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Airbnb executive on why startups must work with the community, and government, for a better future

Airbnb’s Brent Thomas says keeping the community and legislators up to date with innovation will ultimately serve to benefit startups.
Brent Thomas_Airbnb
Airbnb's Brent Thomas. Source: Supplied

Keeping the community and legislators up to date with innovation will ultimately serve to benefit startups, according to Brent Thomas, Airbnbโ€™s head of public policy for Australasia, South Asia and South East Asia.

Speaking to StartupSmart, Thomas says when startups are disrupting traditional industries, they would do well to keep lines of communication open.

Airbnb is working with Australian government โ€œin whole new waysโ€, he says. Rather than lobbying for change behind the scenes, the home-sharing tech giant works with hosts and travellers to โ€œmobilise those people and make sure their voices are heardโ€.

โ€œWeโ€™re working with those people because theyโ€™ve got a stake in the future of travel,โ€ says Thomas.

People are changing the way they are booking accommodation, but theyโ€™re also changing the way theyโ€™re shopping, working and catching cabs.

โ€œConsumers have changed their behaviour, and those same consumers are voting,โ€ Thomas says.

โ€œItโ€™s a wise government that pays attention,โ€ he adds. โ€œThereโ€™s an opportunity for community-based companies to collaborate with the government on regulations.โ€

That said, Thomas doesnโ€™t believe Airbnb is, necessarily, disruptive innovation. Home sharing is by no means a new concept, there was simply an opportunity for โ€œa whole new business model, now the internet has come alongโ€.

โ€œPeople 200 years ago used to stay in other peoplesโ€™ homes,โ€ he says.

Equally, he says Airbnb is more of a โ€˜humanโ€™ company than a tech company, saying: โ€œWeโ€™re passionate about people, not robotsโ€.

โ€œOthers in the space are moving away from humans. Weโ€™re the exact opposite of that, using technology to enable people-to-people diplomacy, empowering human lives.โ€

In turn, this allows tourism to grow in a โ€œrespectful and responsible wayโ€, Thomas says.

Airbnb means people can travel more without new complexes going up, which Thomas says has environmental benefits. The company has also expanded into experiences, allowing guests to book wine tours, crafts events or private tours, as well as learning about their destination from their host.

โ€œWhen youโ€™re going to a new place and you donโ€™t know what to do, you can learn about a city from someone sharing their life experience,โ€ he says.

โ€œEverything Airbnb does is about empowering micro-entrepreneurs.โ€

What can startups do?

Thomas still thinks of Airbnb as part of the startup community, and while heโ€™s focused on sharing experiences with the government, he is also keen to impart his wisdom in this area to other game-changing tech businesses that are just starting out.

Startups โ€œoften have a business model that the government doesnโ€™t understandโ€, he says. Despite this, “how they engage with the government can’t be an afterthought”.

The government itself should focus on โ€œrunning to where the ball is goingโ€, and working with leading innovators that are likely to have an Airbnb-sized impact on the future.

Regulating disruptors like Airbnb โ€œis going to be a walk in the park compared to whatโ€™s comingโ€, Thomas says.

โ€œJust wait until AI comes along, until robotics comes along.โ€

Equally, he advises startups to engage with their communities, and โ€œnot only the people using the products but also the people who may not be yetโ€.

Now, a quarter of Australians have an Airbnb account, Thomas says. That wasnโ€™t the case five years ago.

โ€œWe all tell our own stories,โ€ he says.

โ€œBring the community along with you.โ€

Brent Thomas will be speaking at the Disruptive Innovation Conference in Sydney this August.ย 

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