Class is in Session
At WeWork, an Idealistic Start-Up Clashes With Its Cleaners
By DAVID GELLES
Adam Neumann bounded through the downtown Manhattan headquarters of WeWork, beaming as he pointed out the amenities of the open floor plan.
Over in the communal area, entrepreneurs mingled. Here was the shared kitchen, with cold-brew coffee and organic snacks. How cool is that? Over there was the quiet room, with mood lighting and hammocks. Wasn’t it awesome? Mr. Neumann pulled out his iPhone and checked WeWork’s app, where members — as WeWork calls its customers — can find jobs and team up with one another on new socially responsible ventures. Talk about disrupting business as usual.
In just five years, Mr. Neumann and WeWork’s other co-founder, Miguel McKelvey, have built their start-up into an office-space rental empire, with 52 locations in 16 cities around the globe. An office utopia designed for millennials — at first mostly freelancers trying to escape their apartments, but now also small businesses and corporations trying to lure the creative class — WeWork was, until recently, valued at $5 billion. Then in June, it sought another round of financing, getting huge investments from Fidelity Management and others. Its new valuation: $10 billion.
At WeWork, an Idealistic Start-Up Clashes With Its Cleaners
By DAVID GELLES
Adam Neumann bounded through the downtown Manhattan headquarters of WeWork, beaming as he pointed out the amenities of the open floor plan.
Over in the communal area, entrepreneurs mingled. Here was the shared kitchen, with cold-brew coffee and organic snacks. How cool is that? Over there was the quiet room, with mood lighting and hammocks. Wasn’t it awesome? Mr. Neumann pulled out his iPhone and checked WeWork’s app, where members — as WeWork calls its customers — can find jobs and team up with one another on new socially responsible ventures. Talk about disrupting business as usual.
In just five years, Mr. Neumann and WeWork’s other co-founder, Miguel McKelvey, have built their start-up into an office-space rental empire, with 52 locations in 16 cities around the globe. An office utopia designed for millennials — at first mostly freelancers trying to escape their apartments, but now also small businesses and corporations trying to lure the creative class — WeWork was, until recently, valued at $5 billion. Then in June, it sought another round of financing, getting huge investments from Fidelity Management and others. Its new valuation: $10 billion.
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