In an era where universities are moving beyond traditional infrastructure, Madhavi Shankar is at the forefront of revolutionizing student life through smart campus solutions. As the Co-founder and CEO of SpaceBasic, Asia’s largest AI-powered platform for student housing, cafeteria management, and smart ID automation, Madhavi is transforming how campuses operate—making them smarter, more efficient, and better equipped to meet the needs of today’s students.
Recognized globally as a Forbes Asia 30 Under 30 honoree and Entrepreneur India’s Under 35 leader, Madhavi has also been celebrated by the Government of India and the United Nations as one of the 30 Women Transforming India. But beyond accolades, it’s her product-first mindset and unwavering focus on solving real-world problems that sets her apart.
In this exclusive interview with Business Review Live, Madhavi dives into how SpaceBasic is unlocking 3x cost savings and 5x operational efficiency for universities, while staying true to its core mission—empowering student success through technology that feels intuitive, not invasive. From scaling across geographies to embedding sustainability into the digital backbone of campuses, her vision for smart campus solutions is reshaping higher education from the ground up.
1. SpaceBasic has become a game-changer in campus automation. What were the early indicators that convinced you this was not just a product but a scalable solution with the potential to redefine student living and learning infrastructure in Asia?
The inspiration behind SpaceBasic came from the everyday chaos I witnessed on campuses. Students were queuing for hours just to submit a form or request a room change. At the same time, administrators were buried in spreadsheets, phone calls, and paper logs. Campus operations clearly weren’t built to scale.
As we dug deeper, we discovered a critical insight—over 80% of universities across Asia used minimal or no digital tools outside the classroom. While the rest of the world was embracing digital transformation, campus life remained stuck in outdated systems.
That insight drove us to launch our first pilot. The response exceeded expectations. Students quickly adopted the platform and began using it daily. More importantly, university staff—initially hesitant—soon asked for more automation. This behavior shift proved that SpaceBasic wasn’t just solving a pain point; it was enabling real change.
Today, SpaceBasic powers campus operations for over 500,000 users across Asia. What began as a solution for operational chaos has evolved into a powerful platform redefining how students live, learn, and connect within campus ecosystems.
2. Given your platform’s deep integration with AI, how do you ensure that automation enhances—not replaces—human decision-making in academic and residential ecosystems? What role do you foresee AI playing in shaping the future of student experiences?
At SpaceBasic, we’re very intentional about how we use AI. It’s not meant to replace human decisions—it’s here to eliminate repetitive tasks and free up time for what truly matters.
For example, AI handles room allocation and occupancy tracking with ease. Instead of using spreadsheets or relying on word-of-mouth, our system predicts vacancies, flags double bookings, and suggests the best room assignments based on student preferences. In food management, AI uses real-time consumption data to plan meals, reduce waste, cut costs, and adapt to dietary habits.
But humans remain at the center of it all. Administrators receive smart suggestions—not fixed instructions. AI acts as a support system, helping staff focus on student wellbeing instead of routine operations.
Looking ahead, we believe AI will drive more personalized and responsive student experiences. From promoting healthier habits to optimizing campus resources, AI will help ensure no student is left behind. It’s all about building smarter, more human-centered campuses.
3. With users spanning India, Malaysia, and Vietnam, how do you adapt your product to meet region-specific challenges in infrastructure, tech readiness, and student behavior while maintaining a unified platform experience?
While core campus challenges—like manual processes, poor communication, and outdated systems—are common across Asia, how they appear varies by country. The issues we see in India are not always the same in Malaysia or Vietnam.
That’s why we built SpaceBasic to be modular. The core platform stays the same, but universities can activate features based on their digital readiness—whether that’s enabling online payments, integrating student IDs, or automating housing operations.
We also invest heavily in understanding local student behavior. From food preferences and device usage to how students interact with campus staff, these insights help us design workflows that feel natural and intuitive for users.
At the same time, we ensure a consistent user experience. Whether a student is in Delhi or Da Nang, using SpaceBasic should feel equally seamless and familiar. It’s about being regionally relevant while maintaining a unified, global standard—and we’re constantly evolving to do it even better.
4. As universities increasingly look to tech platforms to support holistic student success, how does SpaceBasicstrike a balance between operational automation and building meaningful engagement within the student community?
At SpaceBasic, our mission goes beyond automation—we aim to simplify campus life through a single, integrated platform that brings daily operations and communication together.
By automating key functions like housing, cafeteria management, payments, and access control, we give students and staff back their time. With the basics running smoothly, campuses can focus on what really matters—community, wellbeing, and meaningful connections.
Once routine admin work fades into the background, campuses can truly engage students using feedback tools, event features, real-time collaboration, and smart notifications. When staff stop firefighting and start focusing on experience, the entire campus environment transforms.
That’s the real impact of automation—and that’s the layer SpaceBasic is proud to enable.
5. Sustainability is becoming integral to campus operations. How does SpaceBasic contribute to universities’ green goals, and what innovations are you exploring to make student housing and cafeterias more sustainable through data insights and automation?
Sustainability is no longer a choice—it’s a necessity. At SpaceBasic, we believe technology can drive that change across campuses.
