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“Into the Future” Housekeeping Seminar -Fort Walton Beach, FL, Oct. 14

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Housekeeping Boot Camp for Vacation Rentals

On October 14, industry expert Steve Craig of Pro Resort Housekeeping is hosting an educational opportunity for vacation rental managers and vacation ownership resorts. The event will be in Fort Walton Beach, FL, and will include topics such as:

  • Legal issues related to property management
  • Proper handling of Blood Borne Pathogens
  • Legal cleaning subcontractor rulings
  • Overtime for piece rate housekeepers
  • Rules for housekeeper pay from the Department of Labor
  • The latest and best training tips from the industries leading trainers
  • Product and equipment demos, test result and tips
  • Making systems easier with standardization, especially where linens are an issue
  • Lost and found. Do you know what the laws are for your state?
  • The benefits of using two very simple TASK FORM documents
  • Get the latest tips for interviewing housekeepers

 

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.

HouseTrip founders quit amid restructuring and staff redundancies

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Housetrip focuses on Europe

A major restructuring and shift in strategy is expected to lead to a widespread axing of staff at vacation rental brand HouseTrip.

The company says in a statement issued this week that it is ”changing the organisation design to reflect the new strategy in order to deliver against those objectives.”

By Kevin May, Tnooz

This is primarily due to a new concentration on European properties, rather than trying to cover as many regions as possible, plus a focus on family-based rentals.

The statement adds:

“As part of that restructure we anticipate a number of role redundancies.”

Chief marketing officer Zaid Al-Qassab, who joined in January this year, declined to put a figure on the number of staff who are likely to be shown the door at the company, but Tnooz believes it to be in the region of 60 out of a total headcount of 180.

He did disclose that founders Arnaud Bertrand and Junjun Chen have decided to leave the business.

Bertrand was originally CEO but moved aside to the role of president in June this year, replaced by George Hadjigeorgiou who was previously chief operating officer for two years.

Chen was chief financial officer since the HouseTrip’s formation in January 2009.

Al-Qassab would not state if any other senior management would be leaving the business. The company has offices in the UK, Switzerland and Portugal.

The “restructuring” comes at the end of a two-year cycle which started with the company trousering $40 million in Series C funding from Accel Partners in October 2012.

The company had fairly recently turned its attention to TV advertising and in April 2014 took the deliberate step of axing private room rentals from its portfolio in a bid to set itself apart from the likes of Airbnb and others in the so-called sharing economy.

The 2012 investment round came less than a year after HouseTrip had secured a $17 million injection from Index Ventures and Balderton Capital.

The statement continues:

“We retain the full backing of our core investors and will continue to develop as a leading online holiday accommodation website with outstanding customer service.”

Al-Qassab says the company is expecting to book more than three million nights on the system during 2014 and will strive to position itself as a “secure, curated marketplace” for family-friendly rentals in Europe, namely its core markets of the UK, Italy, Spain, France and Germany.

By Kevin May, Tnooz

Tweaking your homeowner acquisition strategy: PMs give advice and lessons learned

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We’ll cut your commission rate in half!

$5,000 sign-up bonus!

$10,000 interior design credit!

20% payout to realtors for referrals!

 

It is contract renewal time for many vacation rental managers, and the flyers are flying. With the end of the summer season comes the fall frenzy to acquire new properties, and the competition is heating up. New players and new business models are sprouting in many destinations, all with the singular focus of increasing inventory.

What is the best strategy for adding inventory to a vacation rental program? Taking a cue from business development programs around the globe, there are five identifiable steps to creating a solid homeowner acquisition plan.

  • Analyze

  • Target

  • Create Messaging

  • Identify Marketing Channels

  • Evaluate

 

1. Analyze

With changing market conditions, professional property management companies are finding it beneficial to first analyze the performance of existing inventory before implementing a business development plan.

 

Finding the sweet spot

Over the last few years, the vacation rental industry has seen significant changes in marketing costs, guest behavior, competitive pricing and rent-by-owner models. Inventory which once was profitable may now be a liability.

For many property managers, the counter-intuitive solution they discover through comprehensive analysis is to decrease inventory rather than add properties.

“Sometimes adding properties provides diminishing returns,” said Trisha Howarth, Hospitality Sales and Marketing Director at Bald Head Island Limited in North Carolina. “We performed a profitability analysis on our inventory and were able to put in place a financial model to determine which homes were contributing to our bottom line and which were not.”

Bald Head Island Limited initially cut their inventory from 175 properties to 125, and achieved a notable improvement to the bottom line. Consequently, the company fine-tuned their algorithm and continued to weed out under-performing homes.

“By reducing our inventory, we have been able to dramatically improve our profitability,” said Howarth.

 

2. Target

After performing a thorough analysis of inventory performance, vacation rental managers are able to articulate the types of properties which are profitable for their company and their unique selling proposition.

“Now, we know exactly what we are looking for in a home and what projections work for our model, so we are not tempted to take on just anything,” said Howarth. “Our team is in agreement, and we are now able to target by home. We actually personally go look at the property before targeting it for acquisition.”

Jason Sprenkle, CEO at 360 Blue in Destin, Florida, agreed. “We primarily focus on individual properties,” said Sprenkle. “We utilize the real estate database in our market and keep an eye on specific real estate transactions and new construction.”

For new companies, those with out-of-the box models, and companies with a diverse audience, targeting a wide range of properties has been a more advantageous strategy.

“In our market, we don’t do a lot of targeting based on property type,” said Ryan Goodman, CMO at Kokopelli Property Management in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “We all know that a five bedroom house yields more revenue than a two bedroom condo, but not if the owner of the five bedroom house is calling every day and upsetting the system. We weed out in the sales cycle, not in the marketing campaign.”

Each vacation rental management company has an individual optimal target market. Identifying and characterizing that market leads to more focus, less time and less expense in the acquisition process.

 

3. Create Messaging

Successful marketing begins with a clear message, and homeowner marketing is no different. After analyzing inventory performance and isolating a target market, vacation rental managers are able to craft messaging based on vital components of their unique selling proposition, such as profitability, occupancy, service, relationships, likeability, fee-structure and commission rates.

“What separates us from other companies in our area is that our bookings are so much stronger and occupancy is higher,” said Steve Milo, Founder and Managing Director at Vacation Rental Pros Property Management based in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, who creates messaging communicating their success.

For other companies, the service and relationship is the primary focus in communications.

“For us it is all about the relationship,” said Sprenkle. “In our market, the owner has to like you and trust you before they hand over the keys to their multi-million dollar home. We focus heavily on personal touch, ethics, integrity and trust. When you are new in the industry, you better have the best deal. After you have your feet underneath you, you should be providing the best service.”

“The question homeowners are asking is what makes you different,” said Jodi Refosco, owner of Taylor-Made Deep Creek Vacations in Maryland. “Whether it is higher occupancy, better service or more personalized relationships -or a combination of factors -messaging should communicate what makes your company unique.”

 

4. Identify Marketing Channels

Property managers are utilizing multiple channels to reach prospective owners, including direct mail, email, pay per click, realtor referral programs, social media, in-person marketing, and events. Some referral programs are offering realtors up to 25 percent of the first year’s commission on signed contracts.

