Moderne Ventures Announces its 2020 Midyear Passport Class

Moderne Ventures accepts 7 new companies into its Passport Program; companies are poised to help industry leaders to come out ahead, even in these uncertain times.

CHICAGO, October 13, 2020 — Moderne Ventures, a venture fund focused on real estate, finance, insurance, hospitality, and home service technology companies, announced 7 new companies accepted into its 2020 Midyear Passport Program. The Moderne Passport is a highly interactive, seven-month industry immersion program providing its participants with education, exposure, insight, and relationships to drive customer growth.

The 2020 Midyear Passport Companies provide solutions around artificial intelligence, big data & analytics, benefits for 1099 contract workers, health tech, and services automation to help to drive better customer experiences, increase operational efficiencies and drive growth within 100+ year old industries. This Class has collectively raised over $215M in funding with collective valuations north of $425M. The companies are:

  • NurtureBoss (NurtureBoss.io) – Scottsdale, AZ: Generate 5x higher prospect engagement over traditional marketing

  • Pristeem (Pristeem.com) – New York, NY: 10-minute self-service garment cleaning amenity

  • Ritual (Ritual.co) – Toronto, CA: Ritual’s virtual food halls enhance property experience

  • Stride (Stridehealth.com) – San Francisco, CA: Help your non-benefited workers get affordable benefits, at no cost to you

  • Unacast (Unacast.com) – New York, NY: Human mobility insights to optimize site selection, improve portfolio management, and make rapid data-driven decisions

  • Vyv (Vyv.tech) – Troy, NY: Continuous antimicrobial light for cleaner environments where we live, work, and play

  • Zeguro (Zeguro.com) – San Francisco, CA: Cyber Safety™. Integrated cybersecurity and cyber insurance for small to mid-sized businesses

“The leaders in our industry that embrace tech and innovation will stand to come out ahead in this environment,” said Constance Freedman, Founder and Managing Partner of Moderne Ventures. “We are excited to help this Passport Class impact the new world we now all live in!”

About Moderne Ventures

Moderne Ventures invests in technology companies applicable to real estate, finance, insurance, hospitality, and home services. Moderne operates a Venture Fund and the Moderne Passport, an Industry Immersion Program designed to foster innovation, partnership, and growth between industry partners and emerging technology companies. Moderne works with over 700 executives and corporations within its industries and evaluates over 4,500 emerging tech companies each year. Its principals have invested in 90+ companies including DocuSign, Better Mortgage, Hippo, Easyknock, Hello Alfred, Homesnap, Stride, and ICON.

What’s Next for the Office Property Market?

By Sam Delisi, Operating Advisor at Moderne Ventures

Will Office Building Owners Embrace the Hybrid Model?

COVID-19 has shaken the real estate industry to its core. Social distancing, working from home, zoom calls, thermal scanning, and the risks of sharing an elevator with a stranger are associated with a real fear of returning to the office. Pending the global development of an acceptable level of herd immunity and vaccine administration, the real estate industry must avoid overreacting. Office aren’t going to disappear, they will just be different.

Future Influencers:

Now that we have seen how easy it has been to work from home (WFH), imagine how much better it will get when companies build their systems to be truly flexible. The WFH genie is not going back in the bottle and, if anything, it will become a widely accepted work protocol.  New technologies will be developed, improving video conference capabilities and work collaboration. WFH will be even easier and more efficient once the 5G network is widely available globally.

Based on what we have learned from this global WFH experiment, companies will need to rethink how and why they require office space.  Office leases are expensive, complex transactions that tie up companies for years. Corporate leadership and Governance are going to demand a more thoughtful approach to how a company thinks about real estate. The way we have always done it won’t cut it anymore.

Demand Changes:

Companies are going continue to embrace WFH and as a result will require flexibility in every aspect of their real estate transaction. Lease term, speed to market, location, size, office configuration, services and experience will be important to attract and retain the best quality firms. “Space as Service” (SAS) will allow occupiers the type experience and flexibility that will truly maximize the dollars spent on real estate costs. That level of flexibility will require owners and property managers to think differently.

