Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-15 Thread Susan Evans
Hi all,

I'd chime in briefly to add a big-picture way to think about it, as we do
here at Office Nomads in Seattle. Often I refer to our space in a variety of
different ways as a platform. In this case, we do try to be a platform on
which collaboration can happen. As others have said, we ensure that this
idea isn't forced (because that's not why people come here), but instead
that there is opportunity for it.

This happens in a variety of ways around our office, but increasingly via:

   - happy hours (because you know we coworkers figure out most things over
   beers)
   -
   - emails between members (we have a shared mailing list to the entire
   membership base at ON)
   - chalkboards (no joke - we have 'em everywhere for folks to chalk their
   ideas up)
   - knowing each other (our community cultivator, Alexandra, is great about
   introducing members she think would get a kick out of one another)

Again, I think of this idea less as something that can be solved
programatically, but one that can be solved by creating a place for
collaboration to happen and not getting in the way when it does. We've found
that programming often gets in the way. Angel, I'm intrigued to hear about
how required social events go for you -  I'm pretty sure that wouldn't go
over very well at our office, but I am often wrong. :)

Good luck, and great question!

Susan
__
Office Nomads
officenomads.com
206-484-5859



On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 1:20 PM, Angel K fccowork...@gmail.com wrote:

 +1 to what has already been said and I'd also like to add that
 sometimes I orchestrate situations that REQUIRE people to socialize.
 This is a little different from collaboration but I think you have
 to know each other fairly well before you can collaborate effectively.
 I've been married to a hard core introvert for long enough to know
 that small talk and meeting new people can be a serious drain on him.

 Example, at our recent Waffle Day (I made waffles, they brought the
 toppings) I put the food in the main work room where everyone sits and
 works and I put the napkins and silverware in the conference room.
 They realized right away what I had done and said, seriously?! we
 have to *talk* to each other, we can't just go back to our computers
 and work while we eat?! They were half joking/half serious but guess
 what? They all sat together in the conference room, enjoyed a meal and
 got to know each other a little better. Afterward, the introverts got
 2 solid hours of quiet time to recharge their batteries! (yes, at
 times I feel like a mother to the members but I kinda like it and I
 think they do too!)

 I'll also occasionally ask everyone to eat family style at the same
 time/table during night coworking so we'll all do better in school
 and be more successful--think after school special style. It's all a
 bit tongue in cheek but no one has ever regretted the times when I
 politely persuaded them to interact.
 -A

 On Nov 9, 2:10 am, wilsond wilson.denni...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hello,
 
  I am new to this discussion group and would like to kick off my first
  contribution with a question that i would be very interested in
  hearing your answers on.
  We re currently in the process of putting together a coworking space
  in Dublin, Irl which we are pretty excited by. I have read a large
  amount of detail about coworking and the philosophy of it. But on a
  practical level, how would the owners/managers of a coworking space be
  best placed to ensure that their space would be one of collaboration.
  What practical steps can someone take to foster this environment and
  hopefully create the reputation/output that every coworking space
  wants.
 
  Thanks,
 
  wilson

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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-15 Thread Ryan Price
I'd like to call out something I saw at a client's office once: The Thank You 
Board

It was just a simple whiteboard posted near the main hallway, so people had to 
look as they walked past.

The only messages were one person thanking another:

e.g. Jane M, thanks for getting me those photos so quickly! - Sean

Now extrapolate this to your Coworking space and members. Rinse and repeat. If 
the thanks is given publicly, the warm fuzzies go even farther.

Peace,
Ryan Price
rpr...@ryanpricemedia.com
@liberatr


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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-15 Thread Alex Hillman
This is an awesome idea. Love it. Thanks Ryan!

-Alex

/ah
indyhall.org
coworking in philadelphia


On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 10:56 PM, Ryan Price ucfbass...@gmail.com wrote:

 I'd like to call out something I saw at a client's office once: The Thank
 You Board

 It was just a simple whiteboard posted near the main hallway, so people had
 to look as they walked past.

 The only messages were one person thanking another:

 e.g. Jane M, thanks for getting me those photos so quickly! - Sean

 Now extrapolate this to your Coworking space and members. Rinse and repeat.
 If the thanks is given publicly, the warm fuzzies go even farther.

 Peace,
 Ryan Price
 rpr...@ryanpricemedia.com
 @liberatr


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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-11 Thread Alex Hillman
Thilo is on the money, and I like to look at it from an 'environmental'
perspective. Not like the earth's environment, but what in terms of how you
can influence behavior by changing the variables of the environment.

