We don't actually know the situation. If he wants people to work 84 hour work weeks regularly - yeah that's a problem. I looked at it charitably. Twitter is in such bad shape the only choice is to burn out engineers in order to fix it. This points to terrible product management, which points to terrible engineering leadership, which points to a terrible C-suite. It sucks, but once you pass the point of no return you can't hire more people (they take months to ramp up), and you're gutting the low performers (they will slow you down), so unfortunately the work has to be foisted onto the rest. It's not a fun time, it will cause more people to quit, but it's also the only solution to fix a trainwreck if you notice the speeding freight train too late.
ahtihn|3 years ago
No. The fact that it even crosses his mind as an acceptable demand at any time is a problem. No one, under any circumstance, should ever be asked to work that much in a week. It should be a criminal offense for an executive to even allow employees to work that much.
> Twitter is in such bad shape the only choice is to burn out engineers in order to fix it.
Nope. Even if it would otherwise go bankrupt that choice shouldn't legally be available.
P5fRxh5kUvp2th|3 years ago
The other choices are just more work.
bobthepanda|3 years ago
Test0129|3 years ago