Elon Musk will speak to Twitter employees on Thursday for the first time since launching his $44bn (£36.2bn) bid for the company in April.
The multi-billionaire Tesla boss is expected to take questions from Twitter workers at the meeting. Mr Musk has warned that he could drop the deal if the firm fails to provide data about fake accounts on the platform.
The program was announced by Twitter’s chief executive Parag Agarwal in an email to employees on Monday. Mr Agarwal told employees he could submit questions to Mr Musk before the meeting.
The news, which was first reported by Business Insider, was confirmed to the BBC by a Twitter spokesperson.
The all-hands meeting will be the first time Mr Musk has spoken directly with company employees since launching his takeover bid.
Earlier this month, he threatened to walk away from the deal, accusing the social media company of “failing” their requests to learn more about its user base. In a letter filed with regulators, Mr Musk said he is entitled to his own measurement of spam accounts.
The letter formalized a dispute that boiled over for weeks after the deal was declared “on hold” pending further information.
Analysts have said Mr Musk could use the issue to renegotiate the price or walk away from the deal. He said his decision to take up the matter on social media was unconventional, making it difficult to establish how serious he was.
When Mr Agarwal defended the company’s process for identifying fake accounts in a series of tweets, Mr Musk responded with a poo emoji. Shares of the company were trading at $37.03 at the end of Monday’s New York trading, well below Musk’s offer price of $54.20.