North East Freelance Network

Why Working Alone Together Works: The Science Behind Virtual Coworking

Ever have those mornings where you sit down to work and somehow an hour disappears scrolling or making another cup of tea? You're not procrastinating because you're lazy - your brain is just doing what brains do when they work in isolation.
Science Between Virtual Coworking North East Freelance Network

Working for yourself can feel isolating sometimes, and staying focused when you’re on your own is genuinely tough. But there’s a surprisingly simple solution that freelancers have been using for years: working alongside other people, even virtually.

The Science of Body Doubling

There’s actual neuroscience behind why working near others helps us focus. It’s called “body doubling,” and it’s particularly well-studied in ADHD research, though the benefits apply to everyone.

When another person is present, even on a screen, your brain shifts into a different gear. Here’s what’s happening:

  • Mirror neurons activate. These are the neurons that fire both when we perform an action and when we watch someone else do it. When you see others working, your brain literally mirrors that focus. It’s why gyms work better than home workouts for many people, and why cafes are full of freelancers despite having perfectly good desks at home.
  • Social accountability kicks in. Even without explicit pressure, the presence of others creates what psychologists call “social facilitation.” We naturally perform better on tasks when we know others can see us (or even just know we’re meant to be working). It’s not about judgment – it’s about our brains being fundamentally social organs.
  • The default mode network quiets down. This is the part of your brain that wanders when you’re alone—the bit that suddenly decides you need to research whether penguins have knees or reorganise your desk drawer. When you’re in a shared work environment, even virtually, this network is less likely to hijack your attention.

The Power of Accountability (Without the Pressure)

Traditional accountability can feel heavy. Weekly check-ins with a coach, elaborate goal-tracking systems, someone asking “did you do the thing?”. It works for some people, but for many of us, it just adds another layer of pressure to already busy lives.

Virtual coworking offers something lighter but surprisingly effective: casual, regular accountability.

When you tell a group of friendly faces “I’m going to draft that proposal this morning,” something shifts. You’ve said it out loud. It’s real now. And in 25 minutes, someone might ask “how did it go?”.

The beauty of virtual coworking is that the stakes are low. If you didn’t get it done, nobody’s disappointed in you. But the simple act of stating your intention makes you more likely to actually do it.

Studies show that people who share their goals with others are significantly more likely to achieve them. But here’s the key: it works best when the accountability is supportive rather than evaluative. You’re not being tested, you’re just being seen.

Why Virtual Works (Sometimes Better Than In-Person)

There’s something about virtual coworking that removes a lot of the friction of in-person spaces:

  • No commute. You can roll out of bed, make a coffee, and be “at work” with others in minutes.
  • Lower social anxiety. Cameras are optional. You can be in your pajamas. There’s no pressure to make small talk beyond the brief check-ins.
  • Flexibility. Need to take a call? Step away for a minute? Nobody minds because everyone’s on mute anyway during work sessions.
  • Geographic freedom. You get the benefits of community without needing to live near a coworking space or find other freelancers in your immediate area.


For many people, virtual coworking hits a sweet spot: enough presence to trigger focus and accountability, but enough distance to feel comfortable and pressure-free.

How It Actually Works: Our Sessions

We run virtual coworking sessions for our members every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month, 9.30am – 11am.

Here’s the flow:

9.30am – Quick hellos

Jump on Zoom, say hi, share your name and what you’re planning to work on this morning. One sentence is fine. “I’m Sarah, I’m going to finish editing three blog posts.” Done.

9.35am – First 25-minute sprint
Mics off, cameras optional. Set a timer, put your head down, and work. Just you and your task, but with the quiet presence of others doing the same.

10.00am – Check in
Quick round of “how’s it going?” Share a win, mention if you’re stuck, or just say “yep, cracking on.” 

10.05am – Second 25-minute sprint
Same again. Mics off, timers on, heads down.

10.30am – Wrap up
Final check-in. What did you get done? How are you feeling? Then we sign off and get on with our day.

That’s it. Ninety minutes, two focused sprints, actual progress on your work.

Some Common Objections

“But I Need Total Silence to Concentrate”

This comes up a lot, and it’s a fair concern. Good news: the work sessions are in total silence. Everyone’s on mute during the work sprint.

What’s different from working alone is that you’ve got the presence of others without the noise of others. And somehow, that makes all the difference. You’ll be surprised how much more focused you are knowing that somewhere in the North East, several other freelancers are also heads-down, working through their own tasks.

“What If I Can’t Make the Full 90 Minutes?”

Pop in when you can, leave when you need to. There’s no attendance register, no one keeping track. Just show up when it works for you. The flexibility is part of what makes it sustainable.

“Will Everyone Already Know Each Other?”

There are people who attend regularly so yes, you might hear things like “How did that client call go yesterday?” between people who’ve been coming for a while. But here’s the thing: everyone went to their first session once. And this community is full of the loveliest, most helpful, and welcoming people you’ll meet.

This isn’t a clique. It’s a group of freelancers who understand that working for yourself can be lonely and distracting, and who’ve found that working alongside others – even virtually – makes everything easier.

Why It Works: The Real Reason

The science is interesting. The structure is helpful. But the real reason virtual coworking works is simpler than all of that: It’s really hard to do this alone.

Building a business, managing clients, staying motivated, being productive without a boss or colleagues or office structure—it’s genuinely difficult. And while you might love the freedom of freelancing (most of us do), that doesn’t mean you have to do it in complete isolation.

Virtual coworking gives you just enough structure to stay on track, just enough community to feel less alone, and just enough accountability to actually get the work done.

And sometimes, that’s exactly what you need to go from “I should really work on that” to “I’ve actually done it.”

No commitment, no pressure. Just ninety minutes of your Tuesday morning where you might actually get something important done. See you there!

 

Are you a freelancer in the North East? Join us and be part of this vibrant, supportive community as we continue to learn and grow together.

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