How We Work, Live and Travel is Changing: Is the multifamily industry ready to capitalize on this opportunity?
Sébastien Long
Founder & CEO of Lodgeur | PropTech, Multifamily Real Estate, Hospitality & Design | Investor | University of Cambridge MBA
This article that I wrote for the Houston Apartment Association's ABODE magazine explores why multifamily operators should consider converting a portion of their inventory to furnished apartments and on-demand housing to take advantage of and adapt to changing behaviors and lifestyles.?
Long ago, nomadic hunters and gatherers sought out resources in new lands. Farmers, on the other hand, were tied to one location, much as modern workers became bound by the need to be close to their place of work or office.
In 2021, workers are shifting from a fixed-location lifestyle to a nomadic lifestyle at an unprecedented rate. “Digital nomads,” as they are called, can work from anywhere with an internet connection. Without the traditional fixed job location rooting them to one place, they are beginning to live nomadically. The rise of remote work has freed growing swaths of the economy from the constraint of living near an office.
Unfortunately, housing options still tend to tie people down. We think that needs to change.??This article explores why multifamily operators should consider converting a portion of their inventory to furnished apartments and on-demand housing to take advantage of and adapt to changing behaviors and lifestyles.?
A more traditional nomad roaming the desert with a camel
COVID-19 Accelerated Trends Toward Remote Work?
There’s no denying COVID-19 has transformed the way we work. With everybody staying home as much as possible, companies and employees alike who were nervous about remote work have discovered its many advantages.
In reality, however, COVID-19 only accelerated what was already happening. In 2019, there were already over?26 million Americans?— about 16% of the workforce — who worked remotely. Furthermore, in the 10 years between 2005 and 2015, remote work rose by 115%.?
Now that so many people were forced into trying it, it’s unlikely the world will ever go back to the way it was before. The popularity of remote work is undeniable with?99% of remote workers saying they would like to continue working remotely, at least part-time, for the rest of their careers.
The benefits of remote work are also undeniable. Employees save time and money by not commuting to work, maintaining extensive work wardrobes, or buying lunch every day. Businesses reduce their office and workspace costs while gaining access to larger talent pools. Cities are less congested with fewer people on the roads going to work. Although adjustments to a remote work environment require coordination between management and staff, 77% of remote workers feel more productive at home.?
Even though many positions will continue to require an employee’s physical presence, about 55% of businesses globally say they can offer some capacity for remote work. In other words, a lot of people can be freed from being tied to a specific location for work.?
More and more people will work from home or work from anywhere
The US Lags Behind International Trends for Rental Properties
However, mainstream housing options in the US do not typically provide the flexibility that digital nomads demand. Typically, renters must sign at least a one-year lease for an apartment. Plus, that apartment will be empty, requiring them to move all their belongings, including heavy furniture, from one home to another when they want to move. Worse, if they’re setting up their first home, they’ll need to spend thousands of dollars for the bare essentials to make the apartment livable.
Overseas, renters commonly have more options and flexibility. Furnished apartments can be found on shorter lease terms, giving renters the ability to more easily move from place to place.?In cities such as London in the UK, up to 82% of all rented accommodation is rented furnished.?The expectation of a costly, time-consuming move is particular to the North American market.
Renting furnished apartments on flexible terms allows apartment owners to take advantage of another market subset as well. Americans traditionally take fewer vacation days and thus have less opportunity to travel. But flexible work arrangements mean that you don’t need to become a digital nomad to explore.?
You can expect to see surging travel in the US, as people can “work from anywhere,” even if it is just for a long weekend. And the accommodations they book are changing, greatly accelerated changes by COVID-19.
Instead of staying primarily in hotels as they mostly did in the past, people and companies are booking homes. Airbnb may have captured the zeitgeist of the hotel alternative in cities, but this shift has been emerging over several decades with vacation rentals and corporate housing, and it’s not going to reverse after the pandemic.
Multifamily professionals can take advantage of this trend as well. Unlike leasing a bare apartment, furnished apartment inventory can be more flexibly rented, minimizing vacancy losses. You can not only attract long-term residents but monetize occupancy gaps by attracting demand from people who prefer to avoid hotels when traveling to enjoy the space and privacy of a luxury apartment.
More and more people will work from home or work from anywhere
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Convenience and Flexibility Disrupting Every Industry
Demand for convenience and flexibility is changing everything we do now. If you want to buy something, you can order it on Amazon and have it delivered quickly to your house instead of driving to multiple retail stores. If you need transportation, you can call an Uber to come to pick you up wherever you are instead of finding a busy street to hail a taxi. If you want to watch a movie, Netflix now allows you to watch what you want on your schedule instead of being boxed into TV times, or worse, picking up a movie from Blockbusters. If you have a minor ailment, your physician can meet with you virtually and send a prescription directly to your pharmacy, instead of requiring you to spend a half-day on an office visit.
