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Entries in entrepreneurship (7)

Thursday
May032012

64 Co-working Spaces For Every Entrepreneur

Last summer, you voted on the Top 10 Cities for Young Entrepreneurs. Now, we’re listing all the innovative co-working workspaces in those cities.

Here are 64 co-working spaces for every entrepreneur…

New York City

  • Green Spaces NY – Collective workspace for sustainability-oriented small businesses. Green Spaces also has a Denver location.
  • Green Desk – Locations in Downtown Brooklyn, DUMBO, Greenpoint and soon to be Williamburg, this is one of the original co-working spaces in the 5 boroughs.
  • Wix Lounge – This free co-working space is run by Wix Website Builder and provides a space for anyone to come and grab a desk.
  • New Work City – Manhattan’s oldest community coworking space. Full-time, part-time, and drop-in memberships, as well as workshops and events.
  • The Hive at 55 – Shared workspace for 30+ people, three private workrooms, as well as flexible space for conferences and workshops. Sponsored by the Alliance for Downtown New York.
  • WeWorkNYC – Arguably the hottest co-working concept in the city with Midtown, Meatpacking and 2 SoHo locations.
  • Grind Spaces – Located at 26th and Park in the Flatiron District, this space is one of the nicest designs in the city and a sponsor of Lean Startup Machine.

Thanks for the mention of us alongside our NYC peers!

Friday
Feb102012

Collaborative Consumption hits NYC

The Sustainability Practice Network (SPN) organized an event that took place yesterday at Green Spaces to discuss the trend of collaborative consumption, which was identified by Time in 2010 as one of the 10 ideas that will change the world. The talk was moderated by Roo Rogers, founder of Ozolab and panelists included the entrepreneurs Jen Abrams, Our Goods; Ron J. Williams, SnapGoods; Paul Steely White, Transportation Alternatives; Danya Cheskis-Gold, Skillshare. Other representatives from related businesses were there as well, including Shared Squared NY and the German-founded carpooling.com, which is coming soon to the United States. Read more about the event and background information here.

Friday
Feb032012

Goodbye home office, hello co-working

Independent professional, 27, seeking OS for short- or long-term commitment. Politics progressive; Chinese takeout a fave. You: accommodating, not too clingy; quiet but social. Groups OK. Let’s get together and change the world.

So might read the personal ad of a typical young freelancer of the postindustrial, postrecession workforce. She’s not looking for a mate—she needs office space, a “co-working” venue, to be precise.

Whether the term co-working will mean anything to you has everything to do with your age, your occupation and where you live. In big cities, a certain segment of 20- to 40-something professionals (mostly male techies) have already been co-working—that is, sharing communal office space—for more than a decade. Typically they come together under the high ceilings of renovated warehouse buildings; they work alone, but together.

In recent years, co-working has been catching on among a wider range of professional types, including virtual business owners of every sort, designers and writers, and off-site employees of large companies. Renting a desk by the month, or even by the day, these free agents can avoid both the loneliness of working at home and the soul-raking aggravation that comes with table-surfing at Starbucks. A two- or three-person company can use co-working to establish a base without ever signing a commercial real estate contract.

Not surprisingly, a handful of businesses have opened in the last two or three years to connect space seekers with empty desks. Of these, the current category front-runner is Loosecubes, a Brooklyn, New York-based online directory and booking service created by a 33-year-old former investment banker named Campbell McKellar. Loosecubes is the most human-friendly online service that office managers can use to list empty desks; it’s far less anonymous than Craigslist, and it allows members to search, book and pay for reservations directly on the site.

McKellar launched the Loosecubes alpha site in June, 2010, at the time listing 20 locations. Within four months, that number had jumped to 600. There are now 3,000 office spaces at 1,500 locations in the company database, covering more than 500 cities in 67 countries. Toronto is the fifth most-searched city on the site—and the only Canadian city in the top 10—trailing larger centres like New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles but leading Berlin.

For the first year, McKellar and her small group concentrated on building the network—“This is about introducing people to people, not people to space,” she says—and offered all services for free. In September, 2011, the company began charging hosts a 10% transaction fee for every booking, though there’s no cost for membership. Users sign on via Facebook, a key component of the site’s social grid; create a Loosecubes profile; and look for their next office by postal code, social connections, professional alignment and user ratings. A desk can cost between $50 and $350 per month, depending on office amenities and location.

