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Meet Haymarket HQ, the unique startup hub helping Australian startups launch into Asia

A unique co-working space in Sydney aims to help Australian companies make the daunting leap into the Asian market. Located in Sydneyโ€™s Chinatown, Haymarket HQ is a specialised co-working space geared towards providing startups with mentoring and advice they need to expand into Asia. Property developer Brad Chan said he founded Haymarket HQ because he […]
SBS Small Business Secrets

A unique co-working space in Sydney aims to help Australian companies make the daunting leap into the Asian market.

Located in Sydneyโ€™s Chinatown, Haymarket HQ is a specialised co-working space geared towards providing startups with mentoring and advice they need to expand into Asia.

Property developer Brad Chan said he founded Haymarket HQ because he believed there needed to be a dedicated space aimed at taking advantage of Australiaโ€™s economic ties to Asia.

โ€œOne of the strengths that weโ€™ve got in Australia, and particularly in Sydney, is a lot of good networks, a lot of good connections and a lot of good capabilities into Asia which werenโ€™t being utilised,โ€ Chan said.

For university mates Julian Chow and Alfred Boyadgis, working at Haymarket HQ has been a lifesaver.

The pairโ€™s company Forcite Helmet Systems designs smart-helmet technology, so motorcyclists and sportspeople can interact with their helmets.

Despite having raised $1.2 million to make their smart-helmet a reality, finding software and hardware manufacturers in China was one of the biggest challenges.

The other was bridging the cultural divide between Asia and Australia.

โ€œThere is that huge language barrier at first โ€”ย and the cultural barrier โ€”ย having grown up in Australia the whole time,โ€ Chow told SBS.

โ€œAs an Aussie going there for the first time, it is totally different to how you do it in Australia,โ€ Boyadgis said.

Angela Kwanโ€™s software company Catalyser is aimed at helping major companies to facilitate staff donations through their intranet systems.

She says one of the benefits of basing her startup out of Haymarket HQ is the access to potential investors to facilitate her shift to the Asian market.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of funds from Asia, investment funds and seed funds and also a lot of local funds that come here to talk to the startups, mentor the startups and look at opportunities,โ€ she said.

Chan says he thinks startups are sometimes too focused on moving to Silicon Valley in the United States, and may be overlooking opportunities closer to home.

โ€œWe have a very strong Asian population, not only visitors and not only students, but people of first, second, third generation of Asian descent, who live here and who still have a lot of strong connections into Asia.โ€

โ€œOne of the things I see is we are not using our Asia capabilities as well as we could,โ€ he added.

This article was originally published by SBS Small Business Secrets.