Heads In Beds Show - A Guidebook Is MARKETING For Your Vacation Rentals: Here's Why
Episode Date: November 29, 2023In this episode Conrad and Paul dive into the guidebook: what purpose does it serve for your marketing? More than you might think... Enjoy!⭐️ Links & Show NotesPaul Manzey Conrad O'...ConnellConrad's Book: Mastering Vacation Rental MarketingTouchstay Guidebooks🔗 Connect With BuildUp BookingsWebsiteFacebook PageInstagramTwitter🚀 About BuildUp BookingsBuildUp Bookings is a team of creative, problem solvers made to drive you more traffic, direct bookings and results for your accommodations brand. Reach out to us for help on search, social and email marketing for your vacation rental brand.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Heads and Feds show where we teach you how to get more properties, earn
more revenue per property, and increase your occupancy.
I'm your co-host Conrad.
And I'm your co-host Paul.
Hey there Paul, how's it going today? Oh, fantastic day here. Just recovering from the holiday, first set of holidays here that we've come through.
It's been a good time. How are you, sir?
Yeah, pretty good. I was on vacation last week, hence the two-parter that we recorded a few weeks back.
We got back just before Thanksgiving, like literally the day before Thanksgiving, we arrived back.
So it was a Wednesday to Wednesday type vacation.
It seemed like those are low travel days. I was somewhat expecting a bit of chaos in the airport. But the
Wednesday because this was our assumption that we led to when we were getting on our plane Wednesday
in Charlotte to get back to Myrtle Beach. We're like, well, if you wanted to go somewhere for
Thanksgiving, you would have already traveled. So if you're traveling on Wednesday, it might be like,
oh, no, like I couldn't make it until this day. So there was just like a little bit less demand,
like very few people I feel would arrive the day before Thanksgiving on a plane because something
could have gone wrong so i was expecting
more chaos than i saw or maybe there's like less overall travel i'm not sure i feel like if you
wanted to be somewhere for thanksgiving and you were going to fly to do so you would have traveled
it monday or sunday or something like that so that was an interesting observation that i had i was
expecting more chaos than i actually experienced when i was in the airport for sure and is myrtle
does it have is it like a Thanksgiving? Do you do anything Thanksgiving
big celebration down there?
Or is it?
I feel like just the demographics
and psychographics of our area
would indicate that if you're like,
you didn't, if your parents live here,
you likely didn't grow up here.
So if it was like,
I'm going to return home for the holidays.
If anything, it might be
the parents leaving Myrtle Beach
to go visit their kids
back in the Northeast
or something like that.
I feel like that would be actually
a more common travel path. But my sisters come down here for
Thanksgiving before from New York down here and stuff like that. I don't know. It's an interesting
question. I haven't really thought about it before. But I suspect that if there was one bias,
it would be it wouldn't overwhelm it wouldn't overwhelm the airport like people coming into
Myrtle. But the I made that call when I was in Charlotte, which is a pretty big hub here.
And the Charlotte airport wasn't even that full relative to how full I've seen it before.
So that was interesting.
It was busy.
There was people there.
I don't think I've ever gone to the Charlotte airport and been like, oh, there's no one
here.
It's such a big hub.
But it was it was not as chaotic as I thought, which is always interesting when you're traveling,
looking at observations and trends and things like that.
We saw I saw the videos at MSP, which MSP is big and people getting out and people getting
out of the cold weather.
It's we're back to winter ish up here. It's 30 degrees. MSP, which MSP is big and people getting out and people getting out of the cold weather.
We're back to winter-ish up here.
It's 30 degrees.
So I think you had people at 4 a.m. in a two-hour line or a three-hour line or something that whole week.
But I didn't really hear about that many flights being delayed or canceled or anything like that.
So I think, fingers crossed, people got where they needed to go to.
And that's where we go.
Yeah.
I will say that the flight that I saw that was the most full or the most jam-packed I saw was people like coming from JFK, like New York City area, metro area to Aruba.
That's where we were.
Or then I saw a flight that was like Philly, first like Aruba back to Philly.
That one seemed full, completely full.
There was like standing people trying to get on the flight.
And then the same one back to JFK.
So if you were in the Northeast, Philly or New York City, you were like, please get
me to a beach, 90 degrees, perfect weather for a week before the holiday.
And that seemed to be, I always joke about this.
I have a client in Florida.
I think we talked about this before in the Palm Beach, like Jupiter area.
And you hear more New York accents there than you do outside of New York.
And that's how I felt in Aruba last week.
Lots of New York accents that you can hear from people.
That's for sure.
