Home Technology Application Twitter head of France quits, says ‘it’s over’ in staff exodus Damien Viel had led the region for about seven years by Bloomberg November 22, 2022 Twitter’s head of France announced his departure in a tweet on Sunday ahead of what may be additional layoffs at the embattled platform coming as soon as Monday. Damien Viel, who confirmed his departure in a separate message to Bloomberg, had led the region for about seven years. A number of workers at the Paris office, which had fewer than 50 employees before billionaire Elon Musk took over last month, are focused on advertiser relationships. Musk, who’s already slashed Twitter’s workforce in half in sweeping job cuts that included much of the company’s management, is considering additional layoffs to begin as soon as Monday. They’ll likely focus on the sales and partnerships side of the business, people familiar with the matter have said. “It’s over. Pride, honor and mission accomplished,” Viel tweeted. C’est fini 🫡 Fierté, honneur et mission accomplie. Au revoir #twitterfrance 🇫🇷. Quelle aventure ! Quelle equipe ! Quelles rencontres ! Merci à tous pour ces 7 années incroyables et intenses💙. #workhardplayhard #OCaptainMyCaptain #LoveWhereYouWorked — damien viel (@damienviel) November 20, 2022 Viel declined to comment on the circumstances of his departure or how many Twitter employees remain in Paris. Last week, Paris-based fashion house Balenciaga joined other brands in quitting Twitter, deleting its account after Musk acquired the social-media platform and upended content rules. Other companies have paused advertising on the platform, including General Motors, Volkswagen, Pfizer and General Mills. Read: Balenciaga is latest Twitter quitter amid exodus under Musk Tags departure Employees France Paris Twitter 0 Comments You might also like France short-haul flight ban comes into effect: What it means for travellers UAE, France trade grew 17%, reached Dhs29.5bn in 2022 Twitter becomes X Corp as Musk advances ‘everything app’ hopes Saudia ramps up flights to Europe and Asia