Sorry, bullet 4 should read "spells out membership levels and associated
dues".

On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 5:10 PM, Tom Brandt <[email protected]> wrote:

> At Workantile, we have a license 
> agreement<http://workantile.com/license-agreement/>which:
>
>    - spells out in broad terms how members may use the space
>    - clarifies that members are responsible for their own property - we
>    are not insuring it
>    - specifies that Workantile does not provide alcohol to members, but
>    members may share drink among themselves - this gets us and our insurance
>    company off the hook in case something alcohol-related happens (we hope)
>    - spells out membership
>    - spells out how/when Workantile may terminate someone's membership.
>    We have had to do this only once in three years.
>
> We don't have rules, we do have 
> expectations<http://workantile.com/member-expectations/>. When
> you have rules, people get bogged down in minutiae. It is better to invite
> members to figure out how to make the community even more awesome than it
> is right now, than it is to dictate what people can and can't do.
>
> On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 5:02 PM, Linda Rolf <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Oren,
>>
>> We (swivelspaces.com) are new to coworking as well. Like you have
>> suggested, we opted for the community rules posted under our website's
>> terms of use. We want to create an atmosphere that is in keeping with the
>> spirit of coworking while still keeping our attorney happy.
>>
>> Linda
>>
>> Sent from my iPad
>>
>> On Aug 18, 2012, at 4:40 PM, "[email protected]" <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hey there all you global coworkers,
>>
>> I'm still a bit new here, so forgive me if this topic has been covered
>> before (couldn't find it via a cursory search).
>>
>> I have a few questions to get a discussion going regarding everyone's
>> opinions on guidelines for member behavior:
>>
>>    1. Do you provide a membership agreement to each coworker, post house
>>    rules in a public or both?
>>    2. What are the key principles covered in either?
>>    3. Can you provide samples of your house rules or membership
>>    agreements?
>>
>> I feel like there might be room for both, but there seems to be more
>> value in house rules since coworkers can see these all the time vs. an
>> agreement that might be more detailed but only read once, signed, and never
>> considered ever again.
>>
>> What do y'all think?
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> twb
> member, Workantile <http://workantile.com/>
> @twbrandt
>
>


-- 
twb
member, Workantile <http://workantile.com/>
@twbrandt

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