monday.com opens Singapore headquarters to drive Southeast Asia AI growth
monday.com said it will quadruple Singapore headcount in 2026, making the city-state its AI and partner hub for Southeast Asia.
monday.com is turning Singapore into its Southeast Asia nerve center as it pushes deeper into AI, enterprise sales and partner-led growth. The company said the new headquarters will support a regional plan that already reaches more than 1,000 customers in Singapore and more than 20 partners across Southeast Asia.
Chris Jordan will drive the expansion as monday.com builds out a base at 21 Collyer Quay, 049320, Singapore. The company said it intends to quadruple its Singapore headcount in 2026, a sign that the office is meant to do more than host sales meetings. It is a hiring bet, a partner hub and a local landing point for customer support and product rollout across the region.

The move comes after monday.com’s May 6 reset from a work management platform to an AI work platform. The company says more than 250,000 customers worldwide now use monday.com to bring people, workflows and AI agents together on one flexible platform. For Southeast Asian customers, that matters in practical terms: a larger local team can move faster on localization, enterprise sales and implementation work, especially as companies look for software that fits their own processes instead of forcing a one-size-fits-all system.
monday.com is already naming the kind of accounts it wants to win more of. Regional customers include Brother International, Unilever and CloudMile, while partners in the region include Acepak Technology and iZeno. That mix points to a go-to-market model built around both direct sales and channel reach, with Singapore serving as the place where those two motions meet.
The Singapore expansion also fits monday.com’s wider operating structure. The company said it shifted to a hybrid APJ regional model on September 1, 2023, and has been growing in New York City, London and other global markets. In that context, Singapore is not just another office. It is the company’s latest test of whether a local headquarters, a bigger partner network and an AI-first product pitch can translate into more durable share across Southeast Asia.
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