How Will Covid-19 Impact Co-LivingWhile the co-living market size across India's top 30 cities was expected to grow to $14 billion by 2025, with social distancing becoming the new norm, Indian co-living startups are unsure about how it could shape people's mindsets with respect to community living

通过Sneha Choudhry

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Pixabay

In India in the midst of a 40-day countrywide lockdown because of the novel coronavirus pandemic, co-living companies have seen almost zero demand. They are expecting occupancy to be down by 40-50% in May. Many of them have also cut down their growth projections by half. While the co-living market size across India's top 30 cities was expected to grow to $14 billion by 2025, with social distancing becoming the new norm, Indian co-living startups are unsure about how it could shape people's mindsets with respect to community living.

With the Indian unemployment rate expected to spike to 31%, a prolonged slowdown affecting consumer spending, corporates aggressively exploring the option of Work from Home for employees and companies having paused recruiting fresh graduates on a large scale, the coliving players targeting early-stage working professionals might be affected hard. The student housing may be slightly less impacted due to the nature of demand.

Rent collection from existing residents are also becoming more and more difficult:

  • Many startups and IT companies have already started laying people off.

  • Most of the Indian corporates have declared to defer hikes and incentives for this year.

  • Many of the residents who had gone back to their homes before the lockdown, may refuse to pay up.

The startups have started offering rent discounts to incentivize the tenants to pay. Pre Booking amounts and upfront deposit payments are also being looked at.

However, the lockdown also comes with a silver lining. It has forced the startups to go back to the drawing board and relook at the business fundamentals:

  • Many of the startups which had minimum guarantee agreements with the property owners have started negotiating with them for changing the agreements to revenue share models

  • Companies have started targeting corporates and educational institutions more rather than retail customers. It creates a win-win situation for co-living platforms that get bulk demand and branding opportunities for employers.

  • The platforms have also used the lockdown to set straight internal processes and increase internal efficiencies. Many of them are outsourcing secondary functions and creating leaner systems.

  • A few businesses may also consider acquisitions. Consolidation may happen with smaller players either folding up or being acquired by the well-capitalized established co-living platforms.

Col-living players are already starting to change how they operate when the economy opens up again:

  • Co-living spaces are ramping up their hygiene and sanitation standards. Increased frequency of housekeeping, sanitizers at places where people come together often, increased scrutiny on cleaning practices, and PPEs are set to become the norm.

  • Many of the players have started conserving capital. With future growth expectations looking muted and large funding rounds and sky-high valuations looking unlikely, these startups are trying to create lean organizations and scale sustainably.

  • Startups are tying up with insurance companies, healthcare providers, sports arenas, and focusing on community experience to cultivate loyalty among their customers. Some may also ask residents to wear masks when outside of their private residences.

  • Platforms are also trying to transform their offline community activities into equivalent online avatars.

And despite all the doom and gloom surrounding the economy, co-living may emerge as the long term solution for urban India. With PGs kicking people out just before the lockdown, COVID-19 has also increased the value of co-living in the eyes of migrant professionals through their efficiency, convenience, and transparency. This pandemic has also brought the co-living communities closer and brought forth their ability to self-help and triage operational challenges in delivering social distancing strategies. Subdued real estate prices in the near future may help co-living players achieve sustainable growth. Developers might become more interested in co-creating BTS spaces with co-living platforms. Hygiene conscious customers living in PGs will look to move in with co-living players and their solution might fit in perfectly with the changing nature of work - work from home, short term with perpetual transitions.

Wavy Line
Sneha Choudhry

Co-Founder & CBO, ZoloStays

A gold medalist from IIM Kozhikode, Sneha Choudhry is the Co-Founder & CBO at Zolostays.

Recently featured under ‘YourStory’s 100 emerging voices of 2019’, she brings with her 10 years of experience in leading global companies like Deloitte and Oracle as Strategy & Operations Consultant. Sneha is responsible for Business Expansion and Customer Experience at Zolo. She holds an engineering degree from R.V. College of Engineering, Bangalore, and a post-graduate degree in MBA from IIM, Kozhikode.

Having founded two companies before zeroing in on Zolostays, Sneha believes an entrepreneur’s 24 X 7 lifestyle requires a specific mindset, strong determination, and robust resilience. She believes that one needs to develop its own unique work-life balance that works for one without being bogged down by all the rules that define it. A strong supporter of women in business, she willingly spends her time encouraging and advising women entrepreneurs on moving to the next level.

Sneha is a detail-oriented problem-solver and strongly believes in getting the job done, no matter what the challenge may be. Her vision to start Zolo was to make the way people live away from homes, awesome!

She is an avid reader and traveler. In her spare time, she aces vegan cooking and greens up her surrounding with samplings she has collected from her travels.

Related Topics

Business Solutions

Learn to Program an AI Chatbot for Your Business in This $30 Course

Get back-to-school savings on this AI coding course.

Data & Recovery

Get 1TB of Cloud Storage for Life for $119.97 With This Back-to-School Sale

This 1TB Cloud Storage Solution Is Only $119.97 for Back to School

Innovation

68%的世界很快就会住在城市地区,re Smart Cities the Future for Humanity?

Is Saudi Arabia's NEOM a vision or a mirage? Discover the transformative power of smart cities.

Science & Technology

8 Ways IoT Devices Can Improve Your Business Office

Automation and internet-connected products can lead to a happier and more connected workplace.

Thought Leaders

I Pitched 300 People a Day For 1 Year — and Learned This Impactful Entrepreneurial Lesson

After working myself to the bone pitching 300 people each day for one year, I came out of that experience as a new man — but surprisingly, an unhappier one. Here's what I learned.

Devices

This Versatile MacBook Is Only $299.99 During the Back-to-School Sale

Fid out how to get a MacBook Air that's sleek, portable, and reliable for a great price.