The ever-innovative Elon Musk, owner of the popular social media giant Twitter, has disclosed plans to overhaul the brand and abandon its symbolic bird emblem.
An icon recognized across the globe, the famed bird is soon to exit the stage, according to Musk’s recent declarations on the platform.
Musk’s imminent brand transformation is poised to be a key component of his visionary blueprint for the application, slated to be an “everything app” under the fresh moniker, “X”.
The dawn of a new era: Twitter morphs into X Corp
As early as last year, Musk had unveiled his intention to restructure Twitter, reflected in the company’s name change to X Corp in official documents.
Continuing with this transformative streak, Musk challenged his digital audience on a Sunday tweet to come up with a compelling ‘X’ logo.
If a logo meeting his standards surfaced, Musk promised its global introduction the next day. Additionally, he conducted a public poll to contemplate changing the platform’s default hue to black.
The social media titan has weathered numerous storms since Musk’s $44bn procurement last October. Musk’s drive to economize led to a significant reduction in manpower, while his unconventional policy modifications have been met with resistance from users and advertisers alike.
This has manifested in a 50% slump in advertising income, with Twitter just barely staving off insolvency.
Twitter versus Meta: The rivalry intensifies
Twitter’s latest struggle is with rival Meta, whose Threads feature attracted droves of Twitter users to its fold. The company has threatened legal action against Meta, accusing them of stealing trade secrets for their messaging application.
Musk is no stranger to shifts in decision-making post-public declaration. If he proceeds with this proposed rebranding, it will be the newest in a series of endeavours aimed at steering the company back to profitability.
In a bid to restore advertiser confidence, Musk appointed Linda Yaccarino, ex-head of advertising at NBCUniversal, as Twitter’s CEO in May.
Her recruitment was a strategic move intended to attract numerous high-profile advertisers who had previously abandoned the platform due to Musk’s idiosyncratic leadership style and lenient content regulation.
Despite Musk’s affirmation that advertisers are rekindling their association with Twitter, he has consistently managed to court controversy among users. His latest decision to temporarily limit the number of posts visible to users triggered substantial backlash.
The light-blue bird, a universally recognized image of the platform and an asset described as its “most recognizable” on its website, was named “Larry T Bird” by Twitter co-founder Biz Stone in honor of the retired basketball legend Larry Bird.
As we approach the conclusion of an era marked by this iconic emblem, users worldwide wait with bated breath to see what the future of Twitter, or rather X Corp, has in store.
A Step-By-Step System To Launching Your Web3 Career and Landing High-Paying Crypto Jobs in 90 Days.