Toronto Star

Ikea teams up with startups to look at next-gen furniture

Younger customers living in micro-pads want smart, convenient solutions at home

- ANNA MOLIN AND CAROL MATLACK

Sankarshan Murthy sinks into a sofa at Ikea’s conference centre in the sleepy town of Almhult in southern Sweden.

The former Tesla and Apple engineer is jetlagged after flying from San Francisco to make a pitch for his startup, BumbleBee Spaces, which has developed a robotic system to maximize space in small apartments by hoisting beds and other furniture to the ceiling when not in use.

BumbleBee was one of 18 companies invited by Ikea for a “startup boot camp” in late March, following a selection process that drew more than 1,100 entries worldwide. The program is part of an effort by the world’s No. 1 furniture retailer to attract a new generation of shoppers. Murthy’s robotic furniture includes sensors that can help users locate, say, a tennis racket stashed in the back of a cupboard, or put a pair of running shoes near the front door for a morning jog — all at the touch of a button or a voice command.

“It’s like having an AI butler,” said Murthy, who said he drew inspiratio­n from classic Disney cartoons featuring robotic arms and other futuristic devices.

That’s a big leap from the no-frills, flatpack furniture traditiona­lly sold in Ikea stores. And it doesn’t come cheap. BumbleBee’s bedroom system, installed in three apartment complexes in California and Washington, costs about $6,000 (U.S.) per room.

Ikea, though, needs to freshen its appeal to under-30 customers, raised in the sharing economy, who often care less about ownership than about the experience that a product or service can deliver. And their limited living spaces mean they need less furniture.

“We’re in the middle of a retail revolution, where people are moving seamlessly between the physical and digital world,” said Per Krokstade, the manager of Ikea’s boot camp.

“Everybody wants smarter solutions and more convenienc­e than before.”

Ikea isn’t the only retailer joining forces with startups. Walmart has a Silicon Valley incubator that’s backing ventures such as Jetblack.

Jetblack is a concierge shopping service for upscale city dwellers. Walmart is also backing Spatialand, which creates virtual-reality entertainm­ent to plug merchandis­e sold in the U.S. company’s stores.

The challenge is especially urgent for Ikea, which has a younger customer base than most other big-box retailers do.

“It’s a generation­al difference,” said Ray Gaul, senior vice-president of research and analytics at Kantar Consulting.

“Ikea has woken up to the fact they can’t deny this anymore and have to change with the culture.” Ikea has already acquired Task-Rabbit, a San Francisco-based startup that dispatches workers to assemble furniture in customers’ homes. And it’s about to finish a prototype for a high-tech table that can brighten or dim room lighting with a sweep of the hand across the tabletop. The technology uses electrodes covered with an electrical­ly conductive paint developed by Bare Conductive, a London-based startup that took part in Ikea’s first boot camp in 2018.

This year’s participan­ts included Copenhagen-based Freemi, whose co-founders have developed an app to help people give away their old furniture and other possession­s.

“People, especially the younger generation, are fed up with our throwaway culture,” Thude said. The service, currently offered in Denmark and the Netherland­s, ties into Ikea’s goal of reducing waste.

In parallel, Ikea has launched a furniture-leasing program that it plans to expand to 30 markets in Europe in the next year. Customers who subscribe to the service can get either new or used items that the retailer takes back at the end of the lease.

Other startups Ikea is considerin­g include London-based Skipping Rocks Lab, which has developed edible food containers made from seaweed that could be used in Ikea’s cafeterias; and Copenhagen-based Flow Loop, which recycles and purifies water in the shower.

For entreprene­urs such as Murthy, a chance to partner with a company that sells $44 billion worth of goods a year is worth a bit of jet lag. Ikea, in turn, wants startups to see the retailer as “a natural partner,” Krokstade said. “When they have made an innovation, they should come to Ikea and say ‘Hey, look what we have done. Can we co-create with you?’ ”

 ?? BUMBLEBEE ?? In a bid for the next generation of buyers, Ikea is talking to startups like BumbleBee, maker of robotic furniture.
BUMBLEBEE In a bid for the next generation of buyers, Ikea is talking to startups like BumbleBee, maker of robotic furniture.

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