Elon Musk tells Twitter staff to work long hours or leave
- Published
Elon Musk has told Twitter staff that they must commit to working "long hours at high intensity" or else leave the company, according to reports.
In an email to staff, the social media firm's new owner said workers should agree to the pledge if they wanted to stay, the Washington Post reported, external.
Those who do not sign up by Thursday will be given three months' severance pay, Mr Musk said.
The BBC has contacted Twitter for comment.
In his email to staff, also seen by The Guardian, external, Mr Musk said that Twitter "will need to be extremely hardcore" in order to succeed.
"This will mean working long hours at high intensity. Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade," he said.
Workers were told that they needed to click on a link by 17:00 EST on Thursday, if they want to be "part of the new Twitter".
He added: "Whatever decision you make, thank you for your efforts to make Twitter successful."
The world's richest man has already announced half of Twitter's staff are being let go, after he bought the company in a $44bn (£38.7bn) deal.
Mr Musk said he had "no choice" over the cuts, as the company was losing $4m (£3.51m) a day. He has blamed "activist groups pressuring advertisers" for a "massive drop in revenue".
A host of top Twitter executives have also stepped down following his purchase of the firm.
Last week, the entrepreneur told Twitter staff that remote working would end and "difficult times" lay ahead, according to reports.
In an email to staff, the owner of the social media firm said workers would be expected in the office for at least 40 hours a week, Bloomberg reported.
Mr Musk added that there was "no way to sugar-coat the message" that the slowing global economy was going to hit Twitter's advertising revenues.
But tech investor Sarah Kunst said the real reason Twitter is facing difficulties is because Mr Musk's takeover has saddled the company with debt.
His behaviour since the takeover has also led some advertisers to pause their spending, she said.
"He's now trying to inflict that pain and uncertainty on the employees," she said.
She added that there was a question mark over how enforceable Mr Musk's email about hours to staff really was.
"Can you just send an email to staff who already work for you and just unilaterally change their working contract? That remains to be seen."
Musk shows his ruthless side
Elon Musk likes to think of himself as "hardcore".
He says he works 100+ hour weeks. He sometimes sleeps at the office.
And he wants that for his staff too.
His management philosophy is about putting together small collections of highly motivated and capable employees.
He says he'd much rather have a small number of exceptional people than many who are "pretty good and moderately motivated".
With this email, he appears to applying that philosophy.
He wants just true believers at Twitter, people who are fully aligned with what he's doing.
There are plenty of staff who do believe in Twitter's mission. There are also staff working for Twitter who will relish working closely with Mr Musk.
But his directives to staff feel at times autocratic. The danger is he loses top staff by appearing cavalier and arrogant.
And of course, if everyone at Twitter decided to take Elon Musk's offer of severance at once, it's hard to see how Twitter could function in the short term.
Mr Musk himself has been sleeping at Twitter in recent weeks, even while leading electric carmaker Tesla and rocket company SpaceX.
He described his work habits in a US court on Wednesday, where he appeared to defend the eye-popping $56bn pay package he received from electric carmaker Tesla in 2018.
"I pretty much work all the time, with rare exceptions." he said.
In response to questioning, he later added that the "fundamental organisational restructuring" at Twitter would be complete by the end of this week.
One way Mr Musk could lighten his workload is by sharing the leadership of his other companies.
At the hearing, James Murdoch, a Tesla director and the son of media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, said that Mr Musk had identified a potential successor to head the car maker.
Asked to confirm that Mr Musk had never identified a potential new Tesla chief executive, Mr Murdoch said "he actually has", adding that it had happened in the "last few months". He didn't identify who the potential successor was.
Dan Ives, a senior equity analyst at Wedbush Securities, said that Twitter's culture had "dramatically changed" with Mr Musk at the helm.
"Elon Musk is not going to be doing candlelight dinners and playing ping pong in Twitter's cafeteria and this is a shock to the system," he said.
"But he also needs to play nice in the sandbox because if key Twitter engineers and developers leave, this will be a major void in the Twitter ecosystem," he warned. "There's a careful balance ahead for him, in this tightrope act."
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- Published10 November 2022
- Published4 November 2022