Musk ends remote work in Twitter and calls on employees to prepare for the coming period

Musk ends remote work in Twitter and calls on employees to prepare for the coming period



 Late on Wednesday, Elon Musk sent the initial email to Twitter employees, in which he stated that he would no longer allow remote work and urged them to prepare for the challenging period that lay ahead.

In a letter to employees, Musk stated that the economic outlook and how it will affect a company like Twitter, where advertising generates nearly 90% of revenue, cannot be improved.Bloomberg was shown an email that says this.


He added: The new rules that will come into force from now on will expect employees to stay in the office for at least 40 hours a week, subject to exceptions that he will agree to himself.


It is reported that before Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter, Twitter had established a permanent system for employees to work remotely, after the changes that companies experienced after the pandemic, but last June, in a call that Musk held with Twitter employees, he said at the time: He is against the remote work policy, and I will not Exceptions are granted only on a case-by-case basis, as is now announced.


Bloomberg reported this month that Musk has also rescinded his Twitter employee "rest days" privilege, which was a company-wide one-day-a-month, which was put in place during the pandemic, and the expiration of that privilege is another sign of Musk's impatience with the current work culture. in tensing.


“The road ahead is tough, and it will take intense work to achieve success,” Musk wrote in his letter to employees yesterday. “Over the next few days, the absolute top priority is to find, verify and immediately suspend any random or automated accounts,” he added in another message.


at the same time; The biggest change that Musk has made so far at Twitter is to set a new price for Twitter Blue at $8, and Musk has told employees via email that he wants a Twitter Blue subscription to account for half of that. Company revenue.


Twitter ad revenue was hit hard during Musk's management of the platform, as several major companies paused ad spend on Twitter; Fearing Musk's plans to reduce restrictions on content posted on the platform.


Musk told advertisers during a session with them on Wednesday that he had heard their concerns but that changes to the platform's content policies needed to be made. Musk previously blamed "activist groups" for pressuring advertisers to stop their ad campaigns across the platform without providing any evidence for the claim, and accused these same unnamed groups of trying to destroy freedom of expression in America.

Post a Comment

0 Comments