Timeline Of Elon Musk's Twitter Takeover From 2022 - Tracking The Weird And Wonky

Elon Musk became the owner and CEO of Twitter on October 27, 2022, after acquiring the social media company for $44 billion. Before the deal was sealed, 19,000 tweets showed his long time complications with Twitter.

Below is a timeline of events and the changes implemented under Musk’s leadership.

December 20, 2022

Musk announces he will step down as CEO once he finds a replacement

December 14, 2022

Musk suspends the Twitter account that tracked his private jet and introduces a new policy prohibiting posting someone’s real-time location details. Newsletter platform Revue shut down.

December 12, 2022

Twitter relaunches Blue Verified.

December 9, 2022

Musk announces plans to free up inactive accounts

December 8, 2022

Musk promotes the release of part two of the “Twitter Files.”

December 2, 2022

Musk promotes the release of the “Twitter Files.”

November 25, 2022

Musk mentions creating his own phone if Apple and Google remove Twitter from their app stores.

November 24, 2022

Musk announces ‘amnesty’ for suspended Twitter accounts begins next week.

November 19, 2022

Musk reinstates Trump’s Twitter account.

November 18, 2022

The deadline for Twitter employees to accept Musk’s ultimatum passes; many decide to leave.

Musk publishes a poll on Twitter asking whether he should reinstate the account of Donald Trump.

November 17, 2022

A majority of Twitter employees reportedly reject Musk’s ultimatum, opting to leave the company.

November 16, 2022

Musk issues an ultimatum to Twitter staff, asking them to commit to “hardcore” working conditions with longer hours and no remote work or get leave the company with three months severence pay.

November 15, 2022

Musk fires employees for criticizing him in a private Slack channel.

November 14, 2022

Musk turns off “bloatware” services which he claims isn’t necessary for the site to work

November 12, 2022

Under Musk’s leadership, Twitter fires an estimated 80% of contract employees without no advance notice.

November 11, 2022

Musk pauses Twitter Blue subscriptions due to fake accounts impersonating brands and public figures.

November 10, 2022

Musk warns about a dire money situation and believes Twitter could go bankrupt.

November 9, 2022

Twitter launches a new verification system, with all users receiving a blue checkmark by purchasing Twitter Blue.

November 4, 2022

Musk lays off half of Twitter employees to cut costs

November 1, 2022

After facing criticism from Stephen King after Musk confirms plans to charge $20/month for verification, Musk has a counteroffer.

October 27, 2022

Musk and Twitter close the deal, making Musk the new owner. Musk immediately fires CEO and top executives.

October 26, 2022

Musk tweets a video of him carrying a kitchen sink into Twitter headquarters - referring to the “let that sink in” internet meme as he changes his Twitter bio to “Chief Twit”

October 20, 2022

Musk told investors he plans to cut nearly 75% of Twitter’s staff.

October 4, 2022

Musk proposes to seal the $44 billion ($54.20 per share) deal to own Twitter on the condition that Twitter drops its lawsuit.

July 12, 2022

Unable to come to an agreement, Twitter formally launches a lawsuit against Musk after he tried to back out of the acquisition.

July 8, 2022

Musk announces his plan to terminate the Twitter acquisition, claiming that Twitter still refuses to comply with requests for data on spam accounts.

Twitter’s chairman, Bret Taylor, says that the board plans legal action to enforce the agreement.

June 8, 2022

Twitter’s board complies with Musk’s demands to access data stream of tweets.

This was first reported by The Washington Post.

June 6, 2022

Musk says Twitter is refusing to share data on spam accounts and threatens to terminate his agreement.

May 13, 2022

Musk puts the buyout deal on hold after he learned that 5% of Twitter’s users are spam accounts.

April 25, 2022

A filing with the United States Security and Exchange Commission accepts Musk’s buyout deal

April 14, 2022

Musk offers to buy Twitter for $43 billion, or $54.20 per share, to transform it as “private”

April 10, 2022

Twitter’s chief executive, Parag Agrawal, said on Monday morning that Musk had declined the offer to join Twitter’s Board of Directors

April 4, 2022

A securities filing reveals Musk is Twitter’s largest shareholder, with a 9% stake in the company.

Musk is invited to join Twitter’s board of directors.

March 25, 2022

Musk begins openly criticizing Twitter with the principle of free speech - an “essential to a functioning democracy.”

