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Bookt/InstaManager Acquired by RealPage

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InstaManager

This week, Bookt LLC, the company behind InstaManager®, was acquired by RealPage Inc. (NASDAQ:RP), a leading property management systems and services company. With this acquisition, RealPage is entering into the vacation rental industry.

BooktLogoBookt’s management team and the vast majority of employees will all remain with the business.  “We started Bookt with a single mantra – Your Online Success. That to me, always meant making our customers successful through more bookings and better tools, said Bookt CEO Rob Käll. “Last year we did over $100M in bookings through the platform which we are very proud of, but that’s still just a fraction of the entire VR industry. With RealPage’s backing we now expect to turn millions of dollars of bookings into billions.”

RealPage is a leading provider of comprehensive property management software solutions in the multifamily, commercial, and single-family rental housing industries. RealPage’s entry into the industry provides both validation of growth in the vacation rental marketplace and increased resources and investment in top-tier technology innovation for professional property management companies.

“This enables us to join a world class SaaS organizations, with resources far greater than most of our competitors, said Käll. “Together we will bring a lot of new services and make significant investment into the product, support and sales.  RealPage buys into the same global vision that Bookt has had from day one, to really provide better marketing, better software and greater success for VR professionals around the world.”

Resort Realty OBX expands on Hatteras Island

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Resort Realty OBX Expands to Hatteras Island

Resort Realty is proud to announce the opening of its Hatteras Island division for 2014. This will make the fifth office for the company, who currently represents more than 500 OBX vacation homes from four offices in Corolla, Duck, Kitty Hawk and Nags Head.

As Resort continues to steadily grow and increase market share on the Outer Banks, the decision to open on Hatteras Island and offer property management services to Hatteras owners was inevitable. Resort’s CEO, Mike Harrington as well as COO, Stuart Pack, began their property management careers on Hatteras, and are eager to begin working in the area again.

“We are extremely excited to once again work with the vacation rental homeowners on Hatteras Island, as well as become part of the local business community. Starting my career in Avon, I have a deep passion and knowledge for the entire area.  We feel there is a growing demand for an owner-centric property management program on Hatteras Island, and that is our business,” stated Harrington.

TeamMr. Pack concurred, “We are in the business of creating memorable vacations. We owe it to our Outer Banks guests to offer the same great vacation experience across the entire Outer Banks. I am also excited to again work within the community of Hatteras Island and provide unparalleled service and support to Hatteras homeowners.”

The company recently hired long-time Hatteras resident and property manager Lori Sankey as Broker-in-Charge and operations manager for the office. Lori has been working with Hatteras Island homeowners for more than seven years and brings knowledge and experience to the new office. The office is located in the former Tarang Shopping Center in Waves, NC and is currently being renovated with a prospective open date sometime in April.

 

resortrealty_hatteras_logo_864To learn more about Resort Realty’s property management program on Hatteras Island, call Lori Sankey at (252) 996-0970 or by email at Lori.Sankey@ResortRealty.com.

You can also visit www.resortrealty.com/hatteras.htm for more information. View HERE.

2014 Vacation Rental Seminars along Northern Gulf Coast

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Alabama and Florida Panhandle Seminars for Vacation Rentals

Blue Tent Marketing and Red Sky Travel Insurance want you to join them in a learning seminar designed to improve and add value to your Vacation Rental business  as industry leaders  share effective tactics and tools to generate more revenue, reduce expenses and provide real value for owners and guests in the New Year.

Conveniently located, the seminars will take place from 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm and a food and beverages social will follow from 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm.

 

Vacation Rental Industry Leaders Presenting:

 

 

Laird Sager will cover many of the topics and options relating to the travel insurance industry. He’ll be revealing new insurance options as well as cover what’s new in the travel insurance industry.
Explore Red Sky Travel Insurance »

 

Dawn Yeskulsky will highlight payment processing options and benefits as well as recent changes all vacation rental Managers need to know about. They will be discussing new options to lower costs and reduce fees.
Explore Ascent Processing »

 

Peter Scott will present digital marketing initiatives including strategies in responsive web design, email marketing, search engine optimization, digital advertising, social media and more.
Explore Blue Tent Marketing »

 

Bryan Goodwin from FlipKey will discuss the consumer experience in 2014 and how to make the most out of reviews and opinions.
Explore FlipKey »

 

Ben Edwards will provide an overview of the vacation rental industry and changes that will affect your business in 2014. He will outline concepts to drive revenue, increase efficiency within current operations and discuss growth opportunities through the purchase and sale of vacation rental companies in today’s climate.

Upcoming Vacation Rental Seminars

 

 

Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014
2:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Livebait Restaurant
24281 Perdido Beach Blvd.
Orange Beach, AL
Register Today »
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2014
2:00 pm – 7:00 pm
The Bay House
127 Calhoun Avenue
Destin, FL
Register Today »
Thursday, Feb. 20, 2014
2:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Firefly Restaurant
525 North Richard Jackson Blvd.
Panama City Beach, FL
Register Today »

Expedia Slow to Execute HomeAway Partnership

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Vacation rental OTAs

Speed and innovation usually characterize successful and growing companies, but when it comes to the prospect of starting to offer HomeAway’s vacation rentals on Expedia.com,  Expedia Inc. is noncommittal and taking it all extremely slow and easy.

By Dennis Schaal, Skift

The two parties announced a partnership last October, and today, during Expedia Inc.’s fourth quarter earnings call, CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said the company has just started to experiment with HomeAway’s vacation rentals, but won’t gather enough data about it until the second half of 2014.

Expedia will study how adding vacation rentals to its accommodation mix impacts conversions, and will expand the offering to the extent that consumers show they are interested, Khosrowshahi said.

Khosrowshahi said the company’s emphasis will continue to be in growing its hotel business, although it is optimistic about the HomeAway partnership, which is in the early stages of testing.

“But it is really too soon to call” how the partnership will take shape, Khosrowshahi said.

Expedia clearly sees hotels as where its biggest margins are. And vacation homes certainly have far fewer rooms than hotels.

Still, Expedia wants to compete with Booking.com, which offers a broad range of lodging offerings, but Expedia is making no commitments at this stage about what its vacation rental offering will look like.

In other matters:…Read More at Skift.com

 

New “Back to Basics” Housekeeping Seminars Announced

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Ocean front housekeeping services

With 97% of guests in agreement that a clean establishment is the most important factor in choosing accommodations, it is critical for vacation rental managers to have a trained, experienced housekeeping team who is consistently learning and improving performance. Pro Resort is hosting a series of Pro Resort’s “Back to Basics” Seminars, designed to take your Housekeeping department to the next level.

Pro Resort Housekeeping’s “Back to Basics” Seminars  will provide you with the latest news, up-to-date information and education to take your housekeeping department to the next level and give your company the ultimate competitive advantage.

Agenda

Designed for company owners, general managers,  executive housekeepers, and housekeeping coordinators,  the “Back to Basics” Housekeeping Seminar covers the following topics:

  • 11 Fundamentals of Successful Vacation Rental Housekeeping.
  • 6 Fundamentals of Successful and Profitable Vacation Rental Maintenance Departments
  • 4 Standards Every Vacation Rental Company Needs and How to Create and Implement Them
  • What is the “Hub of the Wheel?” Every Department Has a Role in Successful Housekeeping and Those Roles Will be Explored and Clearly Defined
  • Group Problem-Solving: How to Achieve Success at Getting All Guests out at Checkout Time.

The price for each attendee is $75.00. Coffee will be provided in the morning, and we will break for an hour for lunch which is left up to attendees. There are dining options in or near the venue.

Seminar Dates and Locations

May 14, 2014
Holiday Inn Lakewood Ranch
6231 Lake Osprey Drive
Sarasota,FL  342400

May 20, 2014
Holiday Inn
6231 Lake Osprey Drive
St. Augustine, FL

June 10, 2014
Silver Baron Lounge
Park City, UT

Event Sponsors

To register and learn more…

Big Changes at NAVIS

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NAVIS expanding to Orlando in 2014

NAVIS has made recent changes which are designed to both allow for rapid expansion and provide more specialized and personalized service to clients in the vacation rental, hotel and resort industries.

NAVIS, who is known in the vacation rental industry for providing call center services and a highly touted reservation sales system, has recently launched a new suite of marketing automation products labeled NAVIS Reach, which includes an integrated CRM, an email marketing tool, an automated/lifecycle messaging solution, and a data mining platform.

“For the last 3 years our attention has been in creating and scaling new, integrated technology,” said Michelle Marquis, VP of Marketing & Strategic Initiatives. “Now we can focus on scaling our operational growth. Internally, we are calling it ‘Organizing for Success.'”

As a result, NAVIS will be adding to its global client-facing team and expanding into offices in Orlando.  To better serve their customers, client advocates will be closely aligned in industry and region-specific expertise with each client they support. Specialists will be added to maximize benefits from new and existing products, and product management positions are being created to optimize enhancement and integration implementation.

“We have always been client-centric, but now we are literally going to be closer to our clients,” said Marquis. “I am very excited to have the chance to help NAVIS continue to grow in a great, smart and thoughtful way!”

NAVIS will host the 2014 NAVIS Leaders Conference in Orlando Feb. 20-21, 2014 at the Orlando World Center Marriott.

 

 

Dwellable’s Vacation Rental Survey: Does Mobile Matter?

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Dwellable's Mobile App Study for Property Managers

Dwellable is quietly emerging as a leader in the consumer-focused vacation rental space and currently drives more than 70% of their business via mobile devices. So it stands to reason they might know a few things about the rise of mobile adoption by travelers researching and booking vacation rentals. To dig deeper, they recently surveyed their property managers about their own adoption of mobile in their business practices. CEO Kirby Winfield presented the findings at the VRMA European Seminar, and recently published a white paper detailing the major takeaways. We’re glad to publish it in full here below.

Related: Results of VRM Intel’s 2014 Mobile App Survey for Vacation Rental Managers

 

Vacation Rental Survey: Does Mobile Matter?

By Kirby Winfield, CEO Dwellable

Last year, we surveyed travelers who had used Dwellable, and asked them about their mobile vacation rental habits. 75% said they researched vacation rentals via smartphones or tablets, and 35% inquired or booked via mobile.

This got us thinking: Are vacation rental managers on the same page as their customers when it comes to mobile?

So, this is an analysis of the impact on vacation rental management companies (VRMCs) of the ongoing traveler shift to mobile for research and booking. Or put another way, we threw some questions up on SurveyMonkey and asked property managers to answer them. We found out some pretty crazy stuff.

 

Introduction and methodology

Since the emergence of internet media as a dominant source of potential new business for VRMCs and owners, the proprietors of vacation rental homes globally have slowly moved their businesses online. The advent of listings sites like HomeAway and FlipKey, the emergence of Airbnb, 9flats and Wimdu, and the $530M invested in online VR solutions since 2011 are a testament to the power of the online media channel, yet less than 3 out of 10 dollars spent in the global VR industry today is spent on the web.

It’s still very early days for the vacation rental industry.

It is fair to say that the majority of VR inventory suppliers are well behind their hotelier counterparts in adopting PC-based online models (SaaS, SEM/SEO, OTA). Some of this lag is endemic to the fragmented and unbranded nature of VR inventory; nonetheless, even the industry leaders are catching their collective breaths from years of turmoil, including loss of control to aggregators, the unfulfilled promise of a collectively-owned VRMA “switch”, and the move from print brochures to web sites and listings as core marketing materials.