In short order, McKellar has become a visible champion of the new-to-the-mainstream movement, says Marissa Feinberg, founder of Green Spaces, a co-working site in New York’s SoHo district. Like McKellar, Feinberg believes that the movement’s success relies on its ability to foster communities, and so the members of her office loft, a popular Loosecubes pick, hold an “ideas bounce lunch” over steamed veggie dumplings every Wednesday. In a given week, one’s tablemate could be an industrial designer from Spain; the maker of an online encyclo–pedia for kids; or the fellow who’s introducing the world’s first fair-trade vodka, made from quinoa, to the U.S. market.

Several signs point to such co-working sites becoming a larger, more permanent and, paradoxically, more free-flowing feature of what we know as work. With fewer traditional openings on the market, and job security scarce, more people are willing to strike out on their own with a business idea or accept project work, especially if they can share the costs of office resources. Ever-improving mobile and cloud computing technology continues to make fixed addresses less relevant. At the same time, more businesses are having their employees work remotely either part-time or full-time, while the ranks of the self-employed (some 2.6 million in Canada, as of November, 2011) continue to grow.

Those happy professionals already on the co-working path say there’s no comparing the perks against those of a corporate office gig. Commutes are history. Colleagues are interesting, talented people you might never meet otherwise, and there is no corner office. Web designer Michael Cairns, who recently used Loosecubes to book an office in Brooklyn from his home in Australia, summed it up best: “Sure, sometimes you have to work all hours. But today I’m sending a few e-mails, and then I’m going to the museum.”

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What co-working space is right for you?

By far the most nurturing of co-working situations is a start-up incubator, where companies on similar tech-focused missions share space, mentoring resources and company equity with their landlords: namely, venture capital investors. Getting in requires connections and a successful application.

If that’s not your game, you might instead join a co-working collective like The Hub, which has branches in 30 cities on five continents. Anyone can rent space at a Hub and gain instant access to a “family of other Hubs,” and experts in every field, says Joanne Macrae of The Hub Halifax, the only one in Canada. At the San Francisco and London locations, Hub leaders have begun experimenting with on-site venture capital consulting, and VC infusions (called Hub Venture Labs) raised by the local outlet itself. Casual introductions to angel investors in Halifax are already part of Macrae’s mission, as are free events like tech talks on specific topics—how non-profits can use Twitter, for example—arranged by devoted members.

A third model is even less structured—it might involve a small company with rentable space and a willingness to host a rotating cast of one or two freelancers either for fun, or to help cover the rent, or both. Still rare in this category are people like Chuck Lin, who runs a web and app development company called Urban Pixels out of his one-bedroom apartment in New York’s Lower East Side. His six employees are scattered across the U.S., however, so Lin works alone. He’s using Loosecubes to invite people to work with him at his kitchen table.

“It’s a social experiment for me,” says the 39-year-old. “It’s been nice to have people here. Even if I don’t talk to them, it gives a different feel, a little life.”

The most he’s ever charged someone? Ten cents per day.

Thursday
Jan192012

Founder & CEO of Entrepreneurs That SOAR! Visits Green Spaces

Zef calls us, "hip and buzzing... great community of green, conscious people." Watch the video to see everyone in action! Thanks for visiting!

Friday
Jan132012

130 Ways to Fund Your Social Venture

Written by  on January 19, 2011 in EntrepreneurshipFeaturedFunding 

As a blogger focusing on social entrepreneurship and technology, I run across a plethora of resources for funding— one thing that most social ventures can’t get enough of. After some contemplation, I decided if I could get all, or at least most, of these websites, organizations and other funding avenues listed in one place, it would be an invaluable resource, capable of helping thousands of socially focused organizations. Below, I have tried to capture some of the best opportunities for big-thinking changemakers to put capital behind their world-shaking ideas.

FELLOWSHIPS

STUDENT FOCUSED

GRANTS

CROWDFUNDING/ONLINE PLATFORMS

ANGELS/VENTURE CAPITAL (investments, business support and more)

NETWORKING/CONFERENCES

DO-GOOD BANKS/LOAN PROVIDERS

LOOK LOCAL

It’s inevitable that I wasn’t able to find every funding avenue out there, so comment your ideas below. Honorable mentions go to Cause CapitalismGreen VCShana Dressler and Rachael Chong for their fantastic venture funding lists.



