Kansas City Coworking Alliance named world’s best at international Coworky’s
April 24, 2018 | Tommy Felts
Scoring the title of the world’s best coworking alliance is a big win for Kansas City, Melissa Saubers said.
“This is just another way that we can put Kansas City on the map to show that we are the most entrepreneurial city in America,” said Saubers, president of the Kansas City Coworking Alliance. “It’s verification Kansas City is a great place to work, live and play.”
The local collective was honored Tuesday with a Coworky Award at the international Global Coworking Unconference Conference (GCUC — pronounced “juicy”) in New York City.
“Kansas City is well-respected across the globe. We not only had people in Kansas City’s coworking industry voting for us and cheering us on, we had friends and family and supporters all over the world,” said Saubers, noting a boost from voters within the broader coworking industry itself.
Victory came after an initial field of about a dozen nominations for “Best Collective or Alliance” was quickly narrowed down to Kansas City and the German Coworking Federation.
“We both rose to the top and you could tell there was going to be a real competition,” Saubers said. “Everybody else just let us go.”
The final count separating Kansas City and Germany was less than 20 votes, she said, expressing gratitude for those who helped secure the win.
“It was extremely competitive and came down to the wire,” added Saubers, who also is founder of Cowork Waldo.
Kansas City’s coworking alliance boasts such members as Bridge Space, Cowork Waldo, eCafe, the Ennovation Center, the Enterprise Center of Johnson County, the Grid, iWerx, Plexpod, Village Square and WeWork.
Unity within the group falls back on the idea that a rising tide lifts all boats, Saubers said.
“The Kansas City Coworking Alliance works because we all have a common goal: to raise the awareness of what coworking is and what the options are in Kansas City,” she said. “We go about it in a spirit of ‘coopetition’ in that we know, technically, we’re all competitors, but if we all work together, then we all benefit.”
Saubers was joined at the awards by Shervonne Cherry, director of community and partnerships for Baltimore-based Spark, she said. Spark, an incoming alliance member, is opening a two-level, 15,000-square-foot workspace in late 2018 at Two Light in Kansas City.
In August, the Kansas City Coworking Alliance helped set a world record for the most people coworking in one space at the same time.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Daddy-daughter candy business drops tongue-in-cheek lessons flavored with entrepreneurship
What started out as a joke about an inflatable unicorn sprinkler “tooting” out candy has turned into a meaningful daddy-daughter candy business, Lee Urban shared. The Shawnee father launched Fantastical Droppings “for the little squirts that make your life complete,” he notes on the colorful packaging. “I’m like, ‘I’m gonna create a company that I…
She came to Kansas seeing a land of opportunity; now her just-launched bookstore opens doors for Black creatives
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. WICHITA — Latasha N. Eley Kelly’s new storefront not only combines her love of books, education, and supporting local creatives, she said; Left on Read also serves as a unique community…
New Westport coffee shop hopes to crown a fresh local favorite in the spot that launched Ruby Jean’s
Move over, office coffee pot; Tamara Grubb’s workspace brews its own premium drinks Tamara Grubb was just looking for a nice office space when she walked into a Westport building — a long-ago gas station with a distinctive double-A frame roof that once launched the popular Ruby Jean’s Juicery brand. Her first thought: This space…


