What is an office, but a space containing a few tables, chairs, and computers? The founders of Boatster, a peer-to-peer yacht rental platform, have ditched their land-based office for one that floats in the Mediterranean. Six members of the company are now operating from a boat that mainly docks outside of Mallorca in Spain. The yacht has a crew of two: one captain and one attendant, “But of course, they do a lot for themselves,” says Robert Davids, a representative for the company. By which he means employees are supposed to do their own cooking and cleaning.
Of course no one is forced to be on the boat. There is still a small office in Mallorca the team can use, which they do when the yacht is being rented out on their platform. “In July, the yacht was rented out for two weeks,” says Davids. This is part of the deal the cofounders of Boatster have worked out with the yacht’s owner: they can use the boat so long as no one else wants to rent it. The company also has a larger office of 12 in Amsterdam; mostly developers and marketing people. More people would like to work from the yacht, but there is only enough room for 10, maybe 12 people, Davids tells me.
When I ask him if its weird for coworkers to also live with each other in a confined ocean-bound vestibule, he says that it hasn’t been a problem. He has only heard that it is “a lot of fun.”
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