WorkWhile
WorkWhile Mission, Purpose & Impact
Frequently Asked Questions
WorkWhile's mission shows up in the products the company ships. Real-Time Pay gives workers free access to earned wages the day after a shift — within weeks, 91% opted in. The Campus partnership gives workers access to a debt-free college degree. And Coach, an AI talent agent, surfaces what workers are actually capable of rather than filtering by resume. The mission isn't a statement on a wall — it's the product roadmap.
WorkWhile serves more than 1.3 million workers in warehousing, hospitality and retail — people doing essential work that keeps the economy running. By connecting them to reliable income and real-time access to their earnings, WorkWhile is addressing a structural gap in how hourly workers have historically been treated. The Give Back program gives employees dedicated time for volunteering, and some team members have worked hourly jobs themselves — bringing firsthand worker empathy into everything the company builds.
WorkWhile's values aren't aspirational — they're operational. Decisions get made in the worker's favor: Real-Time Pay launched at no cost, Coach was built to discover talent rather than filter it out. Speed and care aren't traded off against each other — workers entrust WorkWhile with their livelihoods, and the team takes that seriously. That same respect runs through the internal culture, from dedicated #kudos and #wins Slack channels to how the company honors employees' time and wellbeing.
WorkWhile was built on a simple observation: 80 million Americans work hourly jobs, yet the systems built to employ them have consistently underserved them. Cofounder and President Jarah Euston started her own career in hourly retail jobs— that experience is baked into how the company thinks and builds. At WorkWhile, mission and business model are the same thing: workers who are paid fairly and matched to the right roles show up more reliably and stay longer. That's what makes the mission feel real here.