[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-24 Thread Miguel
Sorry been MIA. Thanks everyone for sharing tips and experiences.  I
completely agree that ultimately, it's the site manager's
responsibility to make sure to place runs smoothly. Alex's
recommendation to focus on removing myself as the dependency is
something I will definitely keep in mind as a strategic goal.
Thanks!!



On May 6, 10:51 am, thilo th...@upstre.am wrote:
 Hi Miguel and all the others on the list,

 i followed the thread closely and it was great read.
 I can fully agree from my personal experience with everything what
 Angel and Alex explained in more detail.

 You are the one in charge and if you make sure everything is taken
 care of without bothering your coworkers they will take on some tasks
 them self and jump in happily when their help is really needed because
 they grew proud of the space.

 And I also just learned from reading The E-Myth Revised  what Alex
 said,  it's important that you are able to remove yourself as a
 dependency.

 So beside praises nothing to add.
 Cheers
 Thilo
 coworking:http://co-up.de
 coworking management:http://cobot.me

 On May 3, 11:45 am, Joseph K. mjoemig...@gmail.com wrote:







  When I started my co-working presence in Singapore (a little, 'big'
  city?), most chores listed by Angel were done internal i.e. my staffs,
  myself who also use the co-work area. As time goes, efforts are
  'chipped in' by subscribing members. Maybe it's a 'pick up your own
  litter' mentality or the posted 'keep the place clean' notices sticks.
  Hence the management of space is auto. Some of my members even help
  'sell' available slots to inquirers! I think this works like a 2-way
  street : don't expect members to be delegated tasks, but ensure a
  culture is there to love that place they sits at. Hope this helps :)

  On May 2, 7:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:

   I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
   report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
   steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
   organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
   deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
   than I originally expected.

   I started talking to a few coworking managers about ways to more
   efficiently manage the space.  One person mentioned that a coworking
   space should really runitself, and that the founders/managers are
   just members who moved desks in, and pays the rent.  The theory is
   that most of the work, if any, can/should be delegated to members.
   Personally I do not agree with this, but wanted to see what the group
   thinks

   Cheers,

   Miguelwww.coworkingevanston.com

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[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-06 Thread thilo
Hi Miguel and all the others on the list,

i followed the thread closely and it was great read.
I can fully agree from my personal experience with everything what
Angel and Alex explained in more detail.

You are the one in charge and if you make sure everything is taken
care of without bothering your coworkers they will take on some tasks
them self and jump in happily when their help is really needed because
they grew proud of the space.

And I also just learned from reading The E-Myth Revised  what Alex
said,  it's important that you are able to remove yourself as a
dependency.

So beside praises nothing to add.
Cheers
Thilo
coworking: http://co-up.de
coworking management: http://cobot.me

On May 3, 11:45 am, Joseph K. mjoemig...@gmail.com wrote:
 When I started my co-working presence in Singapore (a little, 'big'
 city?), most chores listed by Angel were done internal i.e. my staffs,
 myself who also use the co-work area. As time goes, efforts are
 'chipped in' by subscribing members. Maybe it's a 'pick up your own
 litter' mentality or the posted 'keep the place clean' notices sticks.
 Hence the management of space is auto. Some of my members even help
 'sell' available slots to inquirers! I think this works like a 2-way
 street : don't expect members to be delegated tasks, but ensure a
 culture is there to love that place they sits at. Hope this helps :)

 On May 2, 7:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:







  I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
  report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
  steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
  organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
  deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
  than I originally expected.

  I started talking to a few coworking managers about ways to more
  efficiently manage the space.  One person mentioned that a coworking
  space should really run itself, and that the founders/managers are
  just members who moved desks in, and pays the rent.  The theory is
  that most of the work, if any, can/should be delegated to members.
  Personally I do not agree with this, but wanted to see what the group
  thinks

  Cheers,

  Miguelwww.coworkingevanston.com

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[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-03 Thread Joseph K.
When I started my co-working presence in Singapore (a little, 'big'
city?), most chores listed by Angel were done internal i.e. my staffs,
myself who also use the co-work area. As time goes, efforts are
'chipped in' by subscribing members. Maybe it's a 'pick up your own
litter' mentality or the posted 'keep the place clean' notices sticks.
Hence the management of space is auto. Some of my members even help
'sell' available slots to inquirers! I think this works like a 2-way
street : don't expect members to be delegated tasks, but ensure a
culture is there to love that place they sits at. Hope this helps :)

On May 2, 7:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
 report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
 steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
 organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
 deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
 than I originally expected.

