Why Founders Are Curious to Join Napblog as Mentors?
By Pugazheanthi PalaniFounder & CEO, Napblog 1. The Energy That Founders Recognize Instantly When founders walk into a Napblog coworking space for the first time, something feels different.It’s not just the hum of laptops or the smell of coffee. It’s the rhythm — the pulse of curiosity, experimentation, and rebellion. It feels like walking into an afterparty of creativity — where people who failed at something yesterday are laughing about it today, while building something new by nightfall. That’s Napblog.A coworking space that feels more like a techno festival of ideas than an office. And it’s precisely this raw, chaotic, and magnetic energy that pulls founders in — not as investors, not as clients — but as mentors. Because for a true founder, mentorship isn’t about teaching.It’s about feeling alive again in the middle of other people’s beginnings. 2. Founders Miss the Garage Days Every successful founder secretly misses that phase — the one where it was just chaos, cheap pizza, and wild ambition. No hierarchies. No HR. Just ten people arguing over logo fonts at 2 a.m. and celebrating small wins like they’d raised a Series A. That’s the energy Napblog bottles up.We call it Coworking 2.0 — a place that’s part agency, part startup lab, part therapy circle, and part rave. When a founder visits Napblog, they don’t just see interns working.They see versions of their younger selves — unfiltered, unpolished, and fiercely curious. Mentorship here isn’t about frameworks or OKRs.It’s about reminding each other why we started in the first place. 3. From Roma’s Rave Culture to Napblog’s Coworking Spirit Let’s take a quick detour to Rome — or more precisely, Roma’s TRP Rave Parties. If you’ve ever been to one, you know what I’m talking about:neon lights, soundscapes that feel alive, and a crowd moving as one — no judgment, no barriers, just vibe. That’s how Napblog designs its coworking ecosystem. Founders join not because they want to “lecture” or “supervise.”They join because Napblog gives them the same thrill that TRP gives to DJs — a live audience that reacts to authenticity. In traditional mentorship setups, founders speak; others listen.In Napblog, everyone’s mixing the track — founders, interns, designers, marketers, all co-creating in one shared loop of progress. That’s why founders find it addictive. 4. The Makerspace Mentality: Laser-Cutting Ideas Across Dublin 12, there’s a makerspace called Imagine Crafts — a place where creators cut, engrave, and shape their ideas with lasers. Napblog’s coworking model shares that same essence. Our interns and early-career marketers don’t just “learn marketing.”They engrave their learning through doing — by experimenting with campaigns, brand ideas, and creative strategies that would never survive in a corporate boardroom. When founders see that — that fearless tinkering — something clicks inside them. They remember their own garage days when they had to laser-cut their own prototypes, figuratively and literally.So when Napblog invites them to join as mentors, the word “mentor” feels almost irrelevant. They’re not there to supervise — they’re there to co-create. 5. Founders Don’t Want to Sit on Pedestals Let’s be honest: most “mentor programs” are ego traps.Panel photos, polite applause, a few LinkedIn tags — then silence. Napblog breaks that format entirely.We don’t host mentorship sessions. We host conversations in chaos. A founder might walk in on a Friday evening, see a group brainstorming a campaign called “Hand Fishing Marketing”, and jump right into the mess. No formal intros.No PowerPoints.Just participation. And maybe later that night, that same founder might find themselves at a TRP afterparty — surrounded by the same interns — sharing stories about their first product launch or first client rejection over techno beats. That’s the Napblog way: mentorship through shared humanity. 6. Founders Are Drawn to Freedom Most founders today are trapped in success.Their calendars are full, their brands are polished, but their souls?Craving a bit of chaos. Napblog’s coworking floor feels like freedom again. Here, you can drop titles at the door.No one cares if you raised €10M or €0. You’re just another curious human trying to figure things out. That’s why founders are curious to join.Because we remind them of what freedom to build actually feels like. They mentor because they want to stay close to that feeling — the unstructured, messy, and brutally honest environment that corporate success often kills. 7. The “Roma–Napblog Loop”: Where Art Meets Entrepreneurship In cities like Rome, art and business blend seamlessly.The rave DJs are entrepreneurs. The record labels are communities. The maker spaces are movement hubs. Napblog carries that European creative DNA — where marketing isn’t just about ads, but culture. We’re not a marketing agency.We’re a marketing coworking ecosystem — a living lab where creative minds collaborate with analytical ones, where founders mix with future founders. So when a startup founder, artist, or tech visionary joins Napblog as a mentor, it’s not charity.It’s resonance. They see their own artistic struggle reflected in Napblog’s experiments — whether that’s a viral campaign idea, a rebrand, or a podcast produced at 1 a.m. on a Friday night. 8. Curiosity Is the New Currency Founders today aren’t just looking for returns — they’re looking for relevance. Joining Napblog as a mentor gives them that: Every mentor session often turns into a brainstorm.Every brainstorm sometimes becomes a campaign.Every campaign sometimes turns into a business. It’s unpredictable — and that’s the beauty of it. That unpredictability is the Napblog Effect. 9. Why Mentorship at Napblog Feels Like Music If traditional mentorship is a lecture hall, Napblog is a record label. Founders here aren’t “teachers” — they’re producers. They guide the beat, tweak the mix, suggest a drop — but they let the interns and creators own the stage. And just like in a music label, sometimes the producer learns something new from the artist. That’s why mentorship at Napblog feels organic. It flows both ways.A marketing founder might mentor a creative intern — and end up learning how Gen Z thinks about brand authenticity, TikTok humor, or visual storytelling. Napblog builds a
