Steve Davis, the head of Muskās tunnelling startup, The Boring Co., helped oversee cost-cutting at Twitter and now leads DOGE. Brian Bjelde, a longtime human resources executive at SpaceX who also helped during the Twitter takeover, is now an adviser to the Office of Personnel Management.
Michael Grimes, a top banker at Morgan Stanley who helped lead Muskās Twitter acquisition, is expected to take a senior job at the Commerce Department.
Musk completed a dramatic takeover of Twitter (now X) in 2022. Credit: Bloomberg
One of Muskās software engineers at Tesla, Thomas Shedd, was named the head of āTechnology Transformation Servicesā at the General Services Administration, which helps manage federal agencies. Shedd promptly employed a Musk tactic: asking for proof of engineersā technical chops.
Shedd asked engineers to sign up for sessions in which they could share āa recent individual technical win,ā according to an email sent to more than 700 employees Tuesday night and viewed by The New York Times.
āThese sessions are an opportunity to understand more deeply the types of expertise we have,ā Shedd said in his email, which emphasised his āhours on the factory floorā at Tesla.
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Just a day after acquiring Twitter, Musk demanded engineers print out and share code they had written for the companyās various products.
Musk also worked quickly to undo diversity initiatives at the social media company ā a move echoed by Trumpās flurry of executive orders in his first week in office, which eliminated diversity and inclusion efforts in the federal government.
āThese programs divided Americans by race, wasted taxpayer dollars, and resulted in shameful discrimination,ā according to emails sent to federal workers viewed by the Times.
After buying Twitter, Musk slammed previous managementās attempts to foster diversity, sharing a video in which he mocked shirts made for the companyās Black employee group. Under his leadership, the company cut funding for employee resource groups and took down a mural celebrating the Black Lives Matter movement in its San Francisco office, according to two former employees.
One of Muskās go-to tactics for cutting costs at Twitter was reducing the companyās real estate footprint. He stopped paying rent for various office spaces around the world, leading to evictions from several facilities, including in Seattle and Boulder, Colorado.
The General Services Administration is also targeting real estate for cost-cutting. Stephen Ehikian, a former tech executive and Trump appointee, told workers in an email sent Tuesday and viewed by the Times that two of the agencyās properties would be listed for sale while three leases had been terminated. The move would save about $US11 million and was a āfirst stepā in slashing real estate expenditures, according to the email.
While Musk ultimately transformed Twitter, reducing staff by 80 per cent and minimising its real estate footprint, its business has declined. Advertisers have fled the site in droves, and at least one investor, Fidelity, estimates the company is now worth 72 per cent less than the $US44 billion he paid for it.
āOur user growth is stagnant, revenue is unimpressive and weāre barely breaking even,ā Musk wrote in an email to X employees earlier this month, which was viewed by the Times and previously reported by The Wall Street Journal. āWe need to be faster, more innovative and relentlessly focused.ā
āElon clearly thinks he learned from Twitter how to decimate a workplace and heās trying to roll out the same playbook with the federal government now.ā
Employment lawyer Shannon Liss-Riordan.
Musk resurfaced one of his 2024 posts Tuesday evening on X, appearing to reference the āfork in the roadā email to federal employees, which demanded that they be āreliable, loyal, trustworthyā and āstrive for excellenceā.
Some government workers are looking to former Twitter employees for guidance.
Several federal employees circulated online posts from Chowdhury offering advice about how to respond to a Musk takeover. Others contacted Shannon Liss-Riordan, an employment lawyer who is suing Musk on behalf of former Twitter workers.
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āElon clearly thinks he learned from Twitter how to decimate a workplace and heās trying to roll out the same playbook with the federal government now,ā Liss-Riordan said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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