“We sent out a four piece direct mail campaign to 600 contacts in Angel Fire, NM,” said Kokpelli’s Ryan 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 percent return on that investment.”

From direct mail to email, from glossy brochures to personalized letters, marketing to homeowners has gotten to be big business in competitive locations.

“We saw one of our competitor’s brochures which looked like it could have been from GE,” said Sprenkle. “We skip all of the glossy stuff. For us, it is not about coming in with a classier presentation. It’s about being down to earth and straight-forward, building trust, and communicating a clear set of expectations that owners believe we can deliver.”

Elliott Beach Rentals in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina decided to invest in brick and mortar locations in their target areas. “Guests and owners have an increased comfort level and familiarity when they see and feel a physical presence,” said CEO Rick Elliott. “We staff these offices with Owner Service Professionals, who serve as the point of contact for homeowners in the area.”

 

Owner service as a marketing tactic

For established vacation rental managers, owner referrals are the number one source of owner acquisition, and 360 Blue decided to capitalize on that feature as a key focus in their business development strategy.

“Nickel and diming owners over a maintenance fee while you are paying a realtor thousands of dollars in a referral program doesn’t make sense in our business,” said Sprenkle. “We have found that investing in making homeowners happy is a better use of marketing dollars than paying off referrers.”

Bald Head’s Howarth agreed. “Our CEO Chad Paul tells us, ‘Do your job, do it well, and make the most money we can for our owners,’” said Howarth. “It has paid off for us. In fact, many owners who left have come back to the program.”

 

5. Evaluate

“However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results,” Winston Churchill

Marketing should not be set in motion and left alone, but constantly reviewed, evaluated and adjusted to meet company objectives. While it is beneficial to calculate an overall measurement, a more specific breakdown by each marketing channel provides critical insight into which campaigns worked and which fell short.

CRM tools are especially useful in measuring tactical effectiveness. Both 360 Blue and Vacation Rental Pros utilize CRM tools to manage owner marketing efforts, allowing their team to track activity and communications with prospective homeowners.

Evaluating the performance of the owner acquisition plan helps to measure the short term success and provide intelligence for a long term growth strategy.

While each owner marketing plan will be tailored to the individual objectives of the vacation rental management company, through reflective analysis, laser-focused targeting, compelling messaging, ROI-based marketing channels and careful evaluation, property managers are able to execute a specialized owner acquisition plan which leads to lasting results.

“We’ve learned that our marketing to new homeowners should reflect who we are as a company,” said Refosco.  “Being authentic and communicating what makes us unique is the only sustainable way to create an inventory growth plan that yields long term results.”

 

By Amy Hinote

 

Kaba and BeHome247 partner to integrate keyless locks and smart home control

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Kaba and BeHome247 announced a collaboration that offers an integrated home management solution for property managers active in the vacation rental market.

For more than 10 years, Kaba Oracode keyless door locks have facilitated the remote management of access to vacation rental properties that issues time-sensitive codes for guests, staff and vendors, and eliminates the need to distribute keys or keycards with technology that also addresses common challenges facing property managers–security while dealing with guests, housekeepers and service personnel, owner and guest satisfaction, and the need to keep expenses in check.

BeHome247’s  Enterprise Property Control ™ is the Preferred Home Automation & Energy Control System of HomeAway Software. Enterprise Property Control provides customers the ability to monitor and control their portfolio of properties with a solution that ensures secure access and optimizes energy efficiency. BeHome247 empowers property managers, owners and guests to control door locks, thermostats, pool systems, and many other compatible sensors – all from a tablet, smartphone or PC/Mac.

“Partnering with BeHome247 is a natural extension for Kaba to provide best-in-class service to our growing base of vacation rental customers,” said Stephen Pollack, vice president of marketing for Kaba. “To be able to include the Oracode application on the BeHome247 dashboard and mobile application is a major step forward in the convenience of generating and managing lock user codes.”

“When discussing the potential for this collaboration, it was apparent that BeHome247 and Kaba shared the same vision with respect to the property management community,” said Michael Walther, CEO of Behome247. “As the premier commercial grade lock available, Kaba provides access to guests in a secure and convenient manner, while BeHome247 alerts the owner when conditions within the property have changed. Now, managing these activities is accomplished from a single, integrated solution.”

HomeAway/Expedia partnership moves to next level

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The long-awaited Expedia partnership with HomeAway, which had its beginnings in a beta in February, went live today, with HomeAway property managers and owners who use the commission-based pay per booking model opting into the distribution relationship.

By Dennis Schaal, Skift

However, there is no distinct vacation rental tab on the Expedia.com homepage. Instead, when Expedia.com users search for a stay of a week or so in duration for a particular destination, they will see vacation rental options listed.

And, under accommodation type in the left-side rail on hotel pages, customers can also filter their searches for “private vacation home,” and there are 67 such listings in Orlando, for example.

HomeAway Expedia Vacation Rental PartnershipThese listings of vacation rentals within the Expedia hotel search/tab is Expedia’s answer to providing more lodging options, but without undermining its all-important hotel business.

The HomeAway-Expedia partnership means 115,000 vacation rental listings are now displayed on the U.S. version of Expedia.com. They must pay a 10% commission and 3% in credit card processing fees for each booking.

Vacation rental owners and managers who pay subscription fees to HomeAway aren’t part of the Expedia tie-in yet, but HomeAway states it will make an announcement in the first half of 2015 about bring them on board.

There is a twist, though, to this new partnership relationship between Expedia and HomeAway.

In HomeAway’s announcement of the implementation of the new partnership with Expedia, the companies point out that “property managers and owners continue to have the opportunity to reach Expedia travelers by partnering directly with Expedia” — and thereby cutting out HomeAway.

“Doing so would be complementary to distribution via HomeAway, and would maximize bookings by listing across various Expedia Inc.-owned websites instead of only Expedia.com,” the implementation announcement states.

In other words, Expedia Inc. will benefit and learn lots about the vacation rental market from HomeAway, and HomeAway gets to expand its customers’ distribution, too, but Expedia plans on building its own direct vacation rental business, as well.

No one can predict how the partnership will work out, but it’s a often-done online travel agency strategy — and not just by Expedia — to partner and then build-your-own in the future. Still, Expedia would have a great distance to go to catch up with HomeAway’s one million paid listings stretching across 190 countries.

Asked about Expedia allegedly undermining HomeAway, HomeAway CEO Brian Sharples said:

“Though Expedia does have direct relationships with property management companies, they are not currently integrated into the for-rent-by-owner (FRBO) market, which is 60% of HomeAway’s inventory (as of Q2 2014). Currently, not all FRBOs can be distributed to Expedia.com because they are on HomeAway’s subscription model, but it is something we are working towards.

“The additional distribution for that segment of the market presents a meaningful opportunity for everyone — Expedia, HomeAway and its customers — and is a major reason why both companies are excited about the future of the partnership.”

The new Expedia-HomeAway distribution relationship is a big deal for HomeAway because the “cornerstone partnership,” as it is described, marks HomeAway’s launch of its so-called Expanded Distribution Network, which includes Expedia.com, but will be expanded to other “well-known travel brands,” HomeAway states.

HomeAway CEO Brian Sharples is on record as stating that HomeAway would like to establish partnerships similar to its Expedia relationship with other online travel agencies, tourism sites, and other websites.

