How freelancers and solopreneurs in Vienna can use their coworking space to test ideas, get honest feedback, and validate products without spending a cent on research.
You're sitting in your coworking space, headphones on, grinding through your to-do list. Three meters away, a graphic designer is wrestling with a client brief. Across the kitchen, a developer is microwaving last night's pasta. Downstairs, someone's rehearsing a pitch for an investor meeting.
You probably think of these people as your coworking neighbors. Nice folks. Good for the occasional coffee chat.
Here's what they actually are: your first research panel.
If you're building something, you've probably had this thought: "I should talk to some users first." Followed immediately by: "But I don't have time or budget for that."
So you skip it. You build based on assumptions. You launch. And then you find out that real people use your thing in ways you never expected, ignore the feature you spent three months on, or simply don't care about the problem you're solving.
This is the most expensive shortcut in the game. Not because research is cheap, but because building the wrong thing is incredibly costly in time, money, and motivation.
Here's what most people miss about coworking spaces: they're accidentally perfect research environments.
Think about who's around you on any given day at Das Packhaus. Freelancers, founders, designers, marketers, developers, consultants. People from different industries, with different problems, different workflows, different levels of tech-savviness.
That's a diverse sample group that most startups would pay thousands to recruit.
And unlike strangers you'd find through an online panel, these people have two things going for them: they're accessible (you literally share a kitchen) and they're honest. Try getting brutally honest feedback from someone who'll never see you again versus someone you'll bump into at the coffee machine tomorrow. Big difference.
You don't need a formal process or a research budget. You just need to be a little intentional about how you use the space you're already paying for.
Got a landing page draft? A new app screen? A pricing idea? Pull it up on your laptop at lunch and ask whoever's sitting nearby: "Hey, can I get your gut reaction to something? Takes 30 seconds." You'll be surprised how willing people are. Three to five of these conversations will reveal patterns you'd never see alone.
If you can't explain your idea in two sentences to someone at the coffee machine, your messaging needs work. Use casual run-ins as low-pressure pitch practice. Watch their face. Do they nod and ask a follow-up question? Or do they get that polite glazed-over look? That reaction is data.
Community events, meetups, afterworks. These aren't just for networking. They're rooms full of people who are already in "open conversation" mode. At Das Packhaus, events like the UX Research Afterwork or the GameDev Meetup bring in people from outside the coworking community too. That's fresh perspectives you wouldn't normally have access to.
Ask someone to try your prototype while you watch. Don't explain anything. Just say "try to sign up" or "find the pricing page" and observe. Where do they hesitate? Where do they click the wrong thing? Five minutes of watching someone use your product beats fifty hours of guessing.
Most coworking communities have a shared Slack or WhatsApp group. Post a quick two-question poll. "Would you pay for X?" or "How do you currently handle Y?" Keep it short, keep it casual. Response rates in tight communities are way higher than any email survey you'd send to strangers.
Professional user research is valuable. But for freelancers and solopreneurs, the barrier to entry is too high. By the time you've recruited participants, written a discussion guide, and analyzed results, your window of motivation has closed.
Coworking research is scrappy by design. Five-minute conversations, not two-hour interviews. Gut reactions, not statistically significant samples. And that's exactly what you need at the early stages: fast, directional signal that tells you whether you're roughly right or completely off.
The formal research can come later, once you know the idea has legs.
Don't be annoying about it. Your coworking neighbors are not your unpaid focus group. Read the room. If someone's clearly heads-down, don't interrupt. If someone's already given you feedback twice this week, give them a break. Buy people a coffee. Say thank you. Respect the space.
The best coworking research happens when it doesn't feel like research at all. Just people helping people figure things out. Which, if you think about it, is the whole point of being in a coworking space in the first place.
Das Packhaus is a coworking space in Vienna's 3rd district with 500+ members, regular community events, and the kind of kitchen where good ideas get their first honest reality check. Check out our spaces