Coworking isn’t replacing networking — it’s changing how it happens Coworking spaces can produce solid connections, but they don’t “automatically” replace the old-style event circuit. Traditional networking is intentional (you turn up to meet people). Coworking is more incidental (you bump into people repeatedly). That repeat exposure is the real advantage: trust builds faster when you’ve seen someone every Tuesday for three months, not just swapped cards at a breakfast.
The valuable connections tend to come from
practical proximity rather than the space’s planned socials. People overhear a problem, recommend a supplier, or share a contact because it’s natural in the moment. In UK terms, it’s often useful for micro-businesses and one-person Ltd companies: you might meet a bookkeeper who understands VAT quirks, a web dev who can rescue a site, or a commercial solicitor who can sanity-check a contract. Those are tangible wins.
That said, the “networking” can be overrated if the space is full of people who never talk, are heads-down on calls all day, or if the community team is pushing forced mingling. Also, many connections stay casual unless you’re clear about what you do and who you help.
If you want coworking to generate real business, a few things help:
- Pick a space with a stable core (not just hot-desking churn).
- Go on consistent days so people recognise you.
- Offer small, useful help early (introductions, quick advice) without hard-selling.
- Treat it as relationship-building, then move key chats to a proper coffee meeting.
Coworking works best as a steady “networking drip”, while events and trade bodies still win for targeted lead generation and sector-specific contacts.