Yes. I do. Whether this will work depends on how you think of your space and how you want your community to think of your space.
I have mine listed on a number of Dutch language websites which are traditionally sources for regular office space listings. This is because the model we are based on, is that this is your office, home for your business if you like, whether you are physically here once a year or every day. Or if you only come for events and parties. Such listings work well for folks who come on a regular basis; traditional listings are after all where the people are, who are looking for regular office space and also for peole who don't know what coworking is -- there is a population who is looking at traditional office listing because that's what they know about. Or because they are looking for a rental which is not going well, in hope of cobbling somethign together with the owner. These last are the best coworkers, because they are already thinking outside the box. But you have to target your listing pretty carefully to the people you want who are n that site, otherwise you just spend a lot of time talking about something they are not interested in. That's my experience. Jeannine On Thursday, December 13, 2012 12:00:30 AM UTC+1, [email protected] wrote: > > Hey there, > > I was just wondering if anyone has tried promoting their coworking space > through means usually reserved for traditional office space? > > These would include Craigslist, Loopnet <http://www.loopnet.com/>, > Costar<http://www.costar.com/>, > and probably many more that I'm not aware of. > > Just curious if anyone has had success using these methods or what your > experience may have been like promoting through these services. > > Thanks! > Oren -- Visit this forum on the web at http://discuss.coworking.com --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Coworking" group. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

