Will the American co-working giant WeWork kill BHIVE Workspace? How’s the WeWork vs BHIVE battle going to pan out on Indian turf? Here’s my take!

By Published On: March 22nd, 2017Categories: Articles, Coworking Franchise, Managed Office7.1 min read

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WeWork vs BHIVE space battle in Coworking India

Back in January 2015, my co-founder Ravindra and I were on our way to the Start-up India program in Delhi, really excited about government’s new-found focus on encouraging entrepreneurship in India.

At the airport, we ran into an erstwhile chairman of NASSCOM Product Council. We were excited being on our way to the “Start-up India” conference and were talking to someone who was supposed be a top start-up evangelist. Hence, we were expecting to hear some words of encouragement, and some useful insights.

But, just the day before his short encounter with us, he met Adam Neumann, CEO, WeWork, and seemed to be blown over by his plans for India. As soon as we started our conversation, he became dismissive of our future as a business and cautioned us with something like this. “WeWork is going to invest hundreds of millions of dollars into India over the next few years and is going to take up a few million square feet of space across multiple cities in India.”

“The numbers they are talking about are mind blowing. Don’t think you’ll become what Ola is to Uber. When Uber entered India, Ola was already few years old and had enough funding to compete against Uber. But this time, it is going to be different. Nobody in the workspace business will be big enough to challenge WeWork when it enters India with big money. They are going to literally fry you guys alive.”

He was basically suggesting that it is time for us to shut BHIVE down and look for other business opportunities. While I was shocked to see someone of his stature and in his role attempting to discourage a budding entrepreneur this way, I saw no point in arguing. I could only smile and say “only time can answer this”.

There seems to be some level of inferiority complex that our start-up evangelists in India carry.

This is not an isolated case. There seems to be some level of inferiority complex that our start-up evangelists in India carry when it comes to American companies, especially the ones planning to scale in India. This is evident in my conversations with some of them. Following are the three questions I get asked all the time:

1.   “How do you see the BHIVE vs WeWork battle panning out on Indian soil?”

2.   “Are you hoping to getting acquired by WeWork at certain point?” (yes, that’s how blatant it is)

3.   “Do you believe BHIVE is the “WeWork of India”?”

Before I get into my responses to these questions, let me share the current state of BHIVE Workspace and my take on WeWork.

It’s been over 1 year since that conversation took place. Looking back and without trying to blow my own horn, I am happy to share that we’ve actually grown to a level where we are ready to take any foreign entrant heads on. In last two years since inception, we’ve focused on operational efficiency and on our books, scaling to $2 million revenue run rate, while being profitable at unit level. In fact, our unit metrics are much stronger than those of WeWork. And, we are scaling fast.

We recently launched one of the largest Indian co-working spaces in the heart of Bangalore with 700+ seats. According to our current roadmap, BHIVE will expand to other cities in India, the Middle-East and South East Asia and add another million square feet in co-working space within next two years. We’ve also come up with unique business models that cater specifically to Indian ecosystem, both from landlords’ and end-customers’ perspectives. With over 500 events at BHIVE Workspace in the last 2 years, we’ve built a thriving community of over 10,000 entrepreneurs.

We are also proud of the fact that we have focused on helping different segments of landlords to not only efficiently monetise their properties, but to also help them contribute to the “start-up India” story. In addition, we’ve built one of the best start-up teams out there, with top talent from Amazon, Facebook, SAP, Bloomberg etc. In sum, we are in a great shape to take on any foreign entrant.

BHIVE is currently at $2 Million revenue run rate and has been profitable at unit level throughout

Now, coming to WeWork. Personally, I’ve used WeWork in New York, and I really admire Adam Neumann and the business he’s built. But scaling such a business in a country like India is going to be a huge challenge for WeWork, a much bigger challenge compared to what they faced in China. In fact, WeWork’s entry seems to have been delayed by at least a year because they’d made the India launch announcement in that start-up India conference itself.

The real-estate business in India is probably the most complex in the world, no one can understand it better than a local player like BHIVE. But, I’d still welcome WeWork’s entry into India. In fact, I am slightly disappointed that WeWork is making a very cautious entry into India. Had they come in with the same level of confidence as displayed by them a couple of years ago, it’d have actually accelerated the growth of co-working spaces in India by driving greater acceptability for the concept.

Another disappointing part is that WeWork is tying up only with the biggest builders in India, in an attempt to minimise risk. To an extent, this is understandable given the challenges it had to face in China. But we need to help our small to mid-size landlords take advantage of the co-working revolution as well.

Now getting to my responses to the questions:

1.   How do you see the BHIVE vs WeWork battle panning out on Indian soil?

Like mentioned above, we have built a strong foundation and understanding to not only compete, but become a dominant coworking space provider globally.

Workspace is a new multi billion-dollar industry, which is growing at a rapid pace, disrupting the traditional office space business. In India alone, there’s more than 1 billion square feet of office space, growing at 8% every year and waiting to be disrupted by the concept of co-working. We are looking to not only hold the pole position in India, but to become a dominant player globally.

Having said this, coming to Wework vs BHIVE, we still need to acknowledge the fact that WeWork has set new standards in the industry and is the current leader in the United States. While Google and Facebook pioneered the concept of modern office space, WeWork was among the first coworking spaces that brought the experience to US based start-ups. We need to respect what they have achieved. But, we are confident that BHIVE has the opportunity to be another major player in coworking in the world. It’s not a zero sum game, after all!

2.   “Are you hoping to getting acquired by WeWork at certain point?”

A true entrepreneur never builds a company with an intention to sell it. BHIVE is a dream and this is what I love doing. With the huge opportunity lying in front of us, there’s no reason to believe the question can’t be reversed. No question of thinking about selling at any point when the ambitions are grand and opportunity is even larger.

True entrepreneurs don’t build companies to sell them off.

3.   “From the perspective of competition between Wework vs BHIVE, do you believe BHIVE is the “WeWork of India”?”

In the last two years, we understood the Indian real estate and co-working space like no foreign entrant can imagine. We have carved our own identity and are confident that we’ll be a notable player in global markets within a few years. In fact, our business model has evolved to be completely unique and different from that of WeWork. BHIVE is as different to WeWork as Alibaba is to Amazon. We don’t wish to be labelled as XYZ of India. We are BHIVE from India and intend to scale with our own identity.

My advice to Indian entrepreneurs is to not get intimidated by global players entering India or get discouraged by start-up evangelists. We have the biggest opportunity to build global businesses from India if we believe and go all out!

Do the difficult things while they are easy and do the great things while they are small. A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step. –Lao Tzu

 

 

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