The position brings formidable challenges. Musk, who admitted he overpaid for the platform at the purchasing price of $44 billion, said last month that the company was losing $4 million a day.
Since Musk retains a major public profile and ultimate authority as owner, the incoming CEO will need to implement Musk’s vision and cede the spotlight, Peter Harms, a professor of management at the University of Alabama who has studied corporate leadership, told ABC News.
“It’s not going to be your typical CEO,” Harms said. …
Here’s a list of who could be the next CEO of Twitter[.]
[I note that my name has been left off this list, as well as Catturd’s, the popular choice of the platform’s users. More seriously, though, this list has a couple of potential winners. Former T-Mobile CEO and re-energizer John Legere might be well suited for the job, for instance. But including Jack Dorsey and especially Facebook/Meta refugee Sheryl Sandberg is unserious at its core. Sandberg was part of the problem at Facebook that Musk wants to fix at Twitter. Come on, man. — Ed]
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