Musk's acrimonious Twitter bid heads for business school case study
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[October 10, 2022]
By Andres Gonzalez, Svea Herbst-Bayliss and David Randall
LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Elon Musk's $44
billion Twitter takeover saga comes with all the drama necessary to be
immortalised in case studies for future captains of industry, as the
tycoon's on-off pursuit of the social media platform and unique
management style make for a union like no other.
The chief executive of electric car maker Tesla Inc performed a U-turn
by proposing to buy Twitter at the agreed price having spent months
trying to get out of the deal, just as a Delaware Court was getting
ready to rule on the standoff.
"This is unique in many cases," said Arturo Bris, Professor of Finance
and Director of IMD World Competitiveness Center. "It is definitely a
business school case study. Because it's about poison pills, breakup
fees, lawsuits, hostility."
While there are examples of acrimonious or hostile takeovers such as
AOL-Time Warner and Sanofi-Aventis-Genzyme, here the world's richest man
- who has long used his own Twitter account to press for more freedom of
speech - is working to impose his will on another corporation.
Musk's attempt to take over Twitter is "a gift to professors and
students", said Joshua White, a professor at Vanderbilt University,
calling the situation "unprecedented".
UNIQUE STYLE
"Frankly I hate doing mgmt stuff," Musk wrote in a text message to
Twitter Chief Executive Parag Agrawal in the run up to making an offer
for the company, according to legal documents related to the battle.
"I kinda don't think anyone should be the boss of anyone," he wrote,
while another message noted he could "interface way better with
engineers who are able to do hardcore programming than with program
manager/MBA types".
While the messages reflect his unusual approach to running a business,
taking control of Twitter will mean managing it, at least initially.
Musk has said he would take the reins as CEO but only until he finds a
new executive with expertise in the media industry.
"What is to come is unclear," said Donna Hitscherich, a Columbia
Business School professor.
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Elon Musk photo, Twitter logos and U.S.
dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration, August 10, 2022.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Musk did not respond to a request for comment on the challenges of
running the company after such a contentious deal. Twitter declined
to comment.
Academics and analysts say Musk should focus on restructuring the
social media company's business model after second-quarter revenue
dropped amid the court battle and a weakening digital advertising
market.
Musk has hinted at wanting to turn Twitter into what he called an
"everything app" like the wildly popular WeChat in China which
offers everything from banking to chatting. That will be difficult,
analysts said, especially in the United States where consumers are
already well served by multiple services.
Whether or how Musk pulls it off remains to be seen. What analysts
and academics can agree on is that considerable energy and momentum
could be sapped by what they forecast will be heavy turnover among
Twitter's staff and senior management.
Musk spent months criticising the company's management and
complaining about salaries, what he perceived as political bias and
automated 'bot accounts' - of which he thinks there are many more
than Twitter estimates.
Addressing employees directly in June, he said there needed to be "rationalisation
of headcount and expenses" while stressing that staff, who currently
have relatively free rein to choose where they work, should lean
towards working in an office.
One thing is for sure: Musk is going to receive huge attention and
scrutiny as he figures out how to run Twitter. Success or failure,
it will be an instant business school classroom staple, experts say.
"I'm really, really looking forward to the end," said Bris. "So I
can teach this case in class."
(Reporting by Andres Gonzalez, Svea Herbst-Bayliss and David
Randall; additional reporting by Sheila Dang and Hyun Joo Jin;
Editing by Matt Scuffham, Megan Davies, Kirsten Donovan)
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