Always fun to experience that. Yeah. it's always fun to experience things you know what
else we can experience when we're being when we're hosting guests when we're working with our clients
they're hosting guests is a guidebook so i thought today we would talk about the guidebook process
paul's a touch into the weather his voice is 100 so i'll try to carry the load here i will try to
jordan flu game this although it's i guess that's not really the right analogy if it was jordan
flu game you'd be talking the whole time so we're trying to not jordan flu game poor paul manzi over
there who's having a cough and dealing with some stuff but i'll get i thought today we would talk
about the guidebook because actually i talked about this a little bit on art of hospitality
and scott was very surprised that i thought the guidebook was really important and he because
adam and scott we were talking about the book and we were doing some pieces about that and i said
yeah in the second chapter and third chapter we talk about blogging we talk about doing content
creation for seo and that's something that we discussed
with some level of detail. And then he was like, and then he but he thought that was like the first
thing. And I was like, hold on, it's actually not the first thing. I think there's two pieces of
content that you put out, even as a single property host, or even do this, even if you have
10 properties, and you're a small property manager first before you get to that blogging thing. And
it's actually a property description, which we've done an episode on property descriptions before.
You can go back in the archives
and look for that.
And we didn't talk about this too much before.
It's the guidebook.
The guidebook is what do you send your guest
and that sort of thing.
So I guess I'm curious your perspective
on the role of the guidebook.
Maybe if you just want to share a high level
and then I'll dive into the specifics
of the guidebook and the role
that I think it serves
and the hosting experience.
I think the guidebook is something that
it's unique to a vacation rental, a short-term rental of some kind, because at a hotel, you don't really need a guide.
You need a guidebook, but it's all standardized, I think.
You're in the same block.
You may have a few extra amenities here, but for the most part, everything's pretty standard.
And you can look at a fact sheet for a hotel and you're going to get the breakdown of what everything is. I think that's where on the rental side of things you do.
You have the ability to really allow your listing or property to stand out and not just explain everything about the property, but what you can do.
Give people that whole experience. And it is if you've got a funky appliance, kitchen appliance that you have to explain how to people how to use it.
Guidebook is a great way to do that, to set that experience off on the right foot.
So that's how I've always seen the guestbook provide value.
And it is something that I've been away from the guest side for a while, so I haven't seen as much of the guest book. I think owner guidebooks are also a resource that is worth considering. If you have, if you really want
to explain to people, I've seen some partners who are trying to undertake something like that
and really educate their owners the same way, but it is throwing it back to you. What do you think?
What's the key value in having a really solid guidebook? Well, it's interesting. You went in
a different direction than I,
when I think guidebook first, I always think like recommendations first and then property second,
but you're probably right. The appropriate questions that you have initially are generally more property first or local area information second. Maybe it's just because my brain works
in like content. And then I thought like I books content, therefore let's put content in the
guidebook. And the truth is both are necessary in some respect, but I think you're correct.
Comparing it to a hotel is an interesting thing to explore for a
minute. Because ultimately, inside of the hotel, like you said, not only is there just a sense of
I know what to expect in the hotel room itself, right? Yeah, it all looks the same, right? If you
were if I were to blindfold you and then drop you into a Hilton and then covered all the logos on
the stationery and things like that and drop you into a Hyatt, would you be able to tell the
difference? Probably not unless you're just like a road warrior and you travel in hotels
a lot of time. Ah, those purple sheets, I know what that is. But yeah, the vacation rental can
be very unique. That's one very important layer that we can pick apart here in a second. The other
piece is, and this is just a simple deductive example, but like in the hotel, you can walk
down to the front desk and say, Hey, I'm having trouble with this, or this isn't working how I
expect or Hey, what is the best pizza place that actually delivers here? We did that one last time we stayed in Boston, what's the best pizza place
that actually delivers here? They give us recommendations. So that's one angle that you
have in the hotel experience that you really don't have the same format of interaction in the vacation
rental experience for the most part, right? That host maybe will help you if you send them a
message or give them a call on some of those types of things. But the guidebook has to carry a lot
more weight, especially like you're saying, because you may even with our clients, if I were to stay in five different vacation rental properties,
I might encounter five different dishwashers, five different refrigerators, five different.
I remember the one we stayed in down in Florida, there was like, I was turning on the pool
heat accidentally because I was trying to turn on the light.
It was like, oh, the light and the pool heater on the same switch.
I was like, whoops, sorry about that.
I didn't realize that no one was in the pool and I was turning the pool heat.
That's not ideal.
I should have read the guidebook, but men read manuals nowadays.
So of course I didn't do that. But that those layers
of exploration of the property, and then like area information, I think are worth splitting
apart. And in my mind, yeah, the guidebook is a great opportunity to put the key necessary useful
information in there. And people can scroll through it. I guess I should disclose this
early right touch day is a client of ours. So we've worked with them for some time and the team
over there, they do a great job. But I'm very partial to their platform anyways, because I think the way that it's structured
and the way they organize the guidebook is just so logical.
And to your point, you were talking about homeowner pieces there too.
To my knowledge, I think this was the case before Heather Bayer sold her company.
