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waffle_ss | 2 years ago

There is no board of directors. Twitter isn't a publicly-traded company any more; it's private and it's owned by Musk.

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nostrademons|2 years ago

Private companies still have boards of directors. It's possible to have a board of directors with only one member but this is a rarity; even non-profits and pre-funding startups will usually have a board with more than one person.

skissane|2 years ago

> It's possible to have a board of directors with only one member but this is a rarity

It is actually extremely common for corporations which aren’t regular business as such - for example, trustees of family trusts are commonly corporations with a single director who is the person who ultimately controls the trust. Also a common structure for sole proprietorship businesses that want some protection from legal liability.

I own a company which never has done anything (I was daydreaming). Its board of directors has one member-me. Legally, I am required to hold annual board meetings with myself, although I believe the legal obligation is met if I hold them in my head. “This year’s financial results: zero revenue, zero expenses, zero assets, zero liabilities, zero employees-another great year at does-nothing-corp!”

3r3rni9|2 years ago

Musk fired the board in Oct 2022. I can’t find anything about them reforming it.

skissane|2 years ago

All companies have boards of directors, even privately owned ones

Small firms it is common to have a single person board of directors, where that single person is the 100% owner.

When private equity takes a large firm private, they’ll often appoint a board full of their own partners and consultants/advisers-if you own 20 different firms, you don’t want to deal with all their CEOs, you want a layer between the CEO and you-which is where the board helps.

100% subsidiaries (such as a large multinational firm’s local subsidiary in each country) commonly have multi-person boards of directors, with a handful of local senior staff on it (e.g. country director, head of local finance, HR and general counsel) - they usually all just rubber stamp whatever HQ wants, although occasionally they might refuse (e.g if local counsel insists HQ’s demands are illegal and complying with them would make the directors personally liable)

waffle_ss|2 years ago

Not all companies. Only corporations are required to have boards. LLCs are not - their structure is dictated entirely by articles of organization.