 I started talking to a few coworking managers about ways to more
 efficiently manage the space.  One person mentioned that a coworking
 space should really run itself, and that the founders/managers are
 just members who moved desks in, and pays the rent.  The theory is
 that most of the work, if any, can/should be delegated to members.
 Personally I do not agree with this, but wanted to see what the group
 thinks

 Cheers,

 Miguelwww.coworkingevanston.com

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[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Jeannine
Hi, Miguel,

I think this depends on what kind of a community you have.
Particularly in large cities, I think the DIY mindset does prevail.  I
have a space in a smallish city (50K) which is attached to my house.
So this space is all about the personal.  My members are not asked to
do much of anything; but I note that when they really feel a part of
it this is marked by their starting to do things themselves -- they
clean up, they buy stuff for the space, they set coffee for somebody
else.  It's at that point that they have made the transition to
feeling that it is really theirs.

I will say that nobody volunteers to clean the bathroom but other than
that.

This is also the basis of my theory of parenting, so it pleases me to
see that it works for adults also, right down to (not) cleaning the
bathrooms now that I think of it. :-)

Anyway, just as within my family, I don't delegate things to my
members because I am ultimately responsible for it and I see no sense
in pretending that is not true.  If your workload is uncomfortably
high then it's time to have a look at that, what is it that is taking
up most of your time?

Laters,

Jeannine

On May 2, 1:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
 report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
 steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
 organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
 deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
 than I originally expected.

 I started talking to a few coworking managers about ways to more
 efficiently manage the space.  One person mentioned that a coworking
 space should really run itself, and that the founders/managers are
 just members who moved desks in, and pays the rent.  The theory is
 that most of the work, if any, can/should be delegated to members.
 Personally I do not agree with this, but wanted to see what the group
 thinks

 Cheers,

 Miguelwww.coworkingevanston.com

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[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Miguel
On a daily basis, other than the typical chores (clean up little
things, trash, coffee pot clean out, etc), most of my time is spent on
interacting with members, answering emails/calls from potential
members, giving tour to drop-ins, organizing and promoting events, and
if there's time left, I will tweet a little bit :-)  For us, we are
very young, and still trying hard to grow, so my focus is more on
outreach and community building.  Sometimes half the day is gone
before I get to sit down to do my normal job.

As mentioned, I am actually having a LOT OF FUN doing all these, and
don't mind the chores at all.  And it's good to be busy fielding
questions, and meeting interesting people.  But as this was not
intended to be a source of income, I just wanted to get a realistic
sense for labor resource budgeting.  I've visited a few awesome
coworking spaces, and talked to a few veterans.  I get the sense that
this is a solid part-time job.  Hearing the idea that the place
should run itself, I just thought I may have missed something, or
been doing too much?

Have a great week everyone!

Miguel


On May 2, 3:38 am, Jeannine flexkantoorkame...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi, Miguel,

 I think this depends on what kind of a community you have.
 Particularly in large cities, I think the DIY mindset does prevail.  I
 have a space in a smallish city (50K) which is attached to my house.
 So this space is all about the personal.  My members are not asked to
 do much of anything; but I note that when they really feel a part of
 it this is marked by their starting to do things themselves -- they
 clean up, they buy stuff for the space, they set coffee for somebody
 else.  It's at that point that they have made the transition to
 feeling that it is really theirs.

 I will say that nobody volunteers to clean the bathroom but other than
 that.

 This is also the basis of my theory of parenting, so it pleases me to
 see that it works for adults also, right down to (not) cleaning the
 bathrooms now that I think of it. :-)

 Anyway, just as within my family, I don't delegate things to my
 members because I am ultimately responsible for it and I see no sense
 in pretending that is not true.  If your workload is uncomfortably
 high then it's time to have a look at that, what is it that is taking
 up most of your time?

 Laters,

 Jeannine

 On May 2, 1:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:







  I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
  report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
  steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
  organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
  deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
  than I originally expected.