Our platform helps universities reduce waste and optimize resources using automation and real-time data. In cafeterias, we track consumption patterns to cut food waste and align meal planning with actual demand. Some campuses have reduced overproduction by up to 30% just through better visibility.
In student housing, we’re developing tools that monitor occupancy trends and utility usage. These insights help campuses improve room allocations and lower energy consumption. Our smart access control also limits unnecessary movement, making buildings more efficient.
Looking ahead, we’re building advanced sustainability dashboards. These will allow universities to track their carbon footprint across housing and dining in real-time—and act on it. At SpaceBasic, we’re focused on making sustainability practical. We help campuses go green—without adding complexity.
6. Universities, especially in Asia, can be complex when it comes to procurement and adopting new tech. What have been the biggest hurdles in driving adoption of SpaceBasic, and how have you tackled resistance to change among institutions?
One of the biggest challenges we’ve faced is institutional inertia. Many campuses still rely on outdated systems and manual workflows, making change feel risky or overwhelming.
At SpaceBasic, we tackle this by starting small. We focus on solving one clear pain point—like room transfers or meal planning—and deliver quick, visible results. Once teams see the value, they’re more open to scaling the solution.
We also work hand-in-hand with campus staff during onboarding. It’s not just about rolling out software—it’s about making the transition smooth and supportive. By co-creating workflows and keeping the platform user-friendly, we reduce resistance and build trust. Ultimately, adoption happens when technology feels like a helping hand, not another hurdle. That’s the experience we strive to deliver.
7. You speak about 3x cost savings and 5x operational efficiency. Could you unpack how you measure this impact and how those metrics have evolved with the platform’s growth?
When we mention 3x cost savings and 5x operational efficiency, it’s not just marketing—it’s based on real results from our partner universities.
SpaceBasic helps cut costs by reducing food waste, minimizing manual work, and replacing outdated, paper-based processes. For instance, one university using our cafeteria module lowered food overproduction by nearly 30% by syncing meal planning with real-time student attendance and preferences. That not only saves money but also supports sustainability goals.
On the efficiency front, tasks like room assignments, check-ins, and maintenance requests now take minutes instead of days. Some campuses have seen up to an 80% drop in admin workload for key processes.
As more data flows through the platform, our AI and analytics continuously improve. We also provide each university with an impact dashboard to track real-time savings and efficiency gains. At its core, it’s not just about numbers—it’s about removing friction, saving time, and helping campuses shift focus back to what truly matters: the student experience.
8. Post-pandemic, there’s a growing focus on hybrid and resilient educational infrastructure. How do you see digital-first platforms like SpaceBasic influencing the design and operation of future campuses—from planning to day-to-day management?
The pandemic changed how universities view infrastructure. It’s no longer just about buildings—it’s about how flexible and responsive those spaces are.
Digital-first platforms like SpaceBasic now form the backbone of modern campuses. We’re not just integrating into legacy systems; we’re reimagining how campuses operate. Real-time data on room occupancy, cafeteria usage, and student flow empowers universities to plan smarter—optimizing space, energy, and staffing.
Operationally, it’s about building resilience. Whether students are learning on-site or remotely, SpaceBasic keeps housing, access, payments, and communication running seamlessly—ensuring continuity through any disruption.
Looking forward, campuses won’t just add tech—they’ll be built around it. With automation, AI, and real-time insights at their core, universities can become more student-focused, sustainable, and future-ready.
9. As SpaceBasic expands across countries, how do you ensure that rapid scaling doesn’t compromise your core mission of empowering student success and operational sustainability?
At SpaceBasic, scalability is fundamental—but we believe true growth should never compromise our mission: supporting student success and driving operational sustainability.
Our platform is modular and API-first, enabling universities to customize their experience while preserving a consistent, unified interface. This design allows us to expand rapidly across geographies—like India, Malaysia, and Vietnam—without sacrificing value or adding unnecessary complexity.
To maintain quality, we’ve built robust onboarding and customer success systems that ensure every institution sees real, lasting benefits—not just new features. Our key performance indicators focus on adoption, engagement, and retention—not just revenue growth.
What truly powers our scale is real-time feedback and data. Each new campus enriches our platform, allowing us to improve performance and usability with every deployment. That’s the power of SaaS done right.
For us, scaling isn’t about vanity metrics—it’s about delivering measurable, meaningful outcomes at every step.
10. As a woman entrepreneur in the deep-tech and education space, what unique perspectives or approaches have you brought to leadership, and how do you see your role in inspiring the next generation of women innovators?
At SpaceBasic, I’ve always taken a product-first approach—rooted in solving the real, everyday challenges faced by students and campus teams. This means listening closely to user feedback, simplifying complex workflows, and building technology that’s intuitive, human-centered, and impactful. For me, innovation is only meaningful when it creates tangible change—and that’s what drives long-term success in education technology.
To the next generation of innovators—especially women—I want to share this: you don’t need to be the loudest voice in the room to lead with strength. Purpose-driven leadership, constant curiosity, and surrounding yourself with people who challenge and inspire you—that’s what creates resilient, visionary teams. These values have shaped my journey, and they’re the kind of leadership principles I strive to live by every day.