Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Hardcore' Musk drives into a culture clash at Twitter

EUR -
AED 4.016644
AFN 74.362271
ALL 98.951769
AMD 423.368992
ANG 1.971578
AOA 1000.115091
ARS 1065.936188
AUD 1.622483
AWG 1.97031
AZN 1.860668
BAM 1.955949
BBD 2.208807
BDT 130.726362
BGN 1.957324
BHD 0.412188
BIF 3163.10269
BMD 1.093553
BND 1.430957
BOB 7.55923
BRL 6.105636
BSD 1.093953
BTN 91.84259
BWP 14.547575
BYN 3.580041
BYR 21433.643121
BZD 2.205067
CAD 1.503023
CDF 3143.964957
CHF 0.936312
CLF 0.036861
CLP 1017.102566
CNY 7.742033
CNH 7.74654
COP 4607.959883
CRC 564.922327
CUC 1.093553
CUP 28.97916
CVE 110.907507
CZK 25.338946
DJF 194.346322
DKK 7.460874
DOP 66.061612
DZD 145.522082
EGP 53.107644
ERN 16.403298
ETB 132.524598
FJD 2.430695
FKP 0.832805
GBP 0.83706
GEL 2.979929
GGP 0.832805
GHS 17.453181
GIP 0.832805
GMD 74.361904
GNF 9442.831826
GTQ 8.460334
GYD 228.866953
HKD 8.497636
HNL 27.152594
HRK 7.43508
HTG 144.127014
HUF 401.038366
IDR 17131.87814
ILS 4.119907
IMP 0.832805
INR 91.801332
IQD 1432.554719
IRR 46027.655237
ISK 148.712473
JEP 0.832805
JMD 172.863155
JOD 0.774998
JPY 162.446214
KES 141.068523
KGS 93.173398
KHR 4449.667581
KMF 493.684788
KPW 984.197278
KRW 1477.034985
KWD 0.335142
KYD 0.911636
KZT 542.596407
LAK 23916.009055
LBP 98190.478233
LKR 320.395593
LRD 210.949437
LSL 19.372281
LTL 3.228978
LVL 0.661479
LYD 5.249523
MAD 10.753729
MDL 19.340764
MGA 5008.474011
MKD 61.674682
MMK 3551.818203
MNT 3715.893794
MOP 8.756766
MRU 43.485156
MUR 50.423571
MVR 16.797523
MWK 1897.314566
MXN 21.281424
MYR 4.692986
MZN 69.850711
NAD 19.372328
NGN 1771.873116
NIO 40.27585
NOK 11.681614
NPR 146.949808
NZD 1.795374
OMR 0.42097
PAB 1.093933
PEN 4.11094
PGK 4.298744
PHP 62.744824
PKR 303.624647
PLN 4.304419
PYG 8531.571244
QAR 3.981645
RON 4.978071
RSD 117.026695
RUB 105.636941
RWF 1477.937177
SAR 4.106215
SBD 9.038247
SCR 14.477492
SDG 657.766491
SEK 11.358048
SGD 1.428616
SHP 0.832805
SLE 24.984742
SLL 22931.258633
SOS 624.418764
SRD 35.118343
STD 22634.343788
SVC 9.572641
SYP 2747.585203
SZL 19.224496
THB 36.568514
TJS 11.650554
TMT 3.827436
TND 3.36378
TOP 2.561215
TRY 37.436156
TTD 7.427294
TWD 35.258892
TZS 2979.932884
UAH 45.099907
UGX 4020.195653
USD 1.093553
UYU 45.463044
UZS 13986.544985
VEF 3961453.990238
VES 41.121095
VND 27169.329762
VUV 129.828835
WST 3.059174
XAF 655.982926
XAG 0.035093
XAU 0.000416
XCD 2.955382
XDR 0.813832
XOF 655.587293
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.822536
ZAR 19.195903
ZMK 9843.289839
ZMW 29.043882
ZWL 352.123691
  • RBGPF

