You can look at sharing space with another company, either a supplier or client who you are closely aligned with culturally and commercially. This works well for some companies.
Co-working space. This covers a multitude of options but most commonly, an open area shared with many other people or companies. You choose a desk , sit down and work at for the day.
Serviced offices. This flexible office space option has been around since the late 70s. Barrister’s chambers, however, are the original serviced office and have been around much longer; Barristers are self-employed but rent an office in a building that has a Clerk to assist them, all costs are equally shared out amongst the barristers each month. This is, in essence, the serviced office concept. The only real difference is that where the Chambers are not for profit, the majority of serviced office operators are. The non-profit organisations are called innovation centres and are run by either local councils or Universities.
When looking for serviced offices, you will be applying the same principles you used when searching for leased office space. So the key things will be size, office environment and external environment, location, term and price but now you can consider other things such as flexibility to expand and contract, availability of free meeting rooms, availability of chargeable meeting rooms, staff facilities, client benefits, other products available, quality of customer service, quality of property management, networking opportunities, resilience of IT services/infrastructure.
As the serviced office operator manages your entire office environment you need to dig a little deeper than the five areas you would have for a lease. Ask to speak to some of their clients for references, ask them when the last major property incident was and how it affected their current clients, ask when the last major communications infrastructure failure was and why, find out what their average length of stay is. If you are using a broker ask them what the reputation of this operator is within their industry. Purchasing a serviced office is no different to purchasing any other service it is about the quality of delivery! Remember it is a service which you are purchasing not a property deal because they are looking after your whole office environment. If you are ISO compliant the operator should have a document which answers all of your necessary questions. If you are not ISO compliant this list of questions is quite a good one to ask for!