The "Non-Musk Effect" at Twitter
Dmitry Zinoviev, Arkapravo Sarkar, Pelin Bicen

TL;DR
This study investigates how Elon Musk's Twitter acquisition influenced the tweeting behavior of entrepreneurs across seven countries, revealing that a small but significant portion changed their activity during the acquisition period.
Contribution
First to quantify the Musk Effect on entrepreneurs' Twitter activity and identify characteristics of those most affected.
Findings
Approximately 2.5% of entrepreneurs showed significant behavioral change.
The Musk Effect varies across different entrepreneurial profiles.
The study provides practical insights for understanding social media influence during major corporate events.
Abstract
Elon Musk has long been known to significantly impact Wall Street through his controversial statements and actions, particularly through his own use of social media. An innovator and visionary entrepreneur, Musk is often considered a poster boy for all entrepreneurs worldwide. It is, thus, interesting to examine the effect that Musk might have on Main Street, i.e., on the social media activity of other entrepreneurs. In this research, we study and quantify this "Musk Effect," i.e., the impact of Musk's recent and highly publicized acquisition of Twitter on the tweeting activity of entrepreneurs. Using a dataset consisting of 9.94 million actual tweets from 47,190 self-declared entrepreneurs from seven English-speaking countries (US, Australia, New Zealand, UK, Canada, South Africa, and Ireland) spanning 71 weeks and encompassing the entire period from the rumor that Musk may buy Twitter…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivate Equity and Venture Capital