    2.5500

    63.35

    +4.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.77

    +0.36%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.59

    +0.28%

  • SCS

    -0.4300

    12.6

    -3.41%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.88

    -0.29%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    65.68

    +0.08%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    66.84

    +0.73%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    46.36

    -0.75%

  • AZN

    -0.6350

    76.87

    -0.83%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    39.21

    -2.63%

  • BCC

    -3.4400

    138.95

    -2.48%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    35.11

    -1.05%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.74

    +0.1%

  • BP

    0.3600

    32.34

    +1.11%

  • BCE

    -0.4500

    32.86

    -1.37%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.22

    0%

'Hardcore' Musk drives into a culture clash at Twitter
'Hardcore' Musk drives into a culture clash at Twitter / Photo: SAMUEL CORUM - AFP/File

'Hardcore' Musk drives into a culture clash at Twitter

After snapping up Twitter, one of Silicon Valley's most iconic companies, Elon Musk swiftly introduced his no-holds-barred work ethic, setting up a bitter culture clash with thousands of workers who still believed in the platform's higher mission.

Text size:

In less than a month, Musk sacked half the company's 7,500 employees, axed executives and engineers who disagreed with him and finally imposed an ultimatum: work "extremely hardcore" or leave.

The style is reminiscent of what Musk pushed through at Tesla, SpaceX and his other companies, where the multi-billionaire drove his teams hard, seeing their personal sacrifice as the key to success.

After an initial willingness to wait and see, Musk's style has proved disconcerting in a company culture that valued ethics and a strong sense of community, even when worked hard.

"I have the impression that Musk really likes humanity but not so much humans," said Emmanuel Cornet, a software engineer who was among the first to be fired from the social media company after the acquisition on October 27.

Before that, he'd been one of the many employees genuinely curious to see the successful entrepreneur at work, despite his propensity for provocation that has delighted so many of his fans.

"I think we had blinkers on. Most of the employees tried to give him the benefit of the doubt for as long as possible, and also because finding another job is not necessarily easy," he said.

But Musk, beyond the big smiles and enthusiastic declarations, has lived up to his reputation, with those remaining having no choice but to give their job their all.

"His behavior is still of the bully on the playground, firing anyone who tells him he’s wrong," said Sarah Roberts, a social media professor at UCLA. "Any kind of criticism with his wildly inaccurate ... statements gets you fired."

- No 'respect' -

Cornet was particularly shocked by what he called a lack of respect from the richest man in the world.

"In the long term, objectively, he seems to be trying to help the planet, with electric cars, in particular," he said. "But the people around him seem disposable."

Musk brings "this kind of swashbuckling bravado from being an entrepreneur interested in things like rockets and cars and big hardware that has impressive performance and really wows people," said John Wihbey, a media professor at Northeastern University.

"The Twitter culture is much more low key. It has a politically progressive, geeky, pro-social vibe," he said.

The libertarian entrepreneur has long had close ties with Silicon Valley, where he co-founded Tesla.

But he has since disavowed politically liberal California, railing against health restrictions during the pandemic and becoming a hero to conservative libertarians online.

At the end of 2021, he moved the headquarters of his flagship company to Texas, a majority conservative state.

Twitter was founded by Jack Dorsey, who "is very much this kind of Zen guru, sort of a spiritual seeker vibe," said Wihbey.

Employees of the network were "proud to work there", he said. "They really believed in the product."

Cornet worked 14 years at Google before going to Twitter, two groups which, at the time, did not seem "obsessed with profits."

"The sense of community at Twitter is so strong it continues after" the layoffs, he said with admiration. Ex-employees gather on Discord, WhatsApp, signal and other platforms to support each other and be nostalgic.

- 'Badge of honor' -

Many former "tweeps" said they were okay with working hard, but not just for bombastic promises, like "building a revolutionary Twitter 2.0", and at the mercy of brutal decision-making.

When an employee asked during a meeting about the risk of attrition, Musk replied that he had no "great answer."

"I can tell you what works at Tesla is people being in the office and being hardcore," he said.

The mercurial leader abhors work from home –- which is very popular with computer engineers –- and loves to tell how he slept on site at Tesla when his company was "on the verge of bankruptcy."

"He was able to drive things hard at Neuralink, Tesla, or Solar City because they had technologies that were on the frontier or, in the case of Tesla, far enough ahead of most other commercial automakers. He has a highly committed workforce there," said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, professor at Yale University.

At Twitter, on the other hand, the massive layoffs, the new culture of coercion and Musk's "whims" are not likely to rally the staff, said Sonnenfeld, a specialist in corporate governance.

"At this stage," said Sarah Roberts, "for many it's a badge of honor to have been fired by Elon."

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)