People are used to having exactly what they want on their terms. They don’t like constraints, hassles, or commitments.?
Unfortunately, that’s exactly what most multifamily communities offer.
Multifamily property investing took a?nosedive in 2020. Investors were understandably nervous about what the future would look like. Renters were vacating apartments, especially in larger cities. No longer tied to an office, they sought more space to weather the lockdowns.?
With interest rates so low, many renters took steps to become homeowners. If they were going to be stuck at home all the time now anyway, it made sense to purchase their own home. Instead of paying a premium for space in the city center when they couldn’t enjoy the amenities anyway, they might as well build equity in a home.?
Though buying a home feels permanent, locking yourself into a one-year lease also has a semi-permanent feel. Life rarely fits neatly into 12-month blocks. Plus, hauling a home’s contents from one place to the next is a cumbersome slog. The cost, rigidity, and effort of moving from an apartment to another made the jump from renting to buying a home much easier for renters, especially when they’d already purchased the furniture.
In Houston, our analysis shows vacancy rates rose to 15% in?stabilized?luxury communities in the Downtown and Midtown markets. That’s an average of 40 empty apartments per community, resulting in a million-dollar annual vacancy loss per building.
While we can point to oversupply and COVID-19 as culprits, the reality is that there’s a product-market fit problem. By furnishing vacant apartments to create on-demand housing, multifamily communities can both diversify their revenue mix and make purchasing a home a less attractive option. Renters want the same convenience and flexibility in housing they get from entertainment, shopping, doctors, traveling, and transportation.?
Moving Doesn’t Have to Be Awful or Expensive
Moving between apartments is a nightmare, but it doesn’t have to be
With furnished apartments and on-demand housing, moving or setting up a home isn’t such a nightmare. Renters simply pack up their personal belongings, without having to worry about carting or buying furniture, home decor, and other cumbersome objects from one residence to the next. This lighter load makes moving faster, easier and cheaper.?
Furthermore, with furnished, professionally decorated apartments, setting up a new place isn’t such a chore. You don’t have to disassemble furniture and reassemble it at the new place, praying you don’t lose any tiny but necessary screws or parts along the way. The bed is already made, and the kitchen is equipped. The utilities are connected, and the Wi-Fi internet is configured. You also don’t have to spend days cleaning and organizing the new space. It’s already been done for you! There are no movers, stacks of boxes, or time lost searching for utility providers.
You can think of it like moving from one hotel to another, but for apartments.?
Rising Demand for On-Demand Housing
Remote work, changes in travel trends, and demands for flexibility and convenience have accelerated the demand for on-demand housing. On-demand housing allows people to pack up and move out with minimal notice. Rather than signing leases for prescribed terms that do not align with their real-life plans, renters can use on-demand housing to tailor their housing start and end dates to a particular job contract, internship, or other individualized need.?
This sounds kind of scary for multifamily companies and investors. One of the reasons for using year-long leases is to ensure income for long periods of time and not having to spend so much time on marketing and finding new tenants. However, rising vacancy rates show this isn’t working. Even during COVID-19, data shows that converting vacant units to alternative accommodation can increase occupancy and even deliver above-market rents, by tapping into short and mid-term rentals.
There’s a reason why luxury apartments are sitting empty in so many cities right now: The uncertainties in today’s economy have reduced the market of people willing to lock themselves into a 12-month lease or incur the time and expense of moving.?
Revamp Your Multifamily Investment
Forward-thinkers and innovators are the ones who don’t just survive difficult times, they thrive through them. People are looking for flexible housing options — and ultimately are willing to pay for that convenience. Multifamily property operators have an opportunity to adapt their product offering in innovative ways and increase the value of their property. Once you start offering people what they’re really looking for, your vacant apartments fill themselves.?
About the author
Sébastien Long grew up immersed in his parents’ hospitality business before spending a decade traveling the world digitizing banks and their operating models. Looking for a new challenge, he earned an Executive MBA from the University of Cambridge and helped two Silicon Valley unicorns enter the European market. He moved to Houston in 2018 and launched Lodgeur, a company that helps apartment building owners boost their cash flow and property value by converting vacant units into furnished lodging and managing them to attract renters looking for convenience and flexibility.
Consumer Duty Product & Risk Expert -
3 年Thanks for sharing Seb and bang on, flexibility is the key for the post Covid travel, working & living world. Keep it up ????????