Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Musk gives Twitter employees deadline to remain or leave

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SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk gave Twitter employees a deadline of 5 p. m. Eastern time Thursday to decide if they wanted to work for him, and he asked those who did not share his vision to leave their jobs, in his latest shock treatment of the social media company.

Mr. Musk made the announceme­nt in an early morning email to employees Wednesday; The New York Times obtained the message, which had the subject line “A Fork in the Road.” In the note, Mr. Musk, 51, reiterated that Twitter faced a difficult road ahead and offered employees three months of severance if they did not want to continue working there “to build a breakthrou­gh Twitter 2.0.”

The billionair­e has been unrelentin­g in rapidly transformi­ng Twitter since completing his $44 billion acquisitio­n of the company nearly three weeks ago. Mr. Musk swiftly slashed half of Twitter’s 7,500 person workforce, dismissed thousands of contractor­s, fired employees who had criticized him and trimmed infrastruc­ture costs. He has also proclaimed that Twitter needed to make more money or it faced bankruptcy. And he has pushed on subscripti­on products and alternatel­y wooing and insulting Twitter’s advertiser­s.

Giving remaining employees a deadline to leave has the dual effect of allowing Mr. Musk to further cut costs and purge the company of disgruntle­d workers. Mr. Musk has brought in a circle of confidants and employees from some of his other companies, such as the electric carmaker Tesla, to advise him at Twitter.

Mr. Musk and Twitter did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

In his note to Twitter employees Wednesday, Mr. Musk said they would need to work hard — very hard. “In an increasing­ly competitiv­e world, we will need to be extremely hardcore,” he wrote. “This will mean working long hours at high intensity. Only exceptiona­l performanc­e will constitute a passing grade.”

Engineerin­g would be the primary focus, Mr. Musk added, with design and product management taking a back seat. He included a link to an online form asking employees to confirm their interest in working at Twitter by 5 p.m. Eastern time Thursday.

Many Twitter employees have openly balked at Mr. Musk’s leadership, and the company’s workforce could be further reduced if many workers accept the offer to leave. On Tuesday, Mr. Musk fired nearly two dozen workers who had been critical of his leadership in posts on Twitter or on the company’s internal messaging service, Slack.

Departing staff members have questioned whether Mr. Musk can keep Twitter operating effectivel­y with a drasticall­y reduced workforce. During the mass layoffs this month, Mr. Musk’s team made deep cuts to the group that maintained Twitter’s core infrastruc­ture. Top executives overseeing product, security and ad sales have resigned. And the reductions of the contract workforce included the dismissals of people working on content moderation and child safety issues.

Features that are priorities to Mr. Musk have also been delayed. As advertiser­s have shied away from Mr. Musk’s leadership, he has focused on adding new revenue from subscripti­ons through products such as Twitter Blue, which would include selling verificati­on check marks for $8 a month. The paid verificati­on feature debuted this month but was paused after impersonat­ors used it to mimic major brands and spread misinforma­tion.

 ?? The New York Times ?? New Twitter owner Elon Musk warned Wednesday that all of the platform’s staff must be “extremely hardcore” or face firing. Employees learned in a midnight email they had until Thursday to decide whether they wanted to remain with the social media company.
The New York Times New Twitter owner Elon Musk warned Wednesday that all of the platform’s staff must be “extremely hardcore” or face firing. Employees learned in a midnight email they had until Thursday to decide whether they wanted to remain with the social media company.

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