
That matters more than people think. A vacation is not just the days away. It is the mental lift you get in the weeks or months leading up to it. Research on vacations found that people planning a holiday reported higher pre-trip happiness than those not going away, and much of that boost appears to come from anticipation, not the trip itself. In many cases, people were not meaningfully happier after the trip unless the vacation was especially relaxing.
There is a second layer to this. Experiences tend to create more positive anticipation than material purchases. In a Psychological Science paper, researchers found that people derive more happiness from anticipating experiences than from anticipating things. Waiting for an experience feels more exciting and pleasant.
So the practical point is simple. Booking a trip early does not just help with logistics. It extends the return on the trip itself. You get months of energy, conversation, motivation, and mental escape before you ever leave.
The vacation effect shows up before departure. In a study of 1,530 Dutch adults, including 974 vacationers, people about to go on holiday reported higher happiness before the trip than non-vacationers, while post-trip happiness generally did not stay elevated unless the holiday was very relaxed.
The anticipation effect extends beyond travel. In a 2014 Psychological Science study, four separate studies found that people experienced greater happiness from anticipating experiential purchases than from material ones. In a large experience-sampling dataset, adults thinking about future experiential purchases reported higher momentary happiness, along with greater pleasantness and excitement.
More recent survey research points in the same direction. A University of Alabama study of 1,040 U.S. travelers found that looking forward to a future vacation made people happier, and the researchers described anticipation as important to mental well-being.
I try to always have one trip on the calendar.
Not because I need to escape, but because it is one of the simplest ways I know to create positive forward momentum. When a vacation is booked early, it changes the texture of the next few months. You talk about it. You plan dinners, workouts, golf, restaurants, activities for the kids. It gives everyone something to look forward to.
I also think most people underrate how much joy sits in the build-up. The trip is often great, but the anticipation is cleaner than reality. No delays, no weather, no tired kids, no overpacked itinerary. Just possibility. That mental version of the trip can be incredibly energizing.
So my move is to book earlier than feels necessary. Put something on the calendar, even if it is years out. Half the value is not the vacation. Half the value is having something great ahead of you.
Thanks for reading.
Mike Wystrach
Founder · Operator · Investor
→ Know someone who should read this? Forward it to them.
→ Follow me on LinkedIn for daily insights.
The Advantage | WiseTrack Collective
© 2026 WiseTrack Collective. All rights reserved.