What if most of your roadmap is work that should not exist at all?
Chris Franks, Anthony Franco, and Stephanie Hays take apart Elon Musk’s five-step algorithm — make the requirements less dumb, delete, simplify, accelerate, automate — and Stress test it against the reality of running an early-stage company. They dig into the Tesla fire-pad story that nobody could trace to an owner, why most founders run the sequence in reverse, and what changes when you treat cycle time as a learning instrument instead of a productivity metric. The conversation gets sharper when the hosts disagree about whether deletion and simplification are actually the same step, and whether speed still matters in a world where AI can generate five hundred bad logos in an afternoon. By the end, the algorithm becomes less of a framework and more of a checklist founders can run against their own week to find the work that should have been killed three months ago.
Keywords: Musk algorithm, founder frameworks, deletion over optimization, requirements engineering, cycle time, startup automation, first principles thinking, planning fallacy