Brittany Corona overcame adversity. Now she’s teaching others how to do the same.
If you’ve been around Vibe much over the last five months, you’ve surely crossed paths with Brittany Corona.
If you’ve been around Vibe much over the last five months, you’ve surely crossed paths with Brittany Corona.
Sam Jones, Founder and CEO of Proworks Enterprises, radiates an inspiring blend of “can do” attitude, casual friendliness, and unflappable confidence that simply pulls people in.
It’s a big day here at Vibe Coworks. Please join us in welcoming about Leah Persinger as our new Community Manager!
Despite our world seeming like a big blur for nearly a year, Bradly Franco keeps smiling. As the creative mastermind behind Ulterius Flux, Bradly is committed to enjoying life and work, no matter what they dish up.
Here’s a fun fact for you: since opening just two short years ago, Vibe has been staffed, not by employees, but by members who trade eight hours a week of their time for an unlimited membership to Kitsap’s most dynamic coworking community and shared workspace, thanks to the Vibe Host Program.
Marit Bockelie is all about community. The central DNA of her business, The Bremerton Letterpress Company, is all about connecting people through prin
Some people, as they say, light up a room. For others, the light is their backdrop; they simply glow. Vibe member and front desk host Leah Persinger? She’s an all out light show.
If there’s one thing this pandemic has pushed us all to do these last months, it’s adapt, adapt, adapt. We’re a coworking space, not a school. And yet, we feel the strain of schools being closed deep in our bones.
With the outbreak of COVID-19, Olympic Community of Health’s purpose statement resonates on a whole different level: “Tackling health issues that no single county or Tribe can tackle alone.”
Collaboration, innovation, and teamwork are pillars upon which our work relies. In these urgent and frenzied times, we are invited to continue leaning on these pillars to collectively support our communities, those in most need, and those providing care.
When you get up close and personal with Ryan Denny, owner of Trash Transporter, you have an immediate sense of old-fashioned courtliness peppered with boy-next-door familiarity and “aw-shucks” chuckles (the best combination of city slicker meets cowboy). Ryan radiates decency, and it’s no surprise that his company, Trash Transporter, is enjoying a 25% growth year after year. Neither is it a surprise that his man-on-the-street marketing style is a stealth weapon that performs.
We are living in a strange time. Every time I turn on the radio, open FaceBook, click on the news app on my phone… the first thing I hear is about the coronavirus.
Suddenly, everything has to do with the effects of this virus which no human has ever encountered before.