In an email sent in the early hours of Wednesday, Elon Musk asked Twitter employees to commit to “long hours” or they’ll be fired.
The new boss of Twitter, who has led a messy takeover following his $44 billion acquisition of the company, sent an email around midnight pacific time on Wednesday with a Google Form that he said employees must fill out by Thursday, 5 p.m. ET. The form asks whether the remaining workers at the company are looking to leave, or stay and commit to “long hours at high intensity.”
“Going forward, to build a breakthrough Twitter 2.0 and succeed in an increasingly competitive world, we will need to be extremely hardcore,” Musk wrote in the email, per The Wall Street Journal. “This will mean working long hours at high intensity. Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade.” The email was titled “A Fork in the Road,” per The New York Times. The form asked staff to click “yes” on the pledge to the “new Twitter,” and if they fail to do it by the deadline, they will be fired with three months severance pay.
Musk said that engineering is the primary focus for employees at the moment, and all design and product management will take a back seat for the time being. He expects his “restructuring” of Twitter to be finalized by the end of this week, he said during a court case regarding his compensation as chief executive of Tesla.
The email comes as Musk essentially halved the staff at Twitter, dismissed contractors, fired employees who criticized him, and permitted notable executives to depart. He’s also warned that if Twitter fails to increase revenue, the social media platform could face bankruptcy.
Musk has so far tried, and failed, to push Twitter Blue, which allows all users of the platform to get verified for $7.99 a month. It has already been used to impersonate notable people, and has since been suspended as advertisers have expressed concern over Musk’s leadership. In a recent tweet, he said he hopes to relaunch Twitter Blue verifications on November 29, when he promised that it’ll be “rock solid.”