Think of it this way: it may be your goal to encourage collaboration, but
ultimately, what you REALLY want is collaboration to be more likely to
happen on its own. So it's more of an indirect path to your goal. Here's how
we do it.

We've operated on the thesis that trust and relationships are the most
important precursor to successfully working together, and as such, we've
worked hard to make Indy Hall a Community of Trust, where events like the
ones Thilo lists below serve a very specific purpose:

They get coworkers who otherwise might not be as likely to bump into each
other casually to get to know each other outside of the working arrangement,
but still in (or near) a working context.

By having work be the context, there's a mutual understanding that the
potential for working together (or otherwise collaborating, learning, etc)
is baked into their interactions, so they don't have to focus on pitching
each other. Instead they focus on their personal relationship, what else
they have in common, what shared connections they have, etc. Those bonds
lead to trust, and trust as I've said is the precursor to collaboration.

If you take this environmental approach, I think you'll find that it's far
more sustainable than shouting COLLABORATE, YOU
FOOLS!!!http://www.toplessrobot.com/skeletor08.jpg
at your coworkers, and the quality of life at your coworking space increases
multi-fold.

With this in mind, you can take Thilo's list and see how it encourages this
kind of behavior, and you can also brainstorm what kinds of events make
sense for you and your crew!

-Alex

/ah
indyhall.org
coworking in philadelphia


On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 5:36 AM, thilo th...@upstre.am wrote:

 Hi Wilson,

 great to hear that you open a space in Dublin, love the city, surley
 will visit your next time I am there.

 Here a some things we do to encourage collaboration.

 - coworker meetups: once a month where coworkers can bring in their
 ideas and projects for the space - informal, like dinner or beers so
 that new coworker get to knew the others.

 - host usergroup meetups that fit the identity of your space, e.g. we
 have technical groups like ruby or frontend dev

 - throw parties

 - open space design, a sperate public area

 - go out for lunch together

 These are some of the things we do.

 I guess people from the list come up with more.

 Cheers
 Thilo

 ---
 development: http://upstre.am
 coworking: http://co-up.de
 coworking managment: http://cobot.me


 On Nov 9, 10:10 am, wilsond wilson.denni...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hello,
 
  I am new to this discussion group and would like to kick off my first
  contribution with a question that i would be very interested in
  hearing your answers on.
  We re currently in the process of putting together a coworking space
  in Dublin, Irl which we are pretty excited by. I have read a large
  amount of detail about coworking and the philosophy of it. But on a
  practical level, how would the owners/managers of a coworking space be
  best placed to ensure that their space would be one of collaboration.
  What practical steps can someone take to foster this environment and
  hopefully create the reputation/output that every coworking space
  wants.
 
  Thanks,
 
  wilson

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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-11 Thread Alex Hillman
Also, I wrote an essay recently that takes this idea of relationship  work
and expands a bit more:

http://dangerouslyawesome.com/2010/11/take-interest-dont-fake-interest/

I think they key takeaway that's relevant in this conversation is this one:

Business is an overlay for social interactions, not the other way around./ah
indyhall.org
coworking in philadelphia


On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 9:34 AM, Alex Hillman
dangerouslyawes...@gmail.comwrote:

 Thilo is on the money, and I like to look at it from an 'environmental'
 perspective. Not like the earth's environment, but what in terms of how you
 can influence behavior by changing the variables of the environment.

 Think of it this way: it may be your goal to encourage collaboration, but
 ultimately, what you REALLY want is collaboration to be more likely to
 happen on its own. So it's more of an indirect path to your goal. Here's how
 we do it.

 We've operated on the thesis that trust and relationships are the most
 important precursor to successfully working together, and as such, we've
 worked hard to make Indy Hall a Community of Trust, where events like the
 ones Thilo lists below serve a very specific purpose:

 They get coworkers who otherwise might not be as likely to bump into each
 other casually to get to know each other outside of the working arrangement,
 but still in (or near) a working context.

 By having work be the context, there's a mutual understanding that the
 potential for working together (or otherwise collaborating, learning, etc)
 is baked into their interactions, so they don't have to focus on pitching
 each other. Instead they focus on their personal relationship, what else
 they have in common, what shared connections they have, etc. Those bonds
 lead to trust, and trust as I've said is the precursor to collaboration.