HomeAway shared the announcement about the implementation of the Expedia.com partnership with the press, and was slated to publicize it today at the RezFest vacation rental conference in Nashville.

By Dennis Schaal, Skift

HomeAway kicks off 9th Annual RezFest in Nashville, TN

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Vacation rental managers are once again descending on Nashville’s Gaylord Opryland Resort for the HomeAway Software for Professionals (HASP) 2014 RezFest.

With 600 vacation rental managers preregistered for the event, HASP’s ninth annual user conference is already  proving to be the largest vacation rental conference of the year and is loaded with over 70 educational sessions for attendees utilizing five software platforms: Entech, Escapia, First Resort, PropertyPlus and V12.

“There is no better place than RezFest to educate and learn from our customers,” says HomeAway Software Vice President Bill Furlong. “Each attendee has the opportunity to provide feedback that can directly influence how we help better serve them and delight their guests.”

HomeAway Co-founder and CEO Brian Sharples will present the keynote address to open the conference on the morning of September 18 (In case you miss it, Sharples is also slated to deliver the keynote address at the VRMA Annual Conference in San Diego, October 26-29).

The HomeAway executive team and senior leadership will also be in attendance to discuss the company’s efforts on the software and distribution categories of the business and new trends and insights of the property manager role in the vacation rental industry.

To follow the conference, add @HomeAwaySoftPro on Twitter and watch the hashtag #RezFest2014.

 

Editor’s note: This conference is being hosted at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel. To read about Gaylord’s history with the software company and the vacation rental industry, download the whitepaper.

 

 

LiveRez Conference Wraps Up in Boise

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LiveRez Roundtable for Vacation Rentals

The inaugural 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference wrapped up in Boise, Idaho last week with new friends, new product announcements and a newfound sense of community among LiveRez users and team members.

The conference kicked off with a special keynote session by Priceline’s CMO Brett Keller addressing vacation rental managers about branding, increasing online conversion rates, and the direction of Villas.com.

Priceline Brett Keller talks vacation rentalsRead more about his session.

Keller’s keynote was followed by breakout sessions centered on accounting, new products, CRM training, data mining, and smart home control.

“There was a lot of excitement over the development of new technologies as well as the obvious care and commitment the LiveRez Team has for their customers (whom they love to refer to as ‘partners’),” said Lance Boyer, owner at Florida Dream Homes.

The LiveRez team hosted their “partners” for dinner Monday night at the top of the Zions Bank Building, the tallest building in downtown Boise, which also provided a gorgeous sunset as a backdrop for a moving presentation focused on the foundation of LiveRez and how each partner and team member had contributed to the fast growth of the company.

In a tear-jerking tribute to its partners, the LiveRez team surprised attendees with customized hand-crafted copper medallions with their company name, their company colors (pantone matched) and their partner number.

 

Here is the video LiveRez put together for its tribute.

 

“I’ve been to a lot of conferences over the years, but the one that Tracy Lotz and his Team at LiveRez put on in Boise was far and away the best conference I have ever attended; informative, well planned, filled with the right mix of education and networking and, most of all, imbued with a passion for our industry that was infectious,” said Boyer. “Everyone Karin and I spoke with at the conference was impressed with how well organized and educational it was.”

Sally Newton, founder at Shores Vacation Rentals in Michigan agreed. “I thought the LiveRez partner conference was perfect. Really!” said Newton. “The conference time with the other partners was inspiring and educational, and the workshops and the one-on-one with the LiveRez team were invaluable. It was a great time to focus on our business and Boise was beautiful. I would definitely attend again!”

 

The following day’s general session began with a double dose of Idaho with Boise Mayor Dave Bieter, followed by a warm welcome by Idaho Governor “Butch” Otter.

Idaho Governor talk to Vacation Rental Managers

 

Keynote speaker Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Fosbury addressed attendees with his experience introducing the “Fosbury Flop” at the 1968 Olympics, winning the gold medal, setting new U.S. and Olympic records, and establishing the new standard method of high jumping worldwide.

Fosbury explained that the formula for Olympic success is Passion + Vision + Action = Success, and he challenged vacation rental managers to think outside of the box and visualize success in their daily activities.

 

Boise Dick Fosbury talks to vacation rental managers

 

Vacation rental managers also learned about LiveRez’s new product road map, participated in roundtable discussions, tested new housekeeping and work order modules, and learned how to grow their business with CSA, VRP and PointCentral.

According to Jim Kitts, owner at Carolina Beach Realty, “I thought the conference was great and very informative.  The LiveRez partners were given FIRST CLASS treatment.  It was a pleasure to meet some of the partners from around the world as well as meet with the entire LiveRez team.  We were able to share some thoughts and ideas, and at the same time, we were able to see what LiveRez will be implementing in the near future.”

In addition, a leading focus of the conference was decreasing dependence on listing sites with two breakout sessions concentrated on alternatives and a general introducing iVacationRental.com, a LiveRez partner specific website focused on the distribution of professionally managed vacation rentals. CEO Tracy Lotz said, “There is a turf battle for the heart and soul of the vacation rental industry, and it is a battle we can win.”

The general portion of the conference wrapped up with a closing reception at the Reef in downtown Boise, and in true vacation rental fashion, ended with an 80’s dance party with local band Pilot Error,

For the next three days, partners spent one-on-one time with the LiveRez team for personalized training and education.

“There was a very high energy throughout the entire conference,” said Steve Zimmerman, founder and CEO at Beach House Logos. “Speakers, sessions and social gatherings were an A+. Hats off to the LiveRez team for a job well done. Looking forward to the future.”

 

LiveRez and iVacationRental

 

“As the very first LiveRez Partner’s conference was approaching my hope was that we would see a decent attendance and it would be a solid start to a recurring event we would all enjoy for years to come,” said Steve Trover, CEO at All Star Vacation Homes and CSO at LiveRez. “Having been part of the planning and execution of many industry events, I figured for this first one the attendance would be modest and many planning mistakes would surface that could be improved upon.”

Trover continued, “What happened next surprised us all. Attendance was fantastic and the conference was an absolute hit with every attendee I spoke to. I was amazed how well everyone was able to network due to being on a common platform and it became clear that this whole idea of ‘partnership’ between the company and its software users was real to all. It was an honor to be part of it and I can’t wait for next year. I believe that everyone that came felt the same way.”

“We came as people using the same software. We left as a community of partners ready to tackle what this challenging business presents us. Best vacation rental conference ever,” said Trover.

Florida Dream Homes’ Boyer added, “If the LiveRez conference in Boise last week is any indication, the future is very bright for the vacation rental home industry; particularly those who had the foresight to partner with LiveRez and take advantage of the software they are continually enhancing and improving.”

“I’m already looking forward to the next conference,” said Kitts.

Trulia CFO talks vacation rentals and long term rentals

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Trulia talks rentals

By Sean Aggarwal, Trulia CFO

In April, Airbnb raised a $475 million round of financing, which valued the company at an impressive $10 billion. Some might point to a frothy venture capital market, but it’s undeniable that Airbnb has disrupted the massive vacation rental market, which PhoCusWright valued at $23 billion in 2012.

