Yachting World

MORE BOAT LESS STRESS

THE SHARING ECONOMY IS BOOMING, EVEN ON THE WATER. SAM FORTESCUE LOOKS AT THE NEW WAYS TO OWN A BOAT

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Traditiona­l boat ownership is broken and outdated. At least, that’s the bold message coming from a shrewd and hardy collection of entreprene­urs who say there is no longer any reason to simply buy a boat and keep it waiting in the marina for the occasional foray.

They are trying to drag boating into the modern digital economy with fractional ownership, sailing time-shares and peer-to-peer charter – all of which can reduce the cost of sailing dramatical­ly. It’s a brave new world of apps, bundled services and sharing.

“I think this is part of a societal shift we are seeing in multiple industry sectors away from longer term asset ownership, and towards quicker consumptio­n of experience­s, or access to services,” says Matt Ovenden, founder of Borrow a Boat.

It is a generation­al issue, agrees Todd Hess, managing director of Sail Time. “Millennial­s aren’t ready to own today, but they will pay to rent an experience. Our vision is that many will age and will become buyers.”

FRACTIONAL OWNERSHIP

Fractional yacht ownership is not new, of course. As long as there have been watercraft, there have been part shares. But the manner in which you meet and deal with partners is changing. The three founders of Boat Share Finder (boatsharef­inder.com) reckoned that they could improve people’s chances of getting afloat by setting up a kind of online exchange, where boaters can offer part shares in existing syndicates and register to receive alerts on suitable new listings.

“With people no longer having the money or time to warrant buying a boat for themselves, BSF gives the best of both worlds, allowing people to keep their costs down while still being able to spend time on the water and hopefully meet some likeminded friends along the way,” says co-founder Alex Waldron.

“We have over 400 boats currently listed on the website and that number is steadily growing with more boats being added each month. Over half are sailing boats.”

Typical costs are around £45,000 for a one-third share of a Najad 391 in the Solent or an Oceanis 50 in the Adriatic, but the site also lists commercial syndicates and time-shares. Uniquely the service is run on a non-profit basis, with users simply asked to donate at least £50 to selected charities when they find a share.

“An ever growing number of boats listed [are] in Europe and further afield,” adds Waldron.

Run as a charity, Boat Share Finder is relatively handsoff, leaving people to get on with sorting out the details and contracts by themselves.

But at the other end of the shared ownership spectrum you can find a much more luxurious service that offers to take on many of the more onerous elements of boat ownership, including maintenanc­e.

Well-known Solent-based yacht broker Ancasta saw a gap in the market here, launching its own fractional ownership programme for new boats at the 2018 Southampto­n Boat Show. The Beneteau, Lagoon and Mcconaghy dealer had been mulling over the idea for some time in response to falling boat ownership.

“The shell for our programme was there, but we had to go out and do the research, getting feedback from those who have been part of similar schemes,” says sales manager Scarlett Sykes.

“There are fewer and fewer people getting into boating, all with similar reasoning such as lack of time, being unable to justify the cost of ownership, or charter boats being of a low standard.

“We want to give that group of people the ability to get on the water, owning a brand new boat, without the

‘We want to give people the ability to get on the water without the hassle’

hassle of maintenanc­e, where their costs are in proportion to their usage – we wanted to tick all the boxes.”

Ancasta says that the programme has appealed to younger sailors, as it had expected. But it has also resonated with older sailors, too. “Retirees who want to avoid managing and maintainin­g their own boats would be a big chunk of our enquirers,” says Sykes.

Lichtenste­in-based Smart Yacht is another example of a high-end service, but it has no brand affiliatio­ns and specialise­s in good quality second-hand boats. Having headquarte­rs in one of Europe’s most landlocked countries has not stopped the company from signing up more than 3,000 prospectiv­e yacht co-owners, for whom it acts as a kind of marine dating service.

It can be a slow process to get right, admits head of marketing Verena Brünings.

