Twitter employees are flooding with bad reviews!
Twitter employees are calling Elon Musk a ‘brutalist decision-maker on annonymous forum Blind.
Another forum user said that he ''has no idea'' what he's doing.
Posting at the day the layoffs have been announced, one user said management turned into causing "stress".
Twitter laid off thousands of employees on Friday whilst Elon Musk completed his $44 billion takeover of the platform. After axing almost 1/2 of the Twitter workforce, Musk tweeted on Friday that there was "no choice" as the corporation became losing more than $4 million a day !
Blind requires that users provide their worke mail deal with, the company they workfor, and their task title once they sign on. The web site does not check employment, however requests that people use their work email to "gauge the professional status" of users, Blind's site states.
Users have posted a total of 953 Twitter opinions to the website online due to the fact 2020 and the organisation has an universal star score of 3.8 out of five stars. Each poster adds a star rating to their review. Some of the critiques were published the day a few workforce members discovered of the mass layoffs the subsequent morning, but the majority are from earlier.
One poster who defined themself as an engineering manager said on Wednesday: "Brutalist decision-maker at the helm. Emergency driven work is exciting for those who like thrills. Pay is no longer tied to the stock market fluctuations."
The anonymous poster, who gave Twitter a two-star rating, added: "The absolute and swift destruction of a compassionate, human-first corporate culture is leaving Tweeps feeling like we've lost our family."
Another user, who posted the day the agency despatched personnel a memo announcing layoffs, said it "was good until Elon take over."
The self-described senior software developer listed getting to "work for Elon" as a "pro" of working at the company, then put being treated as a "labor robot" on an accompanying list of "cons."
"Sense of achievement on delivering mission critical projects with 24/7 working and sleeping at office," the post said.