Coworking
Linking Coworking and Innovation
“Accelerated serendipity” is a term you hear often in the coworking community. It is a belief that coworking increases the generation of business ideas and productivity. The concept is when smart people from diverse backgrounds come together in a coworking community, good things happen – including business innovation.
Our interviews with coworking users confirms that “accelerated serendipity” is not just a marketing phrase – it is occurring. Coworking users tend to see strong business value in the idea generation, feedback and input they get from their coworking communities.
The Cube, a coworking facility in London, has an interesting essay on this topic. How Coworking Spaces Will Help Shape the New Economy focuses on the role of coworking in creating new ideas, businesses and industries. Key quote:
“Coworking spaces bring together people of different thought processes, experiences, and talents. The inter
Coworking for the Bio-Curious
One of the more interesting things we’ve found during our current coworking study is the growing number of “non-traditional” coworking spaces.
We laughingly use “non-traditional” and “traditional” because the coworking movement has only been around for 5-6 years. But the concepts – shared space, targeted at independent workers and small businesses, an emphasis on community and networking – are being picked up in a variety of fields and shared facilities.
Hackerspaces are an example. They are coworking facilities for people who like to hack or make things. Think of them as shared workshops instead of shared offices.
While most Hackerspaces are targeted at hobbyists, a growing number also target independent workers and small businesses. We first noticed this trend during our research on Makers, Maker Faire and Hobbypreneurs.
The DIY BIO blog recently did a survey looking at the demand for a coworking biology lab. Not surprisingly, 15% of the respondents said they would be interested in such a facility for business and 32% for research.
So we can add coworking biology/life science labs to the list of “non-traditional” coworking facilities.
For those that are interested, there is also Bio-Curious Google Group.
**Update: An alert reader pointed me to a blog post on this topic on The Atlantic Monthly blog. In addition to Bio-Curious, it also covers the broader Open Science trend.**
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