Awfis, CoWrks look for ways to hold attention of their millennial clientele

06 July 2018

Awfis, CoWrks look for ways to hold attention of their millennial clientele

  • Business Standard

CoWrks and Awfis are keen to adapt their spaces to the design aesthetic of the millennial worker

Building brand stickiness has become both a challenge and necessity for the growing number of co-working spaces in the country. More than location, price and sizes of the spaces on offer, Awfis, CoWrks, WeWork and a host of others are rapidly bundling a set of experiences that they believe will lock in consumers: the millennial self-employed, the start-up community and also, importantly, large traditional organisations.

Notoriously fickle in their consumption habits, these consumers are being wooed with the promise of vibrant community centres and networking opportunities and lured in with a design aesthetic that best suits their sensibilities. For the brands doing that, the task is doubly difficult given that the business of co-working spaces is still nascent and its special features, yet to be defined. But at the same time the number of brands is multiplying; there are close to 200 co-working operators running an estimated 400 shared workspaces across the country today, compared to just Regus and few localised players in 2010, according to Knight Frank, real estate consultants.

So how does a brand build loyalty into its growth plan even before the product and the business have matured?

Following the workforce

“Millennials will soon represent an astounding 50 per cent of the global workforce. While the workforce has evolved, workspaces haven’t,” said Sidharth Menda, chief executive officer, CoWrks. His point is that the nature of the office, be it in large established organisations or in the newly formed ventures is being defined by the new band of people that work there. Co-working brands have to understand their needs when they design the community and the workspace. It is through them that the brand will find an audience with the large workplaces.

Most large companies, the traditional technology and non-technology firms, are adapting to the demand for flexible work timings, e-commute and a greater emphasis on work-life balance. Trapped within the old formal frameworks, they fall short when it comes to meeting the expectations of their young employees. Co-working brands can step in to fill the gap and grab the huge opportunity that is currently untapped. Business volumes of co-working spaces are expected to triple over the next three years, according to a recent report by real estate firm Knight Frank. This is due to the increasing appetite for this format from occupiers, property owners and co-working operators, it said

While there is no dispute that demand for co-working spaces will grow, how many from the current list of spaces will survive the marketplace crush? And therein lies the need to build differentiators between the brands on offer and also promise customers something more than just a cost benefit.

“We highlight things that show how co-working spaces are different from traditional working spaces. Our main focus, from an advertising or marketing point, is how co-working spaces take away the hassle of setting up an office,” said Amit Ramani, founder-CEO, Awfis. Companies say they are keen to be seen as more than easy hunting grounds for the start-up and freelancers community while keeping their conveniences in mind.

At present approximately 50 per cent of the client roster of an Indian co-working operator is made up of big corporates. This can go as high as 80 per cent in the more premium priced offerings, said the report. This is at the heart of the stickiness problem say experts, given the low lifespan of start-ups and the mobile nature of temporary employment, these companies have to aim for the corporate customer but, develop an identity for the brand that young employees buy into.

Build offline networks

While there are numerous factors that contribute to the identity of a working space, the community building and the networking opportunity that the spaces provide are turning out to be key differentiators. “The power of community is an important aspect. The kind of large and diverse communities that co-working spaces provide bring people and opportunities together, both at a professional level and also as a community, said Ramani. Awfis has 10-50 centres that encourage collaborations within the occupant communities and 10 per cent of their total members have partnered internally, he said.

“A culture of collaboration is our main offering and we want to be known for the creativity, productivity, cross-collaboration, knowledge sharing and skill upgrade that our spaces facilitate,” said Menda. Flexibility, form and design and technological facilities are being combined to create a brand that ticks all the right boxes in the list. CoWrks claims to be India’s answer to uninspiring, traditional office spaces that this generation feels tied down to. “We’re the ideal fit for any individual or entity that seeks flexibility, freedom and inspiration,” said Menda.

Flexibility is a major draw, both with respect to time and location. The network of co-working spaces across various locations is attractive for employees and companies with a busy travel schedule.

Design is an important distinguishing feature too. Visually appealing artwork, tasteful furniture, well designed meeting rooms and vast open workspaces are among some of the assets being highlighted by these companies. “The design philosophy at CoWrks caters to a modern workforce. Millennials want to work out of spaces that are designed to reflect their values and we draw from pop and local culture for building a space that drives collaboration and fuels inspiration,” said Menda.

 

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Awfis aims to double revenue to Rs 600 cr in FY23; IPO by Dec next year

20 March 2023

Awfis aims to double revenue to Rs 600 cr in FY23; IPO by Dec next year

  • Posted by Awfis Editorial

At present, Awfis has 150 centres across 17 cities, comprising about 90,000 desks. It offers a desk in a price range of Rs 7,000-20,000 per month

Co-working operator  is targeting two-fold jump in revenue to Rs 600 crore in FY23 as demand for flexible workspace has risen post the second wave of the pandemic, its founder and CEO Amit Ramani said.

The company also plans to launch its initial public offer (IPO) towards the end of 2023 mainly to raise funds and give exits to investors, he said, adding the company has so far raised about Rs 450 crore from investors.

At present,  has 150 centres across 17 cities, comprising about 90,000 desks. It offers a desk in a price range of Rs 7,000-20,000 per month.

