Lack of Clear and Concise Communication from Top to Bottom - Community Manager WeWork Employee Review

3.0
26 Feb 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

When I began in 2018, it was the Adam Neumann era, so yes, it was a heavy party culture however, beyond that the individuals I worked with were some of the most incredible human beings I had ever worked alongside. The ultimate goal outside of member satisfaction was employee satisfaction and you could feel such a positive and uplifting energy in the air. Every employee enjoyed coming to work and seeing each other. We were family. There were opportunities to grow, but that being said, it's hard to get anywhere past the manager role, once you're in it in the Community Department. You have to jump into a different department if you want to see yourself grow outside of the manager position.

Cons

However come late 2019 as new ownership took over it quickly changed and upper management didn't care about employee satisfaction. In fact, when they began to diminish/take away some of the perks of being a member of WeWork, management didn't realize how that would effect the employees. Unhappy members meant unhappy employees. It seemed as though there was nothing we could do to keep our members happy any more, and in return we all became miserable as employees. Rent would rise, perks were taken away, and the Community Team would be the ones who had to take the brunt of it all while upper management just told us to keep a smile on our face. The communication coming from the top was very apparent that they had no idea what it was like to be the ones facing the members. Not to mention, we repeated the same busy work over the course of the pandemic. We would receive an assignment to complete and then two months later they'd roll out a new assignment that was quite literally the same as the one prior, but with one new slide and tell us to completely redo it. In fact, it felt like we were just given busy work to do it versus doing something meaningful with our time. Often times, throughout my tenure as an employee I would be asked to do a task/project only to find out 1 month later to scratch all of the work I had done, because we weren't moving forward with said project. This was not a one, two, or a three time occurrence, this was very often. It happened so frequently that I began to procrastinate about two weeks after the project was assigned just to see if it was actually would be used/implemented, and most of the time procrastination paid off and the project would never be fulfilled. I was recently a part of a large lay off due to COVID-19, which I understand. That being said, they laid us off on Jan 26th and said, your last day will be February 26th. This may be ideal for some, but in a client facing role, this is difficult. I had to keep my a smile on my face, and lie to members telling them that "Yes, I'm fine, no our building wasn't effected by the closure." Meanwhile being an individual who was laid off, this was not ideal. In my opinion management didn't care about the community team had to face in the midst of the closing of buildings and just expected to keep a smile and act like nothing was wrong.

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5.0
16 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Weekends off Solid structure that you couldn’t find in a normal cafe Base rate that would be equivalent to working a busy cafe with tips

Cons

Depending on location, the customer flow can be insanely heavy. Members tend to come multiple times a visit.

3.0
25 May 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

VERY cool HQ--beer, fruit water, and other treats on tap, free breakfast, amazing decor, lots of events and cool trendy vendors who bring free stuff--if you like to humblebrag via Insta, you'll love this place. Some cool people --celebrities come in and out, your colleagues are generally very attractive folks, there's a sense of excitement and true commitment to the work (borderline evangelism) depending on who you work with and what you do. Name recognition and valuation -- company is a rising star and it's worth having on your resume. A cool mission on the surface--bringing community together, helping people do what they love (making work a passion rather than a chore) through connection.

Cons

This place is like drinking from one continuous Kool-Aid jug. VERY cult-y and cliquey. You are either in or you're out, and if you're out, rather than cut you loose right away, they gaslight you. It's actually kind of shocking how many people I've seen be treated so poorly here, and perhaps no coincidence that they were folks of color. Kind of hard to find the down to earth people I did find. I enjoyed the Community teams and Security/Ops/Real Estate people I met, probably because they were constantly "hustling," but the HR team (the PEOPLE team, for goodness sake) and a lot of other "prominent" faces were consistently rude, with an overinflated sense of self and zero idea of how the WeWork "values" translate into behaviors/contributions from a prospective employee POV. You have to have been there since the start, or be prepared to ingratiate yourself, to get any traction in your professional development or career path. I was always shocked how badly my manager wanted to be liked, and how much they were willing to do to be liked, to get any kind of clout and/or promotion just bc they hadn't started out at WeWork as a community team member. Never mind that they were super qualified for their job. Pay varies depending on who you are; some people earn market value...some people very very much don't, and there doesn't seem to be any consistency that determines which is which. TGIM. Thank God it's Monday. Mandatory Monday meetings. Sometimes they circulate tequila shots. Is that a plus? Not sure. Summer Camp. Adult Summer Camp. With EDM, people in salmon colored shorts, and lots of loud rowdy entitled folks. If that's anything but a con for you, you probably belong here and godspeed.

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