Business Standard

Working together, affordably

With shared offices in vogue, Awfis plans to add more than 100 centres in 12 months, writes AbhishekKu­mar

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Like many of his classmates in IITKharagp­ur, Sanil Gupta had a dream of starting something of his own. After working in various companies for around four years, when he set out to realise his dream in 2016, he faced a problem that he had not planned for.

“People give examples of Apple and Amazon and say the starting place doesn’t matter, but for me working from home was not an option,” said Gupta, who now works with a three-member team from the Pro-working Centre of Awfis at Golf Course in Gurugram. For Gupta and many other entreprene­urs, the growth of companies providing co-working space like Awfis has helped them realise their dreams as renting a commercial space at a key location in top cities in India usually did not fit in their budget. Also, the coworking space format has brought a healthy work culture while opening doors for collaborat­ion.

Founded by Amit Ramani in 2015, Awfis, recently raised $20 million in Series C funding from investors Sequoia India, InnoVen Capital and The Three Sisters: Institutio­nal Office. The company says the investment will be used to expand its centres, launch new products and enhance existing technology platforms.

In the past three years, the company claims to have leased 55 centres with over 25,000 seats in nine cities.

According to Ashish Sharma, CEO of InnoVen Capital, Awfis has built a competitiv­e advantage over others through a differenti­al supply side acquisitio­n model.

Opportunit­y

Given several advantages of a shared workplace over a traditiona­l office, the sector will likely witness robust growth in the coming years.

The shared-office industry, which started with start-ups as its primary focus, is witnessing a positive change with many large companies and SMEs eyeing coworking spaces to set up their work centres.

A recent study by real estate consulting firm Jones Lang LaSalle estimates that 13 million people in India will be working out from shared offices by 2020, and the industry will attract investment­s of up to $400 million by the end of this year.

Property consultant CBRE also sees a bright future for the sector in India. In a report released in 2017, the firm had stated that the co-working office space segment in India is expected spread over 10 million sq ft by 2020, with 2017 alone witnessing an absorption of nearly 1.5 million sq ft.

Revenue model

Awfis says it is making some profit for the past six months. It expects to achieve company-level profitabil­ity in September.

Apart from rentals that form the major chunk of revenue, the start-up generates a significan­t amount through a range of mobility products.

Generating revenues in the co-working industry, according to Awfis, is easier when compared to other industries. "Unlike other businesses with the higher cost of acquisitio­n where the revenue starts flowing in from the 2nd or 3rd year, an Awfis product is such that we start making money within 3 weeks of customer occupying the space,” said Ramani.

The company refused to divulge the revenue figures but said its revenue grew four times between April 2017 and April 2018.

Road ahead

Seeing a huge potential in the sector, Awfis has set ambitious targets for the next year. The company aims to add more than 100 centres with over 40,000 seats in the next 12 months while foraying into cities like Chennai, Kochi, Indore and Ahmedabad.

However, with the rising competitio­n and fall in the number of new start-ups, any co-working start-up will find it tough to fill all its seats.

At present, more than 200 co-working start-ups are operationa­l in India. The space is currently dominated by the likes of WeWork, CoWrks, Awfis, 91springbo­ard and Innov8.

While Awfis claims to be the largest with total space of 1.5 million sq ft, WeWork and CoWrks are among the fastest growing with properties of around 700,000 sq ft.

“The current demand is a third of the total space they have taken up. They will struggle to fill the remaining space. Occupation will gather pace in the next three to five years,” Amit Goenka, chief executive and managing director at Nisus Financial Services, had told Business Standard about WeWork and CoWorks.

 ??  ?? Inside an Awfis centre; founder Amit Ramani says generating revenue on co-working space is easier
Inside an Awfis centre; founder Amit Ramani says generating revenue on co-working space is easier

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