The reason why Twitter revenue and valuation has declined so sharply is political, not technical. Elon Musk put his thumb on the politics of Twitter and shifted it sharply to the right. Which is the sole reason why he bought Twitter in the first place.
Shifting Twitter to the right drove away a significant portion of its left-leaning userbase, and more importantly, drove away advertisers. These purely political decisions were disastrous for the financials of Twitter, but apparently that was the price that Elon is willing to pay to push his right wing viewpoints.
Not according to him! Up to sale and even the press release announcing the sale he said he wanted a "digital town square" and "free market of ideas." He didn't say anything wanting to shift Twitter to the right. Even in his
pitch deck to investors he didn't say anything about being wiling to lose advertisers and userbase. He said he was going to grow the userbase and by quite dramatic amounts too.
Now, I suppose you could be right. He could have been lying when he said he was going to grow users and revenues while intending to drive them away. But in this case, I take him at his word. I think he really intended to expand Twitter into a much more far reaching and profitable platform. He just wasn't up to the task. To be charitable, you could argue he has not
yet accomplished his goals, but I don't see how any clear reading of his statements would indicate he intended to tank Twitter as badly as he has.
Every major tech company has outages. Amazon Web Services has had numerous outages over the years that brought the entire Internet to its knees. But nobody laid off 80% of the workforce at Amazon Web Services.
I don't think that's quite the own you think it is. Twitter's mission is to sell ads. That's what they do. Twitter is private, so we have to guess a bit at their financials, but Fidelity (who is an investor in Twitter), estimates their investment has declined by 2/3 since the purchase (almost exactly two years ago). I don't know how they figure that exactly, but presumably it is IP, goodwill, brand, and an estimate of future revenue. I'd guess, most of it is the latter. Regardless, Fidelity has calculated their investment has lost the majority of its value in just two years.
In other words, regardless of the workforce size, Twitter is doing worse at selling ads than it was before the sale. Sure, they are keeping ap running but they are failing at everything else.
On the other hand, we do know AWS's financials and in Q3 they reported a banger: Operating income up 50%, revenues up 19%, and margins are an eye-watering 38.1%.
So what's the better metric of efficiency? Increasing revenues by 19% with 38% margins, or laying off 80% of your workforce which results in worse performance? If I could only invest in one company, I know which it would be.
And again let's be fair. Perhaps Musk has not yet succeeded with Twitter. But you cannot claim he has been successful because he clearly has not been.