And now, the landscape is undergoing yet another tectonic shift. PCs are being left behind by smartphones and tablets as the world continues to conduct more of its media activity via mobile devices than any other medium save television. By 2017, smartphones and tablets will outnumber PC’s by nearly 4-1. But are VRMC’s prepared? How will they adapt?

 

Dwellable conducted a study of vacation rental marketers to discover attitudes and behaviors associated with mobile device usage in the context of vacation rental discovery and booking. This post presents the study’s key findings.

 

Methodology

Dwellable completed a survey of 100 vacation rental executives whose primary form of acquiring new customers was via vacation rental listings websites – the belief being that these executives represent the vanguard of new media adoption in the VR space.

 

Dwellable asked these property managers 10 questions meant to explore their awareness of mobile as an opportunity and their current attitudes towards and actions regarding reaching mobile travelers.

 

Property Managers See the Mobile Tidal Wave Approaching

 

It’s clear that VRMCs are anticipating the shift to mobile. Having been blindsided by the web 20 years ago, proprietors of vacation rental businesses are aware of the upheaval new technology can bring.

 

Additionally, many VRMCs are now operated by “digital natives”, for whom blogging, social media, and technology are second nature. Mobile is not catching many VRMCs by surprise.

 

Mobile Is the Next Big Thing for VRMC Growth Strategy

Not only are they anticipating the shift of media consumption to mobile devices; VRMCs are strategically embracing the channel.

The mobile channel is seen as a “very important” growth opportunity more frequently than any other aspect of vacation rentals – including the PC web, listings quality, and even the number of properties under management.

 

In fact, VRMC’s put mobile up there in importance with overall lead gen as priorities for their marketing partners like HomeAway and TripAdvisor.

Vacation Rental Managers Haven’t Put Their Money Where Their Mouth Is…

Given the explicit agreement on the part of respondents that mobile is the biggest thing to hit vacation rentals since the web, it was somewhat surprising to see the responses to the questions about what VRMCs are actually doing about this major opportunity. A solid majority do not offer users any experience tailored to mobile devices.

 

There seems to be a laissez faire attitude towards mobile which belies the urgency the numbers suggest should be present.

 

61% of respondents say, “We don’t do anything special for mobile, people can just see our regular website on any device.” This is a major misconception, given that 57% of travelers say they will not recommend a lodging option if it has a bad mobile site (Source: Buteeq, 2013).

 

…But That’s Changing Rapidly

Almost a quarter of respondents use responsive design, which allows for content to dynamically adjust to each possible mobile device’s screen resolution and size, and another 16% offer a custom mobile site or app.

And we should see the mobile website number move close to 50% in 2014, based on the stated plans of respondents.

 

VRMC’s are very price sensitive around mobile. We believe solutions that are free or freemium will continue to emerge to capture this sector of demand.

 

Vacation Rental Managers Are Prepared to Execute in Mobile

 

There’s no fear in the VRMC camp when it comes to mobile. Whether it’s the educational work the VRMA is doing, the expansion of PMS offerings to mobile platforms, or simple confidence gained in managing their businesses through the shift to digital, vacation rental managers clearly feel up to the task of tackling smartphone and tablet usage.

 

We believe this confidence is good news for vendors who offer straightforward mobile solutions – you don’t have to convince VRMC’s that mobile matters, just show them how your solution helps them maintain and grow their business.

 

About Dwellable

Dwellable’s mission is to present vacation homes beautifully to everyone, everywhere. We are turning the traveler experience of vacation rental search on its head with big, high-resolution photography, elegant mobile apps, accurate listings, and zero clutter. With more than 100,000 vacation rentals in North America, Dwellable is the top vacation rental app on all major mobile platforms, and has been featured by Apple, Amazon, CNN, Forbes, and Google Play.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recap: What is going on with Florida? Important legislation affecting vacation rentals

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Vacation Rental ban in Florida

Here is a brief recap of the what is happening in Florida concerning legislation being proposed which would adversely affect the vacation rental industry at the state level.

In 2011, the FL Legislature, with a unanimous vote in the Senate and a near-unanimous vote in the House, approved a change in law that forbade counties and cities from imposing new regulations on short-term rentals, though regulation already in place could remain. The measure was intended to counter the effects of the housing crash by helping home-owners facing stiff mortgages pay their bills by renting their homes to short-term vacationers.

Flagler County had no such regulation before the law was passed two years ago. Recently, a small group of residents and an impassioned Flagler Commission were frustrated when they realized some larger homes in residential areas were able to be rented with no restrictions, complaining of noise and “mini-hotels.”

The Flagler County commission, with the leadership and assistance of its State Legislative Delegation, has been  attempting to amend House Bill 883 passed in 2011 which they assert took away all local control of short term vacation rental properties. Flagler County Commissioners and county staff have been traveling, emailing, calling and speaking statewide seeking support for a bill that would return regulation of vacation home rentals to local government.

The proposed reform of a law that would return control of short-term rental regulations to counties and cities gained additional momentum at the Legislature Tuesday as it cleared a second Senate committee and its first House committee with solid backing. The bills (SB356 and H0307), sponsored by Sen. John Thrasher and Rep. Travis Hutson, resulted in a 7-1 vote by the State Senate Committee on Community Affairs in favor of the bill and a 10-3 vote in favor of the House bill from the State House subcommittee on Business and Professional Regulation Tuesday.

The Senate bill should be heading to the Senate floor for a vote next. The House version has two more committee hearings before it reaches the House floor.

 

 

Important News for Florida Property Managers and Florida Property Owners

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Vacation Rental ban in Florida

Steve Milo, founder and Managing Director for Vacation Rental Pros and member of the VRMA Board of Directors submitted the following editorial about proposed vacation rental legislation in the State of Florida. This legislation not only affects Florida vacation rental managers, but also vacation rental managers around the country. If Florida, the state who reaps the largest monetary benefit from short-term rentals in the U.S., is able to pass this type of restrictive legislation -at the state level – every vacation rental manager in every state in the U.S. must recognize they are in danger of having this repeated.

Recap: What is going on with Florida? Important legislation affecting vacation rentals 

 

Dear Florida Property Managers and Florida Property Owner:

By Steve Milo

It’s me, the “town crier” as someone labeled me.   Yes, I am passionate about the issue of Vacation Rental bans because I have seen first hand in Venice Florida what happens when a city goes from no limits on vacation rentals to a 30 day limit on vacation rentals.   Let’s just say, It is not good for business as it reduces almost 70% of the rental income.  Duration (rental minimum restrictions) is what this fight is about, and those burying their heads in the sand on this issue (like a large property manager company on Sanibel) are making a very poor business decision.  It would be like if a Category 5 hurricane was on a path to strike your area in the next 72 hours.  Everyone needs to take this very seriously.

For those property managers in the Orlando market and Florida Pan Handle market who do not think this issue effects them, keep in mind a “7 day minimum” and “grandfathering” is being discussed at the state level.   This is NOT a compromise that will work and the FVRMA (Florida Vacation Rental Manager) lobbyist is working hard to make sure “duration limits” do not get put in the bill. Also, grandfathering should make property managers cringe as this means no new business, and will impact future real estate sales.

 

Please feel free to forward this email to any Property Manager, Property Owner, Vacation Rental employee, vendor, or the like in the state of Florida you know.  

 

I was waiting to send this email when an audio tape of the February 4th, 2014, House Bill 307 committee meeting was available.  A lot was said in this committee meeting (including talk of compromise), but this audio tape is still not available – which is quite frustrating.

I am going to ask you to read this entire email, because FVRMA (Florida Vacation Rental Managers Association) paid almost $50,000 for a critical “Florida Vacation Rental Impact Study” and to date only 32 property management companies have filled out this survey.   We need 68 more surveys to bring our economic data to the Florida House and Senate leadership.  If not, the Vacation Rental Economic Impact Study will not be published in time to help save our industry from rental limitations in the state of Florida.

First

I appreciate every property manager, owner, employee and vendor who wrote and emailed their Representatives between Friday through Monday.   We understand that almost 1000 calls and emails were received by each office.

While House Bill 307 advanced in committee this week on 10-3 VOTE, there are legislators willing to stand up and advocate for our rights as property owners and Floridians against the Anti-Vacation Rental Bill.  There are still 2 committees to go in the Florida House of Representatives and there are several Representatives who have voiced their desire for compromise.  These future committee dates are not yet set, but we will alert you once they are scheduled. 

Second

To continue to follow the progress of this bill, and to locate an audio and video tape when available please go to this link.  (Note, an audio tape of the meeting is still not available.  We will post it on this community web site as soon as it is published.)   Please log-in and register.   It will alert you when the Audio Tape is available.  Plus, we are posting other information as it becomes available.

http://community.homeaway.com/ docs/DOC-3962

 

Third

There were several Florida Legislatures that need to be thanked.  A proposed thank you message follows. We ask you to cut and paste the message – or use it as a guide for your own – then email it to the legislators listed below:

 

Message to send:

 

Dear Representative _____________

This week you stood up for me and all Floridians who are part of the state’s vacation rental industry. THANK YOU. By voting to oppose legislation that unfairly targets vacation rentals, you have demonstrated your support for the property rights of individuals and for an important part of Florida’s tourism sector. As consideration of the legislation continues, we would ask you to continue your commitment to oppose this bad bill. Just like me, thousands of people across Florida are grateful that you listened and are willing to help.

 

Our champions to thank this week are…

 

Senator Kelli Stargel                       Stargel.Kelli@flsenate.gov

Representative Mike La Rosa          Mike.LaRosa@myfloridahouse.gov

Representative Greg Steube            greg.steube@myfloridahouse.gov

Representative Carlos Trujillo           carlos.trujillo@ myfloridahouse.gov

 

 

Fourth

FVRMA (Florida Vacation Rental Managers Association) needs money to continue to fund the lobbyist, PR firm, and Economic Study.   Less than 1% of property managers have donated a dime.  Can you at least donate something to help FVRMA?
https://secure.fvrma.org/lgaContribution.asp

 

Fifth

Only 32 property managers (out of an estimate 2800 property managers) in the state of Florida have completed the “Survey” to allow Dale Brill to finish his Economic Impact Study on Vacation Rentals for the State of Florida I have listed the 32 companies who have completed this survey.   If you or your company is not on the list, we need you to fill this out today. Please click on this link and fill it out

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FVRMA

 

In preparation for the upcoming Florida Legislative Session beginning in March, the Florida Vacation Rental Management Association is conducting a brief survey as part of a first-ever calculation of the industry’s economic impact on the Florida tourism industry. The link below will take you to a short series of questions, which asks you to estimate annual expenditures made by and on behalf of your clients. Your answers will be compiled with those of other respondents and entered into a sophisticated economic model.

As a result, your answers will be not be associated with you or your clients individually. We will distribute the final results of the survey and the economic model in late February. This request is time sensitive. We have only a few days to collect and analyze your input. Please take a few moments now to provide your critical input by clicking on the link below (or pasting the address into your web browser) Please click on this link and fill it out

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FVRMA 

 

Thank you for these Property Managers who have filled this out. 

