The Mercury News Weekend

WeWork to lay off nearly 20% of workforce in restructur­ing effort

Company’s massive losses doomed IPO as investors bailed

- By Alexandra Olson

NEW YORK — WeWork is slashing nearly 20% of its workforce, embarking on a painful restructur­ing of its money-losing operation that doomed its stock market debut and left the office-sharing company on the brink of bankruptcy.

WeWork said it has laid off 2,400 of its approximat­ely 12,500 employees to “create a more efficient organizati­on.” The job cuts began weeks ago in regions around the world and continued this week in the U.S, the company said in a statement Thursday.

WeWork said the employees who lost their jobs “are incredibly talented profession­als,” but gave no details about which roles were cut.

In an email to employees earlier this week, executive chairman Marcelo Claure said jobs would be eliminated in areas that “do not directly support our core business goals,” referring to WeWork’s main officeleas­ing operations.

Additional­ly, about 1,000 cleaning and maintenanc­e jobs in the U. S. and Canada are being outsourced to another firm that will contract the workers back to WeWork for the time being.

The New York- based company is scaling back the explosive growth that put its sleekly designed shared office spaces in 122 cities around the world while racking up massive losses that ultimately put off Wall Street investors and doomed its IPO.

WeWork is shedding side business and dumping or scaling back projects started under the grandiose but scattered vision of ousted co-founder Adam

Neumann, including a Manhattan elementary school and the shared residentia­l offering WeLive.

Claure plans to lay out a five- year turnaround a plan at company-wide meeting Friday amid employee anger over the mismanagem­ent of a company that until recently had been the darling of the start-up world, valued at $47 billion in private investment round.

WeWork was saved from financial collapse with a $9.5 bailout from Japanese tech conglomera­te Softbank, which now owns 80%. That bail

out reportedly valued WeWork at around $8 billion, devastatin­g for many employees facing a reduction in the value of their stock options. Resentment grew following a $1.7 billion payout to Neumann, whose controvers­ial corporate governance practices contribute­d to skepticism in Wall Street about WeWork.

In a letter to management last month, a group of WeWork employees said the unraveling of the IPO revealed “deception, exclusion and selfishnes­s playing out at the company’s highest levels.” The group, calling itself the WeWorkers Coalition, asked that laid off employees be fairly compensate­d for lost equity, and that those who remain being given a bigger voice in the future of the company.

Of Neumann’s compensati­on package, the workers said, “we are not asking for this level of graft.”

“We are asking to be treated with humanity and dignity so we can continue living life while searching to make a living elsewhere,” the letter said.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? WeWork is shedding side business and dumping or scaling back projects started under the grandiose vision of ousted co-founder Adam Neumann, including a Manhattan elementary school and the shared residentia­l offering WeLive.
MARY ALTAFFER — ASSOCIATED PRESS WeWork is shedding side business and dumping or scaling back projects started under the grandiose vision of ousted co-founder Adam Neumann, including a Manhattan elementary school and the shared residentia­l offering WeLive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States