Musk says Twitter is roughly breaking even, has 1,500 employees
Twitter Inc CEO Elon Musk stated on Wednesday the social media firm is “roughly breaking even,” as most of its advertisers have returned and its aggressive cost-cutting efforts have began bearing fruitafter huge layoffs.
Musk, in an interview with BBC broadcast stay on Twitter Spaces, stated Twitter has about 1,500 workers now, a pointy decline from “just under 8,000 staff members” it had earlier than he took it over in October.
Twitter has been marked by chaos and uncertainty because the US$44 billion acquisition by Musk, as its layoffs have additionally included many engineers liable for fixing and stopping service outages, sources instructed Reuters.
Last week, Twitter suffered a bug that prevented hundreds of customers from accessing hyperlinks, its sixth main outage because the starting of the yr, based on web watchdog group NetBlocks.
Musk acknowledged some glitches, together with latest outages, however stated they haven’t lasted very lengthy.
He says Twitter was in a $3 billion unfavorable money move scenario and needed to take drastic actions, referring to its large-scale layoffs.
“We could be cash-flow positive this quarter if things go well,” he stated within the interview that attracted greater than 3 million listeners, including the corporate presently has all-time excessive consumer numbers.
Twitter has been hit by a large decline in promoting since his acquisition.
Musk had stated that was because of the cyclical nature of advert spending and a few of which was “political.” He stated on Wednesday most of its advertisers have returned.
The billionaire, who additionally runs digital automotive maker Tesla and rocket firm SpaceX, stated he has nobody in thoughts to succeed him as Twitter chief government.
Musk has confronted scrutiny from Tesla traders concerning the period of time he spends operating the social media platform and had beforehand stated the top of this yr could be “good timing” to discover a new Twitter CEO.
Reporting by Akriti Sharma; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Christian Schmollinger