Tristan

Tristan is a SocialEarth cofounder, freelance writer, community builder and solution journalist who covers creativity, social innovation and technology. He has worked with Ashoka and Best Buy promoting social entrepreneurship and responsibility.

Website - Twitter - Facebook - More Posts

Thursday
Dec292011

How Social Entrepreneurs and Non-Profiteers Should Pitch Stories

Yesterday, I had the opportunity to attend a teleclass hosted by Marissa Feinberg, founder of Green Spaces, on writing pitches for social entrepreneurs and non-profiteers.

Large corporations pay premium prices  for professional PR services.  We’re a small New York green builder with a big mission: to turn New York green.  Our job is a mix of green building and educational outreach.  Having a good pitch is crucial to getting our story as much exposure as possible.

A “pitch” refers to the quick-and-dirty description of a story and why it matters.  Writers, for example, will pitch stories to editors, but in this context we talked about how small businesses would pitch stories to journalists in order to have their work featured.

A good pitch will:

1. Consider the style of the intended journalist and publication.  Before pitching a story, you should look through headlines and topics they’ve already covered to get a sense of what they’re looking for.  You should determine, for example, whether the publication has a local or national audience and focus your story accordingly.  Why should this publication/journalist feature your story?

2. Tie into timely, relevant events, such as recent news stories, upcoming holidays, or industry trends.   Why is your story important now?

3. Have a calculated effect on people’s behavior.  What do you want people to do differently, after having read your story?

I went into the class knowing absolutely nothing.  Thanks again to Marissa, for your patience.  I know a lot of other innovative thinkers could use help getting their ideas out there.

Click here for the full story.

Thursday
Nov172011

Interview with Jill Kickul, Director of the Stewart Satter Program in Social Entrepreneurship

I talked with Jill Kickul, Professor at NYU Stern and Director of the Stewart Satter Program in Social Entrepreneurship, about resources and community for new social entrepreneurs in NYC. She listed a lot of resources, but used the term “fragmented” when describing them; that there is no aggregate of these resources:

Green Spaces “provides the infrastructure for triple bottom line companies to work and grow”...

She also suggested talking to Jed Emerson of blendedvalue.org, who is a guru of impact investing and start-up capital for social innovators...

The Feast “is a cross-disciplinary series of programs addressing social innovation and new ways to make the world a better place.”

Good Magazine has resources

Jill does believe there is a community of new social entrepreneurs in NYC, its just fragmented. There are schools and programs that create community, but you have to be part of that program (apply, be admitted). There are also foundations, but you need to be part of that network to be considered for funding. A stronger community for nyc new social entrepreneurs would be helpful (“absolutely”), especially for those without access to resources.

There are already some places to go for help, but they seem to be buried, embedded in amongst other traditional entrepreneurships; social entrepreneurs are treated like traditional entrepreneurs (lumped together) - even though their needs are different. And non-profits are not usually included.

Social Enterprise Alliance is for both for-profit and non-profit start-ups, but they are national and you have to sift through their website to find what you want. They at least have a database of social enterprises nationally [though I couldn’t find it on their website].

Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) is a good aggregate, but they have a global focus - not NYC. Jill said it would be great if we could create an ANDE for NYC.

Jill felt the needs of new social entrepreneurs are:

  • definition: what social entrepreneurship is
  • funding resources
  • help in planning and strategy
  • legal resources
  • networking events (in one aggregated place)
  • one on one interaction with others in community
  • mentor/coaching resources (from those that have done it and are willing to give back)

There are angel lists for traditional entrepreneurs; there should be an angel list for social entrepreneurs - a list of NYC funders who have seed money and knowledge to share

Also, a list of thought leaders in the field who are located in NYC

No one does it right, so far - no one place to go for these resources - the nyc social entrepreneurship community is not complete - filling the gaps would be “tremendous”

Jill would love for us to be able to create a tangible collaborative community space and fill the gaps. She’d be willing to help in anyway to get it off the ground & into actual existence beyond this project, if need be.

-Emily

Click here for the full post.