Social Media

Musk continues to sack Twitter employees despite promise not to do so

This is happening despite his promise not to sack more employees after his brutal layoff exercise in November that affected two-thirds of the micro-blogging platform's 7,500 employees.

New Delhi: Elon Musk is still laying off Twitter employees as dozens of workers across sales and engineering departments were laid off last week, including one of Musk’s direct reporting executive who was managing engineering for Twitter’s ads business.

Related Stories
Here’s Why Nothing CEO, now ‘Carl Bhai’ on X, Urges Elon Musk to add ‘Bhai’ to his Name
Meta may fire 6K workers in its 3rd round of job cuts next week: Report
Musk’s X to soon let you make video, audio calls
Musk returns as world’s richest man; net worth of richest persons up $1.5 trillion
Amazon gears up to send first 2 satellites to space to beam affordable Internet

It means that the new Twitter CEO has done at least three rounds of layoffs, according to The Verge.

This is happening despite his promise not to sack more employees after his brutal layoff exercise in November that affected two-thirds of the micro-blogging platform’s 7,500 employees.

At a meeting with employees, Musk had claimed that Twitter is now actively hiring for positions in engineering and sales. He also asked the staffers to recommend potential candidates.

However, Musk is sacking employees every now and then.

Twitter has also shut down two of its three India offices and directed its employees to work from home, as part of Elon Musk’s mission to cut costs and turn the struggling social media service profitable.

Twitter closed its offices in New Delhi and financial hub Mumbai.

In November last year, Musk fired more than 90 per cent of its staff in India, around 200-plus.

Musk has also given a directive internally to revamp how ads are targeted in Twitter’s main feed within a week.

However, Marcin Kadluczka, the laid-off engineering manager for monetisation who reported directly to Musk, tweeted this is not possible.

“I believe Twitter can really improve ads in 2-3 months (no necessarily in a week though),” Kadluczka posted.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button