BETA
This is a BETA experience. You may opt-out by clicking here

Breaking

Edit Story

‘Nothing Has Worked’: Musk Laments Loss Of Twitter Advertisers And Acknowledges Trying To Back Out Of Deal

Updated Nov 4, 2022, 01:07pm EDT

Topline

On the same day Twitter started laying off thousands of workers, Elon Musk doubled down at an annual investment conference in Manhattan on the challenges he faces in trying to bolster profits for the ailing social media firm he purchased for $44 billion, including a potential advertiser exodus over the proliferation of hate speech on the platform.

Key Facts

Speaking at the Baron Investment Conference, Musk acknowledged he tried to back out of the $44 billion deal, calling Twitter a “poorly managed business” he bought “on the basis of what it could become.”

He also sought to justify the layoffs that hit roughly half the company’s staff on Friday, saying Twitter “was having pretty serious revenue and cost challenges” before the acquisition started.

Regarding the loss of advertisers—including General Mills and Volvo—since he took over, Musk claimed the company has done its “absolute best to appease them,” before lamenting: “Nothing has worked.”

Earlier on Friday, Musk blamed “activist groups” for the pushback he’s received from advertisers, after a group of more than 40 organizations on Tuesday sent a letter urging Twitter’s top 20 advertisers to “cease all advertising” on the platform if Musk rolls back on moderation practices—saying the groups prompted a “massive drop in revenue.”

Forbes Valuation

$210.3 billion. That’s how much Musk, the world’s richest person, is worth on Friday, according to Forbes estimates.

Key Background

The Musk-Twitter saga started back in April, when the billionaire acquired a 9% stake in the firm and weeks later announced a bid to acquire it at a massive premium—only to try to “terminate” the deal in July, purportedly over concerns about fake accounts. After a series of lawsuits, the deal ultimately went through last Thursday, with Musk taking over as chief executive and immediately disbanding the company’s board and firing its CEO and chief financial officer.

Further Reading

Kanye Drops N-Word On Twitter As Musk Claims Platform Rules Unchanged (Forbes)

Twitter Workers Sue Over Sudden Mass Layoffs (Forbes)

Twitter To Begin Layoffs, Will Notify Workers Over Email (Forbes)