Love Letter To You, Business Owner, For This Valentine's Day

Dear You,

This is a love letter written to all of the hustlers out there. All of the business owners, creators, makers, and organizers. For Valentines Day, you need to hear this.

Creator: you did this. To maintain this, is hard. To maintain this, means your heart needs to be in it every day. You are the main person who believes in you. If you don’t believe in you, things will fall apart. If you don’t believe in you, things you created will dry up.

But they won’t die. Not if your heart is still beating. Not if it’s a good idea. The good idea you know should be made. It just needs a special breath of air. To breathe life back into it. And you will do that every day. And if you need to step away, to take more oxygen for yourself directly, that’s okay. Your creation will be there waiting for you.

You may have new creations on the horizon. Those may replace what you are doing, or they may be in addition. Only you will know how to absorb. You will hire the people you need to. You will move office locations as you need to. You will buy more property as you need to.

You do you, Creator.

We are here for you. To support you and to buy from you.

Create for us. We need you.

New Template: Simple Social Content Planner

Content planning can take many forms. The organization of it can look very different before it makes it to a published platform.

Tin Shingle's new Simple Social Content Planner is your monthly and weekly spreadsheet for when a certain post should be written.

Looking at this Template is less-involved than looking at Planoly or Hubspot. The purpose it serves is to help you organize before you create a finished post to schedule at your social platforms of choice.

For those unfamiliar with Planoly, this is a tool you can use to schedule and post finished Instagram posts in advance. It was created before Instagram allowed for scheduling within its own platform.

Members of Tin Shingle can download this template for free. For everyone else, there is a one-time fee, and then unlimited access is available for when updates are published. This template is a companion to Tin Shingle’s more comprehensive Editorial Content Planner.

Activate your membership with Tin Shingle today.

Trending News Stories: Jacinda Ardern, Alec Baldwin, 50th Anniversary of Reproductive Rights

When you're pitching the media, you need to have fresh ideas. One pitch email to 10 media contacts will not do. You need to keep pitching different angles. This is what PR professionals do, and this is what you must do too, dear Business Owner (or Communications Director, Marketing Director, or Intern tasked with this large task of getting organic (free) media coverage for your business).

One way is to piggy back on trending news stories. This is when a big announcement or development comes out, and your product or expertise may have just the thing to say about it.

Let the following stories inspire you. Then come into Tin Shingle's Pitch Whisperer to discuss how you're going to pitch it. Hold yourself accountable, and do it!

If you feel you're too late - ignore that voice. Your possible news story can keep the topic talking.


Trending News Stories Right Now

The 50th Anniversary of Reproductive Rights
Many news outlets picked this up and reported on this date. According to ACLU: "January 22nd marks the 50th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court case that codified the right to an abortion. But this year on January 22nd, we’ll largely remember this anniversary as the one that wasn’t. For 49 years, Roe helped to allow people who could become pregnant decide what was best for them and their families, but on June 24th, 2022, the Supreme Court overturned Roe in the case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health. Since then, bans on abortion have taken effect in 13 states, and courts have blocked abortion bans in 9 others, according to the New York Times abortion ban tracker, though this is constantly changing."
How To Pitch:
Don't limit yourself here. Many businesses, creators, artists and other professionals have relevant stories to tell here. What's your angle?

  • Authors: What part of your book touched on abortion? Was your book set in a time when abortions were illegal? Clip a quote from your book, find your angle, and email that to the media outlet you are targeting.

  • Businesses: Perhaps you have a personal story to share. Very difficult to do for you, so only do this if you feel strongly.

  • Organizers: Have you been working on projects that are collecting experiences from people? Share snippets of these stories to the reporter or producer you think is a good fit.

Alec Baldwin To Be Charged With Involuntary Manslaughter in ‘Rust’ Killing
While filming the movie "Rust," the gun Alec was holding and aiming at the cinematographer, went off. A loaded bullet was inside, and killed her. Interestingly, The New York Times carefully phrased it this way: "A gun that Mr. Baldwin was rehearsing with went off, killing the film’s cinematographer." The person responsible for weapons on set, known as the "armorer" also faces manslaughter charges.
How To Pitch:


New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Announces Resignation
We watched her lead the world in her response to COVID. She's announced her resignation, citing many reasons including her new child, her desire to get married to her man, and admitting she "did not have enough in the tank to do [the job] justice," (read the transcript here). When the BBC covered it, they asked/headlined "Can women have it all?" In response, the MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin slammed the BBC, saying: "What an absolutely shameful headline by the BBC. When men politicians resign, does the BBC question or imply that somehow they fell short in 'having it all'. This is but one mere example of the reductive and frankly sexist headlines PM Ardern faced during her tenure."

