Why will your company look like a Coworking space soon

24 January 2012

Why Talents leave their Companies (survey)

30 December 2011

Via rapidbi.com/blog/

Sum up of the Intrapreneurship Conference 2011 (Brussels 2nd)

26 December 2011

Why is Coworking becoming one of the major trend of the decade ?

15 November 2011

We turned off the lights of the second Coworking Europe conference a few days ago.

Besides the wonderful spirit and the incredible energy we experienced during these outstanding three days, one strong impression remains from all the discussions we had  : Coworking is becoming huge ! 

Coworking to shape the coming decade 

More than 220 people, originating from the five continents, gathered in Berlin.

If Europe was the most represented, an important North American delegation attended the event, alongside representatives from Asia, South America and the Middle East.

Coworking is not marginal anymore nor is it a western phenomenon. Coworking is a solution which naturally and independently arises in different locations of the world. It sounds like a common answer to emerging needs in the our fast changing economies and societies.

Accordingly, my conviction is that coworking is not only there to stay and grow. Coworking will be one of the most impactful trend that will shape the coming decade.

Similarities with the expansion of the internet

As a matter of facts, the short history of Coworking reminds us of some identical milestones of the early days of the internet.

Internet, just like Coworking, emerged out of a handful of isolated initiatives led by small groups of people motivated by different purposes. One day, those actions converged. The US Army was investigating the way to build a resilient communication and information infrastucture which wouldn’t be interrupted in the case of a damage in the physical network. Besides, universities had the need for a more convenient way to share knowledge and documents between academics. Many usages popped up with time. One day, Tim Berners Lee and other pioneers managed to connect everything. The internet, as we know it, was born.

The coworking movement surfaced, according to some consensus, simultaneously, in San Francisco and London. In 2005, developers in the Bay Area had a need for a new location to meet and get rid of the burden that was working out of a coffee shop. In London, the initiators of The  Hub  network, wanted to set up a platform and a community for social entrepreneurs. In the meantime, other players around the world had the idea to create – either as a side project, as a non for profit association or as a regular business – open platforms where nomad workers could drop in, either . One day, all these independent communities acknowledged they were part of a bigger one : coworking.

The common name and the values shared by the coworking promoters helped to build bridges between coworking spaces on the national and on the international level. In a way, the shared values of coworking (openness, collaboration, innovation, entrepreneurship, freedom, sustainability,…) are the TCP/IP and HTML of the coworking movement, the common understanding allowing the nodes to connect with one another.

a new way of working in the 21st century

Both, the internet and coworking, have grown thanks to the support of free, verry committed and value driven people.

Nevertheless, nowadays, as Alex Hillman puts it, coworking is not anymore in the hands, solely, of altruistic entrepreneurs or associations, although their role as pioneers is and will remain critical (just as the role of the “sharing driven” open source developers remain critical for the improvement and the strengthening  of the internet).

In the coming future, I expect Coworking to be more understood as a “new way of working”, a new way to set up inspirational working environment based on human factors, people openness and a collective will to achieve exciting things as well as to enjoy a meaningful professional life.

So, it’s likely that coworking will steadily spread out to new layers of the economical landscape, maybe under different shapes (“hybrid coworking“, or, as Sebastian Olma nicely writes :”something between between anti-corporate activism and Goldman Sachs investment banking” ?).

A matter of style and tastes

Alex Hillman compares the broadening scope of styles in coworking spaces with the variety we have in music. Individuals can enjoy jazz more than classical, listen to pop instead of esoteric… We all know these different styles belong to a bigger thing which is music.

I fully agree. I would add that tastes change.

I can, one day, be in a mood where I will be keen to listen to a rap. The day after, I could be looking for an opera soundtrack. Just as I will pick an Italian restaurant, one day, and go for a Japanese combo the day after…

Accordingly, the challenge of the multi-membership (individuals being members of a bunch of different coworking communities) could possibly arrive on the agenda of the coworking community, as well.

Coworking answering different challenges of our time – A list

So, why will coworking become a structuring trend of the coming decade  ?

According to me, due to the economical, cultural and societal shifts of the current time…  Here, is a list of reasons, I see,, partly inspired by the conference’s speaches :

The rise of the independent workforce

As the Emergent Research study showed during the Coworking Europe 2011 conference, the rise of the independent workforce is structural (at least, within the western world). Even more striking, the majority of the independent workers and entrepreneurs choose to become independent. They will need locations to meet, work and network.

New open innovation models

The technology is getting every day more complex. Innovation cycles shorten. Big companies are always more risk averse. Most of them can’t dance in a time of agility. Innovation is already coming from the outside, especially from startups and creative individuals. As the Otto Group company said, during the conference, coworking spaces can both play a role as trends watchers and serve as a bridge between innovators and big organisations.

