In what is beginning to feel like a tech-themed sitcom, Elon Musk has announced yet another significant change during his second week as Twitter's new CEO.
In a recent late-night email sent to Twitter's staff and obtained by Bloomberg, Musk stated that he will be ending remote working.
This marks the first official communication the 51-year-old has made with his employees since taking over the company on October 27.
"The road ahead is arduous and will require intense work to succeed [...] over the next few days, the absolute top priority is finding and suspending any verified bots/trolls/spam," the Tesla CEO wrote in two separate emails, according to Bloomberg.
The email also revealed to staff that Musk wants to see Twitter Blue subscriptions account for half of the platform's revenue - potentially an overambitious ask, given the number of people leaving Twitter (including Ryan Reynolds, Stephen Fry, Toni Braxton, Gigi Hadid, and Whoopi Goldberg).
Elon Musk touches on his Asperger's syndrome as he hosts SNL:It appears as though Musk was frustrated that Twitter, like many tech companies, had introduced flexible working since the Covid-19 pandemic started. In fact, The Daily Mail reported that the world's richest man is expecting employees to put in a minimum of 40 hours of work during the week, will end remote working, and has completely eliminated the company-wide monthly day of rest that was introduced during the pandemic.
Musk's first communication comes a week after the company's mass layoff, which saw over 3,700 employees fired from Twitter. Hours later, however, it was reported that some managers were asked to rehire some of their former employees.
"Sorry to @- everybody on the weekend but I wanted to pass along that we have the opportunity to ask folks that were left off if they will come back. I need to put together names and rationales by 4 PM PST on Sunday," one manager posted in a public Slack channel.
The Tesla CEO has also been in discussions about putting the social media platform behind a paywall, following the introduction of Twitter Blue - an $8 monthly subscription that allows users to purchase the coveted blue checkmark, as well as giving subscribers access to a range of other perks.