1 ameliasurfandracquetclub.com

2 annamaria.com

3 annamariaparadise.com

4 annamariarental.net

5 athomekeywest.com

6 churchillpropertyservices.com

7 excellentvacationhomes.com

8 Floridakoshervillas.Com

9 FreewheelerVacations.com

10 ftlaudluxrents.com

11 getawaytothegulf.com

12 globalresorthomes.com

13 gosouthern.com

14 hartwellvillas.co.uk

15 HistoricHideaways.com

16 IslandReal.com

17 kwgulfcoastrentals.com

18 luvdestin.com

19 miavac.com

20 NaplesFloridaVacationHomes.com

21 navarrelistings.com

22 ourcaptiva.com

23 perfectdriveatpgavillage.com

24 sarahscondos.com

25 starmarkvacationhomes.com

26 SterlingRealty.biz

27 sterlingresorts.com

28 stpeteclearwatervacationrentals.com

29 superiorfloridarentals.com

30 VacationRentalPros.com

31 villadirect.com

32 watsonrent.com

2014 Vacation Rental Management Mobile App Survey Results Are In

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Mobile Apps for the Vacation Rental Industry

In January, VRM Intel surveyed vacation rental mangers about their company’s mobile app usage. 63% of the property managers surveyed had implemented a mobile app for their vacation rental business.

Related: Dwellable’s Vacation Rental Survey: Does Mobile Matter?

 

Do you use a mobile app textDo you use a mobile app

 

The survey also asked vacation rental management companies about the benefits of using a mobile app. The most prevalent advantage for property managers is having a way to share area information (67%), followed by Customer Support and Confirmations (50%).

 

Mobile App Study

Mobile App Research

Benefits of using a moible app for vacation rental managers

 

None (0%) of the respondents said they were using the app for upselling, adding additional room nights, rebooking guests for future stays, or selling ad space to destination partners.

Which begs the question, “Does an app make you money?” 43% still said yes.

Does a Mobile App increase revenue

Does a Mobile App increase revenue results

What is difficult about using a mobile app

Difficulty with Mobile App Difficulty with Mobile App responses

 

 


The survey results are based on 79 responses from vacation rental managers.

 

By Amy Hinote

More owner managed vacation rentals in Aspen, CO

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Aspen CO short-term rental restrictions

The city of Aspen has doubled the number of business licenses on file for residential properties offered by their owners on the short-term rental market since spring of 2012, when officials began making a concerted effort to get homeowners who rent their properties as tourist accommodations to register and pay taxes.

The numbers still aren’t huge, with licenses for vacation rental residences not connected to a property management company going from 31 to 61 in two years. But it’s an area that is growing thanks to numerous websites that connect owners looking to rent their place and visitors looking for an alternative to Aspen hotels.

In March 2012, Finance Director Don Taylor estimated that the city was losing out on as much as $100,000 a year in sales taxes and licensing fees from vacation rental properties that were operating off the radar — an area where the city rarely enforced the rules. City Council at that time changed its policies, allowing any property owner unlimited vacation rentals — defined as rentals of less than 30 days — so long as they got a business license, paid sales and lodging taxes on short-term rental revenues, and designated a local representative who could respond to problems with trash, parking and unruly guests. The city also brought in VR Compliance, a Virginia firm that scours the internet in search of condos that may not be paying sales and lodging taxes.

Of the 30 new licenses, 15 were the result of leads generated by VR Compliance, while the rest were from property owners who came in on their own volition, according to Kathy Yang, an accountant in the city’s finance department.

The new business licenses generated $73,000 in revenue for the city in 2013, Yang said. VR Compliance charges $100 per property it turns over that the city is able to bring in line.

A business license for a short-term-rental property is $150 a year, while combined sales and lodging taxes come to 11.3 percent, of which 4.4 percent goes to the city.

Yang noted that homes and condos that are offered on the short-term rental market through a third-party property management company are not included in the above totals. Established property management companies will take care of the licensing and taxes for a private homeowner, meaning the owner doesn’t need to get a business license if they go that route. Condos and private homes make up as much as 40 percent of Aspen’s tourist bed base, according to some estimates.

VR Compliance offers software that cross checks for-rent properties in Aspen on popular vacation rental websites with city records. If a for-rent property appears to not have a business license on file with the city, VR Compliance flags the listing and delivers the pertinent details to the city. Yang takes it from there, she said, and looks into the property records to see if the listing actually is out of compliance. She then gets in touch with the owner.

“The majority of the people I speak to just want to make sure they are doing the right thing,” she said. “They are asking questions and trying to understand [proper procedures] going forward.

“There are a few who have not been too happy to talk to me.”

No one has flat-out refused to register, Yang said.

The city may still reach or exceed Taylor’s prediction of $100,000 in unrealized revenue. The website airbnb.com is popularizing the concept of renting out individual rooms, with owners acting as hosts at their own informal bed and breakfast. On Sunday, the website showed 17 rentals available in the Aspen area for a one-night stay on the weekend of March 15, for both rooms within homes, entire homes or apartments and rooms within lodging properties. Most of those listings aren’t encompassed in the VR Compliance’s review, although some may be in the city’s system. The company is in the process of updating its search methods so it can cross check Aspen listings on that website as well, Yang said. Licensing and tax policies still apply in airbnb’s sharing economy.

“The city does not see it any differently,” Yang said.

 

From Aspen Daily News

Under the Hood: Winter Park Lodging Company

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Winter Park Lodging Company

This is part 4 in the Under the Hood Series in which we interviewed executives from seven on-the-grow vacation rental management companies to discuss everything from growth strategies to company culture, technology and marketing to future predictions for the industry. 

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 2: A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

Part 3: A Look Under the Hood at Elliott Beach Rentals

 

Sarah Bradford had no experience with vacation rentals when she and husband Chris purchased their Winter Park, CO condo. At the time Bradford worked as a high level product management VP with eCollege, an online education software company; Chris owned and managed restaurants in the Denver area.

Bradford searched high and low for a property manager to market, book and maintain their rental property. Finally she began marketing and managing the property herself and was soon inundated by requests from a network of friends to help manage their Winter Park properties.

By the time Bradford added 25 homes to her inventory, she and Chris decided to take the leap and make property management their full time jobs. Within a 3-week period in 2007, they sold their Denver residence and bought a home in Winter Park. Sarah quit her job in Denver and Winter Park Lodging Company was born…just prior to another birth, the arrival of twins in the Bradford home. Through smart leveraging of technology and bold, beyond-the-box thinking, the company grew. Only six years later, Winter Park Lodging Company now manages 140 homes.

Company Culture

The friendly company vibe at Winter Park Lodging Company is infectious. It begins and ends with Sarah Bradford herself.Winter Park Lodging Company

“We all work above and beyond to make our properties awesome, and we’re passionate about creating a great vacation for our customers,” says Bradford. “When we began we didn’t think about ‘company culture’. We just knew we wanted it to be fun while working hard. Then I read Tony Hsieh’s (CEO, Zappos) Delivering Happiness, which focuses on making company culture a top priority and helping employees grow personally and professionally.”

Bradford advises, “Formalize your culture and don’t make it cliché. Come up with your own values and include your employees in the process. I learned – largely through networking with other managers in VRMA – when new people come on board I need to be the company cheerleader. Now I spend one-on-one time with each new employee and tell them about our growth, our values, and our goals.”

“I also make a conscious and consistent effort to create fun. I bring chocolate, design t-shirts, plan off-site team building activities. If you don’t stay on top of it, one negative employee can bring the whole culture down and make it seem cool to have a bad attitude,” Bradford adds.

 

Owner Acquisition and Retention

Just as with Amy Gaster’s Tybee Vacation Rentals, the standards for properties accepted by Winter Park Lodging Company have increased. “In the beginning, we said yes to almost any property that wasn’t completely outdated. Now we make intentional choices: Is the company the right fit for the property owner? Does the property fit what we want in our inventory? We do not want to accept a property, then place ourselves or the owner in a position of our having signed a property that is not up to par with others in our program.”

Winter Park Lodging Company now has an onboarding process that includes a long list of interview questions for each property owner. “We’re almost psychological about it,” says Bradford. “If they’re coming from another management company we ask what they didn’t like about the company. We also identify any hot button issues and pay attention to them. When we prepare the property, we triple check to make sure those issues have been addressed. And, we now say ‘no’ more often than ‘yes’ to owners inquiring about being on our program.”

When it comes to owner retention strategy, Winter Park Lodging Company takes a highly personalized approach. “We are always selling to our owners,” says Bradford. “We’re proactive with our owners. We send e-newsletters to keep them informed. We send them revenue, rate, and occupancy updates every six months compared to the year before. We schedule regular phone calls with them. We give them free lift tickets and passes when we can. Sometimes, we even babysit their kids!”

 

Marketing and Technology

Innovation has been a cornerstone for Winter Park Lodging Company. “We are always innovating. We add new technology all the time. We recently adopted PointCentral for keyless locks and we launched the Glad to Have You GMS this fall,” says Bradford.

We questioned Bradford regarding technology platforms a growing vacation rental management company cannot live without in 2014. Her must-have technology recs:

1. Vacation Rental Management Software.
2. NAVIS Narrowcast. “It’s like adding a mentor and a business partner all in one. It completely changed our sales culture.”
3. Phone and internet systems that work well ALL the time.
4. VRBO. “Almost half of our inquiries come from VRBO.com.”
5. Google AdWords.
6. A functional, user-friendly rental website with online booking.

In addition, Winter Park Lodging Company is expanding their database and placing strong emphasis on targeted email campaigns and automated messaging. According to Bradford, “We are seeing incredible results with segmented email messaging.”

 

Advice to New Property Managers

Our next question: What advice do you have for new and/or growing vacation rental management companies? With insight forged from experience and clear understanding, Sarah answered:

1. Think outside the box.
“I think outside the box primarily because I never knew what was in the box!” jokes Bradford. “One example: Historically, tour operators have been responsible for a large percentage of vacation rental reservations in Colorado. We questioned the norm and were highly successful with direct-to-consumer online bookings.”

2. Be a homeowner in your own program.
“It is extremely beneficial to own one or two properties in your rental program. When you’re a homeowner in your own program, you’re much more empathetic and in tune with the needs and expectations of the other homeowners in your program.”

3. When you travel, stay in vacation rentals.
“Whenever possible, choose vacation rentals as a personal lodging option. You can learn so much from experiencing firsthand the way other companies do business.”

4. Have no fear.
“One thing that contributed to our success is that I wasn’t afraid. You cannot over analyze every decision you make. You are going to make mistakes, but learn to trust yourself.”

5. Get more.
“When you can’t take on more properties, take on more properties. When we jumped to 50 properties, I never dreamed we would be able to provide occupancy for over 140 homes. You have to trust your business.”

 

By Amy Hinote

Related Articles:

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 2: A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

Part 3: A Look Under the Hood at Elliott Beach Rentals

Alert: Stop Florida Anti-Vacation Rental Bill

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Rick Scott revuews HB 883 regulating vacation rentals
Attention Florida Property Owners 
By Steve Milo
Right now in Tallahassee, a very harmful bill is speeding through the legislature that will severely restrict your property rights and strip away the freedom to manage your vacation rental business.To protect our rights and fight for our jobs WE MUST MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD RIGHT NOW. There are two easy ways to do this: (1) Email the Legislature, (2) Call the committee members who are considering the bill. We NEED YOU TO DO BOTH BEFORE NEXT MONDAY (FEB 3), and we’re making it easy for you.At the bottom is a list of legislators in the Florida House of Representatives who we need you to contact. There are email addresses and phone numbers for each.