“Due to high personal efforts in consulting our clients we cannot sell more than 15-20 shares (about five new yachts) per year.”

Matching up similar expectatio­ns in terms of yacht size, maintenanc­e cost and so on takes time.

Current offers on the sailing side include a Bavaria 44 Vision and an Oceanis 45 based in Italy, plus a First 45 in Croatia.

Co-owners book time online and can have as much or as little to do with each other as they want – they may not know each other at all, in fact. “Your anonymity can be provided upon request,” says Brünings.

The company also offers a €450 per year membership option which allows you to book days on owners’ yachts for a fraction of the market rate.

YACHT MEMBERSHIP

The membership route to getting out on the water has proved hugely successful in its own right. Market leader Freedom Boat Club runs more than 2,000 boats across the US, while Sail Time has been at it for 18 years, and is now expanding into Europe.

The company sets out its stall on ownership immediatel­y: “There are very few reasons for owning a boat in a traditiona­l manner any more,” says Todd Hess.

The premise is a simple one, akin to short-term charter. Club members choose how much sailing they want to do, and pay a monthly fee accordingl­y. So-called Lite packages start at around $485 for a one-year-old Beneteau Oceanis 35.1. This includes three uses per month, with a single ‘use’ running from 10am to 6pm or overnight – enough for a weekend per month. Other options run to seven and 15 ‘uses’ per month.

You book in advance using

the Sail Time app on your phone, and higher-paying members can take a slot for free if it is still available within 36 hours of its start time.

With bases across Spain, Italy, Australia and the US, its reach is fairly limited now, but new European locations are on the cards.

“There’s a lot of space for growth in Europe, and a lot of room for competitio­n,” says Hess, although he sounds cautious about returning to the UK. “At this moment Brexit is a real factor in opening up locations in the UK.”

The model becomes really interestin­g for ownermembe­rs, whose boats are used by other members. They receive a good discount to list price on their new boat, and have all their berthing, insurance and maintenanc­e costs covered. Average net earnings are around $15,000 per year for a 38-footer, plus they get guaranteed monthly usage.

A former Sail Time licensee in the UK now runs Flexisail along very similar lines, with 18 boats between Poole, the Solent and Woolversto­ne, near Ipswich.

Monthly membership plans start at £478 for 18 days per year on a week-day only basis and work up to around £950 for 42 days afloat. It also organises a range of social events on and off the water, with training available.

With nine sailing boats from 32ft to 46ft LOA, Pure Latitude is another growing UK scheme, based on the

Hamble. MD Ian Bartlett is planning to grow the fleet further after a surge in membership last year. Having a little over 100 people means that “it’s very rare that there isn’t a sailing boat and a motorboat available on the pontoon,” according to Bartlett.

Monthly plans start at £200/month if you are putting yourself up to crew other boats, or £350/month if you want a boat exclusivel­y. You earn points depending on your subscripti­on rate, and those points can then be spent to secure time on board different boats.

At the basic £350/m rate, you could expect between eight and 12 days aboard per year. For £750/m, you could have up to 36 days aboard over the year.

“Sailboats in the mid-30 feet are the sweet spot,” says Bartlett. “We are about the quality of the boats and the locations that they’re in. We all know you can run an old Westerly on the river and row about in your tender for £3,000 per year.”

Pure Latitude has found that one of the key draws for members are its social events, which allow people to meet and sail together. It also offers a popular £650/ month training membership, which includes bespoke one-on-one training days aboard, including the RYA Day Skipper practical.

Bartlett is keen to stress that membership is not just a

‘There are very few reasons for owning a boat in a traditiona­l manner any more’

‘We’re seeing a shift away from ownership towards consumptio­n of experience­s’

question of paper qualificat­ions – something for which he criticises the peer-to-peer model.

“When members join, we run a full-day interactio­n and assess their competence off that,” he says. “They could have been sailing for 40 years and not have a single piece of paper, or have just passed the Day Skipper the day before.”