And with the share of online sales in the space doubling from 12 percent in 2007 to 24 percent in 2012, the market is headed in the right direction for Airbnb and others.

Sean Aggarwal Trulia talks vacation rentalsThis got me thinking about a similar market, which I think is in a similar position as vacation rentals were just a few short years ago: apartment rentals. Not only do I think the market is ripe for disruption, I think that a comprehensive offering that addresses opportunities across the value chain will be the key to unlocking this market, much like we have seen in the vacation rental space.

Because it is relatively fragmented, understanding the rentals market can be challenging. But there is plenty of evidence of its scale and potential. For example, we know that in the U.S., there are currently 100 million renters, who move on average every 18 months.

Rental inventory is broken up into several segments, with large multi-tenant units at one end of the market, then a middle range of smaller, multi-unit buildings and ultimately a very large, fragmented long tail that is comparable to the makeup of the vacation rental market. With almost 80 percent of inventory centered in the long tail of the market, let’s focus there.

Clearly, we are seeing some telltale indicators of category formation in apartment rentals, highlighted by numerous new rounds of funding and a slew of venture-backed companies in the space, such as Zumper, ApartmentList, Urban Compass and others. The market is attracting the attention of the entrepreneurs and capital necessary to address the opportunity.

 

Here are a few different companies and business models that are currently in place.

One model that several companies are trying right now is based on charging consumers one time to create a secure account that takes the friction out of the application and credit-check process. For example, Lovely charges consumers a one-time fee of $20 per application.

RenterResume charges consumers a one-time application fee of $35 per applicant. It’s unclear how much traction this model has generated thus far. On the flip side, companies such as AppFolio generate revenue from landlords by automating the application-processing and tenant-screening function.

“One thing we know for sure is that there is no clear national leader right now. Nobody has cracked the code … especially on mobile.” -Sean Aggarwal, Trulia CFO

 

Another approach is providing a service to landlords that removes some of the uncertainty around getting their monthly rent payments on time. Cozy charges $9 per month per unit to the landlord for accepting the tenant’s online application and/or collecting monthly rent from the tenant. Zumper recently released a universal rental application and is making it easier for small landlords to upload and market listings.

Craigslist continues to be the dominant player, particularly for long-tail single-family rentals, for both landlords and prospective renters, but it has yet to establish a meaningful mobile presence. Though Craigslist has made some attempts at improving accuracy, fraud continues to be a major concern for consumers using Craigslist for finding an apartment.

 

A new landlord landscape

One thing we know for sure is that there is no clear national leader right now. Nobody has cracked the code as to where the future lies, especially on mobile, which is why there are opportunities for companies that can nail the right business model and build the right product.

That’s why I think there is more innovation ahead that will eventually lead to growth. As we have seen with companies that are successfully innovating right now in various industries (Airbnb, Uber), a consumer focus is essential. For example, Airbnb sent photographers to a number of properties on its site to help make the listings look great and more enticing for prospective guests.

You could argue that there is a similar problem today when you look at rentals with either lifeless stock photos, bad landlord photos or, even worse, no photos at all.

 

For investors

As an investor, you should be looking for companies that are thinking across the value chain and building services that deliver better experiences by addressing these types of challenges.

One approach would be a company that can take the pain out of scheduling times to see apartments as part of a mobile app, like you do with OpenTable today. They could also provide an automated and frictionless application-processing service, generate reports on prospective renters to help landlords screen tenants, and provide a seamless rent payment–processing platform.

The company that distinguishes itself in the sector will do it by combining these or a similar collection of rental services, bringing the pieces of the value chain together and creating a great experience for people on both sides of the transaction.

 

Mobile Emphasis at Trulia

At Trulia, we are building an integrated rentals offering. Today Trulia’s rentals business is led by a popular, purpose-built mobile app that is driving 100 percent year-over-year visitor growth.

The accelerating traffic rates are generating a rental lead every 1.5 seconds for landlords and property managers that post their properties on Trulia. Our goal is to build an offering that meets the needs of apartment hunters on one side of the market and property-management professionals and owners on the other side.

I encourage you, as an investor, to spend time digging deeper into the rentals market to explore what I view as a significant long-term opportunity.

 

By Sean Aggarwal, Trulia CFO and member of the CNBC Global CFO Council, courtesy of CNBC

FlipKey Partners with TruPlace to Offer Interactive Floor Plans for Listing Pages

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TruPlace Floor Plans on FlipKey

TruPlace, the leading provider of interactive floor plans in the vacation rental industry, is partnering with FlipKey, TripAdvisor’s vacation rental website, to offer floor plan tours for FlipKey’s vacation rental listings.

 

Floor Plans on FlipKey

With the combination of professional photography and detailed floor plans in one interactive technology platform, vacation rental managers who use TruPlace interactive floor plans instantly provide guests with a visual perspective of the vacation home. The floor plans improve listing quality and give travelers the information they need to make faster decisions about choosing a vacation rental.

 

TruPlace Floor Plans on FlipKey“We’ve been working hand in hand with FlipKey’s technology team to fully integrate the TruPlace Interactive Floor Plans into FlipKey’s listing pages,” said Bob Cusack, CEO at TruPlace. “Our customers have seen a significant increase in online conversions by adding floor plans to property pages, so we expect our partnership with FlipKey to enable vacation rentals to see more bookings and more revenue by adding interactive floor plans to their listings.”

 

A recent independent study by conducted by VRM Intel measured the impact of using TruPlace’s floor plan tours on reservations for vacation rentals and found that rental properties using interactive floor plans saw an 18% average increase in reservations and booked 22 days faster than properties without floor plans.

 

By Amy Hinote

Priceline.com CMO on Villas.com and Airbnb

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Villas-com vacation rental distibution

Priceline.com CMO Brett Keller described Villas.com as a marketing campaign for Booking.com in a session for vacation rental managers at the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference in Boise, ID where he discussed branding, increasing conversion rates and the direction of Villas.com.

“Booking.com’s goal is to be the world’s largest accommodations provider,” said Keller. “We are number one in Europe, and we have begun marketing initiatives in the U.S. to increase our presence here.”

According to Keller, Villas.com is a destination-driven, vacation rental specific marketing campaign for Booking.com and currently has 200,000 properties, mostly in Europe. “Villas.com brings all of the merchandising experience of Booking.com to the vacation rental industry,” said Keller.

In addition, Villas.com does not approach professionally managed rentals differently than owner managed rentals, but they must be instantly bookable. What property managers get by listing properties on Villa.com

  • Year-round global demand”
  • Content in 42 languages
  • No registration fees
  • 24/7 multi-lingual support
  • Currency conversion
  • Commission-based fee structure

 

On Acquisitions and Airbnb

“We are an acquirer of great companies that can help as achieve our objectives.” We asked how the HomeAway and Airbnb business models will fit into the greater OTA environment, and Keller said, “They seem to be fitting in very well.” “We’ve been watching Airbnb closely, and they have an exciting business model. They have had some regulatory issues, bu they seem to be navigating that very well. They have carved out a great niche, but it isn’t hurting our business.”

 

By Amy Hinote

Rental Guardian Responds to the Opt-In vs. Opt-Out Travel Insurance Debate

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Opt in or opt out Travel insurance vacation rentals

In the vacation rental management industry, there is a current debate centered on the decision to sell travel insurance online through an Opt-In or Opt-Out sales model.

