| 
		Twitter CEO faces employee anger over Musk attacks at company-wide 
		meeting
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [April 30, 2022]  By 
		Sheila Dang and Katie Paul 
 (Reuters) -Twitter Chief Executive Parag 
		Agrawal sought to quell employee anger on Friday during a company-wide 
		meeting where employees demanded answers to how managers planned to 
		handle an anticipated mass exodus prompted by Elon Musk.
 
 The meeting comes after Musk, the Tesla chief executive who sealed a $44 
		billion deal to buy the social media company, repeatedly criticized 
		Twitter's content moderation practices and a top executive responsible 
		for setting speech and safety policies.
 
 At the internal town hall meeting, which was heard by Reuters, 
		executives said the company would monitor staff attrition daily, but it 
		was too soon to tell how the buyout deal with Musk would affect staff 
		retention.
 
 Musk has pitched lenders on slashing board and executive salaries but 
		exact cost cuts remain unclear, according to sources familiar wth the 
		matter. One source said Musk would not make decisions on job cuts until 
		he assumes ownership of Twitter.
 
 "I'm tired of hearing about shareholder value and fiduciary duty. What 
		are your honest thoughts about the very high likelihood that many 
		employees will not have jobs after the deal closes?" one Twitter 
		employee asked Agrawal, in a question read aloud during the meeting.
 
 
		
		 
		Agrawal answered that Twitter has always cared about its employees and 
		would continue to do so.
 
 "I believe the future Twitter organization will continue to care about 
		its impact on the world and its customers," he said.
 
 Executives said during the meeting that the employee attrition rate has 
		not changed compared to the levels before the news of Musk's interest in 
		buying the company.
 
 In recent days, Musk has tweeted criticism of Twitter's top lawyer, 
		Vijaya Gadde, who is a Twitter veteran and widely-respected across 
		Silicon Valley. Musk's attack triggered a barrage of online harassment 
		targeting her.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			Elon Musk's Twitter profile is seen on a smartphone placed on 
			printed Twitter logos in this picture illustration taken April 28, 
			2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration 
            
			
			 
Employees also told executives they feared Musk's erratic behavior could 
destabilize Twitter's business, and hurt it financially as the company prepares 
to address the advertising world in a presentation next week in New York City.
 "Do we have a strategy in the near-term on how to handle advertisers pulling 
investment," one employee asked.
 
 Sarah Personette, Twitter's chief customer officer, said the company was working 
to communicate frequently with advertisers and reassure them "the way that we 
service our customers is not changing."
 
 After the meeting, a Twitter employee told Reuters there was little trust in 
what executives had to say.
 
 "The PR speak is not landing. They told us don't leak and do a job you are proud 
of, but there is no clear incentive for employees to do this," the employee told 
Reuters, noting that compensation for non-executive staffers is now capped 
because of the deal.
 
 Agrawal is estimated to receive $42 million if he were terminated within 12 
months of a change in control at the social media company, according to research 
firm Equilar.
 
 During the meeting, Agrawal urged staff to expect change in the future under new 
leadership, and acknowledged that the company could have performed better over 
the years.
 
 "Yes, we could have done things differently and better. I could have done things 
differently. I think about that a lot," he said.
 
 Twitter declined further comment.
 
 (Reporting by Sheila Dang in Dallas and Katie Paul in Palo Alto, California; 
Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Kenneth Li and Daniel Wallis)
 
				 
			[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.]This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |