Co-working. In a world of collaboration and co-creating, we now have co-working. According to the New York Times July 17, 2011 article “Working Separately, Working Together”, freelancers and telecommuters are finding that being unshackled from the office environment is not nirvana. Instead, it is a lonely place. The work-at-home crowd is abandoning their corner Starbucks for membership in co-working spaces called IndyHall and Hive. These 5000 square ft., open floor plan office spaces offer the community and collaboration that comes from a shared, non-virtual work space. You can “rent” a cubicle (isn’t that what they were fleeing?!?) and soak in the collaborative energy of tapping keyboards and human contact.
At NineSigma, we witness this collaborative energy in our Linked Innovation programs. Clients come together to address some of the thorniest problems, recognizing that their combined efforts can accelerate the outcome that they each seek. One group has been working together for 6 months to address a key sustainability issue that impacts their entire industry. Merging the perspective of nearly a dozen powerhouse corporations into a shared vision statement and action plan is no small task. As they toiled to blend the nuances of each company’s viewpoint, I secretly admired their passion and commitment.
These companies recognize that they cannot solve the big, global challenges by “freelancing”. Whether they are seeking new technologies to achieve their long-term sustainability goals, or finding efficient ways to meet regulatory standards that ensure consumer safety, collaboration is the accelerator. NineSigma’s Linked Innovation program provides the “co-working” environment for them to bring together their collaborative energy into a virtual and physical place.
And like Hive and IndyHall, we even provide the coffee.