Elon Musk has told Twitter staff that remote working will end and “difficult times” lie ahead, according to reports.
In an email to staff, the owner of the social media firm said workers would be expected in the office for at least 40 hours a week, Bloomberg reported.
Mr Musk added that there was “no way to sugar coat the message” that the slowing global economy was going to hit Twitter’s advertising revenues.
The BBC has contacted Twitter for comment.
Mr Musk, who also is the boss of Tesla, told staff at the electric car maker in June that working remotely was no longer acceptable.
The world’s richest man has already announced half of Twitter’s staff were being let go, a week after he bought the company in a $44bn (£38.7bn) deal.
Mr Musk said he had “no choice” over the cuts as the company was losing $4m (£3.51m) a day. He has blamed “activist groups pressuring advertisers” for a “massive drop in revenue”.
As part of his shake-up of the social media platform, Mr Musk is rolling out plans to allow users to buy blue-tick verified status for $8 per month.
In his email to staff, Mr Musk said he wanted subscriptions to account for half of all Twitter’s revenue.
But policy change is controversial, amid concerns that the platform could be swamped with fake accounts.
Until now, the verification badge was only given to notable or high-profile accounts which Twitter had analysed and deemed authentic.
SOURCE: BBC.COM