 If you take this environmental approach, I think you'll find that it's far
 more sustainable than shouting COLLABORATE, YOU 
 FOOLS!!!http://www.toplessrobot.com/skeletor08.jpg
 at your coworkers, and the quality of life at your coworking space increases
 multi-fold.

 With this in mind, you can take Thilo's list and see how it encourages this
 kind of behavior, and you can also brainstorm what kinds of events make
 sense for you and your crew!

 -Alex

 /ah
 indyhall.org
 coworking in philadelphia



 On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 5:36 AM, thilo th...@upstre.am wrote:

 Hi Wilson,

 great to hear that you open a space in Dublin, love the city, surley
 will visit your next time I am there.

 Here a some things we do to encourage collaboration.

 - coworker meetups: once a month where coworkers can bring in their
 ideas and projects for the space - informal, like dinner or beers so
 that new coworker get to knew the others.

 - host usergroup meetups that fit the identity of your space, e.g. we
 have technical groups like ruby or frontend dev

 - throw parties

 - open space design, a sperate public area

 - go out for lunch together

 These are some of the things we do.

 I guess people from the list come up with more.

 Cheers
 Thilo

 ---
 development: http://upstre.am
 coworking: http://co-up.de
 coworking managment: http://cobot.me


 On Nov 9, 10:10 am, wilsond wilson.denni...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hello,
 
  I am new to this discussion group and would like to kick off my first
  contribution with a question that i would be very interested in
  hearing your answers on.
  We re currently in the process of putting together a coworking space
  in Dublin, Irl which we are pretty excited by. I have read a large
  amount of detail about coworking and the philosophy of it. But on a
  practical level, how would the owners/managers of a coworking space be
  best placed to ensure that their space would be one of collaboration.
  What practical steps can someone take to foster this environment and
  hopefully create the reputation/output that every coworking space
  wants.
 
  Thanks,
 
  wilson

 --
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
 Coworking group.
 To post to this group, send email to cowork...@googlegroups.com.
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
 coworking+unsubscr...@googlegroups.comcoworking%2bunsubscr...@googlegroups.com
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 For more options, visit this group at
 http://groups.google.com/group/coworking?hl=en.




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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-11 Thread Willie Morris
I agree 100% with Thilo and Alex on collaboration, but I also think this 
extends to getting new members if you are a newer space like us.

We initially started having brainstorming sessions with pizza and wine on 
Thursday nights and a weekly wind down on Fridays on our deck to get all the 
members into the sense of community and become friends. For some reason, 
flipcup has become a favorite team building game here. Once we got everyone on 
the same page, we started inviting others from our local tech community to come 
see what we're doing. The response was great. We had our first real 
open-to-the-public party here last Friday and since have signed up 3 new 
members, become host to another usergroup, and some of our members have started 
scheduling things to do outside of work together.

Some other ideas for collaboration/promo are doing one project in house all the 
time. We recently did a mobile photo contest and had everyone tag photos 
#WTFoto on twitter to enter...when it was over we used all of our members to 
judge it. It didn't require a big time commitment from anyone, but it got 
everyone to work together and helped promote the space. 

Cheers,
-Willie
-WhiteTableFoundation.com


On Nov 11, 2010, at 9:34 AM, Alex Hillman wrote:

 Thilo is on the money, and I like to look at it from an 'environmental' 
 perspective. Not like the earth's environment, but what in terms of how you 
 can influence behavior by changing the variables of the environment.
 
 Think of it this way: it may be your goal to encourage collaboration, but 
 ultimately, what you REALLY want is collaboration to be more likely to happen 
 on its own. So it's more of an indirect path to your goal. Here's how we do 
 it.
 
 We've operated on the thesis that trust and relationships are the most 
 important precursor to successfully working together, and as such, we've 
 worked hard to make Indy Hall a Community of Trust, where events like the 
 ones Thilo lists below serve a very specific purpose:
 
 They get coworkers who otherwise might not be as likely to bump into each 
 other casually to get to know each other outside of the working arrangement, 
 but still in (or near) a working context.
 
 By having work be the context, there's a mutual understanding that the 
 potential for working together (or otherwise collaborating, learning, etc) is 
 baked into their interactions, so they don't have to focus on pitching each 
 other. Instead they focus on their personal relationship, what else they have 
 in common, what shared connections they have, etc. Those bonds lead to trust, 
 and trust as I've said is the precursor to collaboration.
 
