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Coworking can change the world: Amarit Charoenphan at TEDxChiangMai 2013

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    Good morning
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    Just kidding, good evening!
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    Ladies and gentlemen, Tedsters
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    My name is Amarit Charoenphan
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    the cofounder & CEO of HUBBA Co., Ltd
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    with the first coworking space
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    in Thailand for startups,
    creatives and freelancers.
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    And today I’d like to share with you
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    one very simple message
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    I believe that
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    coworking can change,
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    can and will change the world.
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    And I like you to be
    part of that movement,
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    So, how did coworking begin in Thailand
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    and what is a coworking space?
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    So, for me the journey towards
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    building the whole coworking movement
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    is essentially trying…me trying to solve
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    a personal, very painful situation,
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    from a house that
    was flooded in October 2011
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    and I had to move out to Pattaya.
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    So…like most people,
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    me and my brother, we started working,
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    of course, at a house.
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    We rented this small house in Hialeah,
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    that includes 13 dogs,
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    all the stuff we brought over from Pattaya,
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    a very nagging mom
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    and just general mayhem
    with no wifi and 3G, imagine that!
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    And we tried to start
    a business at that house,
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    and ok, at first, of course,
    it's sort of works
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    it's the quickest office
    you’ll ever get to in your life.
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    You just get up and go,
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    it's also the most cost-efficient
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    if you're living with your parents.
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    And also it's comfortable
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    if you're working from your bed
    or in your underwear.
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    Fortunately I do not have pictures of me
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    working in my underwear!
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    But, more importantly is that
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    we soon found out that
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    if you're working from your homes,
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    you’ll get the feeling that
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    it’s just not a place to start anything.
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    Whether you become lonely, bored
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    or generally demotivated
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    and the place is really not suited
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    for you to meet with investors,
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    teams, your clients and your suppliers.
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    Then once you throw in your pets
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    or you have wives, kids,
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    visiting relatives and 13 dogs,
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    it just becomes too much.
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    So like most people, we just said,
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    ah…this isn’t going to work,
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    so where do we go?
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    So we went to look around
    for the best coffee
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    and the best café in town.
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    And we searched far and wide
    and we love coffee
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    and we craved it after a while.
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    Also we just love
    the energy and buzz of seeing...
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    you know...people,
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    especially good-looking people
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    working at the café.
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    And initially it sort of worked as well.
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    But, you soon found out that cafés
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    were never meant to be
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    ah… office substitute.
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    For a very good reason:
    you're paying the rent
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    with 2 cups of coffee a day,
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    if you don’t drink,
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    the owner starts looking at you
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    and getting pissed off
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    Then, after a while,
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    the power socket is hard to find,
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    the chairs are uncomfortable,
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    the light is dim,
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    and then, all the tourists
    from everywhere start coming,
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    and eventually, you realize that
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    this is too much distraction.
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    And, after a while,
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    you just find out that,
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    you know, this coffee shop
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    has one very big drawback:
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    one I just found out
    in a very hard way!
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    It's that, I had diarrhea,
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    I had to pack all my stuff in my bag,
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    put everything together,
    run to the toilet,
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    and then it’s locked!
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    Somebody was inside!
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    And then like...No, I know It
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    I didn't do it on my pants
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    There was the lady's room on the side.
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    So what is there to do
    for new entrepreneurs?
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    Essentially, there’s…
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    it's the house and the café
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    just didn’t really work,
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    but, we couldn’t afford for an office
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    or rent one of those service offices.
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    So, there has to be a better way
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    And there is!
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    Which is this mega trend of coworking,
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    which is working out for
    a hundred thousand people
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    across the world in
    over 3,000 spaces worldwide
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    and we read all these articles and said,
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    this is so awesome
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    but none of this exists in Thailand
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    So if there was one in Thailand,
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    then I would pay money
    to go and use it.
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    And, it’s working out
    for so many people
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    that it's actually,
    fundamentally changing
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    the way we work and for the better.
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    So what is coworking space?
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    A lot of you would say,
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    Yes, it’s basically a whole bunch
    of independent professionals
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    coming together to share
    a facility that has
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    all the stuff you find
    in a really nice office.
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    But that’s the simplistic definition
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    that only describes the tangible aspects
    of a coworking space
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    whereas I’d like to see coworking
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    as a concept that is a verb
    and not a noun.
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    It's the way of working,
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    not actually a static place,
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    but also where 3 COs
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    in the word “coworking” converge:
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    Cooperation, Collaboration, Community.
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    That’s where our generation of millennials
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    and generation Y and people after us
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    want from work space
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    a service, a relationship... a community
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    So, back to my story.
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    I came back from Pattaya and
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    I thought this was the big…
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    very big pain that I want to solve
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    and I really wanted to work at
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    a coworking space
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    There’s none in Thailand,
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    I've never been to one,
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    never did any market research,
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    but we knew
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    there were more people
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    going through the same pain as me,
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    and not just about diarrhea,
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    but just about working;
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    so we realized that O.K.
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    We’re just gonna build it
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    and we found this really beautiful house
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    Actually it’s very ugly right now,
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    but in 6 months,
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    we turned it into this!
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    We basically put everything
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    that you find in a really nice office
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    and more, and shared it
    with everyone else.
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    You know,
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    beautifully decorated work space,
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    fast Wi-Fi, a lot of books,
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    shared water, coffee, a printing service,
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    meeting rooms, everything,
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    even a trampoline in this garden.
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    However, all of that is very affordable