FIRST, SEND THEM EMAILS…Send an INDIVIDUAL email to EACH of the Representatives on the list (for your convenience, a suggested format is below. If you are pressed for time, you can simply cut and paste – but also feel free to make the words your own):Dear Representative  __________________:I’m writing today to urge you to oppose HB 307 because the bill will destroy my property rights and those of other vacation property professionals like me. We are a vital part the Florida’s tourism economy. This bill is unnecessary because current law already balances the rights of all property owners. HB 307 would result in severe restrictions that would “zone out” some businesses like mine. With economic recovery just starting, it is the wrong time to impose laws and regulations that will crush our business. Please stand up and protect private property rights in Florida by opposing this harmful bill. VOTE “NO” ON HB 307 in the Business & Professional Regulation Subcommittee meeting on Tuesday, February 4.

Sincerely,

[Your name here]

SECOND, THEN CALL THEIR OFFICES…

The phone numbers that are listed for each member are their legislative offices. You will likely get a staff person or voicemail. Please be clear, concise and respectful. Feel free to share the passion you have for your rights and your business, but try not be angry.

Here’s a suggested script for the call:

Hi, I’m calling to let Representative ________ know that I’m urging a “NO” vote on HB 307 in the Business & Professional Regulation Subcommittee meeting on Tuesday, February 4. Men and women like me in the vacation rental business are part of the state’s important tourism economy. This bill will destroy our property rights and allow overregulation that will hurt our business or even put us out of business. During the last few years of tough economic times, I worked very hard and contributed to Florida’s economy, and I need Representative ________’s support to oppose this very bad bill.

FINALLY, FORWARD THIS CALL TO ACTION AND ASK YOUR FAMILY, FRIENDS, VENDORS, AND EMPLOYEES TO MAKE THE SAME CALLS AND EMAILS.

Here are the key Florida House Members to target:

Representative:           District Phone:                        Capitol Phone:                                                 Email:

Debbie Mayfield         (772) 778-5077                       (850) 717-5054                       debbie.mayfield@ myfloridahouse.gov
Greg Steube                (941) 341-3117                       (850) 717-5073                       greg.steube@myfloridahouse.gov
Darryl Rouson             (727) 906-3200                       (850) 717-5070                       darryl.rouson@myfloridahouse. gov
Ben Albritton              (863) 534-0073                       (850) 717-5056                       ben.albritton@myfloridahouse. gov
Karen Castor Dentel   (407) 659-4818           (850) 717-5030                       Karen.CastorDentel@ myfloridahouse.gov
Travis Cummings        (904) 278-5761                       (850) 717-5018                       Travis.Cummings@ myfloridahouse.gov
Dwight  Dudley          (727) 552-2747                       (850) 717-5068                       Dwight.Dudley@myfloridahouse. gov
Dane Eagle                  (239) 772-1291                       (850) 717-5077                       Dane.Eagle@myfloridahouse.gov
Joe Gibbon                  (954) 893-5006                       (850) 717-5100                       joe.gibbons@myfloridahouse.gov
Mike La Rosa              (407) 891-2555                       (850) 717-5042                       Mike.LaRosa@myfloridahouse.gov
Kenneth Roberson      (941) 613-0914                       (850) 717-5075                       ken.roberson@myfloridahouse. gov
Cynthia Stafford         (305) 953-3086                       (850) 717-5109                       cynthia.stafford@ myfloridahouse.gov
Carlos Trujillo             (305) 470-5070                       (850) 717-5105                       carlos.trujillo@ myfloridahouse.gov
Steve Crisafulli           (321) 449-5111                       (850) 717-5051                       steve.crisafulli@ myfloridahouse.gov
Will Weatherford        (813) 558-5115                       (850) 717-5038                       will.weatherford@ myfloridahouse.gov
Robert Schenck           (352) 688-5005                       (850) 717-5035                       robert.schenck@myfloridahouse. gov
Travis Hutson              (386) 446-7644                       (850) 717-5024                       Travis.Hutson@myfloridahouse. gov

ResortsandLodges.com Forms Two-Way Integrated Interface With Barefoot Technologies

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Barefoot Vacation Rental Software

MINNEAPOLIS — ResortsandLodges.com, a leading worldwide Resort and Lodge destination travel website, today announced it is partnering with Barefoot Technologies, one of the founding browser-based vacation rental systems in the travel market, in order to provide ResortsandLodges.com travelers access to more than 20,000 vacation rentals.

Founded in 1999, Barefoot was officially the first browser-based vacation rental system on the market.  They are currently one of the few systems to offer customer relationship management (CRM) software, social media, document management and the most innovative work order system on the market.  They have also attracted more than 20,000 vacation rentals properties, and offer online availability, rates and booking options.

 

Logo

 

Thanks to the new integrated two-way interface, Barefoot Technologies will be able to publish comprehensive rental details with online rates and availability for ResortsandLodges.com’s nearly 10 million guests to book online.  This two-way interface offers Barefoot’s customers a new channel to attract new travelers and will save the property owners time so they don’t have to individually update rates and availability.

“We have an endless pursuit to ensure our travel audience is able to access the largest collection of accommodations across the world and be able to book them online. This ability will offer travelers the chance to create truly memorable vacation experiences. In order to meet our traveler’s demand we are connecting with properties where the availability isn’t typically sold on travel sites we may have become familiar with; Expedia, Priceline, Hotels.com and Travelocity. Our partnership with Barefoot Technologies is very exciting; we will be able to offer our nearly 10 million guests access to book real-time availability with more than 20,000 unique rental properties across North America,” said Ryan Bailey, CEO of ResortsandLodges.com.

“Our customers are always interested in connecting with shopping sites to generate new customers and it is difficult to do so with major OTAs like Expedia, Priceline and Hotels.com because of their traditionally high commission rates.  It is exciting to find a company like ResortsandLodges.com that offers a channel that is more feasible for resort and property managers,” said Ed Ulmer, President of Barefoot Technologies.

 

About Barefoot Technologies- Barefoot is a leading provider of browser-based reservation and asset management systems in the vacation rental industry. It has the distinction of being the first browser system in the industry, the first to provide online booking, tenant, owner access and to offer social media tools and is designed to be tailored to meet clients’ exacting needs. Barefoot is also the only system with a full Customer Relations program wrapped into the program, which in effect makes it the only full service system in the industry. Founded in 1998, by leading technology and industry players, the “.NET platform” has become a standard for those who are trend setters in the industry and those who desire to dominate their market with unique functionally. For more information, please contact Barefoot at 603-428-6255, Adam@barefoot.com

 

About ResortsandLodges.com

ResortsandLodges.com® is a comprehensive online resource for leisure travel with access to unique accommodations worldwide. The site provides the ability to plan and book memorable experiences at resorts, vacation rentals, cabins, holiday rentals, villas, condos, cottages, lodges, boutique hotels, B&B’s and vacation hotels.

Founded in 1998, ResortsandLodges.com was one of the first major leisure travel sites established on the Internet. Over the years, ResortsandLodges.com has received numerous awards and accolades for web design, outstanding usability, fast page loading speeds, and skillful information display.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/01/27/6105042/resortsandlodgescom-forms-two.html#storylink=cpy

LiveRez Expands to New Corporporate Headquarters

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New LiveRez Offices

EAGLE, Id. –– LiveRez.com, the leading provider of cloud-based software for professional vacation rental managers, has moved into new corporate headquarters at 1173 E. Winding Creek Dr. in Eagle, ID.

To celebrate the opening of its new headquarters, LiveRez will hold a ribbon cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 31, as well as an open house later that evening from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. The open house will feature live music from the Kim Stocking Band and food from local eateries, among other activities.

New LiveRez Offices

 

The new 11,000 square-foot complex features state-of-the-art engineering and architectural design, and features:

  • Office space for more than 50 employees
  • Executive conference room
  • Kitchen
  • Lunch room
  • Outdoor patio
  • Locker room
  • Theatre room equipped with popular gaming systems
  • 1500 square-foot recreational room – with big screen TVs, couches, a ping pong table and foosball table – that will double as an on-site training facility for LiveRez partners.

 

“With as fast as we are growing as a company, we knew we had to think long-term and invest in a space that could accommodate our current and future employees,” said LiveRez Founder/CEO Tracy Lotz. “Our new headquarters not only will support our planned growth, but also offers our employees a better environment to come to each day.”

Since first offering its software in 2008, LiveRez.com has grown to partner with nearly 800 professional management companies from across the United States and beyond. It currently operates with a staff of more than 30 full-time employees.

A slideshow of picture of the new headquarters is included below.


 

About LiveRez.com

LiveRez.com is a complete, online, vacation rental property management solution, focused on making vacation rental property managers fully operational online and thereby increasing bookings. LiveRez.com offers an all-in-one cloud-based platform, featuring best-in-class websites optimized for online bookings, a full-featured reservation and property management system, a robust CRM system, an exclusive connection to QuickBooks for trust accounting, and a unique “Pay-for-Performance” approach, which provides a mutually beneficial partnership between LiveRez.com and its vacation rental manager partners. The company’s largest competitor is HomeAway Software for Professionals.

To learn more about LiveRez.com, please call (800) 343-2891 or visit LiveRez.com. And, to receive timely updates from the company, follow LiveRez.com on Facebook, Twitter (@LiveRez) and Google+, or visit the company’s vacation rental software blog. LiveRez.com is a proud Gold Sponsor of the Vacation Rental Manager’s Association (VRMA).

Company Portraits: First-hand accounts from VR company owners on starting up and keeping up in this growing industry.

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How Vacation Rental Management Companies work

2014 is shaping up to be the most expansive year to date for the vacation rental industry. We recently sat down with executives from seven on-the-grow vacation rental management companies to discuss everything from growth strategies to company culture, technology and marketing to future predictions for the industry.

The outcome was a veritable avalanche of industry expertise and insight. VRM Intel’s Under the Hood Series details each of the interviews and includes widespread topics that cover every aspect of the vacation rental business.

How Vacation Rental Management Companies work

Recognition + Opportunity = Success

The success of each of these growing companies is grounded in their owners’ abilities to recognize need and seize opportunity in the marketplace.

 

Rick Elliott, Elliott Beach Rentals
North Myrtle Beach, SC

Following Hurricane Hazel in 1954, South Carolina State Senator Dick Elliott, previously a property maintenance man, saw the need for post-hurricane development and professional property management. Elliott plunged headfirst into real estate and opened the doors to Elliott Beach Rentals. At the time he handled rentals, maintenance, owner relations, guest services and anything else that came along. According to son Rick Elliott, current CEO for Elliott Beach Rentals, “Dad wanted to be on the front line and do it all…greet everyone, check everyone in, and meet with all the owners.”

After receiving his MBA from Univ of SC in 1990, Rick Elliott joined forces with his dad to scale the business; between 1990 and 2013 property management grew from 100 properties to over 1,400 vacation rentals.

 

Steve Milo, Vacation Rental Pros Property Management LLC
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL

In 2002 Steve Milo, Managing Director and founder of Vacation Rental Pros Property Management LLC, purchased his first vacation rental and struggled to find a competent property management company in the area. He decided to self-manage and explore the opportunity in the market. By 2006 Milo owned or co-owned 10 vacation rentals, and was having great success renting his properties on his website. Seeing the opportunity in the marketplace, he decided to launch Vacation Rental Pros. By the end of 2006, he was managing 25 properties.

