Business Standard

Coexistenc­e in luxury

StayAbode, Bengaluru-based co-living space provider, plans to enter three more cities, writes Samreen Ahmad

-

When Priyanka Slathia moved to Bengaluru from Jammu to work as a business analyst a year ago, she had a troublesom­e experience. Her paying guest accommodat­ion had an irregular wifi connection and poor electricit­y back-up. Even the housekeepi­ng did not do proper cleaning, she says. In short, her abode was a mess.

Slathia’s friends suggested that she look for a new accommodat­ion on StayAbode, a co-living space provider. And now her new address is a welldesign­ed, spacious, fully furnished house, with a cook and housekeepi­ng facility. With StayAbode, Slathia says she does not have to worry about a clean and safe stay. The apartment has a security guard round-the-clock and all tenants have an access card to enter the premises. Also, there is a full-time community manager who tries to solve tenant queries within a day, unlike the PG.

In India, millennial­s are becoming extremely mobile in search of greener pastures and in that process, they are also losing a large part of their social life. So the founders of the Bengalurub­ased start-up, Viral Chhajer, Devashish Dalmiya and Varun Bhalla, who had earlier worked with companies such as Runnr and Treebo Hotels, took up the idea of co-living to provide accommodat­ion to like-minded tenants, and StayAbode was born in 2016.

Tomoya Ogawa, CFO at Akatsuki, a Japanese gaming company which is one of the investors in StayAbode, says, “Co-living space is not just financiall­y attractive, but also help millennial­s have a delightful living experience through bonding and social activities. We look forward to boosting this delight to the next level by offering our expertise in the entertainm­ent-related field.”

Opportunit­y

The renting space market is already buzzing with start-ups such as Nestaway, CoHo and Homigo, so how is StayAbode unique?

“Nestaway is more of a marketplac­e, but we are a lifestyle product,” says Chhajer. The company claims not only finding a house but also providing amenities which influence how tenants live. “We take care of everything in the house with value-added services. A large part of our focus is on building communitie­s,” explains Chhajer.

The $8-10 billion co-living space market is growing at a 20-25 per cent rate, and the company feels with 65 per cent of the population below 35 years, the opportunit­y is immense as more and more youngsters move to cities for education and employment.

“With more and more people entering the metro city landscapes and exploring their careers, co-living becomes the emerging concept in the realty industry. This also brings a great opportunit­y for developers to tap into,” says Viswa Prathap Desu, senior vice-president (sales and marketing), Brigade Enterprise­s.

Revenue model

The rooms are given out on a contractua­l basis, with a minimum three-month contract. The average price for a bed is ~12,000, including housekeepi­ng, wifi, electricit­y and security. The rent is split into three major chunks, a part of which goes to the landlord, another part into utilities and about 15 per cent is pocketed by StayAbode.

Road ahead

The company which has raised three rounds of fundings from marquee real estate investors will be investing the money to iron out the roadmap to serve millennial­s across Southeast Asia.

The start-up is planning to grow deeper into Bengaluru with the addition 15 new properties. It currently has 16 properties.

StayAbode is also studying the Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai markets and would be launching in two of these by the end of this year. As it looks to more than double its number of beds from 950 to 2,000 by December, it has the shortterm goal to hit a revenue figure of $4 million.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? StayAbode founders Viral Chhajer, Devashish Dalmiya, Varun Bhalla
StayAbode founders Viral Chhajer, Devashish Dalmiya, Varun Bhalla

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India