What do you think? Write an article on it on your own company blog, and use that to pitch out to the media as you show your expertise.

Use Tin Shingle’s Pitch Whisperer To Help You

Tin Shingle’s community is here to support you. Pitching the media is often done in a vacuum. All by yourself. The Pitch Whisperer Forum allows you to have feedback, possibly tweak your pitch, and keep pitching.

Activate your membership with Tin Shingle today.

Office Hours Today Small Group Session - Members Only - 1/25/2023

Office Hours

When: Wednesday, January 25th, 2022
Time: 1pm-2pm EST
Where: At your computer or on your phone.
Zoom Link: Click Here for the Zoom Link. You need to be logged into your Tin Shingle account.
Required: Membership with Tin Shingle. Join today.

Bring it!

Who are you pitching? Which Media Contacts do you need updated? Bring it to today's Office Hours TuneUp.

This Open Office Hours TuneUp is for members of Tin Shingle who are pitching the media, and are getting stumped, need new ideas, or had great success and need to keep going.

Also come in if you are pitching for Sponsorships and Grants.

These are small-group sessions where there could be one or five members on the call. This is a great opportunity for you to get one-on-one assistance.

Katie Hellmuth is your moderator, and she looks forward to strategizing with you to get the word out about your business.


Activate your membership here. Be sure you're logged in to Tin Shingle, and get the Zoom link here to join the interactive session where you get to bring your media celebrations, challenges, and needs.

Today for MLK Day: Listening To "I Have A Dream" and Reading "Letter From Birmingham Jail"

One thing to do today for MLK Day is to immerse yourself in words written by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  Having the context to the quotes is crucial to understanding where the quotes came from. This will also be a refresher history lesson from the days in elementary school where you may have studied Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement he amplified.

To do this, you can listen to the full transcript of the "I Have A Dream" speech, provided by NPR, and you could read his "Letter From Birmingham Jail," provided by California State University Chico.

Today I was fortunate to cover and participate in a local parade march for Dr. Martin Luther King Day in Beacon, NY. The parade kicked off a day of programming from the Southern Dutchess Coalition which featured several speakers, including the author Jeanette Shelton Brisco, who wrote the memoir, From Duck Hill to Fishkill.

Ready To Stream: [PR] TuneUp: What To Pitch During August 2023

TuneUp: What To Pitch During August 2023

During this podcast, find out ideas for what to pitch the media during August. In this hot summer month, you should have been pitching cool Holiday Gift Guides, and you still have some chances. This is a great time for long-lead follow-up.

We will go over magazine Editorial Calendars that are in Tin Shingle's database that normally members only can see.

MEMBERS OF TIN SHINGLE (FREE)

Stream any TuneUp Webinar anytime with your Tin Shingle membership. No need to purchase it, this TuneUp is ready to play from this page! When you are logged in, you will see a big screen.

NON-MEMBERS ($65)

Once you buy a TuneUp, you own it forever. The video or audio recording will appear on the TuneUp page that you just purchased from, and all you need to do is press play.

Your Content Plans For 2023 - Tin Shingle's Editorial Planning Calendar

By Katie Hellmuth
Creator, Tin Shingle

It’s time!!

To really use Tin Shingle’s 2023 Editorial Content Planner to contain your publishing ideas for what you need to put on your company blog, newsletter, and social media posts.

This is an Excel spreadsheet that you can download from the Tin Shingle website, and then upload to Google Drive to connect your entire team with. Connect yourself with it on your phone from wherever you are.

FREE: Free for Tin Shingle Members. Join now so that you can come into the community to discuss how to use the calendar on our Tin Shingle Open Office Hours (Idea Sessions) or in the online Forum. Already a member? Simply Log In and click here to download this template for free.

$75: Buy it and get lifetime access. You will get the following year and updates every time they are uploaded to the Tin Shingle website for free.

Here’s what it looks like at a glance. Use this to visually see when articles or social media posts need to publish. Use this in conjunction with social media planners you use, like Planoly. Those will physically execute the posting. But it may be easier for your team to congregate around this one, and then carry out what they need to do on other organization platforms. Click here to learn more.

