Logo video2dn
  • Сохранить видео с ютуба
  • Категории
    • Музыка
    • Кино и Анимация
    • Автомобили
    • Животные
    • Спорт
    • Путешествия
    • Игры
    • Люди и Блоги
    • Юмор
    • Развлечения
    • Новости и Политика
    • Howto и Стиль
    • Diy своими руками
    • Образование
    • Наука и Технологии
    • Некоммерческие Организации
  • О сайте

Скачать или смотреть Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde

  • Bernie J Mitchell
  • 2025-11-08
  • 6
Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde
  • ok logo

Скачать Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde бесплатно в качестве 4к (2к / 1080p)

У нас вы можете скачать бесплатно Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde или посмотреть видео с ютуба в максимальном доступном качестве.

Для скачивания выберите вариант из формы ниже:

  • Информация по загрузке:

Cкачать музыку Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde бесплатно в формате MP3:

Если иконки загрузки не отобразились, ПОЖАЛУЙСТА, НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если у вас возникли трудности с загрузкой, пожалуйста, свяжитесь с нами по контактам, указанным в нижней части страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса video2dn.com

Описание к видео Why Early-Career Coworking Professionals Need Their Own Movement with Caroline Van den Eynde

"I'm the poster child for FLOC, because since I've joined, I've completely expanded my network. I've made so many connections."


Caroline Van den Eynde doesn't fit the typical profile of a coworking founder. She stumbled into the industry three and a half years ago when a recruiter called about a marketing role at IQ Offices — and she'd never heard of coworking.


Now she's the Director of Sales and Marketing for IQ's eight Canadian locations and the Marketing Director for FLOC (Future Leaders of Coworking), a peer-led community that fills a gap most people in the industry didn't realise existed.


The gap? Peer connections. Real ones.


While CEOs and founders network over dinner at conferences, everyone else — including community managers, marketing directors, and operations staff — often finds themselves without peers to learn from.


Caroline discovered this firsthand when she realised most of her coworking connections came through her CEO Caine Wilma's introductions to other CEOs.


"I was lacking those relationships with other people in the industry who are at my level," she explains. "People who I could talk to about the day-to-day things that were happening and the challenges."


Enter FLOC, launched by Sam Shay to create exactly those peer-to-peer connections. Just under six months in as Marketing Director, Caroline has become living proof of what happens when you build genuine community in the coworking world.


Double the expected turnout at their GCUC Boston "FLOCtail." Members are getting vulnerable about mistakes and learnings. Real knowledge sharing that saves people from repeating each other's errors.


But FLOC isn't just about networking. They're leading a campaign that reveals how invisible the coworking industry remains: getting LinkedIn to recognise "coworking" as an official industry category.


Currently, you can filter for various niche industries in LinkedIn's dropdown menu, but not for coworking.


Four hundred signatures and counting on their change.org petition. They're pushing for a thousand before taking it to LinkedIn.


Caroline's journey from psychology graduate to coworking champion also reveals something about how this industry shapes careers. Her psychology background prepared her for marketing in ways business school might not have — understanding people, behaviour, and what drives genuine connection.


Now at IQ Offices, she's leading the kind of strategic focus the industry needs more of. Through data analysis, they've discovered 84% of their revenue comes from enterprise clients, so they're leaning into that niche instead of trying to serve everyone.


"Future state, I think we're going to see spaces no longer focus on fast Wi-Fi and good coffee. Everybody has that," Caroline observes. "We're at that point in the industry where that's a given."


This conversation captures someone who makes things happen — Caroline's self-described superpower — while building the infrastructure for others to do the same.


Timeline Highlights


[01:20] Caroline's definition: "I'm known as someone who makes things happen"


[02:20] "I will do anything to get to the end... I get a lot of satisfaction from completing something"


[06:47] The leap from Paris to Canada: "I pulled the plug and I was like, I'm moving to Canada, even though I've never been there"


[08:59] Stumbling into coworking: "I met a recruiter... to be honest with you, at that point, I had no idea what coworking was"


[10:31] The peer connection problem: "I was lacking those relationships with other people in the industry who are at my level"


[13:34] FLOC's impact: "We had double the amount of people show up... It's so nice to have a place to come to make those face-to-face connections"


[16:01] "There's just so much potential. There are thousands of people across North America, across the UK, and everywhere else that work in coworking"


[20:12] The education challenge: "There's still a lot of misconception about what coworking really is"


[22:42] Changing how she explains coworking: "I completely changed my thought process... now I actually take the time to explain it"


[25:29] The enterprise realisation: "We had two companies, one leaving, one going, but for the exact same reason"


[28:25] The LinkedIn campaign: "We just hit 400 signatures... we're pushing to get that to a thousand"


[30:33] Meeting in person: "A few of us will be at GCUC London in October"


When the Founders Get Dinner and Everyone Else Gets Nothing


Here's the thing about coworking conferences: CEOs and founders eat well together. They network over dinner, share war stories, and make deals.


Community managers queue for coffee alone. Caroline lived this for three years.


Every industry connection came through her CEO, who introduced her to another CEO. Meanwhile, she's running day-to-day operations, solving real problems, with no one at her level to learn from.


Then FLOC happened. Those monthly "Cherp and Chat" calls became so...

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке

Похожие видео

  • О нас
  • Контакты
  • Отказ от ответственности - Disclaimer
  • Условия использования сайта - TOS
  • Политика конфиденциальности

video2dn Copyright © 2023 - 2025

Контакты для правообладателей [email protected]