The Stirling Business Podcast

Flexible Workspaces That Actually Work

17 min · 15 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Flexible Workspaces That Actually Work

Descripción

A city-centre workspace can be more than desks and Wi‑Fi. Mark Wallace joins us for a role reversal and puts the questions to us about how we’re building two connected brands at 45 King Street: Working Flexi Spaces and King Street Events, right in the heart of Stirling. We get specific about what people actually want from flexible office space after Covid: private offices on a licensing model rather than long leases, coworking membership that works day-to-day, and an “all-in” approach that includes furniture, utilities, business-grade internet, 24/7 access, a business lounge, and even an on-site gym. If you’re searching for coworking in Stirling, serviced offices, or a hybrid working setup that doesn’t slow you down, you’ll hear the practical details that make the difference. Then we talk about the pivot that sparked King Street Events. When larger office suites weren’t in demand, we repurposed the space into meeting rooms and an event venue for everything from client meetings and networking groups to exhibitions, culture-night talks, and comedy nights. We also share how collaboration extends beyond our own walls through partnerships with other King Street venues, giving us the ability to scale events up to larger capacities and build corporate packages aimed at the MICE market (meetings, incentives, conferences and events). If you enjoy honest business building, local entrepreneurship, and smart use of space, subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a review so more people can find the show.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Stirling Business Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

33 episodios

episode Building Skills For A Changing Economy artwork

Building Skills For A Changing Economy

AI in the 1980s. The early days of OCR and intelligent character recognition. A stint with the people who helped build the internet as we know it. Then, in mid-life, a decision that many would call reckless but Tina Covielllo calls necessary: stepping off the corporate treadmill and going to art school. That pivot becomes the foundation for two very different but closely linked ventures, both rooted in one idea: people can grow, and industries can change, if we train for what’s coming next. We talk through Progressive Pathways in Stirling and its focus on human growth through training, coaching, mentoring and organisational development. Tina shares how employability programmes work in practice across the Forth Valley, why personal development is not a “nice to have”, and how strengths-led learning can help people who are unemployed or stuck find a route into work. We also explore what it takes to scale training with technology, moving from face-to-face delivery into hybrid and on-demand learning without losing the support that makes it real. Then we shift into the Green Skills Training Academy and the fast-moving world of renewable energy training and retrofit skills. From internal wall insulation, heat pumps and solar panels to Global Wind Organisation-aligned health and safety for onshore and offshore wind, Tina explains what’s required, why credibility matters, and how to avoid greenwashing by measuring impact. We get into EPC pressures, the shortage of domestic energy assessors, and the careful balance needed when retrofitting traditional and listed buildings, where cost, performance and planning rules collide. If you’re building a business, changing careers, or hiring for the green transition, you’ll take away practical insight and a sharper mindset. Subscribe to the Sterling Business Podcast, share this with someone planning a pivot, and leave a review with your biggest question about green skills or entrepreneurship.

Ayer21 min
episode Stirling’s Boutique Apart Hotel artwork

Stirling’s Boutique Apart Hotel

Too many people treat Stirling like a quick photo stop: Castle, a coffee, then straight back on the road. We wanted to challenge that with a simple idea, build the kind of boutique accommodation that makes you want to stay the night and use the city as your base. Mark Wallace sits down with us at Studio King Street to unpack how King Street Apart Hotel came to life inside our 45 King Street development, and why we built something closer to big-city standards without pretending to be a full-service luxury hotel.  We get specific about what an apart hotel actually is, where it sits between serviced apartments and traditional hotels, and how we deliver comfort with practical details like kitchenette areas, fridges, and in-room coffee, while partnering with brilliant local businesses for breakfast, dinner, and extras. We also share what we’ve learned from VisitScotland, tour operators, and the travel trade about international tourism demand, especially from the US, and why heritage features matter so much to the guest experience.  From themed tours and the FIT traveller market to the Stirling Stay proposition and our digital concierge, we talk about turning overnight stays into longer, richer trips across Stirling and the Forth Valley. We also explore the bigger picture: how the hotel complements our co-working space, events offering, and recording studio, plus why corporate travel and the MICE market can help fill the quieter months. If you care about hospitality, destination marketing, or building a locally connected business, there’s plenty to take away.  If you enjoy the conversation, subscribe to the Sterling Business Podcast, share it with someone planning a Scotland trip, and leave us a review with your favourite thing to do in Stirling.