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    for the budget-conscious entrepreneur
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    and freelancer and at the same time,
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    so well-managed that
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    our members just focus on their work
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    and not actually
    on the workspace or managing.
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    So we thought that people love us
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    for building this,
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    that they’ll kiss my hands and say,
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    "Oh, shut up and take my money.
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    Oh, thank you bringing
    coworking to Thailand."
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    But, of course,
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    that’s a fairytale
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    and then, the reality is that,
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    in the first months,
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    we had 1 member.
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    And we were like, what is going on?
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    So we were immediately
    so close to failure.
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    I spent millions on this space,
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    and built it, nobody…you know
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    everybody came
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    the investors, media and everyone...
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    They liked it, but nobody really signed up
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    Nobody really signed up,
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    so I realized something was amiss
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    and asking enough questions,
    I realized that
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    people just found coworking
    as a culture so new
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    that they didn’t know
    what was the value
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    that they were getting out of the space,
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    and that they didn't know
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    whether it was more valuable
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    above and beyond, you know,
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    just a nice office,
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    but why should they be there
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    instead of a house or cafe,
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    realizing both on to one word:
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    community.
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    Community is the lifeblood,
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    the…what makes
    coworking space so addictive
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    because community is what
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    gets my members
    and everyone that I know
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    up from bed traveled far and wide
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    to come to this space
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    and pay me to work
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    because they find that
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    the experience of working with
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    awesome like-minded individuals
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    side by side, every day,
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    sharing coffee and conversation,
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    becoming friends,
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    starting to help, share, learn
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    and collaborate with one another
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    is so invaluable, so hard to find
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    to the point that, you know,
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    entrepreneurship is so hard for them,
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    freelancing is so hard
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    for them for the first time
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    that they believe that
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    if they can work with somebody else
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    the journey is much more fun and valuable.
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    So, finding that out,
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    we focus on communities,
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    making the space fun and friendly
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    but also adding value where we can
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    with events, activities, and workshops,
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    like this event,
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    start on the weekend, 54 hours straight,
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    straight complete strangers come together
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    to do a start-up business
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    and pitch to investors.
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    They're so well received
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    that 200 people showed up, you know
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    in our the latest event
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    and our latest conference
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    for the technology star vehicle system
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    attracted 400 people
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    and we filled our entire auditorium.
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    So, who are all these people
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    that work out of these spaces?
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    And, where do they come from?
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    and the events as well
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    So, essentially
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    we’ve met so many
    different types of people,
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    the sheer diversity is amazing.
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    It's not just start-ups and
    creatives and freelancers
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    but I’ve met politicians and lawyers
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    and yoga masters and painters
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    and corporate warriors and nonprofit people,
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    social entrepreneurs, actors...
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    Actually, I had one really
    nice member recently
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    who used to be homeless
    in New York, in the States,
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    learned how to become a DJ,
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    and one...one day she decided
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    she's just gonna fly to Thailand
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    and she started writing about
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    displaced people
    and becoming really famous
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    about refugee issues.
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    So basically, anybody can work
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    out of a coworking space;
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    anybody in this room,
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    all of you can work out there
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    because essentially,
    coworking is a community.
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    A community of people that
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    share ideas, interests and passion,
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    and once we come together,
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    we actually create this space
    where we work together
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    and because we all bring a bit of
    our individual soul and character,
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    coworking spaces are places
    with a lot of soul.
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    So now there're 3,000 spaces
    worldwide and growing.
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    But, there's a handful in town
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    and, there's one in Chiang Mai Pun Space.
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    But I’d like to see this be everywhere
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    as common as coffee shops
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    and so common that our new entrepreneurs,
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    creatives, freelancers, innovators
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    and changemakers
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    work out of these spaces
    and are supported
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    and are nurtured and
    become more successful,
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    allowing us to bring in,
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    you know, more interested people
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    who see now that this...
    their lifestyle is possible,
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    this career is possible,
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    working out of these spaces
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    and are well-supported and
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    and once they join the community,
    the community grows.
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    And I really love to end this
    with one really simple message:
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    coworking spaces are the communities
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    that bring the cooperative
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    and collaborative cultures back to
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    our cities, our communities, our society,
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    and if we can help to
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    foster more coworking spaces
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    to be everywhere,
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    we will have many more spaces
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    with a soul across the cities
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    and that will lead to a rise
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    in the quality of life in our cities.
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    So I'd like to urge all of you
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    to join our movement,
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    to work out of a coworking space
    from time to time,
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    to support the ideas, people, projects
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    that grow out of this space,
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    and also to… maybe even decide to
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    open, operate or invest in one.
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    Because if we cowork together,
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    we can create a better Thailand
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    and a better world.
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    Thank you very much
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    (Applause)
Title:
Coworking can change the world: Amarit Charoenphan at TEDxChiangMai 2013
Description:

Amarit Charoenphan helps people realize their dreams and become more successful startups, entrepreneurs, and freelancers through the best coworking spaces, as well as events, education and media.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
11:23
  • - a few awkward wording and timing mistakes fixed

  • Dear Elaine Mitchell:
    Thank you for the comment on my draft subtitle, on which I am still working to review it. However, I am wondering did you watch the video, because I am sure the speaker also made some grammatical errors like at 00:00:19,047 --> 00:00:21,378
    I am the cofounder & CEO of HUBBA Co., Ltd--> I listen to this part again and he "did not say "I am...."
    Should we alter the speaker's words to make it grammatically right? I am not sure about this!
    I will go though the rest parts to make sure that I do not get you wrong. However, I should thank you for the advice and the help you generously offered.

  • Hi! I edited the parts where said "Padilla". The speaker of this talk confirmed that he was talking about a place in Thailand called "Pattaya”. Best, Helene

English subtitles

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