| BETTING
that Philippine businesses will require
more offices, a Jakarta-based company which
provides serviced workspaces opened its
seventh center in Metro Manila’s premier
financial district.
Worth $2 million, the office
serviced by CEO SUITE offers motion sensors
which control lighting and air-conditioning
and card tap technology for each of its
hundred workstations located on the 37th
floor of the LKG Tower in Makati City.
CEO SUITE, which runs a boutique
style of serviced-office business across
Asian cities, allows individuals to use
rooms for an office or formal work areas.
The company charges between
P12,000 to P40,000 a month for use of a
workstation – a table, a leather seat, a
desk lamp, black canisters for pens and
paper clips – in a wall-to-wall carpeted
room.
Besides being able to provide
secretarial services, CEO SUITE, which claims
to be Asia’s expert in the serviced office
industry, also offers fixed-line communications
and wireless internet connections.
“People who would need this
kind of service are those starting up a
business and they need a distinguished and
highly sophisticated office without going
through the hassles of finding a space here
in Makati, [such as] applying for telephone
lines, and the taxing tasks that come with
the start-up process,” Ems Llanes, the company’s
country manager, told Business Mirror.
Meanwhile, Joseph Siswanto,
co-owner and spouse of CEO SUITE’s president
Mee Kim, told reporters that foreign investors
undertaking research in the Philippines
“may need a business center” even as they
keep their options open regarding investing
in the country.
“They may decide later that
there are opportunities here. So we link
them up with other agencies like CB Richard
Ellis (CBRE) if they would require buying
or leasing business space on a longer term,”
Siswanto said. He added that their customers
who are not ready to invest in the country
“wouldn’t have to worry about a lease contract
that still has six or more months of use.”
Nevertheless, Siswanto believes
the market would swing upward owing to double-digit
growth rates in the local property sector.
He also said that the company is a seriously
looking at establishing facilities in Cebu
City.
“I was in the Philippines
when the region’s property bubble burst
and I see a different, more uppity, market
demand a decade later,” Siswanto said.
Earlier, property broker
CBRE said that vacancies in the Makati central
business district has fallen to a ten-year
low of 1.3 percent from double-digit growth
rates ever since the Asian crisis hit the
Asia-Pacific region’s real estate industry
a decade ago.
According to CBRE, office and business space
demand have grown so much that investors
and developers are already looking outside
Makati for areas which could be developed
for companies engaged in business process
outsourcing.
Besides Manila, CEO SUITE
also manages serviced offices in Singapore,
Beijing, Shanghai, Jakarta, Bangkok, and
Kuala Lumpur.
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