23 de jun de 202624 min
episode Flexible Workspaces That Actually Work artwork

Flexible Workspaces That Actually Work

A city-centre workspace can be more than desks and Wi‑Fi. Mark Wallace joins us for a role reversal and puts the questions to us about how we’re building two connected brands at 45 King Street: Working Flexi Spaces and King Street Events, right in the heart of Stirling. We get specific about what people actually want from flexible office space after Covid: private offices on a licensing model rather than long leases, coworking membership that works day-to-day, and an “all-in” approach that includes furniture, utilities, business-grade internet, 24/7 access, a business lounge, and even an on-site gym. If you’re searching for coworking in Stirling, serviced offices, or a hybrid working setup that doesn’t slow you down, you’ll hear the practical details that make the difference. Then we talk about the pivot that sparked King Street Events. When larger office suites weren’t in demand, we repurposed the space into meeting rooms and an event venue for everything from client meetings and networking groups to exhibitions, culture-night talks, and comedy nights. We also share how collaboration extends beyond our own walls through partnerships with other King Street venues, giving us the ability to scale events up to larger capacities and build corporate packages aimed at the MICE market (meetings, incentives, conferences and events). If you enjoy honest business building, local entrepreneurship, and smart use of space, subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a review so more people can find the show.

15 de jun de 202617 min
episode How Stirling Builds Organisational Learning For The World artwork

How Stirling Builds Organisational Learning For The World

Stirling is not just a beautiful place to visit, it is a place that can teach businesses how to learn. I’m joined by Alaa Gerad from the Stirling Centre for Strategic Learning and Innovation, a Scotland-based think tank and act tank working with organisations across more than 20 countries to build real capability in organisational learning, innovation, and futures foresight. We talk through Alaa’s practitioner-academic path, from quality management in industry to consultancy and assessment work with major organisations, and why that experience convinced him that learning has to be designed as a system. He explains the centre’s LIFE model: Learning, Innovation, Futures Foresight, and Excellence, and why excellence should be the outcome of consistent learning practices rather than a separate initiative. If you lead a team, run an SME, or support performance in HR and L&D, you’ll hear how different roles need different learning interventions, not one-size-fits-all training. A highlight is the centre’s work with the British Standards Institution (BSI), including a newly launched organisational learning standard and the practical support around it: certificated programmes, capstone projects tied to real business needs, and six months of mentoring to help people actually implement. We also get into partnerships with universities and colleges, immersive learning through visits and retreats, and what it takes to connect academia to industry problems at pace. To finish, Alaa offers a direct challenge to the local business community on customer service and responsiveness, and a practical way for listeners to get involved through the centre’s membership and events. Subscribe, share the episode with a founder or manager who cares about culture, and leave us a review so more people can find the show.

25 de may de 202628 min
episode Lights Camera Stirling artwork

Lights Camera Stirling

Stirling keeps turning up on screen, often when you least expect it. One day it’s a medieval stronghold or a gothic graveyard, the next it’s doubling for another city entirely and selling the illusion perfectly. We sit down with author and academic Tom Christie to unpack why filmmakers return to Stirling again and again, and what his new book Lights Camera Stirling reveals about the city’s hidden life as a film and TV location.   Tom takes us behind the scenes of independent publishing with Extremis Publishing, the arts and culture press he runs with his sister Julie. We talk about how a small publisher balances editing, design, marketing and events, and why helping writers find their voice matters just as much as selling books. From there we get into the heart of the project: Stirling’s heritage, landscapes and cultural organisations, and how all of that combines to create a place directors can shoot across genres, decades and styles.   Along the way we touch on 60 productions featured in the book, including titles like Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Greyfriars Bobby, Good Omens and multiple versions of The 39 Steps. We also explore Stirling’s film education pedigree at Forth Valley College and the University of Stirling, plus the potential impact of the planned Stirling Studios on jobs, training and homegrown talent. If you care about Scottish filmmaking, film tourism, screen culture or the creative economy, this conversation is a smart, local lens on a fast-moving industry.   Subscribe on Spotify or Apple Podcasts, share the episode with a friend who loves film locations, and leave us a review so more people can find the Sterling Business Podcast.

8 de may de 202617 min