Sold as a game-changer but held down by all the same old issues - Community Lead WeWork Employee Review

2.0
7 Jul 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

On the community side: - employees have access to workspaces around the world - lots of great people within the company and its spaces - exposure to hundreds of member companies brings connections and networking - job demands can be frustrating but not inherently difficult.

Cons

- On the job training/experience is way overblown. You will work 3x as hard to walk away with skills such as sales or operations as you would anywhere else because resources to truly excel at these things don't exist here. - Old guard is complacent or unqualified in positions they were handed for being early to the company. Deeply ingrained 'fake it till you make it' mentality from regional directors some of whom have little or no prior work experience. *Personal anecdote*: When I was negotiating a promotion that I was more than ready for multiple openings were available. I declined one offer because the needs at that specific location were not aligned at all with the growth I was seeking. Among other unprofessional responses I received, I was told by the internal recruiter to reconsider and that I "should be grateful to be getting a promotion at all". - Entry/mid-level employees have wildly different experiences. Some are stunted from day 1 in terms of growth. Others are mysteriously advanced quickly by their managers who are either friends or of the same age/similar levels of experience. - The middle managers who do try to live by the "people first" rule can only prioritize their teams thru extra efforts beyond the work day and often at a personal expense of some type and will usually burn out quickly. - Corporate policies can change on a whim as upper management learns how to run a business for the first time (pre-2020). - Incentives, directives, and company goals change so fast that innovation, ideas, and hard work go to waste because the whole strategy has been scrapped by the time your ready to present and a new issue is being focused on. - Company leadership at EVERY level is reactive and not pro-active. This means tons of time and resources wasted. Some public initiatives such as sustainability are not thought out or have little priority internally and are left to be the passion projects of a few determined but exhausted individuals. - In NYC there is an obvious lack of diversity (and overall in C-level) which the BOD has been called out for with underwhelming response. - Working in Community is an intimate hospitality/customer service role. When issues arrive in the workplace (i.e. elevator down or a leaking pipe) you may become a punching bag for customers who you will also then continue to see every day in the space. If intense levels of human interaction are not for you then avoid this position.

Explore other reviews about WeWork

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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