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rollerboi | 6 years ago
The running joke in my dept is they're going to start cutting back on amenities (watered down mouthwash, less cut up fruit in the fruitwater, etc.) and we won't see as many maintenance people as we did six months ago.
The private phone booths are still boarded up because of the formaldehyde issue (our booths weren't "affected" but they're still closed off). There was a meeting room with a couch that had bedbugs in it, so that was closed off for a couple weeks. We refuse to use that meeting room now.
WeWork has just had its problem after problem in my time working here. We're not exactly scared (because we're a larger company and could probably just telecommute while our office is moved to another building). But we have noticed that the WeWork associates have become less chipper over time.
seem_2211|6 years ago
autokad|6 years ago
while I find this story interesting to see how things play out, what lessons learned, etc, I don't revel at all about what is happening even though it has no direct impact on me. I feel bad for those 2.5k+ employees that went from 'our company is going to go public and this is going to pay off nicely to me' to "I got nothing and now I'm being laid off". Its sad, sorry that happened to them.
The wework debacle is already having negative ramifications in tech where companies are over correcting from earnings growth and investment to higher bottom lines. This will also lead to lower pay and opportunity for many tech workers. I'm not reveling.
rollerboi|6 years ago
I don't revel about the 2.5k employees that lose their jobs at all. (Not that I befriended many of the WeWork employees, but they're very nice people and I would hate to be in their situation, especially this close to the holidays.)
I revel about the irrational exuberance from the upper echelons of management/banking. I revel that Neuman, Softbank, JPM, Goldman Sachs, etc. are now getting called out for trying to dress up a pig in lipstick and sell it to the public at 10x its current (perhaps, "real"?) valuation.
Your last paragraph though - it's hard to make the determination that "WeWork's meltdown is leading to corrections in earnings growth/investment from tech companies." Not necessarily true imo, earnings growth was bound to correct sometime soon, especially with economic data pointing that demand is starting to slow (which is why central banks across the world are easing rates).
woah|6 years ago
unknown|6 years ago
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