Milo’s initial growth was organic. “I started the business in a recession. Many property managers had stopped taking new homes because they were having trouble getting bookings. In hindsight the recession was an opportunity. It allowed us to take advantage of a tougher playing field. By running a lean organization, we were able to be profitable, and we used that profit for marketing. We ended up having more bookings than units.” Only seven years later, Milo’s company now manages over 635 properties in Northeast Florida and along the Southwest Gulf Coast.

 

Sarah Bradford, Winter Park Lodging Company
Winter Park, CO

Sarah Bradford had little experience with vacation rentals when she and husband Chris purchased their Winter Park, CO condo. Like Milo, Bradford searched high and low for a property manager to market, book, and maintain their rental property. She began marketing and self-managing the property and was soon inundated by requests from a network of friends to help manage their Winter Park properties.

Bradford was managing 25 homes when she and her husband decided to take the leap and make property management her full time job. Within a 3-week period in 2007, they sold their Denver residence and bought a home in Winter Park. Sarah quit her job in Denver, and Winter Park Lodging Company was born, just prior to the arrival of twins in the Bradford home. Through leveraging technologically and bold, beyond-the-box thinking, the company grew. Only six years later, Winter Park Lodging Company now manages 150 homes.

 

Ashley Hamm, 360 Blue
Santa Rosa Beach, FL

In 2007, Jason Sprenkle was involved in developing condos in the Florida Panhandle, and an opportunity arose to manage some of the properties. Jason reached out to his brother Jeremy Sprenkle, and together founded 360 Blue in 2007 managing six vacation rentals. With a focus on technology and service, by the end of 2013, 360 Blue was managing 237 properties.

 

Amy Gaster, Tybee Vacation Rentals
Tybee Island, GA

Fresh from a visit to Europe, Amy Gaster thought it would be fun to welcome travelers into their home and decided to turn their downstairs into an apartment-sized vacation rental. At the time, other than a handful of realtors offering rental services to their clients, there wasn’t an established vacation rental presence on Tybee Island. Amy used local online marketing to list the property and, before the renovations were complete, the new apartment was booked for the entire summer. Amy continued to receive calls and quickly recognized the opportunity before her. She contacted her sister Carrie who agreed to come on board.

After earning their real estate licenses in 2000, the sister-team mailed introduction letters to local property owners announcing they were the new “rental girls” in town who were going to do things differently. With high quality service and all-online marketing, they began signing homeowners. Tybee Vacation Rentals now manage over 200 vacation homes.

 

Brooke Pfautz, All Star Vacation Homes
Orlando, FL

Sixteen years ago serial entrepreneur Steve Trover was approached by his mother, owner of a real estate company in the Orlando area. She was having difficulty finding competent property managers to manage and rent her clients’ vacation rental homes. Trover analyzed the opportunity and, with $1,000 startup capital, founded All Star Vacation Homes. Today the company manages over 250 high-end vacation rentals in four markets.

 

Ryan Goodman, Kokopelli Property Management
Santa Fe, NM

Charles Goodman, CEO of Kokopelli Property Management, has been in the real estate business as an owner, investor, and property manager since 1976, when he acquired a 5-unit apartment complex in Albuquerque, NM. Operating out of a garage with only a handful of properties, he began managing more rentals and soon launched Residential Property Management in 1996.  Goodman recognized that, through economies of scale, the business of property management could be highly profitable. With the help of his wife and two sons, Goodman grew the company and re-branded it as Kokopelli Property Management. Today the company manages 600+ rentals.

 

Company Culture:  How to Keep It

In interviews with CEO’s of rapid-hiring companies across America, Inc. asked, “What’s the biggest challenge in managing a growing workforce?” The No. 1 answer, from 72% of respondents:  “Maintaining company culture.”

Ashley Hamm, CFO of 360 Blue, agrees, ““Our top priority is our company culture. The larger you get, the harder it is to maintain.”

So how do vacation rental companies manage to preserve company culture in the midst of high growth? Both Hamm and Brooke Pfautz, Chief Business Development Officer at All Star Vacation Homes, focus heavily on the hiring process.

“We have a strong, passionate culture. Our people ‘bleed’ 360 Blue,” explains Hamm. “To maintain high morale and a consistent company culture, we typically weed through 300 resumes and interview 100 people for each position we hire. If necessary, we opt to delay hiring in order to find the right person for our team.”

All Star Vacation Homes uses the Culture Index as a tool in putting the right people in the right seats. “We live and breathe it,” says Pfautz. “We create the job profile beforehand, determine the optimal profile for the position, and match candidates to appropriate profiles. A high percentage match between the Culture Index and the job profile is a big factor in our interviewing process.”

Another strategy in promoting and motivating company culture is sharing key business information with team members. According to Ryan Goodman, CMO at Kokopelli, “We’ve decided to open our books to our employees. In giving them manageable, simplified job expectations, we’ve found, if they aren’t looking at a budget or P&L, it’s hard to expect them to make the best decision. They also know if they want to ask for a raise, they need to demonstrate how their contribution directly affects the bottom line.”

Sarah Bradford, Winter Park Lodging Company, said, “When we first started, we didn’t even think about company culture. We knew we wanted it to be fun. I read Tony Hsieh’s (CEO, Zappos) book Delivering Happiness, which focuses on making company culture a top priority and helping employees grow personally and professionally.”

Bradford advises, “Formalize your culture and don’t make it cliche. Come up with your values and include your employees in the process. I learned – largely through networking with other managers in VRMA – when new people come on board (that) I, as the owner, have to be the company cheerleader. Now I spend one-on-one time with each new employee and tell them about our growth, our values, and our goals. I also make a conscious, consistent effort to create fun. I bring chocolate, make t-shirts, and have off-site team building activities. If you don’t stay on top of it, one employee can bring the whole culture down and make it seem cool to have a bad attitude.”

Amy Gaster at Tybee focusses on hiring and empowering capable team members:  “My advice is to grow a competent core staff. It’s important to Carrie and me that we invest in (the way) our organization is growing. We make sure everyone is communicating, and we implement shared systems to keep people connected. We train and empower our team to ensure they portray our vision to guests and owners. The end goal is for everyone to be confident in what the company stands for, and to be able to speak in the same voice when interacting with customers and co-workers.”

To preserve company culture in his energetic, bottom-line-focused business, Steve Milo leads by example and focuses on accountability. “In our experience, company culture is incredibly important. Our company has a culture which is high-energy and doesn’t mix with traditional models,” said Milo. “I’m a high-energy owner. I get up early, and I don’t have time for wasted effort. I task people in our company. I hold them accountable and expect them to meet deadlines. Once you start to build a like-minded team, if you bring someone in who’s not a good fit, they typically won’t last for the 90-day probationary period.”

Owner Relations:  Smooth Turf or Minefield?

In the vacation rental business maintaining quality relationships with homeowners can be a minefield – one that cannot be ignored.

When asked about the number of properties Elliott Realty manages (1,400), CEO Rick Elliott answers, “We manage one property at a time, one homeowner at a time.”

Elliott added brick and mortar locations to his target areas. “Guests and owners have an increased comfort level and familiarity when they see and feel a physical presence. We staff these offices with Owner Service Professionals, who serve as the point of contact for homeowners in the area. We make sure we hire professional and skilled personnel and we pay them well. It’s a key factor to our success with owners. Elliott Realty’s owners like the continuity that comes with seeing the same face.”

The satellite offices also help Elliott target specific complexes and developments. “It’s our way of investing in a targeted area and taking a large portion of inventory. Our homeowners appreciate that we have made a commitment to them and their area.”

Vacation Rental Pros has a different approach to maintaining owner relations, with overall storefront rent less than 1% of gross income. “I don’t believe in fancy offices, and I don’t believe in offline marketing,” says Milo. “What separates us from other companies in our area is that our bookings are so much stronger; occupancy is higher so we have happier owners. We have a dedicated person for owner relations, and the bulk of our correspondence is through email. We also have a customer service department to answer our owners’ questions. But owners still have my cell phone number.”

Ryan Goodman at Kokopelli says their owners have his cell phone number too, plus he has implemented a proactive strategy in communicating with owners. “No matter how much we’ve grown, we have prioritized the relationship with the homeowner.”

Goodman generates an arrival report every week to see which owners are coming into town; he attempts to schedule face-to-face time with them. “Why try to chase them down when you can proactively get in front of them while they’re in town?” said Goodman. “I have a big face with a big smile and that doesn’t come through in an email or on the phone. I want them to know they are taken care of.”

“Having the right number of people staffed is important, so the owner knows someone is designated to always be watching their home,” adds Ashley Hamm at 360 Blue. “Every 360 Blue homeowner has a point of contact. We also have an owner retention program in which we proactively call to check in with the owners.”

All Star Vacation Homes views the homeowner relationship as a partnership. “The way we look at the relationship with homeowners is (that) we are an asset manager and the homeowner is our partner. We call our owners partners,” said Pfautz. “We have a team member in each market who is the point contact for the owner. When an owner is in town, we know when they are coming and we arrange to meet with them at their home and do a walk-through.”

Winter Park Lodging Company takes a highly personalized approach in their owner retention strategy. “We are always selling to owners,” says Bradford. “We send owner newsletters to keep them informed. We schedule regular proactive phone calls with owners. We give them free lift tickets and passes when we can. Sometimes, we even babysit their kids.“ Bradford adds.

 

Absorbing Acquisitions

During growth periods, Kokopelli Property Management, Vacation Rental Pros, and All Star Vacation Homes have all acquired property management companies, producing both opportunities and challenges. Kokopelli entered the vacation rental space in 2003, when they acquired a company which had a small inventory of short-term rentals.  By 2013 the company had acquired 11 other companies and currently manages 220 vacation rentals, along with 500 long-term rentals and 60 commercial spaces.

“When we acquire a company, we typically don’t absorb their employees,” says Ryan Goodman, Kokopelli CMO. “They are less likely to adhere to our standards and procedures. We absorb the work load, closely analyze performance, decide if we need to hire, and hire fresh. There have been a few exceptions when we have absorbed employees if they have some important relationships we feel strongly we would lose without their being on board.”

Steve Milo, Vacation Rental Pros, has acquired four companies, one per year, since 2009, adding 225 properties to his inventory. “The first one was a smaller company that was struggling during the recession. We don’t absorb the employees. We do what is known as an asset purchase. For us, expansion is about quality, not quantity.”

In November 2013 All Star Vacation Homes tapped a new market with its acquisition of Southern California Vacation Rentals. “We surveyed the guests who have stayed in our vacation homes in Orlando since 1998, guests who also continued to request California as a western U.S. destination,” says CEO Steve Trover. “The La Jolla and San Diego destinations are a good fit for expanding the All Star brand on the west coast.”

All Star Vacation Homes retained most of the staff in the acquisition. ““We were very excited to bring the strong leadership and operations team that was in place in Southern California on board as members of the All Star team.” said Brooke Pfautz, Chief Business Development Officer at All Star.

 

Technology:  Staying on Top of It

Although their marketing strategies differ, our company executives agree that leveraging technology is a key component in their success. They reference three areas of focus:

1. Property Management Software
2. Company Website
3. Revenue-focused Technology Platforms

 

1. Property Management Software

In 1990 when Rick Elliott established Elliott Realty, he didn’t have a property management system. Like many VRMA members at the time, he used the “Rez Board” system, a manual method of keeping up with reservations which became inefficient as the company grew.

