Twitter may ‘halve its workforce’ as key investor
backs job cuts
Reports suggest new owner Elon Musk aims to lose 3,800
roles of 7,500 staff with workers to be told as soon as Friday
Twitter faces murky future as top managers flee the
nest
‘He is poised to open the floodgates’: can Twitter
survive?
Dan Milmo in Lisbon
Thu 3 Nov
2022 08.00 GMT
A leading
Twitter investor has backed job cuts at the company, amid reports that new
owner Elon Musk could cut about half the 7,500-strong workforce.
Changpeng
Zhao, the chief executive and founder of Binance, said “a slimmer workforce
would make more sense” at the social media platform. The cryptocurrency
exchange has invested $500m (£441m) in Twitter as part of Musk’s $44bn
takeover, which completed last week and has been followed by a stream of
changes and mooted overhauls of the company ever since.
According
to the latest reports, in the Verge and on Bloomberg overnight, Musk is
planning to cut about 3,800 jobs, with affected staff at the San
Francisco-based company to be told as soon as Friday.
Zhao said
on Thursday, before the Verge and Bloomberg reports were published, that
Twitter has been too slow in rolling out new features under its previous
ownership.
“I do feel
that Twitter, given the 7,500 people they have, the amount of new features that
have been rolled out is quite slow,” said Zhao, a regular user of the platform
with 7.2 million followers.
Zhao,
speaking at the annual Web Summit in Lisbon, Portugal, added that the speed
with which the platform has addressed problems such as spam accounts – a
bugbear of Musk’s – has also been too slow.
“Very
simple things [haven’t] been really implemented very quickly, given the large
workforce,” he said, referring to features such as an edit button, which is now
being trialled among subscribers to Twitter’s premium Blue service in the US.
“So a slimmer workforce would make more sense.”
However,
Zhao said he “did not know for sure” what Musk’s plans were regarding job
reductions but he trusted that “he will do the right thing for the
organisation”.
Zhao said
he had decided to invest in Twitter despite not having met Musk in person owing
to the Covid pandemic.
“I trust
him by reputation for sure. He’s a strong entrepreneur,” said Zhao, adding that
he works with many people he has never met.
Twitter has
been contacted for comment.
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