Hundreds of Twitter employees are estimated to have decided to quit the beleaguered social media company following a Thursday deadline from new owner Elon Musk that staffers sign up for “long hours at high intensity,” or leave.
The departures highlight the reluctance of some of Twitter’s 3,000 or so employees to remain at a company where Musk earlier fired half of the workforce including top management, and is ruthlessly changing the culture to emphasize long hours and an intense pace.
Musk took to Twitter late on Thursday and said that he was not worried about resignations as “the best people are staying.”
The billionaire owner also added: “We just hit another all-time high in Twitter usage...,” without elaborating.
Musk met some top employees on Thursday to try to convince them to stay, said one current employee and a recently departed employee.
The company also notified employees that it will close its offices and cut badge access until Monday, according to two sources. Security officers began kicking some employees out of one office on Thursday evening, one source said.
Over 110 Twitter employees across at least four continents had announced their decision to leave in public Twitter posts. About 15 employees, many in ad sales, posted their intention to stay at the company.
In Twitter’s internal chat tool, over 500 employees wrote farewell messages on Thursday, a source said.
A poll on the workplace app Blind, which verifies employees through their work email addresses and allows them to share information anonymously, had showed 42 per cent of 180 respondents opting for “Taking exit option, I’m free!”
A quarter said they had chosen to stay “reluctantly,” and only 7pc of the poll participants said they “clicked yes to stay, I’m hardcore.”
The departures include many engineers responsible for fixing bugs and preventing service outages, raising questions about the stability of the platform amid the loss of employees.
On Thursday evening, the version of the Twitter app used by employees began slowing down, according to one source, who estimated that the public version of Twitter was at risk of breaking during the night.
“If it does break, there is no one left to fix things in many areas,” the person said.
Reports of Twitter outages rose sharply from less than 50 to about 350 on Thursday evening, according to website Downdetector, which tracks website and app outages.
In a private chat on Signal with about 50 Twitter staffers, nearly 40 said they had decided to leave, according to the former employee.
And in a private Slack group for Twitter’s current and former employees, about 360 people joined a new channel titled “voluntary-layoff,” said a person with knowledge of the Slack group.