Startups

Why Aaron Rinaca left LivingSocial for this JLL-backed real estate venture

After opening LivingSocial offices around the world, Rinaca jumped at the opportunity to launch a leasing platform with two JLL suits. HiRise addresses the pain points he had been encountering daily.

Aaron Rinaca left his job at LivingSocial to join HiRise. (Courtesy photo)

When Aaron Rinaca joined LivingSocial in 2010, the deals website was still very much a startup.
“My desk was still in its Ikea box,” he said. “I had to assemble it myself.”
Though he came in to work in IT, he occasionally helped the company negotiate its new office spaces.
And, within a couple years, he became head of global real estate, overseeing the opening and acquisition of about 75 offices in 15 countries, he said.
That was a “crash course in commercial real estate,” said Rinaca. A rugged field to be in.
It might sometimes take months, or even more than a year, to finagle a workspace for new recruits during the company’s high-growth years, he said.
“I developed this real interest and also sympathy for folks that were in that same position.”
So when he heard “murmurs” about HiRise, a new leasing platform envisioned by Jones Lang LaSalle executives Andy O’Brien and David Adams, his ears perked up.
“The platform was solving the real-world pain that I was experiencing on a day-to-day basis at LivingSocial,” he said.
He soon joined in as product director.
The three men have tried as best they could to make a home for their startup inside JLL’s cubicle-encumbered space.
“We’ve taken down as many of those walls as possible,” said Rinaca.
Meanwhile, the startup has a seemingly infinite pool of human capital, with 20-30 employees working full time on the project.
HiRise, which soft launched in July, started off with 40 listings in the D.C. area and has now been solicited by 15 new locations. It’s kind of like Zillow for office space.

Companies: JLL / LivingSocial
34% to our goal! $25,000

Before you go...

To keep our site paywall-free, we’re launching a campaign to raise $25,000 by the end of the year. We believe information about entrepreneurs and tech should be accessible to everyone and your support helps make that happen, because journalism costs money.

Can we count on you? Your contribution to the Technical.ly Journalism Fund is tax-deductible.

Donate Today
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Congress votes to reauthorize the EDA, marking a historic bipartisan effort to invest in innovation and job creation

Everywhere you can properly recycle electronic waste in DC

Looking for a job? This strategy turns NotebookLM into your personal hiring coach

Technically Media