Putting a solid system in place was a critical part of Elliott’s strategy; he focused first on designing an efficient, scalable reservation system and reached out to IBM certified consultant Rick Flanagan who, in 1993, built a custom system for Elliott Realty – a system still utilized by the company today. Elliott emphasizes, “As a result, we were the first in our area to have online booking on our website.”

From their 2006 beginning, Vacation Rental Pros invested in web-based property management software. “The best thing you can do with your software is to work directly with your vacation rental software provider,” Milo adds. “For example, we worked with Escapia to open up our API so we could create an interface with Salesforce to have a better help desk.”

Tybee Vacation Rentals also implemented web-based software early. “In our first year, we started with a windows-based application, but we quickly identified the need for a web-based solution,” Gaster explains. ”It was our Number 1 goal when we attended our first VRMA conference.”

Like Tybee, 360 Blue decided to change software systems. “It was a difficult process,” Hamm says. “It was tedious and time-consuming, but beneficial for us to change software at the beginning of the year.  We ran dual systems at first and still anticipate using our old system for another year for data purposes.”

All Star also early on sought a web-based property management solution that would also integrate a CMS and better website management.  Limited existing options led Steve Trover to contract with Tracy Lotz to build All Star’s own proprietary system, which has now evolved into the LiveRez platform.  “In this evolving industry and with rapidly changing technology, we needed a solution that could grow with us,” said Trover.

 

2. Company Website

All company leaders agree – a high-performance company website is essential to their marketing strategy. It must include the following components: online booking, software integration, easy navigation, high-quality photography, original content, area information, and mobile-friendly design.

Milo emphasizes that Vacation Rental Pros immediately invested in their website. “We invested in a user-friendly website and have incorporated a high quality mobile site.”

Amy Gaster at Tybee also prioritizes their website. “We started with a good website, improved it, and continue to find ways to make it better for our guests. It’s also important to remember that many potential owners make decisions on which company they will chose to manage their property based on your online presence and the functionality of your website.”

After outsourcing their website to Blizzard Internet Marketing, 360 Blue has seen an improvement in their conversions. “As we have been looking at our marketing data, more and more of our rental revenue is coming from organic traffic to our website,” said Hamm.

 

3. Revenue-focused Technology Platforms

Every executive we interviewed utilizes additional technology with heavy attention to return on investment. “Everything we do at Tybee is technology focused,” says Gaster.

NAVIS Sales and Marketing System, Glad to Have You Guest Management System, Status Tracker Housekeeping Software, and various keyless lock systems rated highest among additional technology platforms.

Kokopelli’s Ryan Goodman emphasizes, “We are careful to analyze ROI with the technology we utilize. Everything we spend eats into our margins. We have to ask, ‘What is it adding to our margins?’ For example, we funded our Glad to Have You App as a Santa Fe Tourism App and sold advertising on it. It’s now a profit center with 100 strategic partners in Santa Fe, NM.”

360 Blue also closely monitors ROI on new technology. “We work in an industry of pennies. In order to determine what software and technology we use, we have to evaluate the ROI,” Hamm explains. “We open our P/L to employees, including software prices. So we have 43 employees monitoring whether or not a technology platform is making sense for us. We have a competitive advantage with our relationship with Glad to Have You, as we’re able to beta test any new technology they think up.”

 

 Crystal-balling the Industry

Most of the executives we interviewed agree that the trend toward consolidation, improved technology, and increased attempts by local and state governments to regulate short-term rentals will impact the vacation rental management industry in the near future.

“Consolidation is a given. We’re in the beginning stages of consolidation, and Wyndham has demonstrated a big appetite for acquisition,” says Milo. “It reminds me of the 90’s with e-commerce sites. What evolved was that Yahoo and AOL attracted eyes, then the consumer sites like Amazon came after. The consumer sites were able to grow because the eyeballs were there. Wall Street has funded some big portals in the vacation rental industry which are drawing eyeballs now, and there are opportunities for property managers to leverage the technology to allow for consolidation and efficiencies. The opportunity is there. No organization has been able to effectively manage vacation rentals on a large scale… yet.”

Goodman agrees. “Consolidation on the online side and the listing side has happened. Consolidation on the service side is coming… next is the franchise model. By establishing a national brand, you get all accounting, marketing, sales, best practices, increased purchasing power, and branding power.”

Hamm at 360 Blue anticipates new technology will be a big factor in the industry. “Technology is (only) going to improve. When we started in the industry, we were decades behind as an industry. And now technology is taking off.”

Concerns about government regulations have prompted several of the executives to encourage participation in local and state government and elections.

According to Amy Gaster, “Following the growth of the vacation rental industry on Tybee, and several proposed rental restriction ordinances, we added two vacation rental managers to the Tourism Council. We were able to demonstrate to the officials and the community that 68% of revenue came from vacation rentals, and we ensured them that we wanted to be good neighbors. We showed the value of tourism and, more specifically, the value brought by vacation rentals to the destination. We knew we had to balance the quality of life issues with residents and we figured out ways to coexist.”

Tybee remains active in government affairs. Gaster adds, “There’s always a risk there could be more regulations and restrictions created. We’re in the process of compiling an official economic impact study, and we continue to communicate with the City and residents as needed in order to be more proactive.”

Steve Milo also stays active in government affairs relating to the vacation rental industry. “If you haven’t faced it, consider yourself lucky, but don’t think you won’t. In Florida, it’s been frustrating to see how few property managers will help fund advocacy initiatives and political campaigns. To me, it would be like not paying for insurance. In our industry, it’s a cost of doing business.”

 

By Amy Hinote

Related Articles:

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 2: A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

Part 3: A Look Under the Hood at Elliott Beach Rentals

 

Under the Hood: Elliott Beach Rentals

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Elliott Beach Rentals North Myrtle Beach

This is part 3 in the Under the Hood Series in which we interviewed executives from seven on-the-grow vacation rental management companies to discuss everything from growth strategies to company culture, technology and marketing to future predictions for the industry. 

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 2: A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

Part 4: A look Under the Hood at Winter Park Lodging Company

 

Following Hurricane Hazel in 1954, South Carolina State Senator Dick Elliott, previously a property maintenance man, saw the need for post-hurricane development and professional property management. Elliott plunged headfirst into real estate and vacation rental management and opened the doors to Elliott Beach Rentals. At the time he handled rentals, maintenance, owner relations, guest services and anything else that came along, including serving as a North Myrtle Beach Councilman from 1962 to 1966.

In 1976, Sen. Elliott was appointed Vice Chair on the Horry County Council, which propelled him into state politics and service. In 1982, he was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives where he served for 10 years before being elected to the South Carolina Senate in 1992. Sen. Elliott retired from politics in 2013 and is credited with bringing many improvements to the area including infrastructure and roads which expanded tourism in the North Myrtle Beach area.

Elliott Beach Rentals familyRick Elliott, Sen. Elliott’s son, joined forces with his father to scale the business after receiving his MBA from Univ of SC in 1990 (although, make no mistake. He is a Clemson fan through and through). With Sen. Elliott’s time being more and more consumed in service to the state, Rick joined to the team to put in a solid corporate structure which would allow the company to grow from 100 properties under management in 1990 to over 1,400 properties in 2013.

In 1990, Rick handled all the marketing and accounting. “Dad wanted to be on the front line and do it all…meet everyone, check everyone in, and meet with all the owners.”

Elliott Beach Rentals now has 40 full-time employees and adds seasonal employees to the mix during peak weeks, typically from mid-May through the end of September.

 

Owner Relations

When asked about the number of properties Elliott Beach Rentals manages, CEO Rick Elliott consistently answers, “We manage one property at a time, one homeowner at a time.”

Elliott added brick and mortar locations to his target areas. “Guests and owners have an increased comfort level and familiarity when they see and feel a physical presence. We staff these offices with Owner Service Professionals, who serve as the point of contact for homeowners in the area. We make sure we hire professional and skilled personnel, and we pay them well. It’s a key factor to our success with owners. Elliott Beach Rentals’s owners like the continuity that comes with seeing the same face.”

The satellite offices also help Elliott Beach Rentals target specific complexes and developments. “It’s our way of investing in a targeted area and taking a large portion of inventory. Our homeowners appreciate that we have made a commitment to them and their area.”

“We focus on one area of growth, and try to be the best in that area,” said Elliott. “Business owners should tell customers exactly who they are and what they specialize in. Early on, we saw the fallacy in trying to be all things to all people.”

By 2005, inventory from new development projects had been added to the market, and Elliott Beach Rentals benefited. “We grew because we specifically targeted each development. We grew substantially from 2005-2006 and have been able to maintain sustainable growth since that time,” said Elliott.

 

Property Management Software

In 1990 when Rick Elliott began to grow Elliott Beach Rentals, he didn’t have a property management system. Like many VRMA members at the time, he used the “Rez Board” system, a manual method of keeping up with reservations which became inefficient as the company grew.

Putting a solid system in place was a critical part of Elliott’s strategy; he focused first on designing an efficient, scalable reservation system and reached out to IBM certified consultant Rick Flanagan who, in 1993, built a custom system for Elliott Beach Rentals – a system still utilized by the company today. Elliott emphasizes, “As a result, we were the first in our area to have online booking on our website.”

 

Marketing

Elliott’s marketing plan follows their regional-targeting strategy with the creation and promotion of complex-specific, region-specific, neighborhood-specific microsites which include online booking, original content and search engine optimization.

Click here to replace main photo (/propimages/rentals/fifty_ext.jpg)“I would encourage PMs to build microsites for specific area and communities,” said Elliott. “They let people know you want their specific business and are willing to commit to their community. We are able to do a lot of branding of business segments using microsites. We have original content to promote every development in every neighborhood with internal linking between the sites.”

Elliott also advises vacation rental managers to hire a marketing person who has demonstrated skills in social media, online reputation management, and content creation. To supplement marketing efforts, “Get some college kids, give them a big title and pay them $10/hour,” joked Elliott.

 

Housekeeping and Service

Overall, Elliott prefers to do most things in house, and their volume of business allows them to accomplish that. According to Elliott, this is especially true with their housekeeping department. “If you can hire your housekeepers in-house, I recommend it,” says Elliott. “Additional fees, better service and accountability make it worthwhile for your company.”

 

Company Culture

Like Sarah Bradford at Winter Park Lodging Company, Elliott puts a large value on being passionate about the work. “You got to have passion. If you don’t have the passion what is it all worth? It is about making people happy, and in our business we get the opportunity to do that every day.”

Elliott Beach Rentals Father and SonElliott Beach Rentals has weekly management meetings. “I used to sit at the head of the table,” said Elliott. “Now, I sit off to the side and just try to provide constructive direction to make sure we are all working together. Sometimes team members don’t want to agree. It is ok to have different opinions, but when you open the door to walk out of the meeting, you walk out as one team.”

Elliott also emphasizes leading by example. “We work in an industry of pennies,” said Elliott. “I get to work early in the morning and walk around the parking lot to pick up cigarette butts and check the dust on the railings in the office hallways. I do this every day to show our employees that owner service is all about the details. Small things make you money.”

 

Looking to the future

We asked Elliott about the competition third party distribution sites bring to the industry. “All these distribution avenues, I see nothing wrong with them,” said Elliott. “Expedia, HomeAway…I’m big fan of them all. In the past I have shied away because of the damage to our organic search traffic. But other managers can decide for themselves which ones work best for them.”

