The Journey of TheShareCo Before It Became Singapore’s Largest Online On-Demand Therapist Network
Behind every impactful company is a story of purpose, grit, and evolution. TheShareCo, today recognized as Singapore’s largest online on-demand therapist network, didn’t start in the mental health space. Instead, it began with one man’s lifelong obsession: solving problems that matter.
Meet Han Sing, the Problem Solver

Tan Han Sing, the founder of TheShareCo- graduated from NUS in 1996 with a degree in Microbiology and Biochemistry. While his background was in science, his passion lay elsewhere — identifying problems in society and creating solutions for them. To him, the impact of his work has always mattered more than just dollars and cents.
Over the years, Han Sing’s entrepreneurial journey has seen him tackle wide-ranging issues, from digital piracy to education inequality, and now, mental health. At the heart of it all is a belief: businesses can — and should — create meaningful, positive change.
The Early Days: Software Exchange

In the late 1990s, piracy was rampant in Singapore. Pasar malams (Malay, for night market) openly sold pirated CDs; cracked software versions of popular applications like Microsoft Office were the norm. For Han Sing, this wasn’t just about copyright infringement. It was about the developers, creators, and businesses losing their livelihoods.
In 1999, he founded Software Exchange, a platform that bought and sold second-hand software licenses. For example, users who upgraded from Microsoft Office 97 to 2000 could sell the older licenses to Software Exchange. They would then resell these licenses at affordable prices. This model gave consumers access to legitimate software without resorting to piracy, while also supporting the larger software ecosystem by promoting lawful usage.
By 2014, Software Exchange had grown into one of Microsoft’s, Adobe’s and Symantec’s top managed partners, with presence in Singapore, Malaysia and Vietnam. Han Sing eventually sold the business, having successfully turned a simple idea into a sustainable force against piracy.
Bridging the Education Gap: Tueetor
In 2008, as financial crises swept through the world, Han Sing noticed another troubling trend: people losing jobs and children losing access to education. His inspiration to tackle this came from two personal encounters.
One was a single mother struggling to afford tuition for her son. Another was a parent unable to find suitable education for his child with autism. Both stories struck a chord with Han Sing. Using the funds from Software Exchange, he founded Tueetor, an online platform connecting learners with trainers across a wide variety of courses — from academics to unconventional skills like running.
Tueetor aimed to make education affordable and accessible while creating jobs for trainers. Some classes were offered for as low as $1 per session. From 2016 to 2022, Han Sing expanded Tueetor into markets like Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia — regions where he believed the platform could have an even bigger impact by providing opportunities to communities often overlooked.
The Pivot to Mental Health: The Birth of TheShareCo
In 2020, as COVID-19 reshaped the world, Han Sing noticed a new, pressing issue: mental health. Lockdowns exacerbated tensions at home, isolation fueled anxiety, and mental health crises surged — sometimes with fatal consequences.
While education was important, he realized the inability to find someone timely, quality mental health support, could carry consequences far serious than education. That could cost lives. Suicide rates during the pandemic only reaffirmed this painful truth.

Determined to address this gap, Han Sing founded TheShareCo — a platform designed to make mental health support more accessible, sustainable, and impactful. Through TheShareCo, he sought to fix what other startups overlooked. Many focused solely on providing clients with quick, affordable access to therapists, but few considered the therapists’ needs or the role of counselling schools in shaping future mental health professionals.
Han Sing believed mental health services are built on a three-stakeholder ecosystem: clients, therapists, and counselling schools. TheShareCo was purpose-built to serve all three.
A 3-Stakeholder Ecosystem: Clients, Therapists, Counselling Schools
Han Sing knew something others overlooked — clients stay loyal to their therapists, not platforms. If therapists are under-served or unhappy, they leave, and clients follow. So TheShareCo wasn’t built just for clients. It was designed for therapists too.

The platform offers therapists an integrated suite of tools: secure video calls, session transcription, HIPAA-compliant records, and more. These tools make their work easier and more effective, allowing them to focus on what matters — helping people.
For clients, TheShareCo offers 24/7 access to therapists around the world, ensuring that help is always available, regardless of timezone.
For counselling schools, TheShareCo provides its platform and tools to support counseling education, enabling students to train with real-world tools as part of their practicum.
Impact at Its Core
One of the stories that fuels Han Sing’s mission is deeply personal.
A Primary 5 student (just 11 years old) reached out, seeking counseling. Han Sing arranged a pro-bono session through a friend. The student, it turned out, was battling suicidal thoughts. That single session helped change the student’s course. Afterward, the student asked if her friend could also get help. Both young lives were touched — perhaps even saved.
For Han Sing, moments like this aren’t just validation — they are the reason TheShareCo exists. It’s not about profit. It’s about people.
TheShareCo Today
What started as a fight against piracy evolved into a platform making education accessible. Today, it’s a movement dedicated to breaking barriers to mental health care. Through TheShareCo, Han Sing continues to do what he’s always done: identify meaningful problems and solve them — with impact, not just income, as the end goal.
Han Sing also invites like-minded individuals to join him in his quest to save more lives together. So, whether you are an investor, a therapist, or a VWO/NPO, get in touch!