I know this isn't exactly what you're asking, but Alex's post reminded me 
of one of the most interesting and unexpected things I've found since we 
opened our space nearly 3 years ago. I expected that we would have around 
80% of our members coming from the immediate neighborhood, but I've found 
that people are more than willing to commute if the place they're commuting 
to is a place they enjoy working. I just took a quick scan of our member 
roster and less than a quarter of our members live in what I would consider 
the neighborhood of either of our spaces. Several of those 25% are in the 
neighborhood because they've specifically moved here after joining us, 
which is even more incredible.

So yeah, it's not necessarily about proximity as much as what you're 
offering and the kind of community you're cultivating.

On Wednesday, April 1, 2015 at 9:44:02 PM UTC-4, Alex Hillman wrote:
>
> How many people are in a radius doesn't really matter, if none of those 
> people care about or need Coworking. 
>
> We did something counterintuitive when we began: we put Indy Hall in a 
> place where NONE of our community members already were. We chose a 
> neighborhood that was easily accessible my public transit (something 
> important to our community), but all of our early members lived in 3 main 
> parts of the city and we chose to open in an area that was relatively 
> central to all 3. If we had picked any one of those three parts, the 
> other 2/3rds of our community would've felt more disconnected. 
>
> Bur I say relative because that's important. There is ALWAYS someone who 
> will say that you're too far away. In our case, that can be as "far away" 
> as 4 subway stops. It depends on what people are used to. 
>
> All of this stems from answering a bigger question and asking: who are 
> your members? Not a demographic, or people you hope to reach...but who are 
> the ACTUAL people that you CAN reach. Where are they, and where do they 
> already go? Do they cross neighborhoods? How do they get there? What kind 
> of work do they do? Can they work from anywhere? Do they have the power to 
> choose where they work? Do they like the way they work, or is there a 
> problem or set of problems?
>
> I'm a HUGE supporter of doing pop-up Coworking (aka Jelly, workatjelly.com) 
> for a while before selecting any space because it's the ideal way of seeing 
> who actually shows up, and where, and most importantly WHY. Is it because 
> they need a place to work? Or...is it because they're lonely at home and 
> cafes are awkward to be a professional. 
>
> And you can find all of that our before ever wasting time on finding the 
> "perfect" location (which doesn't exist, that's a fantasy) and without 
> spending a dollar, unsure if you'll ever see that dollar again.
>
> -Alex
>
> ------------------
> *The #1 mistake in community building is doing it by yourself.*
> Join the list: http://coworkingweekly.com
> Listen to the podcast: http://listen.coworkingweekly.com
>
>
> On Wednesday, April 1, 2015, Cassidy <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
>> What metrics do you all gauge to decide whether a location will work?
>> Like, 
>> - at least 100,000 people in a 5 mile radius
>> - at least 100,000 small businesses in a 5 mile radius
>> etc.
>>
>> Thanks! 
>>
>> Cassidy
>>
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> ------------------
> *The #1 mistake in community building is doing it by yourself.*
> Join the list: http://coworkingweekly.com
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>
>

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