A prime example of the university connection to real estate technology development is the proptech program that Reichman University administers in Herzliya, Israel, said Daryn Videlefsky, a Tel Aviv-based senior proptech research analyst for CREtech.
Among the many Israeli-created proptech startups coming out of the military and university complex are Agora, a real estate management platform; Buildots, a tech-enabled company for construction sites; Cherre, a real estate data firm; Guesty, a short-term rental property platform; Home365, a rental property management company; Lendai, U.S. financing for global investors; Localize, for tech-enabled home buying; MyTower, property management intelligence; Placer.ai, retail real estate location technology; Structure Pal, concrete reduction artifical intelligence; Veev, high-tech home building; Venn, resident experience operating system, and Younity.io, a tenant communication platform.
“Israel is known as the startup nation,” Videlefsky said. “More recently, it’s becoming known as the scale up nation as our tech ecosystem begins to mature. That being said, some of Israel’s proptech leaders have even gone on record recently expressing their confidence in the nation’s ability to become known as the proptech nation. I couldn’t agree more with this.
“But, personally, I’m incredibly passionate about the climate,” Videlefsky added. “As such, I really hope that we start to see more ESG and sustainability solutions emerging from the Israeli proptech ecosystem.”
Another major factor often cited for producing Israel’s technological talent is the country’s compulsory military service, especially those chosen for its elite Unit 8200.
A unit of the Israeli Intelligence Corps within the Israel Defense Forces, Unit 8200 is responsible for a range of highly technical operations, including clandestine ones. It also conducts signal intelligence and code decryption, counterintelligence, cyberwarfare, military intelligence and surveillance. The unit is credited with turning out some of the top technological talent in the world.
One proptech professional who held the rank of major in the Israeli Defense Forces’ technology division is Doris Pitilon, chief technology officer for Faropoint, a Hoboken-based, tech-enabled investment platform for industrial real estate. Pitilon heads the company’s research and development division in Tel Aviv.
“In the army, you are faced with the most complicated challenges, and you have to find a solution because eventually people’s lives depend on it,” said Pitilon. “You don’t have the privilege to not get the job done. So it encourages people to be more creative, more collaborative, to take risks, develop new technologies and prototypes. A lot of things that established create a good startup or company, so that was my first journey as a tech entrepreneur.”
More than ever, Israeli venture capital is looking to fund proptech startups that can grow quickly beyond the country’s borders, experts said.
In 2022, Israel VCs invested $360 million across 23 companies (mostly inside Israel but grew outside, too), with the largest rounds going to Guesty at $170 million, Buildots at $60 million, and Agora at $20 million, according to CRETI, a proptech research firm.
In comparison in 2021, VCs funded $120 million across 17 companies, with the largest rounds to Mindspace at $72 million, Homez at $30 million, and Viisights at $10 million. In 2020, it was $26 million across 13 companies, with the largest rounds going to Juganu at $18 million, RealFriend at $4.4 million, and SparX at $1 million.
However, venture capital for Israel-founded proptech startups may become harder to secure due to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s recently proposed changes to the country’s judicial system. Some fear those changes will weaken the rule of law in Israel, making contracts and investments less stable, and undermining business confidence in general.
“If you look at what’s going on right now in Israel and how that’s going to affect the proptech industry, I think you’re going to see that a lot of proptech founders end up in New York,” said Kobi Lahav, an Israeli native and attorney, who has been a consultant to proptech startups in both countries, as well as senior managing director and director of sales for Manhattan-based residential real estate firm Living New York.
“I think they’re going to feel more comfortable licensing the IP to a U.S. company and not to an Israeli company,” he said. “And I think the investors will want assurances that a lot of the technology can be licensed to the company and not kept by the military, because in my opinion there is a schism coming between Israel and the U.S.
“‘This is not a political statement. This is what’s going on if we’re using military technologies for real estate, or for anything, and the military is under pressure,” he added. “Now, with [the Netanyahu] government, there could be some IP issues that could be generated in the near future.”