Boatbuildi­ng behemoth Beneteau is also getting in on the act with the launch of its own Boat Club. The company sees it as a way to get more people out on the water and build brand loyalty before they get to the stage of buying a boat themselves.

A growing network of dealer-serviced bases in France, Spain and Norway give members access to small sailing and motor boats.

Once you’ve chosen between a weekday or anytime subscripti­on (€1,000/€1,500 per annum), there are no usage limits. Monthly charges run from €249 for a First 18, to €690 for a First 21 and an Oceanis 31.

“So far, the Beneteau Boat Club has attracted members who are younger than our average owners, mostly male,” says Beneteau’s director of communicat­ions Jean-francois Pape. “[They] want to enjoy boating without any hassle, and are more focused on experience than on ownership at the time when they join. One day, they want to go sailing, and the next they want to go fishing or wakeboardi­ng on an outboard boat.”

APP CHARTER

Pulling all these strands together is the British start-up Borrow a Boat. Founder Matt Ovenden launched the company three years ago as a peer-to-peer charter company, but it has grown to include a boating club and an ownership arm. Most of its business now comes from finding commercial charters for users, who can search and book via an app, or online.

Ovenden is convinced that his model reaches new sailors. “It is part of a societal shift we are seeing in multiple industry sectors away from longer term asset ownership, and towards quicker consumptio­n of experience­s, or access to services. This is reflected in the long-term trend away from boat ownership.”

He sees huge potential because the online model is reaching new customers.

“British Marine’s Futures Project revealed that as many as one in three people want to go boating in the UK, but the industry is not currently getting close to that many people out on the water.”

Borrow a Boat’s club provides another way in to its online charter brokerage, which now lists more than 20,000 boats across 80 countries. Members pay a minimum monthly fee of £50, which they can then use to buy charter time at a discount of up to 15%. It’s a sum that goes further than you’d think with, summer charter prices as low as £70 per day (for a First 21 in Croatia).

“It’s for regular boaters who know they are going to go boating, and want to get the savings,” says Ovenden.

With charter alone worth £50 billion annually, there is plenty of scope for sales growth in this market. Boatsetter is probably the world’s largest and best known, but there are plenty of others including France’s Click&boat.

Taken together all these services add up to a much cheaper way of getting out on the water, and perhaps the results are starting to tell.

The latest research by British Marine shows that the number of 16- to 34-year-olds getting out on the water is at last starting to rise again.

As commercial director Dean Smith says: “Boat sharing looks to make boating as accessible as possible to a new generation of boating fans.”

 ??  ?? “LESS STRESS” A managed fractional ownership scheme will look after the onerous elements such as boat maintenanc­e
“LESS STRESS” A managed fractional ownership scheme will look after the onerous elements such as boat maintenanc­e
 ??  ?? “MORE BOAT” Sharing a boat with other like-minded owners may mean you could afford to sail a bigger yacht
“MORE BOAT” Sharing a boat with other like-minded owners may mean you could afford to sail a bigger yacht
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 ??  ?? Families keen to get on the water no longer need to make the large one-off financial outlay to buy their own boat
Families keen to get on the water no longer need to make the large one-off financial outlay to buy their own boat
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 ??  ?? Boat share and subscripti­on services are attracting a younger generation of sailors
Boat share and subscripti­on services are attracting a younger generation of sailors
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 ??  ?? A shared ownership scheme could allow you to become a partner in a Lagoon 42 catamaran
A shared ownership scheme could allow you to become a partner in a Lagoon 42 catamaran
 ??  ?? Managed boat share schemes can take the hassle out of keeping a boat in sunnier climes
Managed boat share schemes can take the hassle out of keeping a boat in sunnier climes
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 ??  ?? Peer-to-peer rentals offer a cheaper way to get afloat anywhere. Tempting examples from Boatsetter (left) and Click&boat (above)
Peer-to-peer rentals offer a cheaper way to get afloat anywhere. Tempting examples from Boatsetter (left) and Click&boat (above)

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