The Opportunity:

While WeWork, Convene and other SAS providers have proven that office space occupiers will pay up for flexibility, experience, instant occupancy and footprint, the lease arbitrage model underpinning their business is challenged. The better option will be for building owners to provide SAS services. SAS will provide office building owners with a variety of new revenue streams and profits by charging for services to their customers on an ala cart basis. This type of relationship already exists in the real estate industry in the hotel and hospitality market. Hotels get financed with a business model based on millions of one-night stays (short-term leases), food service, conference room rentals and banquet service.  Why couldn’t office buildings be financed with a “Hybrid” model of traditional leases and SAS business featuring a variety of service revenue similar to hotel chains? 

Whether your building is in Midtown, Fulton Market or Bellevue, owners will be able to customize a SAS delivery program to suit the tenant mix. Owners and Management Service providers who embrace these concepts will have the ability to market their developing brands. Tishman’s Studio and Zo, CBREGI’s Above and Beyond with Hana or KBS Realty Premiere Properties offering have some elements of the ala cart service model and are currently more focused on traditional property management, they have the appropriate ethos at their core to make the Hybrid transition. Current SAS firms could also expand their business and move to embrace a Hybrid approach to servicing investor owners.

The Hybrid conversion will be gradual, and it is safe to say that there will always be traditional lease tenants co-existing with SAS tenants and benefiting from some of the new service offerings. The future winners of the battle to keep and grow tenants will be owners and operators who have developed a robust SAS model or a relationship with a SAS based management partner. 

Observations on the COVID 19 Outbreak for Office Properties

By Sam Delisi, Global Head of Property Management Services for WeWork

Overview:

The CDC started issuing travel advisories about COVID 19 in early January of 2020.  On March 16th, 2020 the administration issued social distancing standards that were to last for 15 days and on March 29th based on the recommendation of the CDC the timeline was extended through the end of April 2020.  The speed of how quickly a pandemic can spread and literally effect all of our lives and the global economy is truly unprecedented.  

The effects of the social distancing standards and the shelter in place orders by state and local governments have shut down the US economy.  The federal government has enacted 3 separate initiatives to soften the economic blow. Based on current models the virus will peak in mid-April and if social distancing and the measures by the medical and pharma communities make progress one can begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

The future of the Office Property market and workplace is speculative at this point.  Will this usher in a new era of work from home employees?  How do we make employees feel secure about their wellbeing at work? Will fear of this and future viruses mark the end of the open office environment? Will this be the end of Space as Service providers or is the beginning of the second act? What will the impact be due to tenants considering the Force Majeure clauses or clauses that would include Governmental Action in their leases?  We will explore these questions and more herein.

The Market:

The good news that Global and US office markets were broadly in good condition going into the COVID 19 Crisis.  The vacancy in the US was below the historic average in most markets.   91% of leases in the U.S. are 2 Years or longer so vacancy rates should not change dramatically in the next few quarters.  The market has been very disciplined in both supply side and regarding loan to value ratios (LTVs) and as a result the office industry is in good shape heading into what is going to be a recession the length and depth of which is to be determined.

Landlords are already fielding calls from tenants that are aggressively pursuing rent relief and or lease restructures.  Unfortunately, as in all recessions there will be tenant bankruptcy’s that landlords will not be able to avoid. For firms that have temporary setback or want to change their occupancy strategy the blend and extend strategy is back.  Some tenants are looking for rent relief due to loss of business others are re-evaluating their current workplace strategies regarding work from home policies and they may need to reconfigure their office’s to give their employees a sense of personal space as interior designers scramble to develop more environmentally hygienic workplace trends. 

Most office buildings have first floor retailers.  Virtually all of these tenants are or will be looking for rent relief and many will not survive this downturn.  On a prorata basis retail tenants generally pay higher percentage of rents then their square footage would suggest. Losing these tenants has a big financial impact as well changing the buildings image in the market and it diminishes support for the office tenancy.

Well capitalized owners will be able to work with office and retail tenants improve rental rates in the long term, extend leases and add value to their properties.  Owners that are not well capitalized will lose tenants who have short remaining leases terms and experience sublease space for some of their longer term leases which will negatively impact the property’s value as underwriters try to value the building.   

