If your home office is starting to feel cramped but you can't afford to rent a dedicated office, maybe it's time for you to think about setting up
shop in a coworking space.
Not exact matches
Coffee
shops and
coworking spaces abound with freelancers plugging away on their laptops, and office
spaces are increasingly empty as the best and brightest leave traditional work behind to claim more flexibility and autonomy
in their jobs.
But the traditional model doesn't translate well
in remote settings, where people are spread across time zones, coffee
shops and
coworking spaces.
Not only can you enjoy more latitude
in choosing whether to work from your home office, a coffee
shop, or a
coworking space, you might also have the ability to have a digital nomad lifestyle, combining travel and work.
We've already seen the impact of this claim at street level,
in fast - growing
coworking spaces and the emergence of «cofficing» (using coffee
shops as an office).
We started
in our apartments, then coffee
shops (that lasted about a day) and we finally tried
coworking spaces, but found many of them to be overcrowded with too many distractions.