The quest for a new corporate contract and for new corporate values

Not working “for” but working “with”. “Consider employees or freelances not as a ressrouce but as partners”, underlined Mutinerie. The economy is becoming more and more collaborative. So business organisations will (cfr Seats2meet presentation as well). Again, coworking sounds like the perfect platform/ecosystem to transform a human organisation into a more collaborative platform.

The integration of the GenY

The “twenty something” are turning their back to the traditional corporate model. They intend to be respected. They don’t tolerate to be yelled at by a boss just for the reason he or she is the boss… Nowadays, the perfect spot for them to work seems to be… a coworking space.

The emergence of a global “startupsphere”

We are at an age of rising micro-multinationals. What do you do, if you are a startup and need to expand abroad fast to breakeven, according to your business plan ? Ok, you can browse the web. But beyond that? What if you know no-one outside the walls of your city ? The coworking network is a community of communities where you will be able to get, at least, advices and connections, if not support. Nice to say, less obvious to achieve, however, warned us Liu Yan, from Shanghai (Xindanwei). Building a business, locally or internationally, is first a matter of trust building and, more and more, of sharing. Start with that. With respect to that, the coworking movement can help.

Need to bring the creative economy in cities and to interconnect local ecosystems

Coworking spaces create local ecosystems wich help to connect organically many players in a given town or city, much more efficiently than many other public intiatives with the same aim. The Berlin city, for instance, confirmed its interest regarding the impact coworking can have in the bridging of the local communities.

Jean-Yves Huwart

Coworking Europe 2011 conference initiator and co-organiser

Deskmag 2nd Global Coworking Survey

Take part in the Coworking Europe 2011 conference (Berlin, November 3-4-5)

28 August 2011

Global Enterprise is organising the second Coworking Europe conference.

This year, the conference will take place in Berlin, on November 3-4-5 !

We are very proud to already disclose the program for the first day of Coworking Europe 2011. (Click here to register)

We expect exciting keynotes, debates, contribution and networking within the coworking community as well as between the coworking community and potential coworking stakeholders, such as cities, employers, innovation bodies, etc.

Just have a look :

10.00 : Welcome and Registration

10.30 : Introduction – Presentation of the conference and goals
- Conference organisers : Global Enterprise, Club Office, BetaHaus (Belgium, Germany)

10.45 : Taking coworking the next level : it’s all about community ! – Alex Hillman, IndyHall, Philadelphia (US)

11.05 : Presentation of the Coworking Europe Survey 2011 : Thousands of entrepreneurs and  free lances- Deskmag (Germany)

11.20 :  Coworking :  A booster for innovation in Europe ?

11.35 : The State of the independent worker in Europe, the US and elsewhere – Carolyn Ockels and Steve King, Emergent Research, San Francisco (US)

11.50 : Why are cities investing in coworking ? Berlin city (Germany)

12.10 : The promisses of Coworking for China and Coworking as a gateway between Chinese and European entrepreneurs/innovators – Liu Yan, Xindanwei Coworking Space, Shanghai (China)

12.25 : Could coworking become the future of working in corporation ? – Eric van Den Broek, Mutinerie, Paris (France)

12.40 : Gen Y, self-achievement, open collaboration, sustainable development… why Coworking fits with all the rising  values of the society

13.00 : Pause- Lunch

14.15 : How collaborative working is changing the way office spaces are designed – Oliver Marlow, Tilt Studio, London (UK)

14.35 : Coworking, entreprise 2.0 and intrapreneurship – The next Google, Starbucks or Facebook will start out of a coworking space

14.55 : Corporation : why our employees in innovation processes work in a coworking space ? – Otto Group, Hamburg

15.15 : Why universities should partner with coworking spaces ? Ville Simola, or someone anoter representative of the Aalto Venture Garage (Aalto University, Finland)

15.35 : Internationalisation of European startup and  SME’s through the community of coworking spaces

15.55 : Is there competition between business centers and a coworking spaces – Panel

16.15 : Pause

16.45 : Workshop

Workshop 1 – Coworking and Innovation

- Aalto University Venture Garage (Finland)

- Philippe Verstichel, Entreprise Globale (Belgium)

- Peter Schreck (?) (Germany)

- Corporation

Workshop 2 – Getting out of the crisis thanks to coworking

- Anna Klementz, Loffice, Budapest (Hungary)

- Alexandre Kahn or Marianne Wehbe, CoCoAthens (Greece)

- Manuel Zea (?), Coworking Spain

- Coworking Tunisia

17.40 : Pause

17.45 : Panel – Business models, community, independance… : expected challenges for the coworking movement ?

18.30-18.50 : Q&A

19.00 : Cocktail and lunch

And have a look at the Friday and Saturday programs, for the Coworking Camp. We hope that you won’t be disappointed, either.

Coworking : Community managed innovation and entrepreneurship

28 June 2011

Here is the presentation Global Enterprise has been given at Toulon, at the annual Congres of the European business and innovation incubators (EBN).

We were asked to explain the rise of the coworking movement and what were the mainest differences with the more traditional innovation incubators in Europe. We also tried to demonstrate that some coworking spaces were shifting toward more structured innovation and entrepreneurship engines.

