“…These results are particularly interesting in that they support the claim that perceived social isolation constitutes an important predictor of employees' intention to telework in a coworking space (Boboc et al, 2014 ; Gerdenitsch et al, 2016 ; Bianchi et al, 2018 ; Lashani and Zacher, 2021 ; Rådman et al, 2022 ; Wright et al, 2022 ). Since perceived social isolation had the strongest effect on perceived usefulness (and indirectly on behavioral intention) out of the four predictors investigated in our study, the prospect of feeling less lonely when teleworking and having more social interactions at work appears to be the main benefit perceived by employees of teleworking in a coworking space, in the same way as identified for self-employed workers (Boboc et al, 2014 ; Gerdenitsch et al, 2016 ; Lashani and Zacher, 2021 ; Rådman et al, 2022 ). As participants who teleworked more than 50% of their working hours reported a stronger feeling of social isolation than the other participants when teleworking from home, which reproduces past findings (Bailey and Kurland, 2002 ; Mann and Holdsworth, 2003 ; Gajendran and Harrison, 2007 ; Vayre and Pignault, 2014 ; Vayre, 2019 ), the potential benefit of teleworking in a coworking space for social integration might be all the more substantial for employees who telework intensively and may explain why these participants also reported being more inclined to telework in a coworking space in the future.…”