Co-working Unicorn WeWork Heading to Singapore & Tokyo Soon

WeWork is an American company which provides shared workspace, community and services for entrepreneurs, freelancers, startups and small businesses. Founded in 2010, it is headquartered in New York City and has been stable at the current valuation of roughly USD $16 billion.

It designs and builds physical and virtual communities in which entrepreneurs share space and office services and have the opportunity to work together.

WeWork’s expansion into Asia is in full swing. From our checks, it looks like branches in Singapore and Tokyo will open soon. In India also they have planned to set up an office in Mumbai and have acquired leased space for the same.

So far, the company has made forays in Asian cities such as Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Bangalore.

The US-based office sharing startup is hunting for community managers who will “maintain 100 percent occupancy, achieve sales target goals, and manage churn” – among many goals – at its buildings in the two new locations, according to fresh job posts on recruitment platforms such as LinkedIn. It also already registered a company in Singapore, showed a check we did on the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority or ACRA.

WeWork’s destination picks are no surprise.

Singapore is one of the world’s top business and startup hubs, surpassing its peers in terms of investor funding. At the same time, its office rental rates rank among the highest in the world. That gives WeWork a ready market of fledgling startups and entrepreneurs who want to save on rent or are seeking flexible lease contracts.

In Japan, a startup boom is expected after the government vowed to put young tech firms at the center of the country’s economic growth strategy.

Is it wise to go where too many players are going?
Despite the potential, WeWork is diving into a crowded industry as co-working spaces have mushroomed over the years.

In terms of market size, a 2016 Cushman & Wakefield study cited by Flyspaces – only one of the regional players WeWork would be competing with – puts total co-working office stock at 2 million square meters in “mature markets” Singapore, Hong Kong, and Australia, with total revenue of US$1.8 billion per year.

WeWork, valued at US$16 billion, is arguably the biggest player in the co-working space, covering 21 cities in the US plus 20 others around the world. With US$1.4 billion in funding – and another rumored US$4 billion from SoftBank that’s still in negotiation – the company counts over 80,000 members. Bagging the mega round from Softbank would fuel its ambitions to conquer Asia, and make it harder for any other player to compete.
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Soumya Gupta

BW Reporters Soumya is a young writer and journalist, with bachelors in Multimedia and Mass Communication. She is an alumini of the Asian College of Journalism, and finds politics and sustainability intriguing beats to work with.

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