The results of the first European Survey on Coworking

27 April 2011

On november 2011, the economic think tank Entreprise Globale published the first European survey on Coworking, in collaboration with Tech4i2.
According to a definition available on Wikipedia, Coworking is the social gathering of a group of people who, while still working independently, share the same values and are interested in the synerg y coming out of a shared working environment.

The spirit of the time

Coworking is in tune with the spirit of our time. Nowadays, anyone with a laptop, an Internet connection and 100 Euros can start his/her own activity. It has never been easier to interconnect with other entrepreneurs and skilled people, no matter what their background or their location.
So it is no coincidence that coworking spaces are emerging all around the globe, redefining the way people used to consider a w orking environment. Coworking spaces such as The Hub in London, or Citizen Space in San Francisco have opened in all major cities.
In Europe, more than 150 coworking spaces (here is a list) have opened in cities such as Amsterdam, Paris, Brussels, Berlin, Milan, Warsaw, Lisbon, Dublin, Budapest, Riga and many more.

Mapping coworking in Europe

This survey and the Coworking Europe 2010 conference are a first step to map this trend and understand its potential impact in Eur ope. As our survey of coworking spaces showed, coworking is a bottom-up sustained movement that is accelerating.
The concept has already taken off in a number of countries. The number of coworking entrepreneurs, freelancers or even teleworkers is increasing along with the steady growth of coworking capacities.
Furthermore, the interactions between coworking spaces would create a useful international network of entrepreneurs and skilled professionals around Europe and beyond.
Coworking, a very strong trend to support entrepreneurship and innovation
Even some traditional office centres or incubators are now considering coworking as a new approach to running their facilities.
Nevertheless, as our survey confirms, coworking is not only about sharing a physical space. Coworking, most and foremost, is about establishing a community of likeminded people in order to build dynamic networks. People are there to speak with each other, share knowledge, network and sometimes even co-create new projects.
Along with other initiatives, we believe coworking could inject a new entrepreneurial, innovative and sustainable energ y into the European economy.

Download the Survey

A global survey on the benefits of coworking for coworkers

10 December 2010

The economic think tank Entreprise Globale/Globecorp.biz and the Coworking Europe 2010 conference are partners in the first global survey on coworking users, initiated by the Technische Universität Berlin and Deskmag.

Click here to take part in the Global Coworking survey

This survey is part of an academic, non-commercial study examining the working conditions of coworkers in coworking spaces. It’s the first global survey on coworking. The results will be published for free on a magazine or blog in your country.

All replies are anonymous. We don’t at any point ask for your name, or the name of any coworking space.

The questionnaire is simple to use. You also can switch between languages in the upper right corner. The continue button is at the bottom of the page. Have fun and thank you for your participation!


This survey is organized or supported by:

Lukas de Pellegrin, Technical University of Berlin
Carsten Foertsch, Deskmag – Coworking Magazine
Jean Yves Huwart – Coworking Europe / Enterprise Globale – European conference on Coworking 2010
Carolyn Ockels, Coworking Labs – Coworking Research USA
Cadu de Castro Alves, Global Coworking Group
Anderson Costa, Movebla – Brazilian Coworking Magazine
Massimo Carraro, Cowo – Coworking Network Italy
Sebastian Sooth, Hallenprojekt – German Coworking Network
Manuel Zea Barral, Working Space, Coworking Madrid
Akira Matsuda, Coworking JP – Coworking Blog Japan
Nicolas Koreni, moboff – Japanese Coworking Network
Joel Alas, Deskwanted – Global Coworking Space Directory
Nathanaël Sorin-Richez, Silicon Sentier – La Cantine Paris
Pernilla Raj – Coworking Sweden

Coworking Europe 2010 conference was a huge success – here are the feedbacks posted on Twitter

25 November 2010

More than 1224 tweet including the Coworking Europe 2010 hashtag have been posted on Twitter in the last days. It has been a great buzz all around the social network.

Here is a Twitter feedback (via Storify)

Results of the first European survey on Coworking : coworking stimulates creativity

24 November 2010

Can we build a virtual Silicon Valley, via social networks ?

23 June 2010

Moboff: how coworking can stimulate entrepreneurship in Japan

23 May 2010

Coworking can help entrepreneurs meet likeminded people and, then, give them a hand to grow their business faster. In Japan, the entrepreneurship spirit remain low as compared with other developped country.

DWF, an office design company, has started the Moboff (contraction of mobile-office) project. Five coworking spaces recently opened up in downtown Tokyo (Shibuya).


“Nomad workers and entrepreneurs aren’t looking only for a place to seat. They aim to meet people and join new kind of communties”, says Nicolas Koruni, product manager of Moboff. Our ideal would be to have such coworking places all over Tokyo”.
Moboff spaces, where event are organized on a regular base, are becoming a focal point for a number of topics, related to technology a.o.

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