
Image from Work Hall Team
Coworking is crowded now.
Good Wi-Fi, clean space, meeting rooms, decent coffee—most places have the basics covered.
So when Work Hall added an EV charger, it wasn’t because they thought it would become the main feature.
It was for something more realistic (and more useful):
a quiet differentiator that makes the space easier to choose—and a little easier to run profitably.
And just as importantly: it had to stay hands-off. The last thing Work Hall wanted was a charger that turns into a front-desk duty. With Zvolta, sessions run self-serve through the app—members can pull up, start charging independently, and payments are handled in-platform without staff getting involved.
If you ask the Work Hall team what changed, they’ll tell you it didn’t flip the entire business overnight.
But it started showing up in moments that matter: tours, WhatsApp inquiries, and those “we’re deciding between two places” conversations.
One of the team members put it simply:
“Most people come for the workspace. The charger just removes a reason to say no.”
And that’s the real role of a USP in 2026: not replacing your core offer—strengthening it at the decision point.
When charging is smooth, it doesn’t feel like a separate service. It feels like part of the experience. Zvolta helps keep it that way by keeping charging simple, app-led, and predictable—so it adds value without adding a new workflow.
EV charging doesn’t fit every business model. Coworking is one of the few where it naturally makes sense.
Because your users already do three things that make charging viable: