Comment by pavlov
Comment by pavlov 11 hours ago
I think the co-op structure makes more sense if your business is local.
For example, I’d love to have a local alternative to Uber/Doordash that was a co-op owned by the drivers and the customers together. 95% of my taxi trips and food delivery are within my home town. I’d love to support a company owned by the drivers who live here, instead of a massive multinational.
Co-ops are pretty successful in many European countries. In Finland, both the largest bank and largest grocery store chain are national co-ops owned by customers. It’s a model that can scale far, even though the big co-ops do develop internal politics very similar to any traditional corporation.
I agree with the idea of supporting local non-huge businesses that still (need to) for their customers. But I think the coop concept works for more spread-out organizations as well, especially when it comes to digital services. As you mentioned, some big organizations like banks and grocery stores (that operate country-wide or even internationally) exist in Europe. There are also remote-first design/tech cooperatives around.