In an interview with PTI, Ramani said the co-working segment, which includes managed office space, has been performing exceedingly well in the past 12-15 months.

“Our revenue grew to Rs 280 crore in last financial year from Rs 220 crore in previous fiscal year. This financial year, we are targeting around Rs 600 crore revenue,” he said.

Ramani highlighted that the company has already achieved a monthly run rate of Rs 500 crore in revenue.

Asked about the occupancy level, he said the centres that are in operations for more than 6 months have an occupancy of around 85 per cent.

On clients profile, Ramani said around 35 per cent of its clients are large enterprises.

Talking about per desk pricing, he said the rate fell during the pandemic but now it is 10-20 per cent up from the pre-COVID level.

For expansion in an asset-light mode, the company is partnering with real estate developers and individual landlords. However, 25 per cent of portfolio is through pure leasing where it has to make capital expenditure.

It has partnered with Bengaluru-based Prestige group to open co-working centres at various locations.

Earlier this year,  tied up with Blackstone group firm Nucleus Office Parks for a new centre in Mumbai with a seating capacity of 450.

On fund raising, Ramani said the company has no such plans but it is planning to launch the  by December next year.

“We will start preparation from April onwards and plan to file the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with Sebi by middle of the next year,” he said, but did not share the size of the .

This story appeared in the 07 November, 2022 issue of Business Standard and was originally published at: Awfis aims to double revenue to Rs 600 cr in FY23; IPO by Dec next year 

Return to office highest in telecom, consulting sectors; IT lags: Survey

04 August 2022

Return to office highest in telecom, consulting sectors; IT lags: Survey

  • Posted by Awfis Editorial

Majority of employees in telecom and consulting sectors have returned to office with significant fall in Covid-19 cases but the IT sector is lagging, according to a survey by Colliers and Awfis

Majority of employees in telecom and consulting sectors have returned to office with significant fall in COVID-19 cases but the  is lagging, according to a survey by Colliers and Awfis.

Property consultant Colliers India and co-working operator Awfis’ joint report explores the status of return to work across different sectors.

“As the third wave of COVID-19 started waning in February, the return-to-office gained momentum. As a result, by June 2022 about 34 per cent of the companies saw about 75-100 per cent of the employees back in office (includes hybrid work),” the report said.

About 41 per cent of occupiers stated that only up to 25 per cent of their employees have returned to office.

The survey showed that telecom and consulting sectors saw the highest (75-100 per cent) rate of return to office while IT and new technology companies saw the lowest (0-25 per cent) rate of return to office.

“The survey has made it clear that a distributed workspace strategy is the way to go for occupiers in this new era of experiential workplaces, as occupiers emerge from the after-effects of the pandemic. Flex spaces, in particular, are leading this growth, as occupiers from varied sectors are housing teams in flex centres across cities,” Colliers India CEO Ramesh Nair said.

Flexible workspace operators leased about 3.5 million square feet of office space in January-June this year across the top six cities, almost three-fourths of the flexible space leasing in entire 2021, he added.

The survey was conducted during May-June among occupiers to understand their strategies regarding distributed workplace. The respondents were from different sectors such as IT/ITeS, BFSI, engineering and manufacturing and others.

Total 150 responses were received from C-Suite executives spanning Founders, CEOs, COOs and CHROs of various companies. The company size of the respondents varied, starting from a range of 1-500 employees to companies having over 10,000 employees.

As per the survey, about 74 per cent of the occupiers are likely to adopt distributed workspace while 53 per cent of occupiers prefer working from home plus office as their preferred workplace portfolio strategy.

About 49 per cent of the occupiers are likely to adopt flex centres to enable distributed workspace, followed by setting up their own offices in metro and non-metro cities.

The consultant sees opportunities for flex spaces not only in metro cities but also in non-metro cities. “In fact, in non-metro cities, total flex spaces are likely to grow more than two-fold to 5.5 million square feet by the end of 2022,” Nair said.

Amit Ramani, Founder and CEO, Awfis said the findings of the survey are a testament to the success of the distributed work model and subsequently of flex spaces in catering to the ever-evolved workspace needs of India Inc.

“Going forward, 77 per cent occupiers will include flex spaces as part of their workplace strategy. We expect exceptional demand in the future, driven largely by large corporates for de-densification of existing traditional offices,” he added.

According to the Colliers India data, the gross leasing of office rose to 32.9 million square feet in 2021 from 30.1 million square feet in the previous year. During 2019, the numbers stood at 44.8 million square feet across six cities — Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad and Pune.

In the first six months of this year, the office leasing has risen to 27.5 million square feet from 10.3 million square feet in the year-ago period. The share of leasing by flexible workspace operators stood at 13 per cent.

This story appeared in the 4 August, 2022 issue of Business Standard and was originally published at: Return to office highest in telecom, consulting sectors; IT lags: Survey

Amit Ramani live on Zee Business discussion panel on Startup India movement

25 August 2021

Amit Ramani live on Zee Business discussion panel on Startup India movement

  • Posted by awfis

Amit Ramani (Founder & CEO- Awfis Space Solutions Pvt Ltd) on Live Panel Discussion on Startup India on 16th Jan, 2016 on Zee Business