 If you take this environmental approach, I think you'll find that it's far 
 more sustainable than shouting COLLABORATE, YOU FOOLS!!! at your coworkers, 
 and the quality of life at your coworking space increases multi-fold.
 
 With this in mind, you can take Thilo's list and see how it encourages this 
 kind of behavior, and you can also brainstorm what kinds of events make sense 
 for you and your crew!
 
 -Alex
 
 /ah
 indyhall.org
 coworking in philadelphia
 
 
 On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 5:36 AM, thilo th...@upstre.am wrote:
 Hi Wilson,
 
 great to hear that you open a space in Dublin, love the city, surley
 will visit your next time I am there.
 
 Here a some things we do to encourage collaboration.
 
 - coworker meetups: once a month where coworkers can bring in their
 ideas and projects for the space - informal, like dinner or beers so
 that new coworker get to knew the others.
 
 - host usergroup meetups that fit the identity of your space, e.g. we
 have technical groups like ruby or frontend dev
 
 - throw parties
 
 - open space design, a sperate public area
 
 - go out for lunch together
 
 These are some of the things we do.
 
 I guess people from the list come up with more.
 
 Cheers
 Thilo
 
 ---
 development: http://upstre.am
 coworking: http://co-up.de
 coworking managment: http://cobot.me
 
 
 On Nov 9, 10:10 am, wilsond wilson.denni...@gmail.com wrote:
  Hello,
 
  I am new to this discussion group and would like to kick off my first
  contribution with a question that i would be very interested in
  hearing your answers on.
  We re currently in the process of putting together a coworking space
  in Dublin, Irl which we are pretty excited by. I have read a large
  amount of detail about coworking and the philosophy of it. But on a
  practical level, how would the owners/managers of a coworking space be
  best placed to ensure that their space would be one of collaboration.
  What practical steps can someone take to foster this environment and
  hopefully create the reputation/output that every coworking space
  wants.
 
  Thanks,
 
  wilson
 
 --
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 Coworking group.
 To post to this group, send email to cowork...@googlegroups.com.
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
 

Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-11 Thread Alex Hillman
TOTALLY agreed, Willie. Members that have great experiences together will
talk about those experiences, and want their friends to be a part of
it. What's good for the members is also good for membership growth.

And let's not forget about retention! Who cares how many members you have if
they don't have any reason to stick around?

-Alex

/ah
indyhall.org
coworking in philadelphia


On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 10:03 AM, Willie Morris willie.mor...@gmail.comwrote:

  but I also think this extends to getting new members if you are a newer
 space like us.

 We initially started having brainstorming sessions with pizza and wine on
 Thursday nights and a weekly wind down on Fridays on our deck to get all the
 members into the sense of community and become friends. For some reason,
 flipcup has become a favorite team building game here. Once we got everyone
 on the same page, we started inviting others from our local tech community
 to come see what we're doing. The response was great. We had our first real
 open-to-the-public party here last Friday and since have signed up 3 new
 members, become host to another usergroup, and some of our members have
 started scheduling things to do outside of work together.

 Some other ideas for collaboration/promo are doing one project in house all
 the ti


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Re: [Coworking] Re: Collaboration

2010-11-11 Thread Willie Morris
Yes retention is easy to overlook, but keeping people engaged is definitely 
important. Who wants high turnover rates for coworkers? Not us! :)

Cheers,
-Willie


On Nov 11, 2010, at 10:06 AM, Alex Hillman wrote:

 TOTALLY agreed, Willie. Members that have great experiences together will 
 talk about those experiences, and want their friends to be a part of it. 
 What's good for the members is also good for membership growth. 
 
 And let's not forget about retention! Who cares how many members you have if 
 they don't have any reason to stick around?
 
 -Alex
 
 /ah
 indyhall.org
 coworking in philadelphia
 
 
 On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 10:03 AM, Willie Morris willie.mor...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 but I also think this extends to getting new members if you are a newer space 
 like us.
 
 We initially started having brainstorming sessions with pizza and wine on 
 Thursday nights and a weekly wind down on Fridays on our deck to get all the 
 members into the sense of community and become friends. For some reason, 
 flipcup has become a favorite team building game here. Once we got everyone 
 on the same page, we started inviting others from our local tech community to 
 come see what we're doing. The response was great. We had our first real 
 open-to-the-public party here last Friday and since have signed up 3 new 
 members, become host to another usergroup, and some of our members have 
 started scheduling things to do outside of work together.
 
 Some other ideas for collaboration/promo are doing one project in house all 
 the ti
 
 
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