Outsite
4K posts

Outsite
@outsiteco
Coliving spaces, community, and perks designed for remote workers and creatives. Become a Member today.


House full of energy @HackerResidency




The biggest startups during the digital nomad boom from 2014 look like a graveyard now: Selina, coliving - lost 97% of their value, almost bankrupt Remote Year, travel group - acq'd in 2020 by Selina which is almost bankrupt We Work, coworking - lost 99% of its value, bankrupt in 2023 We Live, coliving: - bankrupt




@holmisthename Santa Teresa, Costa Rica. It's getting more expensive but worth it. Try @outsiteco Good wifi, on the beach, great food and coffee, sunny everyday, affordable, incredibly nice people, surf and ride dirt bikes every day


Move to a new city where new people are also moving to (e.g. Austin). Hot tip: out of the gate stay at a co-living/co-working house like @outsiteco (immediately made friends + met my now wife @AndraVomir there). You connect with people on just being "new" to q place. People want to introduce you to people (requirement: be somewhat cool and not a jerk). Literally in a single year, my wife and I have more friends than we've ever had—we're now working on fostering the closest relationships with the friends that have more overlapping interests. Have already made some lifelong friends though. Get out of your comfort zone and be forced to live with strangers in a new place. People in a similar uncomfortable position will find comfort in connecting with you—which leads to new friendships over time. Or don't want to move? Just find cool people on LinkedIn/Twitter, connect + engage with them, try to help them in some way, and invest time into that, people on the internet can turn into friends real fast if you actually care about what they're doing and show it. Most people don't care, so if you do, people will notice. For example, I see you, I love design, you have an awesome work history, let's connect? 🤷♂️