Writing Resolutions For 2023

Writing resolutions for the New Year is one of my most favorite-est times of year. Once December 31st hits, the time has passed from the pressure-packed gift-giving holiday season, and relief has arrived where we can finally focus on the big year ahead - the fresh energy we have for it washing in like a wave.

As I became a mother - and I’m 12 years in now with 3 kids - the days get more cluttered with things to do to keep the family running. The days turn into minutes. Those small divisions of time are what we are left with in order to finish a thought or a sentence - just minutes between professional or family or personal events - to live our lives, grow our businesses, and make it all work on our terms. Very risky. Very stressful. Very fulfilling. We made this. You made this.

So for 2023, here’s how we are going to keep this. We are going to take the time - make the time - to write the resolutions. No matter what anyone says about resolutions sucking and not happening. At Tin Shingle, I used to make written time capsules. In some time capsule resolutions, I declared that I will eat less pasta and more rice (I just ate quinoa the other day!) and that I would explore writing fonts (I have since made menu signs for local businesses!).

This year, 2022, I initiated my divorce from a good person in order to keep my mental state and professional position in a good place. It was also an inspiration for the No Apology, Not Sorry article (regarding walking down the sidewalk…sometimes I couldn’t walk through my own hallway without stepping aside).

I worked hard - and continue to - to make this transition easy on my children. It involves compromise and confusion and hope. Everyone has their own story, and all of us have our own truths. We can only be true to that.

To keep our hearts full and crusade for happiness alive, here are my Resolutions for 2023. I always categorize them. I would love to hear yours too, to be inspired.

KIDS:

  • To wipe their own noses. Somehow, I am the only one that knows how to wipe their faces. And I’m not very consistent. My 12 year old prefers and insists on wiping her face on her clothing. Jeans, leggings, my own sweatshirt that she swiped. My 5 year old has a chronic runny nose, and the teachers can’t keep wiping it at school. He needs to learn how to do it himself. And anyway. His Kindergarten teacher asked parents via the monthly teacher newsletter that we let the kids zip their own coats, because in school, the kids are zipping their own coats because the teachers literally have no time to zip everyone’s coats. Here-Here, I agree, and thank you.

  • To make their own food. If I don’t make the kids their breakfast, they don’t eat it. This is ridiculous, because my 12 year old knows how to make her own English muffin with butter and raspberry jam, but prefers my special touch. My 10 year old insists on making his own scrambled eggs when the babysitter comes over, to show off, but suddenly has no time when it’s just him and me at home. They need to cook for themselves with my guidance if I am not there. After my divorce, which is still in its process but is in the mail, is that I heard from fellow mothers, who were also in frustrating positions, that they worried about their children not eating anything but pizza. That their parent partners might only ever feed their children pizza for 4 days in a row. Well. If that’s keeping you in a situation you don’t like, then empower your children to make the food they like. Today, to practice making their own lunch, my two little ones walked (maybe ran though I told them to walk) to the grocery store to buy their own bread. I’d offered to make them grilled cheeses. But they wanted the special bread they had at their grandparent’s house in Ohio over the winter holiday. Their Nonni had very special, squishy wheat bread that had a brand name that did not matter. So they wanted to buy the bread at the store, and bring it back for me to make.

PROFESSIONAL:

  • Understanding cash-flow and profit. Now that I have an employee, yet have always had long-time contractors, I need to understand how payroll is made, while bills are paid, and money is still in the bank for the next payroll and bills and investing in something if needed. I will hire a money manager to help me.

  • Show and Tell the kids I’m working. This is in the Professional section, because it’s dire to me working. Usually I hide my work, and work at night or in the bathroom or in the early morning. So that I can give them my undivided attention. But I get Nurses Scrubs Envy. Because nurses are on call and helping people in the office. When you have nurses scrubs on, you are in the job. No one questions it. I need to show my kids what I do - and it’s a lot - so that they understand what I do, and respect when I’m working on my laptop at soccer practice, and not watching every goal (but I watch all the goals at actual games, just not practices).

I think that’s enough for now. More Resolutions will come. But we can start here.

Happy New Year :)

xoxo

The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge

I am from the Midwest, and now live in New York. In the Midwest, one is generally very polite. Very nice. To not be nice is like, the worst thing one could do. But what does “nice” mean? Usually it means avoiding discomfort. It means smiling at all costs. It means apologizing a lot. For example: if you are walking down the sidewalk, and somebody cuts you off out of nowhere, causing you to collide into them, you would apologize to them. If somebody bumps you, you apologize to them.