  I started talking to a few coworking managers about ways to more
  efficiently manage the space.  One person mentioned that a coworking
  space should really run itself, and that the founders/managers are
  just members who moved desks in, and pays the rent.  The theory is
  that most of the work, if any, can/should be delegated to members.
  Personally I do not agree with this, but wanted to see what the group
  thinks

  Cheers,

  Miguelwww.coworkingevanston.com

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[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Angel Kwiatkowski
I think that the phrase should run itself is fraught with a level of
expectation that can't be upheld especially by new space catalysts and
owners. New owners: your space will NOT run itself and you shouldn't
feel like you're failing or doing it wrong if it's not. I take care of
most of the infrastructure of our space b/c I set an intention that I
didn't want my members to have to worry about chores like trash,
cleaning, greeting people and giving tours. I wanted the space to be a
place where really busy (and sometimes very sleep deprived)
freelancers could come for respite from the crumby tables of coffee
shops and the piled up dishes of home and concentrate on their craft
and on one another.

I easily worked full time for the first 6 months to get systems and
processes down pat. Even now, here are some of the tasks that are done
by myself or the 2 interns.
Unlock/lock doors
Greet visitors/members and give tours
Make coffee
Put away dishes
Take out trash, compost, recycling, do laundry
Clean tables, straighten chairs
Buy and restock cream, sugar, pp towels, tp
Respond to phone, twitter, facebook and email inquiries
Do invoicing, enter bills, pay bills, take payments
Update the website
Blog 3x/week
Think up and schedule educational and social events
Find partners for events or promotions
Answer member's questions
Go out for coffee and lunch with members and interns (okay, not really
a task but it takes time)
Train interns and delegate work to them

Now to clarify--the members cover for me ALL THE TIME. They'll orient
visitors, give tours and make coffee and open and close when I want a
day off, am sick or am traveling. However, MOST of the time I'll just
take care of those details for them. The members really appreciate
that they don't have to think about where the next clean cup will be
or where the wipes are for the toilet rim are. I think as community
cultivators, we should take care of the simple stuff so the members
can do the hard stuff that requires a lot of mental gymnastics like
collaborating, solving client problems, learning from one another and
starting companies together.

Angel

On May 2, 8:14 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 On a daily basis, other than the typical chores (clean up little
 things, trash, coffee pot clean out, etc), most of my time is spent on
 interacting with members, answering emails/calls from potential
 members, giving tour to drop-ins, organizing and promoting events, and
 if there's time left, I will tweet a little bit :-)  For us, we are
 very young, and still trying hard to grow, so my focus is more on
 outreach and community building.  Sometimes half the day is gone
 before I get to sit down to do my normal job.

 As mentioned, I am actually having a LOT OF FUN doing all these, and
 don't mind the chores at all.  And it's good to be busy fielding
 questions, and meeting interesting people.  But as this was not
 intended to be a source of income, I just wanted to get a realistic
 sense for labor resource budgeting.  I've visited a few awesome
 coworking spaces, and talked to a few veterans.  I get the sense that
 this is a solid part-time job.  Hearing the idea that the place
 should run itself, I just thought I may have missed something, or
 been doing too much?

 Have a great week everyone!

 Miguel

 On May 2, 3:38 am, Jeannine flexkantoorkame...@gmail.com wrote:







  Hi, Miguel,

  I think this depends on what kind of a community you have.
  Particularly in large cities, I think the DIY mindset does prevail.  I
  have a space in a smallish city (50K) which is attached to my house.
  So this space is all about the personal.  My members are not asked to
  do much of anything; but I note that when they really feel a part of
  it this is marked by their starting to do things themselves -- they
  clean up, they buy stuff for the space, they set coffee for somebody
  else.  It's at that point that they have made the transition to
  feeling that it is really theirs.

  I will say that nobody volunteers to clean the bathroom but other than
  that.

  This is also the basis of my theory of parenting, so it pleases me to
  see that it works for adults also, right down to (not) cleaning the
  bathrooms now that I think of it. :-)

  Anyway, just as within my family, I don't delegate things to my
  members because I am ultimately responsible for it and I see no sense
  in pretending that is not true.  If your workload is uncomfortably
  high then it's time to have a look at that, what is it that is taking
  up most of your time?

