Illustrations: Xavier Lalanne-Tauzia

WeWork’s 15,000 Employees Are in Purgatory

As layoffs begin, workers band together to salvage what they can and reflect on the warning signs they wish, in retrospect, they had heeded

Mike Hofman
Marker
Published in
12 min readNov 21, 2019

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“I“If I’m going to get laid off, it will probably be next week,” a WeWork employee told me recently with the frankness of someone who has come to terms with a terminal diagnosis.

In Slack, on WhatsApp, and in other group chats, he and his 15,000 colleagues are buzzing about the fallout from their daredevil employer, which, two months ago, looked to be their ticket to a better, richer life. Perhaps, finally, a downpayment on that Brooklyn brownstone, a second place in Miami, or a way to bootstrap their own startup.

With a sense of surreal disbelief, they have watched as their ambitious, fast-growing company bungled its crucial initial public offering of stock; plummeted in value; flirted with insolvency; bought out controversial CEO Adam Neumann with a $1.7 billion exit package; and began laying off employees in numbers soon expected to exceed 4,000.

Editor’s Note: After publication, WeWork announced the size of this round of layoffs: 2,400 employees, with a possible further reduction of 1,000 more, plus the transfer of 1,000 maintenance staff to outsourcing firms (as

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Mike Hofman
Marker
Writer for

Mike Hofman is a writer and editor living in New York. His work has appeared in Fortune, GQ, and Inc.