“It is similar to the NAR (National Association of Realtors), you aren’t going to see FSBO’s (for sale by owner) running the show.”

Elliott also sees more need for targeted marketing in online travel agencies. “There is a need for more niche marketing and segmented marketing in OTA’s,” said Elliott. “I think we will see more of that in the future.”

With consolidation, Elliott observed, “Wyndham is coming in our market. In the end, whoever provides the best service is going to win. The VRMs are going to have to work. We need to have an on-site mentality in managing our properties in order to compete effectively.”

 

By Amy Hinote

Related Articles:

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 2: A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

 

Content Marketing in 2014 for Accommodations Providers

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Milestone Internet Marketing

In 2013 searchers evolved the way they sought information over the Internet, and towards the end of the year, search engines released their updates to better meet modern queries. In 2014, we will clearly be able to see the effects of these new ranking methods.  Items such as authorship, social outreach, conversational intent and relevancy will really impact the way your website’s content will rank.

 

The Evolution of Search

First, let’s take a look at the ways we search.  The classic desktop search continues to reign as the number one tool for searching and accounts for approximately half of the search volume. In desktop search we still see some searches being conducted in machine talk terms, for example: “Convention Center Santa Clara Hotel”.  This search is packed with keyword terms and lacks a conversational tone which is how people used to search in order to get the most direct results.

a

Coming through in record amounts and still rising, mobile search is the second most popular method for searching.  Mobile search encompasses two different strategies: typing a query into an engine and voice search.  In the first of these, typing a query into an engine, a user may type “Santa Clara Convention Hotel,” which is a little shorter and more to the point than the desktop version. The second mobile strategy for searching came with the inception of voice search with which a user can talk to their phone in order to conduct a search. From this strategy we yield conversational search. When a user searches by voice, she asks questions or gives demands as though she was conducting a conversation, as in “Find a hotel near the Santa Clara Convention Center”.

Mobile and desktop search account for a vast majority of search queries, but it is important to examine some additional emerging methods.  We are starting to see rising numbers of searches conducted on tablets and Internet capable TVs due to the increase in those devices that have become Wi-Fi or Internet capable.  The final significant method of searching is attributed to wearable devices such as watches, Google Glass and more. All of these methods account for a smaller portion of the queries, but will continue to grow as the technology enhances.

 

Google’s Hummingbird

Now that we know about search, let’s take a look at Hummingbird, Google’s most recent update which was released in September of 2013 and has changed the way results are delivered to queries….Read More about Content Marketing Strategies.

 

By Emily Gibson, Content Manager, Milestone Internet Marketing

 

Southern Vacation Rentals Expands on 30A

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Southern Vacation Rentals adds 30A inventory

Southern Vacation Rentals Partners with Adagio on Scenic 30A to Assume the Management of On-Site Office and More than 50 Properties

Southern Vacation Rentals in Destin, FL has partnered with Adagio Resort in Blue Mountain Beach to assume the management of the on-site rental office as well as more than 50 of the resort’s Scenic 30A luxury vacation rentals.

“Southern is proud to have partnered with the Tew family who has made Adagio one of the most successful luxury condo resorts on Scenic 30A,” said Southern General Manager Jim Meeker. “By adding more than 50 Adagio by Southern condos onto our program, we look forward to offering both owners and guests the exceptional Southern service and amenities that our loyal owners and guests have come to love over the past 19 years.”

While Southern has been representing properties in South Walton since 1995 and at Adagio since 2003, these new Adagio condos strengthen Southern’s position along this unique stretch of coastline. Southern plans to continue to expand and fortify its standing as a premier player in vacation rentals in 30A, offering a variety of options from studios to eight bedrooms, with an emphasis on the luxury line and catering to the discerning guests who have come to expect more. Staying in a Southern property ensures a “sweet Southern experience.”

The Adagio property is an exclusive community resting directly on the white sandy beach with two pools, fitness room, and seven condo buildings, three of which face the Gulf of Mexico. Also overlooking the Gulf is one of their pools, a stunning 1,700 square-foot infinity edge pool. The other four buildings surround a magnificent center pool stretching more than 8,000 square feet with three tiers, fountains and cascading waterfalls. Each of the condos is individually owned and exceptionally furnished, offering guests a beautiful destination for their next visit to South Walton.

In addition to the property’s amenities, guests atAdagio by Southern benefit tremendously from Southern’s competitive rates, Southern’s hospitality and service and the GoSouthern app, a communication tool that also features free and discounted activities through the Southern Perks program.

New features that owners gain immediately as part of the Southern Vacation Rentals program include valuable advertising and marketing, full financial management, no-cost Maintenance Plan, Peace of Mind Protection Plan, private Owner Link and a professional reservations sales team driving optimal revenue.

Southern Vacation Rentals maintains a small company feel with big company reach and resources. Southern currently represents approximately 985 short term and 800 long term rentals, 40 associations and countless real estate properties throughout Gulf Shores, Orange Beach, Perdido Key, Pensacola Beach, Fort Walton Beach, Destin, South Walton, Panama City Beach and the Forgotten Coast.

Florida Managers: Important Info for Vacation Rentals in Florida

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Rick Scott revuews HB 883 regulating vacation rentals

In preparation for the upcoming Florida Legislative Session beginning in March, the Florida Vacation Rental Managers Association is conducting a brief survey as part of a first-ever calculation of the industry’s economic impact on the Florida tourism industry, and they need your help.

The link below will take you to a short series of questions, which asks you to estimate annual expenditures made by and on behalf of your clients.

Your answers will be compiled with those of other respondents and entered into a sophisticated economic model. As a result, your answers will not be associated with you or your clients individually. FVRMA will distribute the final results of the survey and the economic model in February.

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FVRMA

This request is time sensitive. FVRMA has only a few days to collect and analyze your input. Please take a few moments now to provide your critical input.

 

In case, you haven’t heard about the recent attempts to unnecessarily regulate vacation rentals in Florida:

In 2011, Florida legislators passed House Bill 883, which blocked local governments from “regulating, restricting or prohibiting” vacation rentals and, with some grandfathered exceptions, giving control over vacation rentals to the state. The bill assured Florida property owners could rent their home, and limited local governments from enacting new ordinances to govern residential rentals. Regulations which existed on July 1, 2011, were grandfathered in, but no new restrictions are allowed.

State Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, is leading a movement to repeal the law. Under new legislation proposed by Sen. Thrasher in late October, House Bill 883 would be repealed, which would then allow local governments to ban or impose restrictions on vacation rentals in residential areas.

 

 

Don’t let your housekeeping department operate at a loss.

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Vacation rental linens

By Steve Craig, ProResort Housekeeping

I am shocked at how many vacation rental companies lose money on their housekeeping departments. I get this complaint all the time, and that does not count those who say “We barely broke even.” I find that, if budgeting and accounting is done properly, to be almost impossible to lose money.

Why does this happen? There can be a great many reasons.

1. Here is the single biggest one: the company posts no revenues to the department.

None!! No departure cleaning fees that are charged a renter, no early arrival or late departure fees-these are all posted to reservations. Let me ask you. How brain-damaged is that? How can that possible be accurate budgeting?

Here is what one company does with the cleaning fee revenues:

  • The cost of the housekeeper (or sub) and inspector are added as revenue to housekeeping. The excess (profit?) is added to the reservations budget as revenue!
  • In short, the housekeeping department has no income to cover their management staff, delivery staff, dispatchers, etc.

Also, when a company creates the percentage of commission it is charging an owner on a rental, those commissions should be computed based on the costs associated with having services to support that rental. Thus a certain cost is associated with each department, and that same percentage of the revenues should go to that department. So, if added into the commission is 1.5% for the cost of the housekeeping department, shouldn’t 1.5 of the commission revenues be posted to housekeeping?

The company posts only expenses to the housekeeping department, none of the revenues that they generate. Can you believe that? But it is true. How can any department make money if their revenue is not posted against their expenses?

 

2. Nothing is charged for many of the services that the department provides.

 

3.  Too many vehicles.

Every inspector and delivery person does not need a company vehicle.

 

4. Fair fees are not charged or charged at too low a rate for things like:

  • Ordering and maintaining an inventory of linens, housewares, etc.
  • Deliveries of items needed in a house are too low for fear of “nickel and diming the owner.”
  • No fees for deep clean others than the actual cleaning time. No inventory, inspection, etc.

 

Click here to subscribe to the ProResort Housekeeping Blog

 

Stephen R. Craig - Pro Resort HousekeepingSteve Craig is the recognized national authority on Vacation Rental Housekeeping. After working as systems manager for a division of the American Hospital Supply Corporation Steve started his adventure in housekeeping with his own cleaning company in 1984. Craig Services Management was actively servicing 17 resorts throughout the state of Florida by the time Steve sold it in 1985 and started his consulting business ProResort Housekeeping in 1986.

Since this time Steve has: consulted with over 200 vacation rental, vacation ownership, and destination resorts throughout the US, Canada, the Caribbean and Mexico; published over 300 articles and newsletters, including the Vacation Rental Housekeeping Professionals (VRHP) newsletter where he served as founder and Director for the past 13 years; spoken at numerous industry conferences by NTC, ARDA, VRMA , FVRMA, CFRMA, Colorado Lodging Association, California Lodging Association and VRHP seminars; and designed and overseen installation of 13 on-premise laundries across the country.

Throughout his entire career Steve has stayed abreast of cutting edge technologies, legal, and operational changes in the vacation rental housekeeping industry. Steve has worked directly with numerous product manufacturers to test their products and share his findings. From new product evaluations, to labor laws, to the latest software programs Steve has recognized, monitored, evaluated, and shared their impacts on the Vacation Rental Housekeeping industry

5 Benefits of Mobile Apps for Vacation Rental Managers

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Mobile Apps for Vacation Rentals

With the overwhelming interest in the use of mobile apps for vacation rental managers, we wanted to know more. How does using a mobile app increase business for vacation rental managers? So we reached out to Tyler Weir at Glad To Have You to find out more.

We want to hear from you. Take our anonymous survey about mobile apps

The question among vacation rental professionals remains, what does “mobile” mean for the vacation rental industry? Did you know more people own a mobile device than they do a toothbrush? (Source: Hubspot) Although there currently are not any apps that can brush teeth (at least not yet), apps have many uses and benefits that your business might be missing out on from an operations standpoint as well as guest communications and support.

Let’s explore the 5 key benefits a mobile app can provide a vacation rental professional.

 

Mobile app for vacation rentals1. Guest Engagement & Communication

Communication between vacation rental professionals and their guests is too often a haphazard mix of calls, emails and pieces of paper left for guests in the properties they’re renting. Mobile apps give vacation rental managers the opportunity to engage with their guest in real-time through instantaneous or scheduled push notifications and email.

To address a concern for some VRMs, mobile apps are not here to remove face-to-face interaction between VRMs and vacationing guests but to provide them with the information they need, when they need it, before, during, and after their stay through a communication channel the guest is familiar and comfortable with.

 

2. Provide Detailed Information

Once in their units, guests are often confused about the features they’ve paid for and the places they could visit nearby.  Mobile apps provide guests with the information they need throughout their vacation right in the palms of their hands. Apps allow VRMs to provide any property specific information the guest need such as boil water alert, what the Wi-Fi code is, when the trash will be picked up, how to use the Keurig or troubleshoot that confusing TV remote.

