Sandie Johnston is good at building community. She co-owns LIME TREE WORK SHOP, a coworking business in a converted warehouse in Sevenoaks, Kent in the UK, and the proof is in the details: her members' children have done work experience at each other's companies. Two businesses that met through their membership now work together as formal partners.
"That is kind of our nirvana," she says. People showing up for each other.
But for a long time, Sandie didn't have that herself. Nobody to compare notes with. No one who understood the particular pressures of running a small coworking space, managing an intimate community, holding the whole thing together with a business partner.
"For a small venture like ourselves, we've only got ourselves that we're asking and talking to."
That changed when Coworks sent her to London.
Sandie runs LIME TREE WORK SHOP alongside her co-founder, business partner and, more importantly, sister, Cathy. The space sits inside a warehouse in Sevenoaks, and its identity is rooted in the creative community it serves. It is not a generic flex office. It is a specific place, with a specific feel, built for people who respond to that environment.
Coworks is the software platform LIME TREE WORK SHOP uses to manage operations, and the company sponsored Sandie to attend Unreasonable Connection LIVE! by the London Coworking Assembly, a peer-gathering event organized by Bernie Mitchell.
The idea was simple: instead of putting the Coworks logo on a sign, we sent an operator to an event for operators.
The event brought together a deliberately mixed group: space owners, social impact organizations, local government representatives, tech platforms, community builders.
Four sessions, four rooms, everyone rotating. The aim was conversation, not presentations. There were real challenges on the table, instead of polished presentations.
Sandie's group included Bernie's organization, which measures social impact; a creative coworking space called Gather Round focused on charity and tech businesses; and people from the venue itself, a not-for-profit working with local councils.
The second session on social impact had particular staying power for Sandie. A lot of the discussion was about B Corp accreditation and the gap between genuine community impact and box-ticking.
That led to some hard conversations: If you can't afford the certification, do you stop doing the work? And if you do the work without the badge, are you doing enough to tell the story?
Beyond social impact, Sandie came home with a clearer picture of a few things LIME TREE WORK SHOP could be doing differently.
"Huge thank you to you and Coworks for sponsoring me to be there,”: said Sandie.. “It’s something I would like to do again."
The format of the event meant that a different group configuration would have produced an entirely different conversation. The sessions she was in, the people she happened to sit beside, the problems that surfaced because of who was in the room. You could attend the same event twice and leave with completely different things.
LIME TREE WORK SHOP runs on Coworks, the coworking management platform built for operators who care as much about community as they do about operations.
There is a next Unreasonable Connection event planned for the fall. She is already thinking about going back.
For now, she has something she did not have before: a room full of people who understood exactly what she was talking about.
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