  Laters,

  Jeannine

  On May 2, 1:55 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:

   I am one of the founders/managers at Coworking Evanston.  Happy to
   report that things are going well since we opened 3 months ago -
   steady membership growth, members have started to collaborate,
   organizing meetups and other events, etc :-)   I am having a great
   deal of fun managing the space, but find that the workload is higher
   than I 

[Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Beth Buczynski
I just wanted to chime in as a coworker to give a little perspective
from the other side...

Before freelancing I worked at an internet startup, where we were
supposed to be casual and awesome and independent. We had a kitchen
situation that was everyone's responsibility but inevitably, this
meant that people always assumed someone else would unload the
dishwasher or take out the recycling. You can't really blame us,
because when the day was full of frantic work (as is often the case at
a startup) we all had more important things to do than dishes. Besides
we all had dishes waiting at home.

Because the community manager at my space (Hi Angel!) doesn't require
us to pitch in on these chore-type tasks, we've been able to avoid all
the reminder notes and awkward scoldings about picking up after
ourselves that I hated about working in an office. This is not to say
that we're all slobs and expect to be cleaned up after. In fact, I'm
even more aware of how I treat the surroundings at Cohere, because I
know that someone has been kind enough to make sure they were clean/
stocked etc. This has created a genuine sense of pride in our
community. Members are more than willing to jump in and lend a hand
when needed, or when someone new shows up, because we're excited to
show it off :)

Basically, I think that if you do it right, the team attitude will
evolve organically, and that sense of community will ensure everything
is taken care of--even if the community manager takes a day off.

Beth
@gonecoworking

On May 2, 10:19 am, Angel Kwiatkowski fccowork...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think that the phrase should run itself is fraught with a level of
 expectation that can't be upheld especially by new space catalysts and
 owners. New owners: your space will NOT run itself and you shouldn't
 feel like you're failing or doing it wrong if it's not. I take care of
 most of the infrastructure of our space b/c I set an intention that I
 didn't want my members to have to worry about chores like trash,
 cleaning, greeting people and giving tours. I wanted the space to be a
 place where really busy (and sometimes very sleep deprived)
 freelancers could come for respite from the crumby tables of coffee
 shops and the piled up dishes of home and concentrate on their craft
 and on one another.

 I easily worked full time for the first 6 months to get systems and
 processes down pat. Even now, here are some of the tasks that are done
 by myself or the 2 interns.
 Unlock/lock doors
 Greet visitors/members and give tours
 Make coffee
 Put away dishes
 Take out trash, compost, recycling, do laundry
 Clean tables, straighten chairs
 Buy and restock cream, sugar, pp towels, tp
 Respond to phone, twitter, facebook and email inquiries
 Do invoicing, enter bills, pay bills, take payments
 Update the website
 Blog 3x/week
 Think up and schedule educational and social events
 Find partners for events or promotions
 Answer member's questions
 Go out for coffee and lunch with members and interns (okay, not really
 a task but it takes time)
 Train interns and delegate work to them

 Now to clarify--the members cover for me ALL THE TIME. They'll orient
 visitors, give tours and make coffee and open and close when I want a
 day off, am sick or am traveling. However, MOST of the time I'll just
 take care of those details for them. The members really appreciate
 that they don't have to think about where the next clean cup will be
 or where the wipes are for the toilet rim are. I think as community
 cultivators, we should take care of the simple stuff so the members
 can do the hard stuff that requires a lot of mental gymnastics like
 collaborating, solving client problems, learning from one another and
 starting companies together.

 Angel

 On May 2, 8:14 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:







  On a daily basis, other than the typical chores (clean up little
  things, trash, coffee pot clean out, etc), most of my time is spent on
  interacting with members, answering emails/calls from potential
  members, giving tour to drop-ins, organizing and promoting events, and
  if there's time left, I will tweet a little bit :-)  For us, we are
  very young, and still trying hard to grow, so my focus is more on
  outreach and community building.  Sometimes half the day is gone
  before I get to sit down to do my normal job.

  As mentioned, I am actually having a LOT OF FUN doing all these, and
  don't mind the chores at all.  And it's good to be busy fielding
  questions, and meeting interesting people.  But as this was not
  intended to be a source of income, I just wanted to get a realistic
  sense for labor resource budgeting.  I've visited a few awesome
  coworking spaces, and talked to a few veterans.  I get the sense that
  this is a solid part-time job.  Hearing the idea that the place
  should run itself, I just thought I may have missed something, or
  been doing too much?

