There's been a lot of talk about where the Baby Boomer generation will live as they age. Several interesting, sharing-based housing alternatives such cohousing and senior villages have emerged as potential options. But what about all the businesses that Baby Boomers own? What happens to those companies when they retire?

The group, which was co-founded by Alison Lingane and Hilary Abell in 2014, wants businesses to avoid that fate by turning them into cooperatives. "Good decisions are built into worker cooperatives from the inside out," Lingane told LIFT Economy.

Take the example of Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives, which develops cooperatively-owned bakeries in the Bay Area. The democratic model of the bakeries has not only proved to be sustainable (the Association has been in operation for more than 20 years), it's also helped create a more collaborative workplace.

"Here we have people who approach the bakery with craft," Tim Huet, one of the association's founder, told Shareable. "If they come up with innovative things, they share. It's not a race to the top."

So how does Project Equity plan to support businesses transitioning to the worker-owned model? Here are some of its strategies, outlined on its website: