>
> So, 5 years later from this post, what's changed?

Remarkably little, I'd wager! Coworking is a bit better known - there's
more examples to point to, better support systems for new aspiring spaces,
and *lots* more examples of what not to do!

I'm guessing, to attract commuters, one will need to educate them on the
> value of NOT commuting.


Well, I'd caution against this approach, especially when you're the one
selling the alternative. ;) Rational arguments for trying to get people to
want to join a coworking space rarely stick, and instead feel like you're
trying to guess the right magic incantation to make people suddenly "get
coworking."

I wrote a bit about this before in an answer to the question "what's the
smallest size bedroom community that can support a coworking space
<https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-smallest-size-bedroom-community-that-can-support-a-coworking-space/answer/Alex-Hillman>"
but here's a fresh take including some of the additional research I've done
and observations I've made.

I always think about this a bit like Netwon's Laws of Physics: an object at
rest stays at rest, an object in motion stays in motion.

In this context, I think of commuting as a habit. Even when people can't
stand it, they're *used to* getting in the car every morning and going
somewhere. They've built their entire lifestyle around it.

The question I'd be asking is...who does that lifestyle *not* work for, and
why?

I can think of a few examples off the top of my head:

   - *Professionals who are new to the area, or returning after having been
   away for some time. *Its a giant pain in the ass to try to land
   somewhere with no network and try to build it when that network is, for the
   most part invisible.

   This translates across all city sizes, too. I've helped people move from
   tiny towns to big cities to find a coworking community that fits their
   goals and values, and the same process in reverse.

   - *"Second career" explorers. *This is one of my favorites, the folks
   who've spent 10, 15, 20 years or more in a career and decided "you know
   what? My quality life is more important than this grind. I'm out. I'm gonna
   figure out what's next.

   I got to watch my mom do this over the last decade and it's been *awesome,
   *but I've also gotten to welcome a lot of folks into our community who
   are so thrilled to find a place that isn't "all young startup founders" but
   instead a place that welcomes them in as a peer.

   - *Internal outsiders. *People who work for companies because it earns
   them a wage and makes their family comfortable, but they feel like an
   outsider at their company. *Don't underestimate this audience.* Job
   dissatisfaction can feel like a terminal disease, but adding coworking into
   the rotation can help people take the edge off and find things to explore.

   E.g we have a member who commutes nearly an hour to Indy Hall (there are
   coworking spaces closer) because the job he has is stable but soul sucking,
   stifling his creativity. He comes here because even if it doesn't help him
   do is job better (he's not especially motivated to, frankly), being a part
   of our community helps him stay happy by giving him a creative outlet and
   people to connect with. In a way, we're the coworkers he wishes he had.

The common theme across these examples are people who are already in
motion, as per the laws of physics like I mentioned above. There's no
convincing necessary...they're already looking for something better, even
if they don't know exactly what they're looking for.

Even then, the goal isn't to educate them on coworking. It's build
relationships. I can't stress that enough. I spent an entire chapter of my
audiobook (chapter 2, *"Just the two of us"*
<https://theindyhallway.com/ten/>) going over how I did this in an urban
setting, but going through it again in the last week since I'm editing the
transcripts for the e-reader edition, I can say with quite a bit of
confidence that my approach wouldn't change in a small town other than some
of the specific gather places I'd use as my starting point.

-Alex










------------------
*The #1 mistake in community building is doing it by yourself.*
Better Coworkers: http://indyhall.org
Weekly Coworking Tips: http://coworkingweekly.com
My Audiobook: https://theindyhallway.com/ten

