Full-Time
Posted on 12/13/2025
Co-working and office space provider
$60k - $65k/yr
Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship
Mountain View, CA, USA
In Person
WeWork provides coworking and office spaces for individuals and teams in locations around the world. Its primary product is membership access to shared spaces, private offices, meeting rooms, and on-site amenities like printers, lounges, and community events, all accessible through a membership plan. Members book spaces, desks, or private offices as needed and can use the global network of WeWork locations. The company differentiates itself with a large, globally distributed network of locations, a built-in community and events program, and enterprise-ready spaces that cater to large teams with scalable office solutions. WeWork’s goal is to make it easier for people and companies to work flexibly, collaborate, and grow by providing accessible, well-designed work environments and a sense of community.
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
New York City, New York
Founded
2010
Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?
Competitive healthcare benefits
Life and AD&D insurance
401(k) matching
20 days of PTO
10 paid holidays
80 hours of paid sick time per full calendar year
16 weeks paid parental leave
WeWork has launched WeWork Go, a new workspace solution featuring private office pods designed for professionals working in high-traffic locations such as airports and convention centres. The pods are available in three formats: single-user, multi-user accommodating up to four people, and ADA-compatible models. The pods feature architectural-grade materials, enhanced soundproofing, curated lighting, ergonomic seating and integrated high-speed connectivity. Built in partnership with Bureau, they use environmentally responsible materials. Users can book pods instantly via the WeWork Go app at flexible rates that vary by location and session length. The product debuted at the 2026 Semafor World Economy Summit in Washington DC and will expand globally. This is WeWork's first new product launch since introducing WeWork Workplace in July 2022.
WeWork has launched WeWork Go, a private office pod designed for busy professionals in high-traffic locations like airports and hotels. The product, available in single-user and four-person models, marks the coworking company's first new offering since July 2022. The launch represents a dramatic shift for WeWork, which once held a $47 billion valuation under founder Adam Neumann before filing for bankruptcy in 2023 with $18 billion in debt. Now private with shares trading around five cents, the company is profitable with 550,000 members across over 600 locations under CEO John Santora. WeWork has adopted an asset-light model, franchising many locations and partnering with over 2,000 third-party coworking spaces. Santora, a former Cushman & Wakefield executive, says the transparent pods will test whether the company's entrepreneurial culture can thrive at a smaller scale.
WeWork has signed a lease for 37,000 square feet at 511 Fifth Avenue, expanding its New York City portfolio to 3.3 million square feet across 36 Manhattan locations. The deal marks a resurgence for the coworking company following its 2023 bankruptcy. The company now operates 45 million square feet globally, taking a disciplined approach under CEO John Santora, who joined in 2024. This contrasts sharply with founder Adam Neumann's era of overexpansion, when WeWork accumulated $13 billion in lease obligations whilst claiming to be a technology company. WeWork emerged from bankruptcy in June 2024 after Yardi Systems invested $337 million as part of a $450 million restructuring. The company is now "growing again, sensibly and sustainably", according to global head of real estate Peter Greenspan.
Yardi, a low-profile yet highly successful entrepreneur, ranks among the wealthiest in the software industry. His journey began in 1963 when he became the second person ever to achieve the top rank in the IIT JEE, a prestigious engineering entrance exam in India.
WeWork Bankruptcy: WeWork, once the most valuable U.S. startup, struggled to achieve profitability as a rise in work-from-home trends following the pandemic soured demand for its shared office spaces.