I began noticing this after I lived in New York for 15 years. Being “nice” and smiling at people for no reason had the opposite effect. New Yorkers grew uncomfortable and suspicious if I smiled at them to say hello. In fact, the more smiley and friendly I was, the more I seemed to get in trouble by those around me. The psychology behind that discovery is for another article, but it is through my thickening skin that I learned that I did not have to apologize anymore for things I didn’t do, or discomfortable words I had to speak. It didn’t matter - my making someone more comfortable at my own expense. it was liberating. Empowering even.

It was this year in 2022 when I stepped up to the plate to undertake a major personal change in my life, that I also challenged myself to stop apologizing. There were no rules as to how many times I could apologize. I apologized all of the time for any kind of reason. This needed to change. So I mainly cut out all apologies.

The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge

The No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge started around the time when I began to say “sorry not sorry” in that snarky way. And then I wondered why I was wasting my breath even saying that. The more I made moves that prompted me to say “sorry not sorry,” I realized that those moves just needed to become a way of life for me.

In Midwestern fashion, I must give the disclaimer that to not be or say sorry does not mean you are going to say something meanly. Or be a mean person. It just means that you are doing what you are doing, or you are who you are, and you’re not sorry for it. If the other person is discomfortable, then that’s on them.

A female friend of mine who is an executive in the beauty industry knew I was writing this article. She sent me an example of a recent time she did not apologize, as she felt empowered and respected. She was voting in this last election, had gone with her husband. and was calmly taking her time.

The interaction went like this: ”My husband was done with his circles like 10 seconds before me, because you know I like to make sure I read everything thoroughly. But the volunteer dude at the booth was like: ‘You with her? Want to see if she needs help?’ And my husband was like ‘Nope, she’s her own person and I don’t have to tell her what to do.’ Then I walk over to post my ballot and he chuckled at me and asked: ‘Is this your first time voting? Need help?’ So audacious!”

Good gracious. This is why we need the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge.

How To Start: Step 1: Walk In A Straight Line. Don’t Give Up The Sidewalk

The first step to accepting the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge is to not yield to another person who is walking toward you on the sidewalk. If you are both walking from opposite directions, in the same path, then one of you will need to move. Usually, I was the one to move. I’ve been known to move around trees, or hop into the street. I’ll do this now to move around people as I speed passed them on the sidewalk (I’m a fast walker), but I’m less likely to do it for an oncoming person.

As a woman, this is especially satisfying when not apologizing or moving for a man on the sidewalk. If a woman is oncoming, I’ll still not move, unless she has a stroller or is walking with children. If it is a group of people - like a group of five friends or a couple of two people - I’ll not move again. I am one person on the sidewalk, they are multiple, and can fall back to take up less space for others.

More Examples Of When To Not Apologize

The thing is, the person you are apologizing to most likely was not expecting you to apologize at all. The person may simply be preparing something nice for you, and wants you in a happy place.

When on the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge, you don’t tell the person that you are not sorry. You simply don’t say anything at all, and you proceed with what you are doing.

Examples include (these are examples for simply going forward in your day - not moments of snark).

“I am not sorry for saying no to you.”
You need to say “no” to people for various reasons. If saying “no” to someone causes a tiff between you, then consider your tone. Maybe you were too snappish. But. No need to apologize for that either. Just note it, and make an effort to say it differently next time. Remember, we don’t need to be so nice all of the time. Especially if you have said no five times already to this question.

Practice this in the grocery store when a sales person selling solar panels or a newspaper subscription tries to stop you in order to sell to you. They are chatty and won’t stop. Instead of ignoring them, simply say “no thank you” and keep walking. Don’t engage or respond in any second attempts.*

*Sorry sales-people! You are getting paid to do this, and that’s great, but we have to keep moving. Also, yes, everyone should subscribe to the newspaper, so do say “yes” to those people and no to everything else they sell you. Oh - I forgot - I’m not sorry!

“I’m not sorry about the price I gave you for this job or the product I sell.”
This usually comes after a potential client gets angry about a price you gave them. I have heard this from a number of service professionals, where current or potential new clients get mad, which makes pricing future jobs difficult. If a client gets mad, you just saved yourself a hassle, and they are not a fit for you. Continue to price as you need to.

“I’m not sorry for following up about when you are going to pay your invoice.”
Tin Shingle likes you to get paid up front so that you can avoid this uncomfortable moment.