  Have a great week everyone!

  Miguel

  On May 2, 3:38 am, Jeannine 

Re: [Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Mike Pihlman
When I have to go on jury duty (or other such necessary trip)our members
take care of the place.  But most of the time...I clean up, take out the
garbage, etc etc.

By the way...today alone...2 NEW members. If you rememberI was this
close to closing last October... :-)

Mike



On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 9:59 AM, Beth Buczynski bethbo...@gmail.com wrote:

 I just wanted to chime in as a coworker to give a little perspective
 from the other side...

 Before freelancing I worked at an internet startup, where we were
 supposed to be casual and awesome and independent. We had a kitchen
 situation that was everyone's responsibility but inevitably, this
 meant that people always assumed someone else would unload the
 dishwasher or take out the recycling. You can't really blame us,
 because when the day was full of frantic work (as is often the case at
 a startup) we all had more important things to do than dishes. Besides
 we all had dishes waiting at home.

 Because the community manager at my space (Hi Angel!) doesn't require
 us to pitch in on these chore-type tasks, we've been able to avoid all
 the reminder notes and awkward scoldings about picking up after
 ourselves that I hated about working in an office. This is not to say
 that we're all slobs and expect to be cleaned up after. In fact, I'm
 even more aware of how I treat the surroundings at Cohere, because I
 know that someone has been kind enough to make sure they were clean/
 stocked etc. This has created a genuine sense of pride in our
 community. Members are more than willing to jump in and lend a hand
 when needed, or when someone new shows up, because we're excited to
 show it off :)

 Basically, I think that if you do it right, the team attitude will
 evolve organically, and that sense of community will ensure everything
 is taken care of--even if the community manager takes a day off.

 Beth
 @gonecoworking

 On May 2, 10:19 am, Angel Kwiatkowski fccowork...@gmail.com wrote:
  I think that the phrase should run itself is fraught with a level of
  expectation that can't be upheld especially by new space catalysts and
  owners. New owners: your space will NOT run itself and you shouldn't
  feel like you're failing or doing it wrong if it's not. I take care of
  most of the infrastructure of our space b/c I set an intention that I
  didn't want my members to have to worry about chores like trash,
  cleaning, greeting people and giving tours. I wanted the space to be a
  place where really busy (and sometimes very sleep deprived)
  freelancers could come for respite from the crumby tables of coffee
  shops and the piled up dishes of home and concentrate on their craft
  and on one another.
 
  I easily worked full time for the first 6 months to get systems and
  processes down pat. Even now, here are some of the tasks that are done
  by myself or the 2 interns.
  Unlock/lock doors
  Greet visitors/members and give tours
  Make coffee
  Put away dishes
  Take out trash, compost, recycling, do laundry
  Clean tables, straighten chairs
  Buy and restock cream, sugar, pp towels, tp
  Respond to phone, twitter, facebook and email inquiries
  Do invoicing, enter bills, pay bills, take payments
  Update the website
  Blog 3x/week
  Think up and schedule educational and social events
  Find partners for events or promotions
  Answer member's questions
  Go out for coffee and lunch with members and interns (okay, not really
  a task but it takes time)
  Train interns and delegate work to them
 
  Now to clarify--the members cover for me ALL THE TIME. They'll orient
  visitors, give tours and make coffee and open and close when I want a
  day off, am sick or am traveling. However, MOST of the time I'll just
  take care of those details for them. The members really appreciate
  that they don't have to think about where the next clean cup will be
  or where the wipes are for the toilet rim are. I think as community
  cultivators, we should take care of the simple stuff so the members
  can do the hard stuff that requires a lot of mental gymnastics like
  collaborating, solving client problems, learning from one another and
  starting companies together.
 
  Angel
 
  On May 2, 8:14 am, Miguel miguel.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   On a daily basis, other than the typical chores (clean up little
   things, trash, coffee pot clean out, etc), most of my time is spent on
   interacting with members, answering emails/calls from potential
   members, giving tour to drop-ins, organizing and promoting events, and
   if there's time left, I will tweet a little bit :-)  For us, we are
   very young, and still trying hard to grow, so my focus is more on
   outreach and community building.  Sometimes half the day is gone
   before I get to sit down to do my normal job.
 
