Join the businesses who have begun to edge out competitors by scouring the web for alternative data.

When Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpening launched Tesla Motors in 2003, many people figured a few rich people were just fooling around. When Elon Musk joined the company with a $7.5 million dollar investment and subsequently plopped an AC motor into a Lotus glider, other investors thought they may be on to something.

The company continued to grow and develop, eventually going public ($TSLA) in 2010 and then releasing the Model S in 2012 to almost unanimously gushing reviews.

But one common criticism remained: Tesla was launching an electric car in a fossil-fuel world. Where would people buy the cars? Where would they recharge them? Where would they get them serviced? How realistic is an electric car in a world without an electric-car infrastructure?

Musk and company had a plan: they would blanket the world with charging stations, service centers, and more.

Turns out that they may have made good on this promise.

The map below shows the current Tesla Motors worldwide footprint, including chargers, stores, and service centers. It paints a fairly convincing picture: Tesla is everywhere. That is, everywhere anyone would want to be.

According to data that we track for Tesla's various real-world locations, Tesla has almost 14,000 chargers throughout the world. In May 2016 (according to our data), there were about 3,100 chargers.

Meanwhile, Tesla now has 438 Tesla Motors Stores throughout the world and almost 100 service centers (Tesla has opened even more Service Centers internationally since we last pulled the data, as you can see here).