“I am not sorry to step away from this family gathering at this annual holiday to do some work.”
You know when I’m really not sorry about this? When the men step out to do their work, and me as a woman steps out to do mine, and I get hand-slapped for not spending time with my young children when there is childcare all around and I just stated that I was going to step away from X amount of time to work.

As business owners, our boundaries are not clear. We have no bosses we hate. We are our own bosses, and we love ourselves. But we have employees to pay, answer to and respect. We have clients we need to be there for and respect. Our boundaries are difficult to enforce, and we are the only ones who can do it.

“I’m not sorry to call you out on something you just said. I will say it in a nice, matter of fact way. And you may be offended. But what you just said was totally offensive, and I am not sorry to point that out to you.”
You are not going to say all that part - you are just stating the calling-them-out part. Not in a mean way of course. But of course! Staying silent on these outlandish statements is too costly, and paves the way for future snuffing out.

“I’m not sorry to speak directly to you. In a voice that is not my happy voice”
This one comes from a place of motherhood, when we parents need to use our “mom-voices” to get something done by our children. A small child may ask in response to this tone: “Mommy, why are you speaking madly? Why are you mad?” And that is a good question. A good answer is: “I am not mad. I am speaking this way because it is the only way you hear me as I help you get ready to get out the door and into the car. I am not mad. I am simply moving forward.”

This only works if you are in fact not yelling. But are speaking firmly. Also, it is important to acknowledge the child, as they are expressing their feelings. The child may respond: “Ok, Mommy. Because I get scared when you yell.” And that is OK. We can work together to know if we are both causing the hold-up to getting out the door, and hold us both accountable to a successful departure.

“I am not sorry to not help you while I’m in the middle of typing a sentence.”
With smartphones, we are all on them all the time. Doing really important things, or doing silly things. If a person asks us to do something for them that is not an emergency, the boundary is there to say: “I will help you after I complete this sentence.”

Key to this, however, is to fulfill the promise, and not move onto another task. Do that, and you will have an angry child or partner because they can’t trust you.

“I am not sorry to not help you while I’m eating my meal.”
Finish your meal. Unless a small child needs to use the bathroom, of course. But once they get older, you need to train yourself to stay at the table for different requests.

“I am not sorry to speak to you in the tone in which you are speaking to me.”
This is a tough one, because if you are being challenged by someone, you may respond. If you are being asked the same question for a sixth time, and that person is shouting at you from across the yard, you might shout your response back. And they might start talking over you, to negate what you are saying. You should keep talking. And when you finish your response, which is usually when they stop talking over you, they may ask you to repeat yourself. At that point, you can simply state that you already answered them, and you can walk away from the non-conversation.

“I am not sorry to tell you I love you, or to tell you my feelings.”
Sometimes saying your feelings is hard or embarrassing. You may over-think how the other person is receiving your information. Just tell them how they make you feel. Even if they get uncomfortable about feeling mushy.

Good Examples Of When To Apologize

When you are wrong, you should apologize right away. Apologizing - really apologizing for something you did that caused hurt or discomfort to someone else - comes from a deep place inside of you. You need to feel that place for your apology to be real.

When a little person hurts themselves, no matter how small the bump: “I am sorry, are you alright?”
When a little person hurts themselves, apologize to them. Even if it is not your fault and you are not the cause of their pain, you say: “I am sorry, are you alright?” This acknowledges that they are in some sort of pain, and helps them feel taken care of. Usually this makes their tears go away quickly, or not come at all. The opposite approach to this is tough love, which sounds like this: “Get up. You’re alright.” This won’t go over well.

“I am so sorry we messed that up. We are going to fix it, and make it right.”
Usually between customer/client and business. There is the saying “the customer is always right,” and that may be, but one needs to tread lightly here. Apologizing to a customer or client for an actual mistake is necessary. Apologizing to them for their dissatisfaction is different, and must be handled lightly. This is true for restaurants who are attacked by customers looking to take out their aggression for the world on the service industry. And it is true for the B2B service industry who wants to make clients happy, but should not be molded in order to keep that satisfaction high.

“I am sorry I couldn’t help.”
When you want to help someone, but cannot. Either it doesn’t fit in your schedule, or you don’t have the power to do it.

In the No Apology, Not Sorry Challenge, just start small with the sidewalk move. Feel it out, and then carry that feeling into other areas where you don’t need to apologize, you simply need to own what you are doing. Helping others feel comfortable is important. But doing so at your own expense will dim your own self.