   As mentioned, I am actually having a LOT OF FUN doing all these, and
   don't mind the chores at all.  And it's good to be busy fielding
   questions, and meeting interesting people.  But 

Re: [Coworking] Re: Coworking Space should run itself?

2011-05-02 Thread Alex Hillman
Because Jeannine, Angel, and Beth have done such a great job of answering
the tactical elements of this quesiton, I'm going to try to take a different
approach.

Rather than ask if a coworking space *should* run itself, as shoulds tend
to be tricky and
prescriptivehttp://dangerouslyawesome.com/2010/11/vitamins-vs-prescriptions/anyway,
I'll suggest that a coworking space can run itself - with some
caveats to explain what I mean by that - and then why it's valuable to work
towards that goal.

*Caveat #1) *
*I wish I'd given up control sooner*
*
*
When we opened Indy Hall, I was there every day to open and close. I was
there to meet every new member. I was there for EVERYTHING, with my fingers
in EVERYTHING.

About 18 months in, I was fast approaching burnout. I found someone who I
trusted, who was organized and friendly, and set her loose on my inbox and
sat her next to me and said look for things that I'm doing that don't need
to be me, and take them from me. She did this, and not only got a large
volume of the administrative work out of my field of vision, but found ways
to improve and streamline everything since it was now being executed by a
fresh set of eyes. Everything I was doing before was not only still being
done, but much of it was being done better. Since then, the role has changed
hands about once a year, as the person in this role tends to find
opportunities in the community to create things for themselves (running Indy
Hall is an educational experience in itself, everything from communication
skills, organizational skills, business skills, interpersonal skills, etc),
and we can't stop somebody from following their path. The role has become
one of transformative learning for all four people who've held it (myself
included).

If I could do it all over again, I wouldn't have waited until I was almost
burned out to get at least one more person involved that wasn't a partner.
It freed me up to work on the things I actually cared about, the things that
actually needed me (until they didn't need me either), and gave us room to
grow.

One of my favorite quotes from Geoff has always been, the only reason to
gather power is to give it away. That's the mindset that's let us seen
impact and change happen on a bigger scale than any one of us could
accomplish on our own.

*Caveat #2*
*Shit always get dirty*
*
*
No matter who's in charge of the cleanliness, things always get dirty. For
the first year, I cleaned the bathrooms. You can also read this as - for the
first year, the bathrooms didn't get cleaned very often. Rather than
delegate this relatively difficult to delegate task (how many people have
trouble getting roommates/housemates/family members to clean up after
themselves in the bathroom/kitchen? yeah, it's even harder at
coworking-space volumes of activity), we hired a cleaning service. This
seems straightforward, but it wasn't to me at the time, and I wish I hadn't
waited so long. The hardest part was hiring someone I could trust, since
members' equipment was always around and I needed members and myself to feel
comfortable leaving things behind.

If you're planning for humans to be in your space, plan for it to get dirty,
and have a plan for regularly removing that dirtiness. Period.

P.S. There's a metaphor in this caveat. Can you find it? Bonus points for
anyone who does :)

*Caveat #3*
*Member is a synonym for potential leader. Key word: Potential*
*
*
If you expect every person who works from your space to step up and pitch
in, you're fooling yourself. But you'll find that if you don't give them a
chance to step up and pitch in - they probably won't ever bother to try.

In communities of practicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_of_practice,
there's very little hierarchy imposed but instead, there's more of a
framework surrounding the individuals of the community that give them the
opportunities to step up and take ownership of something. I've found that
simple changes to how we respond to inquiries has a dramatic effect on
unlocking potential leaders from the community.

When somebody asks for something, try responding with a simple, yes.
Nothing else, just a confirmation that you'd like to see that done, too. If
they don't jump on it - they've probably never had anyone say yes to their
idea before, so you might need to nudge a bit further. Something like,
Yeah, that's a great idea - what do you think we need to do in order to
accomplish that?. See how they take ownership from there. In the end, they
might be like a boy who's bad at reading flirty signals from a girl he likes
and they might need a more explicit push, Hey...would you like to take this
on? What can I do to help YOU?.

Not everyone is comfortable taking ownership of things that they haven't
been told explicitly to own - but once people realize they're working in an
environment that rewards people taking ownership of their work, it's
infectious.

*Caveat #4*
*Damage control shouldn't require you to be a superhero *
*
*