For the past ten years, it has been considered a best practice for vacation rental managers to sell travel insurance online using pre-checked boxes which automatically adds travel insurance to the total. The consumer would then have to make an affirmative decision to “opt out” of the plan.

As a result of using an Opt-Out model instead of an Opt-In model, vacation rental managers were able to increase their travel insurance sales by 30 to 40 percent. However in recent months, the Opt-Out model for vacation rentals has come under fire as the result of changes in regulations for travel insurance sales in other sectors in the online travel industry, including airlines and online travel agencies (OTAs).

Rental Guardian, who specializes in providing insurance products for the vacation rental industry, has been following the shifts in the marketplace, testing alternative strategies and researching effects on online sales of travel insurance.

As a result, Rental Guardian is recommending utilizing an Opt-Choice model, rather than an Opt-Out or an Opt-In model.

An Opt-Choice selection requires the guest to make an affirmative selection to either accept or decline travel insurance before proceeding to the payment process.

As seen in the example below, Rental Guardian believes both travel insurance and a damage protection can be sold in a compelling way, giving guests the choice without cannibalizing insurance sales.

 

Opt choice travel insurance

 

“We believe the Opt-Choice model is preferable to both the affirmative selection model and the Opt-Out model,” said Sean Miller, Managing Director at Rental Guardian. “At Rental Guardian we have been measuring the results of using Opt-Choice in the travel industry and have found that Opt-Choice actually increases travel insurance sales while simultaneously protecting the consumer.”

Airlines were required by the Department of Transportation in 2012 to make the switch to an affirmative selection sales model, and after assessing the risks, OTAs such as Priceline.com have also implemented the required-choice option on their accommodations offerings.

“We believe this is where the industry is heading and are proactively taking steps to provide the best solution,” said Miller. “Our recommendation for vacation rental companies to move to an Opt-Choice model is based on examining the best way to protect our clients and their customers while increasing travel insurance sales.”

 

Priceline.com CMO talks vacation rentals

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Priceline Brett Keller talks vacation rentals

Today Priceline.com CMO Brett Keller addressed attendees at the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference in Boise, ID and talked about branding, increasing conversion rates, creating urgency and improving content.

 

Priceline Brett Keller talks vacation rentalsBranding

Pointing to Priceline’s William Shatner campaign, Keller emphasized the value of consistency and staying true to your values, and he laid out four lessons from Priceline for branding:

  • Stand for something
  • Deliver real value
  • Differentiate yourself
  • Be consistent everywhere (in collateral, imagery, on the website, in emails, etc)

 

Increasing Conversion Rates

“We spend a lot of time getting people to the website, but once they get to the website, the website takes over,” said Keller. “With hundreds of thousands of visitors a day, a small percentage improvement in conversion yields big returns.”

He gave attendees four things to remember in eCommerce:

  • The results are near real-time
  • Infinite testing is possible
  • Opinions don’t matter
  • Consumers vote with their clicks

Keller said at Priceline they spend considerable time and effort testing for better conversion. “With as quickly as the environment changes, sometimes aggressive testing is necessary just to maintain current conversion rates,” said Keller.

“If you can’t afford to test, copy,” said Keller

He explained that OTA’s are spending a ton of money testing and optimizing pages for conversion. By watching the changes they make on property listings and in the booking path, a VRM can take advantage of their conversion strategies without breaking the bank.

 

Creating Urgency

“Urgency equals any copy on your website which makes the customer feel like the opportunity is disappearing,” said Keller.

He pointed to several examples about how they create urgency their websites.

  • Add words to rating (e.g. Wonderful, Great, Very Good, Excellent, etc). “we found that adding one word next to the rating improved conversion,” said Keller.
  • Adding copy such as “32 people have booked this property in the last 48 hours” creates a deadline in the mind of consumers
  • Use the price slash (strike-through)
  • On the booking quote/rate display page, use copy such as “This property is likely to book in the next ___ hours.”

 

Photos and Content

He also reminded property managers that large, professional, high-quality photos are a key component in booking conversions, especially “large exterior photos, pools, and beautiful rooms.”

And the bigger the better. “Some photos are being loaded to extend the width of the desktop.”

Keller used examples from Airbnb, and pointed out that in vacation rentals customers are drawn to faces. He showed Airbnb’s listings with the owners’ faces and recommended using this tactic on property pages.

Keller gave the following tips for optimizing property pages for the customer:

  • Content really matters
  • Great photos sell
  • Highlight brand strength
  • Partner with the best listing sites
  • Test creativity across channels

 

By Amy Hinote

UNO Releases Vacation Rental Findings in New Orleans

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New Orleans vacation rental map

The University of New Orleans and the Alliance for Neighborhood Prosperity have released findings in a survey that looks at the economic impact of the private home rental market in New Orleans.

The report showed that in 2013 approximately 100,000 visitors stayed in private home rentals in New Orleans generating a total economic impact of $174.8 million. The full study is available here.

The survey also showed that these visitors generated an estimated total of $10.8 million in tax revenue for state and local governments, with $6.1 million going to the State of Louisiana and $4.7 million going to local governments in the New Orleans area.

The majority of visitors who chose to rent a private home came to New Orleans in April (18.5 percent), February (13.5 percent) and October (12.3 percent).

Visitor spending also resulted in the creation or support of about 2,200 full and part-time jobs, which according to the report would result in $56.1 million in additional earnings for local residents.

The Alliance for Neighborhood Prosperity formed in February amid renewed discussions among business owners, residents, and city officials over how to regulate the growing number of short-term vacation rentals in the city. The organization commissioned the study with UNO’s Hospitality Research Center earlier this year.

By Maria Clark

Hawaii Economic Impact Study to be Released: 26,500 Vacation Rentals in Hawaii

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Hawaii Beach House Balcomy

Hawaii has about four times as many vacation rentals for travelers than the state’s tourism agency previously believed.

A new study indicates there are about 26,500 houses and condominiums being rented on a short-term basis around the state, Hawaii Tourism Authority Vice President David Uchiyama said. That compares with about 6,900 the agency was aware of previously.

The figures come from a new agency study. The tourism authority is still finalizing the numbers and isn’t ready to release the report to the public, but Uchiyama shared the figures at a conference for industry professionals in Honolulu on Thursday.

Uchiyama said there’s a lot of growth happening in the area and it’s something of which the tourism industry needs to be aware.

By county, the new data show there were 4,478 units on Oahu last year compared with 555 known previously. For Maui County, the new figure is 11,166 compared with 3,342 before.

Joseph Toy, CEO of Hospitality Advisors, said vacation rental, bed-and-breakfast and time-share accommodations have been growing rapidly over the past 10 years. Many visitors have come to Hawaii repeatedly and find they don’t want to stay in hotels as they become familiar with the islands, he said. People are also looking for more unique experiences.

“There’s a sense of wanting to get more into the community,” Toy said after a panel discussion at the conference on alternative accommodations.

The difficult issue for Hawaii, particularly on Oahu, is that most vacation rental and bed-and-breakfast establishments are illegal. Oahu hasn’t issued permits for these short-term accommodations since 1989.

Maui County has a permitting process that has allowed more to operate legally.