The information provided within a mobile app is endless and remains within the guest’s hand throughout their length of stay. Gone are the days of printer ink and toner, if you so desire to save money on those undesirable binders, by providing all your property information inside a mobile app.  Mobile apps also give VRMs the opportunity to provide more detailed, custom information their guest might not normally receive with out the app.

 

3. 24/7 Customer Support

Mobile apps make it easier and more efficient for your guests to communicate with your staff as well as provide the tools that make their vacations simple and more enjoyable.  One of the key benefits of a mobile app is the amount of reduced support calls a number of vacation rental professionals have seen.

By providing the property specific information guests need for their vacation within the mobile app, VRMs are able to focus more of their time on guest value-added work and prospective owners rather than being bogged down with support calls.  Unlike usual working hours, mobile apps are open 24/7/365 giving guests the information they may need during those closed business hours.

 

4. Promotion and Branding

A favorable means of a mobile app is the level of promotion and branding apps can give vacation rental mangers. A mobile app gives many vacation rental management companies the appearance and functionality of a 5-star hotel by utilizing what is known as a white label application.  VRMs can take advantage of these white-labeled apps, which promote graphic splash screens and numerous other custom screens throughout the application to reinforce the branding of your company.

 

5. New Revenue Streams

Many Vacation Rental Managers are finding ways to offset their app cost or better yet, increase their bottom line through new revenue streams.  Mobile applications have opened up these opportunities thanks to detailed reports that allow VRMs to show their mobile app usage analytics with local vendors and partners to drive sponsorship revenue.  Other alternative revenue sources include significantly increased concierge services, increased mobile bookings and re-bookings through mobile apps. These newfound revenue streams do not count the lower costs of running a business, which mobile apps also impact.  Staff productivity improvements with reduced support calls; automated check-ins and checkouts as well as maintenance andhousekeeping management all have seen cost reductions from the use of mobile apps.

 

Tell us about your mobile use in our unsponsored survey about mobile apps

Housekeeping Boot Camp Deadline January 19

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Housekeeping Boot Camp for Vacation Rentals

A recent study by Emprise showed cleanliness to be the number one concern for hospitality guests and customers.  The key findings of the firm’s study found that 97% of guests agreed that a clean establishment was the most important factor.

Vacation Rental Housekeeping Inspector

It is critical for vacation rental managers who provide housekeeping services to have trained, experienced managers who are consistently learning and improving performance.

Pro Resort Housekeeping is conducting a “Live-in” Seminar Feb 21-28, and the deadline is Jan 19 to sign up. This intense week of hands-on, vacation-rental-specific housekeeping management training will be held at Resort Vacation Properties of St. George Island, Florida.

The training is being led by industry expert Steve Craig, who has consulted with over 200 vacation rental, vacation ownership, and destination resorts throughout the US, Canada, the Caribbean and Mexico, published over 300 articles and newsletters, including the Vacation Rental Housekeeping Professionals (VRHP) newsletter where he served as founder and Director for the past 13 years, spoken at numerous industry conferences, and designed and overseen installation of 13 on-premise laundries across the country.

What makes this training so concentrated and tailored is the small class size with less than 10 housekeeping professionals attending.

The seminar has been referred to as Housekeeping Boot Camp and includes (but isn’t limited to) the following training topics:

  • Effective cleaning routines and how to teach them, including DVD training.
  • Proper inspection routines and how to teach them including DVD training.
  • Effective recruiting, motivating, and incentive pay plans.
  • Carpet care that keeps units looking nice through busy season. You will learn bonnet buffing, carpet repair, and many spotting techniques including how to dye carpets!
  • Team-building and management “games.”
  • The 10 fundamentals of vacation rental housekeeping
  • How to effectively recruit housekeepers and keep them coming back season after season.
  • And more (Linen controls, dealing with nasty owners, how to assess and rate units. Attendees will also be taught to create piece rates based on cleaning time.)

Ocean front housekeeping services

Previous attendees have called the “live-in” seminar the closest thing yet to a housekeeping college. “After the live-in seminar I was so filled with excitement and enthusiasm that I could hardy wait until I got back home to start utilizing what I had learned,” said Mark Fasth. “We sent another of our staff last year, and she came back so pumped up and excited and she has been able to perform her job better than either of us had ever hoped.”

Diania Whitehead of Ocean Resorts says “I learned more in one week than I had ever dreamed was possible.”

For more information about the conference, got to Pro Resort Housekeeping.

 

By Amy Hinote

Under the Hood: Kokopelli Property Management

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Kokopelli Property Management Focuses on Owners

A Look Under the Hood at Kokopelli Property Management

This is part 2 in the Under the Hood Series in which we interviewed executives from seven on-the-grow vacation rental management companies to discuss everything from growth strategies to company culture, technology and marketing to future predictions for the industry. 

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 3: A Look Under the Hood at Elliott Beach Rentals

 Part 4: A Look Under the Hood at Winter Park Lodging Company

 

Charles Goodman, CEO of Kokopelli Property Management, has been in the real estate business as an owner, investor, and property manager since 1976, when he acquired a 5-unit apartment complex in Albuquerque, NM. Operating out of a garage with only a handful of properties, he began managing more rentals and soon launched Residential Property Management in 1996.

Goodman recognized that, through economies of scale, the business of property management could be highly profitable. With the help of his wife and two sons, Goodman grew the company and re-branded it as Kokopelli Property Management. Today the company manages 600+ rentals.

 

Acquisition and Consolidation

Kokopelli entered the vacation rental space in 2003, when they acquired a company which had a small inventory of short-term rentals. By 2013 the company had acquired 11 other companies and currently manages 220 vacation rentals, along with 500 long-term rentals and 60 commercial spaces.

“When we acquire a company, we typically don’t absorb their employees,” says Ryan Goodman, CMO. “They are less likely to adhere to our standards and procedures. We absorb the work load, closely analyze performance, decide if we need to hire, and hire fresh. There have been a few exceptions when we have absorbed employees if they have some important relationships we feel strongly we would lose without their being on board.”

Looking ahead to acquisition trends, “Consolidation on the online side and listing side has happened. Consolidation on the service side is coming,” said Goodman. “I think what is coming next is the franchise model. By establishing a national brand, you would get all accounting, marketing, sales, best practices, increased purchasing power and branding power.”

We asked Goodman if Kokopelli was still looking to acquire more vacation rental management companies. He responded, “You can’t acquire something if the seller isn’t ready to sell. Many vacation rental managers are in it to retire and will consider selling at that point. However, it may be too late.”

 

Synergy Between Long-term and Short-term Rental Management

Kokopelli found there was substantial synergy between the processes involved in long and short term rental management. “On the vacation rental side, the ratio of employees to properties managed is about 1:10, while the ratio for long-term residential and commercial properties is closer to 1:100, and one commercial contract can produce ten times the gross revenue from a vacation rental,” said Goodman. “Most vacation rental management companies are highly engaged in real estate sales and short-term rentals. We found that it was more profitable to exit sales and focus on property management, both long-term and short-term. This strategy allowed for more synergy in our processes and services and resulted in an explosion of referrals from realtors, as we were no longer in competition with them.”

Goodman adds, “We created an assembly line approach in order to empower our employees and provide the best owner experience. That’s how we’ve managed to be so successful.” Now Ryan Goodman acts as CEO over vacation rentals, while his brother heads up commercial and long-term rentals.

 

Open Book Management

An in-depth look at Kokopelli Property ManagementJack Stack’s The Great Game of Business introduced business owners to the concept of Open-book Management as a tool in getting employees engaged in the success of your business by sharing financial and decision-making duties among all employees.

Goodman adopted this approach with his employees at Kokopelli. “We have decided to open our books to our employees. In giving them manageable, simplified job expectations, we have found if they aren’t looking at a budget or P&L, it is hard to expect them to make the best decision. They also know if they want to ask for a raise, they need to demonstrate how their contribution directly affects the bottom line.”

 

Bringing It In-house

We have an in-house housekeeping department and an in-house service/maintenance department.
“In Santa Fe, we call it the ‘land of mañana’ …or we’ll get to it tomorrow,” said Goodman. “Finding prompt, quality service was a challenge so in order to provide the kind of quality services we needed, we had to bring these services in-house.”

Goodman adds, “We initially ran these at a loss until we built them up. Now we help finance these departments with ancillary services, such as preventative maintenance inspections and freshen-up cleaning for realtors’ showings and open houses. We also market our housekeeping services to our long-term commercial and long-term renters and to VRBO’s. In the short-term rental industry, it doesn’t matter if you rent by owner or are professionally managed, you need housekeeping and maintenance, so we offer these services to VRBO’s, as well.”

“We have found different revenue streams to support the departments we needed to ensure the quality of our service,” said Goodman.

 

Technology Should Add to the Bottom Line

When looking at technology, Kokopelli is laser focused on their return on investment (ROI).

Goodman emphasizes, “We are careful to analyze ROI with the technology we utilize. Everything we spend eats into our margins. We have to ask, ‘What is it adding to our margins?’ For example, we funded our Glad to Have You App as a Santa Fe Tourism App and sold advertising on it. It’s now a profit center with 100 strategic partners in Santa Fe, NM.”

 

More Owners = More Profits

Kokopelli has a proactive view toward owner acquisition and owner retention. “We chose to grow by acquisition, but we still have to get creative with our marketing to owners,” said Goodman. “Our relationships with our owners dictate our profitability. Most vacation rental managers are competing for guests. We are competing for owners.”

“For example, we sent out a four piece direct mail campaign to 600 contacts in Angel Fire, NM,” said Goodman. “It cost us $2,000, and we got 15 contracts from it. At the end of 2013, when all rental proceeds from those contracts were calculated, we had a 3,000% return on that investment.”

He adds, “In our market, we don’t do a lot of targeting based on property type. We all know that a 5 bedroom house yields more revenue than a 2 bedroom condo, but not if the owner of the 5 bedroom house is calling every day and upsetting the system. We weed out in the sales cycle, not in the marketing campaign.”

Like Steve Milo, founder and Managing Director at Vacation Rental Pros Property Management (who also manages over 600 rentals), Ryan Goodman says their owners have his cell phone number, and he has implemented a proactive strategy in communicating with owners. “No matter how much we’ve grown, we have prioritized the relationship with the homeowner.”

Goodman generates an arrival report every week to see which owners are coming into town; he attempts to schedule face-to-face time with them. “Why try to chase them down when you can proactively get in front of them while they’re in town?” said Goodman. “I have a big face with a big smile and that doesn’t come through in an email or on the phone. I want them to know they are taken care of.”

Many property managers struggle with owners attempting to market their own properties. Kokopelli chooses to work with owners who want to self-market. “I am not a property marketer, I am a property manager. If I have an owner who thinks he can do a better job marketing his property, I let him do it.”

 

Advice for Vacation Rental Managers

For vacation rental managers looking to sell their companies Goodman advises, “Get your books in order. Eliminate any expense which isn’t directly impacting your bottom line. You will need 12-18 months of good books. Make sure you don’t have an area within your company which is losing money.”

Goodman also recommends getting involved in organizations like the VRMA. “Pick two or three associations which offer education. Network and get involved. Participating can be expensive and time-consuming, so don’t pick too many, but the networking and education really helps you succeed.”

 

By Amy Hinote

Related Articles:

Part 1: A Look Under the Hood at Vacation Rental Pros

Part 3: A Look Under the Hood at Elliott Beach Rentals