I'm a self-proclaimed "User Group Groupie." Over the past quarter
century, I've seen the power of collective effort, channeled through
organizations, to provide mutual self-support... as co-founder of user
groups, as well as intentional neighborhoods known as cohousing
communities, I've served on national and regional boards (as I see you
have) and seen a lot accomplished using that form. As a result, I know
I have an innate inclination to see the potential to organize a
nonprofit as a solution to any challenge I see in the world.
But I have also experienced the inertia and resource-drain such
organizations can entail. The innate conservatism of the board
structure. The perpetual fundraising quest. Politics, priorities, and
control issues. The implicit exclusion of paid-membership models. The
difficulty of getting the attention of space owners. The myriad ways
that working to meet the operating/legal requirements of the nonprofit
redirects or even misdirects the get-things-done energy that
entrepreneurial or open-cooperative approaches could otherwise
incentivize.
You list among potential services an org could provide a "passport."
Yet this list and the wiki provided a self-organized "good enough for
now" solution to just that, in about a week. The wiki itself is a
"referral web site", and someone else just implemented another
directory database. We've got an online community right here. Most
spaces have the technical capacity to do videoconferencing, although I
could see a role for scheduling and promoting events, it would be
dependent on willing hosts and participants at individual spaces.
The rest of the list reads like a list of consulting services that you
could provide with your freshly-minted MBA (congrats, BTW!) and
corporate project-management experience/certification, which a
nonprofit could be a great way of marketing. As for the
coworking-related training, support, and educational services, is your
thought that people would be more likely to participate in creating
the content or buying the pieces if there was some kind of mutual
benefit organization vs. individual free or commercial contribution?
I should be clear that I absolutely do support exploration of the
idea: As a consultant serving the emerging coworking industry, I
absolutely can see the marketing benefit, the potential to bundle
services in a membership and spend less time myself doing outreach. I
see, on this list and in person, too many people "reinventing the
wheel" and relearning lessons "the hard way" -- and sometimes, that's
a necessary part of the process of building a business and creating
individual capacity, bringing a group together, but it means that
energy and work goes in directions that doesn't necessarily end up
contributing to more spaces opening faster. And the doctrinal lack of
organization/centrality sometimes adds to our collective inefficiency.
But I am reluctant to embrace such a concept and invest my time
towards it without a clear vision of the benefits to the movement, not
just for myself... and with greater predictors of success.
Rather than direct folks to a static top-down
you-grabbed-the-domain-already centralized-just-email-me
same-as-your-personal-site web page with a pre-made feature list, why
not start a page on the concept on the coworking wiki and see what
elements get energy and who shows up, and then start building the
community there?
Raines
who visited two different coworking communities yesterday and
discussed whether they had any issues like the one Citizen Space has
experienced with someone abusing free-access privileges or other
problems with theft or other disturbance. The answers so far: no, but
they're thinking about potential vulnerabilities. One space is
considering a webcam-at-the-door, but a periscope might do the job!
As part of that model, I am personally seeking to explore, document
and implement ways to connect early pipeline innovators and
entrepreneurs to the greater wealth of resources often and primarily
available to VC targets and incubators.
We have a ton of like-minded, yet diverse folks that are connected by
many facets of Co-working. How about we begin to translate our online
discussions into a rotating offline salon between all of the spaces
currently operating? We can stream gatherings online to afford full,
active participation when we can't make it to a designated venue. One
month we're in San Francisco and another we are in Philly.
We can start by learning who is in the room and how we can help each
other. I think it starts as simply as that, provided we can agree to
come in with an understanding that the goal is not to influence anyone
to do things one way, but to resource build through discussion and
collaborative interaction where it makes sense (and please let that be
by a broad definition of what makes sense).
I am happy to meet with folks to explore further (of course we will
document online to keep things democratic).
Anyone want to Skype in and gather in person next week? I am in NYC
and can secure a venue if one isn't suggested first.
Cheers,
d
Forgive any typos-- shopping and typing presents challenges.
-- dawn
im:
realrainmaker
skype: unitedcommunityventurepartners
--
...sent from my iPod Touch via wifi ;- )
Jacob
--
Office Nomads - Individuality without Isolation
http://www.officenomads.com - (206) 323-6500
I think we have different visions. I wouldn't have paraphrased this
conversation as "making coworking an organization" and I don't
consider cost as an obstacle as by design whatever this becomes would
have to stand on it's own. I'd love to paint a clearer picture of
what I'm thinking but the day job is calling so I need to put this
down.
I love the salon idea but my travel is limited with just the part time
job as income. I've got SxSW in March and maybe NYC in a few weeks.
Jacob
Jacob
Talking of 'shoot the shit'.
Someone posted couple of weeks ago saying they were hoping to open
source release some coworking related software around resource
booking.
Can that person give an update, I think that is one of the biggest
tangible areas that we can work together (along with advice and
comments etc).
PS I would be interested in an initial conf call but we would need to
think abotu what the outcome is other than for me to listen to all
your funky accents :-)
--
Steven Heath
Director, Foxbane Consulting
Founder, AltSpace
www.foxbane.co.nz
Cell: +64 21 706-067
AltSpace: Shared office space in Wellington for home based workers,
freelancers, or nimble companies
-hh