But Teena Rasmussen, Maui County’s director of economic development, said they’re still an issue because there’s not enough housing for people who live and work in the county. Vacation rentals are creating an even bigger housing shortage, she told panelists at the tourism conference.

“It’s a big problem. We want that and we want that experience for our visitors, but it is competing with housing for our residents. How do you find that balance?” she said.

Matt Curtis, director of government relations at Homeaway.com, a website with vacation-rental listings, said more people around the world have been making their properties available to travelers but the supply isn’t keeping up with demand.

Curtis described what he was looking for when he reserved a vacation rental on Oahu’s North Shore: He wanted to stay on a fairly isolated beach, walk out in the morning and watch the sunrise while drinking coffee.

“I did that Tuesday morning. It was the most beautiful sunrise I’d ever seen. I’ve got great pictures if anyone wants to see it. And it was absolutely extraordinary,” he said.

STRAC parent Travel Tech talks ancillary fees with DOT

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Professionally managed vacation rentals

Note: HomeAway, Airbnb and Flipkey recently joined Travel Tech and put the Short Term Rental Advocacy Center under the Travel Tech umbrella. The following article is relevant to the vacation rental industry as the DOT makes a precedent-setting decision on ancillary fess in online transactions.

 

Washington, D.C. – The Travel Technology Association, the trade association for innovators in travel distribution, joined a group of consumer and industry stakeholders today in leading a press briefing on the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) on airline passenger protection and ancillary fees. The coalition of travel stakeholders, including consumer, travel agent, corporate and managed travel, and online travel distribution groups were all aligned in urging the DOT to act swiftly to require airlines to make ancillary fees transactable wherever consumers purchase airfare.

LISTEN TO THE BRIEFING HERE

 

Excerpts from today’s call

“In a very literal sense our members make up the travel marketplace – we make travel happen. Not only helping millions around the globe search, compare, and book travel options, but as we see with our GDSs members actually serving as the backbone of travel — powering direct distribution for many of the airlines, providing the IT infrastructure for hotel partners, and offering the technology and data that allows OTAs and brick and mortar travel agents to do their work.”

“The ideas we’re discussing today, of transparency and transactability, are in the very DNA of Travel Tech.”

“With more than 50% of the airfares sold in the United States going through travel intermediaries, consumers rely heavily on our members to provide them with the ability to comparison-shop the ever expanding array of travel options.”

“Consumers have the fundamental right to know the upfront cost of their entire trip, and not be surprised at the airport with extra fees from the airlines. In the final analysis, we think it’s imperative and frankly way overdue that DOT takes action in this regard. It’s time for the DOT to require airlines to make ancillary services available to consumers when they purchase a ticket.”

“It’s imperative and frankly way overdue that the DOT takes action in this regard. It’s time. It’s time for the DOT to require airlines to make ancillary services available to consumers when they purchase a ticket.”

– Philip J. Minardi, Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Travel Tech

Vacasa makes Inc.’s 10 Fastest Private Growing Companies in the U.S. List

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Vacasa vacation rental team makes Inc Top 10 fastest growing companies

Portland-based Vacasa landed in the No. 9 spot in the U.S., in the coveted 2014 Inc. Magazine 10 Fastest Growing Private Companies in America.

These companies from the 2014 Inc. 5000 competed against one another in what Inc. says is the annual list’s most competitive year yet. The list only looks at American businesses, and to make the top 500 companies had to meet the minimum of 918.59% in three-year revenue growth.

Vacasa was founded in 2009 and currently has a network of over 1,100 properties and 264 employees in the Western U.S. According to Inc., Vacasa has a growth rate of 16,192% and annual revenue of $23.9 million.

CEO Eric Breon and COO Cliff Johnson co-founded Vacasa in 2009 to connect vacationers with homeowners who want to rent out their homes. And rather than rely on homeowners to set their own prices, the company lets its systems do the work. “Our software also runs a rate optimization system. We vary the rates up to four times a day for our homes; we treat the homes more like a commodity,” Johnson says.

In an interview with the Portland Business Journal, CEO Eric Breon said, “We manage vacation homes, and prior to the financial downturn, people were buying vacation homes as an investment, without plans to rent them. When the downturn hit, prices fell 40 percent. Combined with property taxes, maintenance, and more, homeowners were much more eager to explore renting their second home.”

“This timing helped us quickly become one of the largest vacation rental companies in the country, and we now have owners earning over $100,000 annually by renting their home for periods it previously sat empty.”

Vacasa was founded in Portland in 2009, and its North Portland headquarters is home to 42 employees. The company has been working to bring legal vacation rentals to the city of Portland itself. Portland City Council’s decision last month to legalize short-term rentals in a primary residence, subject to certain conditions, should help its business in its home city. The city will tax such rentals and the resident will require a permit and will have to meet safety standards.

 

HomeAway invests in HotSpot Tax to encourage vacation rental tax compliance

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AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 26, 2014 –HomeAway, Inc. announced an investment in HotSpot Tax, Inc., the only automated, web-based tax filing solution for state and local short-term rental taxes in the world. The investment reinforces HomeAway’s commitment to helping owners successfully rent and operate their properties and enables HotSpot to expand upon its existing standalone tax compliance product to offer an integrated solution across many short-term rental platforms. Ultimately, both support the mission of making it simple and easy for short-term rental owners to comply with the laws within their local municipalities.

“Tax compliance is an important issue in our growing industry, and we believe most municipalities see it as the emblem of a level playing field among local lodging providers. Generally, if people are not compliant, it’s because it’s not easy to figure out and comply with local requirements, not because they’re avoiding taxes,” says Carl Shepherd, HomeAway® co-founder and chief strategy officer. “HotSpot makes it easy for owners to know they have properly remitted these highly specific taxes, which in turn increases local compliance and helps municipalities benefit from the vacation rental industry.”

Co-founded in 2002 in Denver by Rob and Kim Stephens, HotSpot offers a comprehensive tax compliance solution that manages all tax and license requirements for vacation rental owners and managers. HotSpot maintains an extensive database of tax rates throughout thousands of locations across 43 states. To date, HotSpot has filed 350,000 sales & occupancy tax returns and paid $80 million in taxes to state and local agencies. HotSpot charges its customers an average of $10 to $12 per month.

“We’ve been HomeAway’s exclusive tax compliance partner for many years,” says Rob Stephens, HotSpot co-founder and CEO. “HomeAway makes it easy for individual owners and property managers to rent their home to travelers and offset the cost of ownership. Our mission is to provide a simple solution to the complex and burdensome tax compliance issues faced by owners and managers, to help them operate their rental business legally. Complexity is the enemy, and both businesses help solve for that.”

The terms of the investment have not been disclosed.

LiveRez Adds Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Fosbury as a Keynote Speaker for the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference

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Dick Fosbury speaks to vacation rental managers

EAGLE, Id. –– LiveRez.com, the industry leader in cloud-based software for professional vacation rental managers, today announced Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Fosbury as a keynote speaker for the company’s inaugural partner conference Sept. 7-12 in Boise, ID.

Fosbury will join a stacked lineup of conference speakers, including Priceline Chief Marketing Officer Brett Keller, who was announced last week as a keynote speaker.