During recessions capitalization rates go up and values will soften. There is a lot of capital on the sidelines and with low interest rates, value add investors will take advantage of these buying opportunities.  As a result there should be some sale transactions later this summer increasing through year end and beyond.

Occupants/Workplace:

The trend to open Workplaces has changed the market for office space.  Ratios of 250 sf per employee have dropped to 150 sf per employee and many firms and space as service companies were pushing the envelope to 100 sf per employee.  These new standards created amazing efficiencies and cost savings for employers.  The average workspace (desk area) was reduced to 46 sf with common elements like phone booths, huddle rooms, coffee stations, conference facilities, game rooms and community kitchens making up the other 100 sf.  The goal of these plans was to improve collaboration and give employees a sense of community and lots of options to work from anywhere in the office. Free addressing also became popular, meaning there was no assigned seating for each employee which helped to increase efficiency and when combined with some amount of worker mobility meant that the ratio of desks to employees was less than 1 to 1.

In the post COVID 19 era asking employees to re-enter this style of working environment would seem to cruel and unusual punishment.  The shared spaces would appear to be havens for spreading viruses and may trigger some form of PTSD for those who have been affected by the pandemic.

Interior designers are already studying plans to evolve open office designs to something that will make users feel better about the work environment.  Providing more personal desk space per employee thinking about how to create a more hygienic environment from products with anti-microbial surface’s to specifying better air filtration and circulation.  The future of these new designs will be exciting to see and should be a big driver of innovation and new technology.

Will working from home become the wave of the future? As we discussed earlier so far, our massive work from home experiment is going pretty well.  If this is to be adopted as a standard practice what % of the work force will be permanently working from home? That will be determined on a case by case basis.

When you combine increased square footage per employee and fewer employees working from offices the net effect of space required may be no net change.  That of course would be a great scenario for property owners however it could also reduce demand. 

Property Management Response:

Over the past 2 weeks we have spoken to leaders in the property management industry and they were very focused on the here and now.  They were interested in the health and safety of their employees, vendor partners and their tenants. Pre-social distancing and shelter in place edicts they were deep cleaning suites where tenant employees contracted the virus.  Now they are operating with essential personnel only but keeping their buildings open.  Keeping the building open is important for the tenants who are considered essential services and may help defend against potential Force Majeure issues for the owner.

The current phase of the property management has to do with planning for how to reopen and provide customers with assurances and some sense of security regarding their buildings level of environmental hygiene when they return to the building.  There will be more from the CDC on approved cleaning standards. Some properties may add a daytime shift of cleaners that will be responsible for sanitizing restrooms, kitchens, coffee rooms and surfaces throughout each suite.  Some customers (at their cost) may opt to add their own full time cleaner to only focus on their offices.

Managers should focus on CDC and ASHRAE standards and add more outside air to the mix to improve the quality of the air inside the property.  Air filtration will have increased importance as filters that trap or eliminate viruses and other microbes will add value to making customers and their employees feeling safer at work and differentiate the property in the market.

Managers will need to increase their communications with their tenants to let them know all that they are doing to improve their employee’s well being.  Managers will need to be proactive to keep their property safe by making sure that sick employees don’t come to work.  Some corporate facilities will take employees temperatures as they enter the building others will install technology that will be less intrusive but will also monitor people temperatures as they enter the building. These could raise privacy issues.    

Managers will need to look for ways to reduce energy costs and the cost of non-essential personnel during the Social distancing phase of the crisis.  Most of what is being contemplating above will increase operating costs and, in some cases, increase capital spend as buildings that need to refit their mechanical systems for better filtration and more fresh air. 

Lastly this is the time to reach out to your tenants.  The building managers should be speaking to the office managers, but leaders of the management services companies and property ownership should be reaching out to the C-Suites of the tenants in their portfolio’s.  These communications will be critical as it is in crisis when new relationships can be created, and existing relationships can be strengthened.  Pursuant to our discussion about the market the blend and extend transactions will go better if there are established relationships throughout both organizations.