Elon Musk speaks in advance to Twitter employees for the first time since the acquisition bid
Elon Musk will speak to Twitter Inc employees this week for the first time at a company-wide meeting since making his $44 billion (about 3,43,500 crore) bid in April, a source said. said Monday, citing emails from the Twitter director. Agrawal moderator for employees.
The meeting is scheduled for Thursday, and Musk will answer questions directly from Twitter the source added.
The news was first reported by Business Insider after Twitter said last week that it expected a shareholder vote on the sale in early August.
A Twitter spokesperson confirmed that Musk will be attending the company’s handshake meeting this week.
Since Musk took over ownership, many Twitter employees have expressed concern that the billionaire’s erratic behavior could destabilize the social media company’s business and damage its finances. finance.
Back in April, Agrawal was seen to quell employee anger during a companywide meeting where employees demanded answers about how managers plan to handle an expected mass exodus due to Musk pushed.
Last week, Musk warned Twitter that he could walk away from his deal to buy the company, if it doesn’t provide the data on the spam and fake accounts he’s looking for.
Billionaire take Last week, a state attorney general with an outsized personality and a good skating stance was entering the vortex of Musk’s current $44 billion (3,43,500 crore) bid for Twitter. He announced the launch of a Twitter investigation into “potentially false reporting” of bots on its platform to bolster claims Musk himself made last week about threatening to walk away from the deal.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced his investigation into Twitter last week just hours after billionaire Musk Tesla and SpaceX The CEO, accused Twitter of refusing to disclose the extent of its spam bots and fake accounts.
Paxton’s unusual move has been viewed by observers as strange and possibly inappropriate, although he may have the legal authority to pursue it. In launching its investigation, Paxton suggested that Twitter may have violated the Texas Deceptive Commercial Practices Act.