At the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, Fosbury forever changed the sport of high jumping by introducing the “Fosbury Flop.” Using this new, innovative technique, Fosbury won the gold medal, setting new US and Olympic records in the process. His technique soon became the standard method of high jumping worldwide.

 

Dick Fosbury speaks to vacation rental managersInnovation

“Dick Fosbury is a shining example of American innovation,” said LiveRez CEO Tracy Lotz. “I can’t think of a better person to talk to our partners about the value of finding innovative ways to take their businesses to new levels.”

The 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference will run Sept. 7-12 in Boise, ID, with Fosbury’s address taking place on Tuesday, Sept. 9. In just its first year, the conference is attracting LiveRez partners from across the United States and abroad – with some traveling from as far away as Australia.

 

In addition to Fosbury and Keller’s keynote speeches, the conference will feature a full docket of hands-on training classes and workshops, networking events, and a preview of LiveRez’s landmark project iVacationRental.com, the first major website that features only professionally managed and 100 percent real-time bookable properties.

To learn more about the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference, visit LiveRez.com/Conference.

 

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).

2014 Fall Conference Preview for Vacation Rental Managers

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Arthur Chapin, VP Expedia at vacation rental conference

The end of the summer means the beginning of conference season for the vacation rental industry and with a strong fall lineup, here is a preview of what’s coming up.

  • RealPage 2014 RealWorld
  • 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference
  • Streamline Summit
  • HomeAway 2014 RezFest
  • VRMA 2014 Annual Conference
  • VRHP 2014 Annual Conference

 

RealPage User Conference

Instamanager Matt Hoffman and Kigo Shawn ConveryFirst, RealPage (NASDAQ: RP) entered the vacation rental industry this year with their purchase of vacation rental software companies Bookt/Instamanager and Barcelona-based Kigo, which collectively represent over 1,000 vacation rental managers. RealPage held their user conference in Chicago last month with an impressive turnout and the launch of several new products and partnerships that we can expect to have available for vacation rentals next year. Currently, RealPage is working to consolidate the purchased systems and is still looking to build its software offerings in the vacation rental industry through future acquisitions of U.S. software companies.

 

2014 LiveRez Partner Conference, Sep. 7-12, Boise

Vacation rental software provider LiveRez is hosting its inaugural user conference September 7-12 in hometown Boise, ID. The conference will include hands-on training of the LiveRez software, workshops about vacation rental management and software best practices, broad networking opportunities, and entertainment options to enjoy in the conference after hours.

Brett KellerBesides the education and networking, there are two very cool things about this conference -their two selections for keynote speakers. First, Priceline CMO Brett Keller, who is regarded as one of the most respected marketing minds in the travel industry, will be speaking talking to guests about how to effectively brand and market vacation rentals online. In his 15 years with the Priceline Group, Keller has helped position the company as the global leader in online accommodation services. Among Keller’s other notable accomplishments, he was one of the driving forces behind the company’s famous Priceline Negotiator ads featuring spokesman William Shatner.

The second keynote speaker is Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Fosbury, who forever changed the sport of high jumping by introducing the “Fosbury Flop.” Using this new, innovative technique, Fosbury won the gold medal, setting new US and Olympic records in the process. His technique soon became the standard method of high jumping worldwide. Fosbury will be addressing attendees with his message of thinking outside the box and finding innovative ways to take their businesses to new levels.

 

Streamline Summit 2014, Sep. 7-11, Park City

Software newcomer Streamline is hosting their first user conference September 7 -11 in Park City, Utah.  With a mix of fun and education, the event consists of 5 days of hands-on training and education, along with round-table type networking.

CEO and Founder Carlos Corzo will be opening the conference, which has a large focus on new development. To prove it, Streamline will be soliciting development ideas from clients with the promise that two customer ideas will be selected to be added to the Streamline development calendar. “We value our clients/partners and we feel it is important to develop ideas that everyone can benefit from.”

 

HomeAway’s RezFest 2014, Sep. 17-19, Nashville

Arthur Chapin, VP Expedia at vacation rental conferenceDozens of vendors and hundreds of vacation rental managers are heading to Nashville this fall for HomeAway’s Annual RezFest. Designed for software users and prospects, RezFest also provides a full lineup of over 70 sessions of education and hands-on training, along with product announcements and networking. HomeAway CEO Brian Sharples will be delivering the first general session.

The second keynote will be given by Arthur Chapin, VP, Global Product at Expedia, who started at Expedia as an intern from WWU, Arthur has held a variety of technical, product and management roles at Expedia which have included: Operations, Engineering, Software Development, Data Warehouse, Architecture and most recently Global Product.

 

VRMA 2014 Annual Conference, Oct. 26-29, San Diego

In 2013, more than 900 vacation rental professionals attended the Annual Conference— and more than 90% of vacation rental managers said they were likely or extremely likely to recommend the event to a colleague. With more than 55 educational sessions, expanded networking time  and a Vendor Showcase, this is an industry event you can’t afford to miss.

Keynote speakers at the VRMA Annual Conference are John DiJulius, HomeAway’s Brian Sharples, and Eight by Eight’s Amy Africa.

John R. DiJulius III is considered the authority on world-class customer service and is the author of three books on customer experience. He is the president of The DiJulius Group, a customer service consulting firm that works with companies like Starbucks, Chick-fil-A, The Ritz-Carlton, Nestle, PwC, Lexus, and many more.

Brain Sharples’s keynote session is titled “Third Party Channels: Why they are the future,”and Amy Africa will be speaking about “Things You Simply Must Know About Your Brain and How It Buys.”

Also, check out the new Bootcamp Sessions:

 

VRHP 2014 Annual Conference, Nov 10-12, Charleston

VRHP Annual Conference CharlestonWho can say no to Charleston in early November, especially when it means learning how to improve the most critical function of a vacation rental business? At this year’s VRHP Annual Conference, Pro Resort Housekeeping CEO Steve Craig will be teaching the 12 Fundamentals of Housekeeping followed by sessions about housekeeping technology, personnel management, working with owners, maintenance, cross training for inspectors, revenue streams, and supplies. This is the go-to conference for companies who are serious about providing superior cleaning and maintenance.

 

By Amy Hinote

 

 

Teeming Vacation Rentals goes from 0 to 100 in first year in St. Petersburg/Clearwater

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(Clearwater Beach, FL) Teeming Vacation Rentals just celebrated its first year in business and already has more than 100 properties under management in the St. Pete/Clearwater area and has recently expanded to Panama City Beach and St. Augustine/Flagler Beaches.

To date, they have had over $2.6 million in bookings, over 40,000 guest inquiries, and have just signed a two-year deal leasing 22 units at The Palm at Treasure Island to Global Connections, a travel club supplier.

“We switched to St.PeteClearwaterVacationRentals.com and as a result have seen a significant investment return on our unit,” commented Peter O’Flynn, an owner and client of TeemingVR. “As overseas owners, we were keen to have an agent that would look after our unit in a way that would offer a complete service with as little hassle as possible. TeemingVR took us under their wing, refurbished our unit in record time, and brought in, even in low season, an impressive number of new clients. Their website offers constantly updated and a fully transparent view of bookings and cash flow from renters, and they set us up quickly on sites such as VRBO, etc. Nothing seems to be too much trouble for Jeff and his courtesy and efficiency is outstanding. Our bottom line reflects their efforts.”

