Hello Caner, It is true that larger spaces are hard to lease out as compared to coworking. Maybe you could talk them into converting a small part of the aforesaid space into coworking and test it out. However, I suggest that you back it with some facts and figures (For eg: No. of freelancers in your city, any business travelers etc.). Moreover, the space utilization efficiency is much higher in coworking as compared to a traditional office where a lot of common area is wasted. If not anything else, coworking will especially work out if a lot of tourists visit your town. Maybe you could add in a coffee shop to hang out with great wi-fi along with coworking! All the best! Do get back to me in case of any queries.
Cheers Raghu On Friday, 20 April 2018 01:36:28 UTC+5:30, Caner Onoglu wrote: > > A Business Center is in need of new tenants. They are almost 70% vacant. I > suggested them converting one of the floors to a Coworking. (each floor is > around 600 square meter and they have 9 floors) I told them having a > coworking will promote their building and in the long run help them find > new permanent tenants assuming some of coworking members will rent them > permanent offices at other floors eventually. What are your thoughts on > that? Has anyone had similar case? They say "coworking is good for big > cities, in our 300,000 populated city it will not work. I don't think it > is true. How can I convince the building owners about the benefits of > having a coworking floor? > > Thanks, > Caner > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Coworking" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to coworking+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.