25.2 C
Accra
Wednesday, July 17, 2024
BusinessMusk reveals he has sent 80% of Twitter staff home

Date:

Musk reveals he has sent 80% of Twitter staff home

In an interview with the BBC late on Tuesday, Elon Musk said that since taking over Twitter, the firm had let go of more than 6,000 employees.

The social networking site now only has 1,500 employees, down from under 8,000 at the time of his acquisition, according to Musk.

- Advertisement -

The layoffs represent over 80% of the company’s workforce.

At Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco, the billionaire CEO told the British broadcaster that it’s “not fun at all” and at times “painful.”

- Advertisement -

The world’s second richest man said that “drastic action” was needed when he came on board, because the company was facing “a $3 billion negative cash flow situation.” That left Twitter (TWTR) with only “four months to live,” he estimated.

“This is not a caring [or] uncaring situation. It’s like, if the whole ship sinks, then nobody’s got a job,” Musk said.

- Advertisement -

Musk purchased Twitter for $44 billion last October.

After initially offering to take over the company in April 2022, he attempted to get out of the deal, citing concerns over how many bot accounts it had. He has since radically overhauled Twitter: firing top executives, slashing jobs and enacting new policies on how user accounts are verified or labeled.

Since then, Twitter is now “roughly” breaking even and advertisers are returning to the platform, he told the BBC.

Musk also pledged to revise the label applied to the British broadcaster, from “government-funded” to “publicly-funded” after the BBC objected.

The designation was added over the weekend. The BBC had protested the move, saying that it “is, and always has been, independent.”

“We are funded by the British public through the licence fee,” it said at the time.

Musk also weighed in on US scrutiny of TikTok, saying that while he was not a user of the Chinese-owned app, he was usually “against banning things.”

“I mean, it would help Twitter, I suppose, if TikTok was banned, because then people would spend more time on Twitter and less on TikTok,” he mused.

“But even though that would help Twitter, I would be generally against banning of things.”

Musk also cracked jokes during the interview, saying that he was “no longer the CEO of Twitter” and had been replaced by his pet dog, a Shiba Inu named Floki.

Latest stories

Akufo-Addo names Christian Tetteh Yohuno as Deputy IGP

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has named Commissioner of...

TV3 apologizes for unsavory ‘cartoons’ attacking Bawumia

TV3, a subsidiary of Media General, has issued an...

NDC communicator hot for saying Mahama started ‘Ghana Card’ on live radio

National Democratic Congress (NDC) communicator Bismark Aborbi-Ayitey recently faced...

Punish Captain Smart now – GJA tells Media General

The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA), alongside various social stakeholders,...

Gov’t is yet to pay companies, others GHC6bn for Free SHS implementation – Minority

The Minority in Parliament has raised concerns over the...

GRA surpasses goal of onboarding over 600 large companies to E-VAT platform

The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has surpassed its goal...

Ghana set to receive $45m AfDB grant in 2025

Ghana is poised to receive a $45 million grant...

Related stories

GRA surpasses goal of onboarding over 600 large companies to E-VAT platform

The Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has surpassed its goal...

Ghana set to receive $45m AfDB grant in 2025

Ghana is poised to receive a $45 million grant...

Why tomato prices skyrocket every June: A seasonal phenomenon explained

The role of agriculture in most developing countries is...

COCOBOD makes $149.8m profit through restructured debt – Auditor General’s report

Ghana’s Cocoa Marketing Board (Cocobod) reported a profit of...

US$145m meter procurement breach by ECG exposed in Auditor-General’s Report

An Auditor-General (A-G) report has uncovered that the Electricity...

IMF keeps its projection for global growth unchanged at 3.2% for 2024

Global growth is expected to align with the April...