TeemingVRJeff and Gina Paglialonga founded TeemingVR as condo owners and avid travelers themselves. TeemingVR’s motto as vacation rental managers is “By Owners for Owners.”

They knew first hand that there needed to be a better way to increase rental revenue, while also providing great service to owners and guests. Jeff’s background as the top salesman for one of the largest publicly traded insurance companies, combined with his experience having launched real estate and renovation companies and numerous marketing efforts, all came together in one package in the founding of TeemingVR.

The average annual number of inquiries for most online ads is around 350. Being a part of the TeemingVR network has given individual owners the exposure of over 40,000 inquiries since their start. The company’s approach to managing vacation properties was to drive more revenue to owners by tapping into the collective advertising power of their network and gaining a market-busting visibility that would attract an astronomical amount of potential guests.

The 5 Property Approach they implemented consists of Property Care, Account Services, Availability, Technology and Marketing.

Statistics show that guests are 22 times more likely to book if they get a response within 5 minutes of when they inquire. TeemingVR utilizes an automated response system to help achieve that aggressive response time. They also offer 24-hour online booking and owner access, advice in updates to your property, turnkey services and capitalizing on the massive exposure of their network marketing which includes all leads from major sites such as VRBO, FlipKey, HomeAway, etc. and their customized software.

“It has been so encouraging as we continue to hear from owners that we have brought something to the rental market which had been greatly needed,” commented Gina Paglialonga. “Often, we found that traditional vacation rental companies had not grown and changed as the market had developed. Our difference is that we understand today’s renters, how to reach them, and how to keep them happy from our initial contact with them until the time they return the keys. Having been owners of multiple condos ourselves, we understand things that concern property owners and operate from that perspective. We also know how busy owners are with their own day-to-day lives, and therefore our goal has always been to make renting their property as worry free as possible while maximizing rental income. Most property owners are not wanting their 2nd home to become a 2nd job!”

eBook: ResortQuest and Building a National Brand for Vacation Rentals

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ebook Building a National Brand in the Vacation Rental Industry

All predictors pointed to success in building a national brand for the fast growing vacation rental segment, so what happened at ResortQuest? And is the idea of building a national brand still achievable in the vacation rental industry?

This eBook provides an in-depth case study of the strategies utilized throughout ResortQuest’s history and examines what it takes to create a successful multi-destination brand for vacation rentals.

We are offering this case study free for a limited time.

ebook Building a National Brand in the Vacation Rental Industry

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Ebook: Building a National Brand in the Vacation Rental Industry

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ResortQuest The Rise, the fall and the lessons learned

All predictors pointed to success in building a national brand for the fast growing vacation rental segment, so why did ResortQuest fail? And is the idea of building a national brand still achievable in the vacation rental industry?

This eBook provides an in-depth look at the strategies utilized throughout ResortQuest’s history and examines what is takes to create a successful multi-destination brand for vacation rentals.

 

[formidable id=3]

 

eBook Summary 

ResortQuest International, Inc. was formed in 1998 through the acquisition of 13 companies, including 12 vacation rental management companies and one software company, representing approximately 10,000 vacation rental units and creating the first national brand in the U.S. vacation rental industry.

After going public in May of 1998, ResortQuest International grew quickly with 28 subsequent acquisitions adding approximately 10,000 vacation rental units between 1998 and 2001. The company’s inventory peaked in mid-2001 with over 20,000 reported units before hitting its decline. In 2002, with falling stock prices, management discord and the aftermath of 9/11, ResortQuest International began to lose revenue and investor confidence.

In 2003, ResortQuest (15,784 units) sold to Gaylord Entertainment on hopes of bringing new management, more customers and necessary resources to the company. Unfortunately, the challenges also proved to be insurmountable for Gaylord. In the end of 2004, Gaylord sold First Resort Software to Instant Software. By 2007, Gaylord split ResortQuest International in two and sold the Hawaii property management (4,500 units) to Interval Leisure Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: IILG) and the remaining ResortQuest Mainland to Leucadia National (NYSE: LUK) (9,300 units).

After Leucadia’s attempts to change management, attract and retain owners, and reduce expenses, ResortQuest was still operating at a loss. Leucadia found a buyer for ResortQuest Mainland in Wyndham Worldwide Corp. (NYSE: WYN).

In September 2010, Wyndham purchased ResortQuest Mainland, whose inventory had decreased to 6,000 units.   To further punctuate the decline of ResortQuest, Interval retired the ResortQuest name of the Hawaii properties and returned to the original Aston brand in 2009, and Wyndham began rebranding the ResortQuest trade name to the Wyndham Vacation Rentals brand in 2012.

All predictors pointed to success in building a national brand for the fast growing vacation rental segment, so why did ResortQuest fail? And is the idea of building a national brand still achievable in the vacation rental industry?

 

This eBook examines the history of ResortQuest in the following sections:

  • May 1998-December 1999 (David Sullivan, CEO)
  • December 1999-October 2002 (David Levine, CEO)
  • October 2002-August 2003, (Jim Olin, CEO)
  • August 2003-July 2007, Gaylord Entertainment
  • July 2007-September 2010, Leucadia
  • September 2010-present, Wyndham Worldwide
  • What went wrong?
  • Is a national brand achievable?

 

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Priceline.com Chief Marketing Officer Brett Keller to Give Keynote Speech at the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference

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The chief marketing officer for the world’s largest travel company set to speak at the vacation rental technology leader’s inaugural partner conference

 

EAGLE, Id. –– LiveRez.com, the industry leader in cloud-based software for professional vacation rental managers, today announced Priceline.com Chief Marketing Officer Brett Keller as its keynote speaker for the company’s inaugural partner conference Sept. 7-12 in Boise, ID.

 

Brett KellerKeller is regarded as one of the most respected marketing minds in the travel industry. In his 15 years with the Priceline Group, Keller has helped position the company as the global leader in online accommodation services. Just this year, Priceline was identified as the world’s largest travel company by online travel intelligence company Skift.

 

Among Keller’s other notable accomplishments, he was one of the driving forces behind the company’s famous Priceline Negotiator ads featuring spokesman William Shatner.

 

According to LiveRez CEO Tracy Lotz, Keller’s speech will focus on how LiveRez partners – professional managers using LiveRez’s software and services – can better brand and market their vacation rental homes.

 

“Brett Keller is the quintessential travel marketing guru,” said Lotz, a 20-year veteran of the vacation rental industry. “His vast insight into the online marketing of travel accommodations will be incredibly valuable to our professional property manager partners.”

 

The 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference will run Sept. 7-12 in Boise, ID, with Keller’s keynote address taking place on Monday, Sept. 8. In its first year, the conference has already garnered a lot of attention from LiveRez’s growing base of more than 800 professional property manager partners. Just last week, LiveRez had to relocate the conference just down the road to The Boise Centre due to increased attendance.

 

In addition to Keller’s keynote address, the conference will feature a full docket of hands-on training classes and workshops, networking events, and a preview of LiveRez’s landmark project iVacationRental.com, the first major website that features only professionally managed and 100 percent real-time bookable properties.

 

To learn more about the 2014 LiveRez Partner Conference, visit LiveRez.com/Conference.