Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told employees he would have been fired from the company he founded multiple times if he were not in total control.

Casey Newton at The Verge obtained audio recordings and published transcripts from two internal meetings Zuckerberg held with Facebook employees in July.

In those meetings, Zuckerberg said that incidents like not selling to Yahoo for $1 billion in 2006, or the day in 2018 when it lost over $100 billion in market value after reporting earnings, would have led to his firing — except he controls the board, and thus, the company.

He said this was good for Facebook because it allowed him to focus on long-term strategy.

Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook CEO and chairman Mark Zuckerberg told employees he would have been fired from Facebook multiple times if it were not for his total control over the company, according to audio recordings obtained by Casey Newton at The Verge from two internal meetings held with employees in July.

"So one of the things that I've been lucky about in building this company is, you know, I kind of have voting control of the company, and that's something I focused on early on," Zuckerberg — who holds 60% voting power over Facebook's board — told employees. "And it was important because, without that, there were several points where I would've been fired."

Zuckerberg gave the example of when, in 2006, he decided to pass on Yahoo's proposal to buy Facebook for $1 billion. At the time, Facebook had 10 million users compared with Myspace's 100 million and was about to bet the business on News Feed, which was unproven as a product.

Zuckerberg said his decision not to sell upset the board and led to most of his management team quitting.

"So once you can get through that, if you're like, when you're like 21 or 22 and all these experienced people around you say that you're going to regret the decision that you're making for the rest of your life, and they all quit and walk out and then you basically have no team and you get through that, that leaves you with a lot of confidence that you — that you can make long-term decisions and that they can work out over time," Zuckerberg said, according to the audio.

"I am lucky because of the structure that we have. I think some people don't have the flexibility to focus on what they think is right over the long term because there really are near-term constraints, " he added.

He also said he might have been fired in 2018, when the company had a disastrous earnings report that shaved over $100 billion off its market cap — which he attributed in the audio to his decision to focus Facebook more on connecting with friends and family and less on viral videos and stories, "among a number of other reasons."

"So again, would I've been able to do that if I didn't control the company? I don't know. maybe I would've been fired but ... over the long term, it really is profitable to do the right thing," Zuckerberg said.

Jake Kanter contributed to this report.