International Fruit Sticker Day

So sat on the train one morning, scrolling through Twitter as always! and saw a tweet about International Fruit Sticker Day. I thought shit there is a ‘international day’ pretty much for everything now.

Why isn’t there one for co-working? Aha a chance to invent one, to be the first to inaugurate such a global day and I’ve thought of it. Immediately with complete enthusiasm I tweeted, ‘I’m going to start an International Co-working Day’ – ‘send’.

Much to my disappointment back came an almost instant reply ‘there is already one’. Oh, that’s scuppered that plan and why didn’t I know about it as Founder of @Work Hubs, they NUMBER ONE CO-WORKING SPACE in Euston Street.

Not to be deterred, I thought actually what co-working really needs in order to be successful and to launch us all forth into the sharing economy and to turn us away from the old school failing world, is the one thing that it is really missing in most cases. That is collaboration.

So sitting just days later from my brainwave, I was with Ronald and Vincent from Seats2Meet, Francesca from OuiShare, Neil from the Entrepreneurs Cooperative and of course Bernie from Sharing Economy Radio and told them about this idea. From this came the plan to do International Collaboration Day.

That meeting and the subsequent work that we have all put into this, is the very example of why collaboration is so important in everything we do and should be the very essence of what co-working should be all about.

We are all much more successful when we stick to the core things that we are good at and partner with others to do the stuff that we are not good at.

A number of co-working spaces are really starting to embrace this and people are connecting – someone to share ideas with, someone to be a future supplier, customer, etc. Or even someone to share shit day with. After all, if you just want a desk and sit with your headphones on all day, then home-working or coffee shops are perfect for that.

Co-working should be the antidote to the isolation that many free-lancers, self-employed, entrepreneurs or corporate nomads face. It should be a space where friction points, serendipity and chance conversations leads to greater things and inspires all of us.

So for me International Collaboration Day is about encouraging co-working spaces globally to embrace the whole concept of their space being the canvas where people mesh together and create greater opportunities through collaborating together.

If you run a co-working space, then please get involved and if you are a ‘free’ spirit and want to help create a meaningful community, then go to your local co-working space and be a part of creating that.

By Philip Dodson – Founder of @Work Hubs

For more information – click here

My 30 day challenges, day 30, THE END – by Philip Dodson

Yes all 8 challenges completed 100% for every day for 30 consecutive days – YES.

I didn’t climb Everest, I did swim the channel, I didn’t run a marathon. But I do feel a real sense of achievement and it proves that many small goals, taken day by day, will lead to big results.

I wanted my last blog to be a monumental one, but given I left home at 5:40am and I got home at 22:30 – I’ve simply run out of time.

I wanted to do a collage of all the photos that I took on each of the 30 days, but that will take time, so I’ll save that for the weekend.

Today’s picture is of Krusty aka Bernie Mitchell. We had a great workshop at the hub this evening on collaboration, service design and service proto-typing from Simon & Phillippa from Redfront.

pic 30

Essentially, in a team with Karl & Bernie, we picked a random card, ours was the 8 of clubs. From this we had to come up with a service inspired by this. Then design the customer, then how we’d attract them, finishing off with a service prototype.

We came up with the After 8 gambling club in Euston, a rather seedy throw back to the 1970’s, in a basement, wait….

Our customer was Krusty, a middle aged wine bar owner in north London, who drove an old jag, was a property agent by day and liked old style clubs.

We tempted him to our club with complimentary fizzy drinks, peanuts, dancing girls and a place to gamble. At the end we made an advert, which once I have a copy, I will share. It will either be a hit or a total flop!

However, the great thing to come out of the evening is, in just 2 hours, working in collaboration, we designed a service, customer journey, fleshed out the details of the marketing and delivery, even made an advert.

So if you’re prepared to focus and be creative, then anything is possible and a lot easier and quicker than you imagine.

A great way to end my 30 days of challenges.