2000–2010 Before founding WeWork, Neumann founded a children's clothing company, Krawlers. The pair sold their interest in Green Desk and using the funds along with a $15 million investment from Brooklyn real estate developer
Joel Schreiber for a 33% interest in the company, they founded WeWork in 2010. Neuman was awarded the
EY Entrepreneur of the Year in 2015.
2011–2020 On September 22, 2019, there were reports, from outlets such as
The Wall Street Journal, that various WeWork directors were planning on asking Neumann to step down as CEO, after "a tumultuous week in which his eccentric behavior and drug use came to light" before a planned IPO.
The Wall Street Journal reported that he had taken $700 million out of WeWork before the IPO, among other details, and "undermined his position" at the company. Neumann also directed We Holdings LLC (a company managed by Neumann and McKelvey) to unwind the transaction of $5.9 million in stock that the company paid in exchange for the "We" trademarks. On September 24, 2019, he resigned and
Artie Minson and
Sebastian Gunningham were named as successors. In October 2019,
The Wall Street Journal reported that Neumann would receive close to $1.7 billion from stakeholder
SoftBank for stepping down from WeWork's board and severing most of his ties to the company. Weeks later, minority shareholders filed a lawsuit against Neumann and other WeWork officials for breach of its fiduciary duties.
2021–present On February 24, 2021,
The Wall Street Journal reported that Neumann had received about $130 million of the $185 million in consulting fees agreed to be paid by SoftBank before SoftBank ceased making the remainder of the payments to him. On May 27, 2021, the Wall Street Journal reported the terms of a renegotiated severance package between Neumann and SoftBank, replacing that from October 2019. Among other terms, Neumann received $106 million in cash in addition to the $92.5 million in consulting fees previously received (in contrast to the $130 million figure reported by the WSJ on February 24, 2021, for previously received consulting fees from SoftBank), with about $50 million of that to pay for his legal fees. The renegotiated settlement package also "let him refinance $432 million in debt on favorable terms and allowed an entity Mr. Neumann controls to sell $578 million in WeWork stock."
The Wall Street Journal also reported that Neumann received a new WeWork stock award of "roughly $245 million," but "if the price [of WeWork] falls below $10 [per share], Mr. Neumann is ineligible to receive the stock award." The May 2021 securities disclosure filings were made "as WeWork completes a merger with BowX Acquisition, a special-purpose acquisition company." Following WeWork's
SPAC merger to become a public company in 2021,
Bloomberg Billionaires Index estimated his net worth at $2.3billion. He returned to the
Forbes billionaires list in 2022. , his net worth is listed at $2.2billion. In August, it was announced that
Andreessen Horowitz had invested in Neumann's new residential real-estate company,
Flow. As of 2025, the company manages and rents six properties in Florida and Saudi Arabia. In May 2022, Neumann was reported as being behind Flowcarbon, a start-up tokenizing
carbon credit trading platform that runs on
blockchain. In February 2024 Neumann attempted to buy-back WeWork, as his former company attempted to emerge from bankruptcy. Three months later the deal was abandoned. In May 2024, Neumann acquired
Whalebone, a bimonthly
lifestyle magazine based in
Montauk, New York. The magazine was founded in 2010 and following the sale renamed to
Flow Trip. In October 2024, Neumann announced his launch of Flow, a WeWork rival. ==Investments==