On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 11:43 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> Great comments here. Gotta go and get it.
>
> So, 5 years later from this post, what's changed? I'm guessing, to attract
> commuters, one will need to educate them on the value of NOT commuting.
> I've been researching commuting costs and it's insane. Between the auto
> wear-and-tear and the time (assuming an hourly rate equivalent to the
> person's wage) it's thousands/year, in my case, WAY more than the annual
> cost of the coworking membership. That said, coworking is still new, and
> commuting has been part of our culture since the past WWII boom, so folks
> need to be told about it.
>
> There's an emotional component here. For people that drive an hour round
> trip, with a family or other things close to home they'd like to do, what's
> the value of more easily getting to a kids' soccer game or a friend's
> dinner party? Ditching that time spent in the car for either productive
> work OR being with friends/family.
>
> I'd say that part of your outreach and market assessment is to meet with
> the employers themselves to understand their needs and concerns. The trends
> underlying the rise of remote work (high speed web, younger folks more
> comfortable with amorphous work/life overlap, sharing v. owning, etc.) are
> not going away. The way we work has changed, and the way we "office" is
> catching up.
>
> Oh! And there are environmental benefits too. And, both the employer and
> the employees can claim that for personal satisfaction and marketing. Here
> in VT, that's important.
>
> On Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 10:33:53 AM UTC-4, Alex Hillman wrote:
>>
>> Tip #1: Go outside.
>>
>> This isn't the field of dreams, it's a new business, which means you need
>> to go out and find your customers. They don't know they're looking for you.
>>
>> Normally, I'd suggest walking into a cafe or bookstore, look for people
>> on laptops. Go say hi. Don't sell them on coworking, instead, have genuine
>> interest in why they're working in a cafe or a bookstore. Find out what
>> problems that solves, and what problems still exist. But since you're
>> looking for commuters, you need to figure out where they hang out - and
>> then hang out there.
>>
>> Get involved in the local community. Be a friendly face, a supporter and
>> a connector. Get known as the person who people want to be around to get
>> things done - and be known as the person surrounded by people who get
>> things done.
>>
>> -Alex
>>
>>
>>
>> /ah
>> indyhall.org
>> coworking in philadelphia
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 9:05 AM, CK <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> You could title this reply "Bought the furniture, built the web site,
>>> hung the sign - now what?"  We too are finding it difficult to get
>>> traction in a small town, although in our case our proximity to a
>>> decent size metro area led us to believe that there were people
>>> commuting into the city that would find they preferred to work here
>>> (Anoka, MN) instead.  Mark - we're interested in your article too.
>>> Niki - we've been considering trying several ideas that you mention
>>> but I think for us part of the challenge is that we are trying to draw
>>> in commuter traffic rather than "locals" that live/work in the small
>>> community where we are located.
>>>
>>> We don't have much available to spend on advertising or the like, but
>>> if folks have found that a particular formula seems to work well, we
>>> would certainly put some money behind it.  Any suggestions on where to
>>> put our scarce dollars?
>>>
>>> CK
>>>
>>> On Sep 13, 10:54 am, "Mark W. Kidd" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> > Hi Niki,
>>> >
>>> > I've been involved in some of the same kinds of conversations in small
>>> > communities, and I've got a forthcoming article which is my attempt to
>>> > synthesize what I've learned about how to talk about rural coworking.
>>> > I'll send you the manuscript off-list.
>>> >
>>> > Best,
>>> > Mark
>>> >
>>> > On 9/13/2011 11:37 AM, Niki wrote:
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > > I look forward every day to seeing what new posts show up here.
>>> > > Everyone is so interesting and seems to be so knowledgeable about
>>> > > coworking. I want to thank you all first for giving of your expertise
>>> > > and time. I ran an executive suites in Washington, DC years ago that
>>> > > really had the soul of a coworking space. We had parties, networking
>>> > > events, meetings, and fun. It was great and I loved every minute of
>>> > > it. However, due to life circumstances, about three years ago (right
>>> > > in the middle of the economic implosion) my husband and I moved back
>>> > > to Michigan where my parents live and where I grew up. Boy is life
>>> > > different here! I've tried for three years (in different iterations)
>>> > > to create a business here (education/training programs, virtual
>>> > > assistant, etc.) with the newest being a shared desk/cowork center.
>>> > > It's in a small town (there are such organizations in some of the
>>> > > larger cities but most people have no idea what I'm talking about);
>>> > > when I share the idea people say wow, how fantastic. I do have a
>>> > > weekly group that has started to meet and seems to be growing, and
>>> > > I've had one person come in and rent the conference room, but my
>>> > > "security cats" and I get lonesome most days of the week. I'm really
>>> > > struggling to find the energy to continue. As a side note, I am
>>> > > disabled with fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis and while I'm
>>> > > working really hard at trying to get business in, it's really wearing
>>> > > on me.
>>> >
>>> > > I have flyers, pr in local papers, have talked personally with every
>>> > > business I can think of in the local community. Every month I get
>>> > > notices of new DBAs and send them invitations to a FREE networking
>>> > > session, or day at the center. I have joined the local chamber, the
>>> > > downtown merchants, Rotary and several other community groups. I go
>>> to
>>> > > meetings and get involved. I just don't know where else to turn. I'm
>>> > > hoping that some of you who may have experience in rural coworking
>>> > > centers, and in psychology of small towns might be able to share some
>>> > > insights that I'm just not seeing.
>>> >
>>> > > Thanks guys for spending some time thinking about this for me. I
>>> > > really appreciate it.
>>> >
>>> > > Nancy Becher
>>> > > Business Success Unlimited
>>> > > challenge -- motivate -- collaborate
>>> > >www.success4biz.biz
>>> > > 269-858-3431
>>> > > --
>>> > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
>>> > > Groups "Coworking" group.
>>> > > To view this discussion on the web visit
>>> > >https://groups.google.com/d/msg/coworking/-/Jl1J9gJferMJ.
>>> > > To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
>>> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
>>> > > [email protected].
>>> > > For more options, visit this group at
>>> > >http://groups.google.com/group/coworking?hl=en.
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > Mark W. Kidd
>>> > Roadside Theater - Thousand Kites - Appalshop
>>> >
>>> > 606-536-0115 (cell)
>>> > roadside.org
>>> > thousandkites.org
>>> > appalshop.org
>>>
>>> --
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>>>
>>>
>> --
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