I think she actually had an owner onboarding guidebook in Touch Day that she was using.
And she would send this to the owner and say, hey, here's the 10 steps from step one to
step 10 from you're now listing with us.
Great.
Step step step step 10, excuse me, is OK, we've got a guest in your property and you're
getting a check.
What are the things in between?
And they did that through the TouchState platform in a guidebook format because it can be a
little overwhelming.
Like what stage am I in?
What do I need to work on?
That sort of thing on the owner side.
So yet back to the guest piece really quickly.
Maybe this is where I'll bring it back to you when you've stayed and you've stayed in
vacation rentals as well. Or when you see clients doing this in your past, what do you think the thing is that they miss in that property education aspect? And what's something that they miss on the area information education aspect as well?
side of things. I think it is. It's some of the, I think it's just the essential things that they need, putting a door code in there, but being able, the ability to really customize that
experience, putting in the pool hours, putting in like those small details that again, are going to
affect the stay long-term. And that's something that is is everybody's going to be a little different there.
But I always felt like what comes out more on the back end of it is when someone gets into a review
and they say, I didn't know about this. If you can go through anybody's reviews, one, two, three star
reviews. I didn't know about this. I wasn't told about this. There's something to be said for the pictures weren't the same as this. There weren't this. Okay. We've all heard that complaint,
but the details that of knowing early check-in, knowing late check-in, knowing some of these,
some of those seemingly small details that are really important, that are really going to affect
the ultimate outcome of the stay.
I think that's where you can get into the most trouble, not having those in there.
And I think it's because we overlook them.
We just assume that, okay, if we put it on the website, if we put it here, if we put it on any of these other spots, people are just going to know and understand that.
Talking about the area, I think it's probably, I don't know.
I think it's probably, I don't know.
I think that tends to be more of a copy and paste or template type of thing where you put in just the information that everybody puts in. You're not giving someone a real personalized feel of, oh, I'm putting the same top five restaurants in that everybody else puts in.
What if those aren't really the top five restaurants?
What if those are not something like that?
At this point, it's not just a county or a county representation
or a city directory of what's in the area.
This is your representation.
And I think the ability to personalize that and say,
hey, I like this pizza place because it's got really good stuff,
crust pizza, it's got this and that, it's extra cheesy,
it's got all the toppings I like. You become the true, it is, it's a travel guide. You become the travel guide at
that point. And I think so many people get to rush to finish it as opposed to really customizing
that experience for the potential guest. And it is, people are going to, I think people are just
naturally going to take all of that into the experience of booking with you. And it is that people are going to, I think people are just naturally going to take all of
that into the experience of booking with you. And that guidebook becomes a part of something that
they can either applaud and praise when the stay is done or completely throw you under the bus with
because you didn't give enough information there. But what are your thoughts on what typically gets
missed there on the guestbook side of things? Yeah, I think it's so funny because this is
going to seem like an opposite recommendation from what I've said before. there on the guestbook side of things. Yeah, I think it's so funny, because this is going to seem like an opposite recommendation
from what I've said before. But on the website, you want the content to be so comprehensive to
rank well in Google, and you want to cover every nook and cranny. In the guidebook,
you want more curation and less comprehensiveness, right to do some alliteration there. So in the
guidebook, I don't maybe want 25 pizza restaurants, I want one of the two or three best pizza
restaurants right there. Catherine and I talked about this on the podcast episode that we did together at VRMA,
which was that she was like giving recommendations to guests, whether it be through phone or text
or messages or whatever. And it was like, yeah, this place is nice. It's close by to her property
that she has in Florida. And then she thought about it more and she listened to the keynote
of VRMA and she said, you know what? I'm not going to recommend this restaurant anymore.
It's overpriced. It's not really great, et cetera. It's close.
It's walkable or it's very close to the property.
But I'm going to tell people, I'm going to preface it by saying, hey, look, this is going
to be a drive.
You might have to get in the car.
It's going to be 20 minutes.
But if you go over here, this place is actually so much better.
So if you're not like needing to eat right now, like kids screaming in your ear, like
that sort of thing, get in the car, drive 20 minutes, go over here.
I think that's what the guest is after in the guidebook on the area recommendation stuff
is I might not have found this place if it wasn't for my host, Paul, or my property manager that
I worked with Paul, or whatever Paul's cool cabin rentals or whatever the case may be.
But I'm so glad that I listened to him because I found this place when I got there is mostly
locals and then I experienced this or I experienced that I think that is really what you're after for
the most part on the recommendation side of things. And I think it's okay to be more curated
and less comprehensive on that side. So yeah, sometimes I look at guidebooks back to the question of what's the
mistake or what's the thing that I see. And usually people actually take it too far sometimes,
or they misunderstand the assignment. They say, oh, well, touch day is this great feature where
I can click a button and import the Google places and the reviews and all that stuff.
And to be fair, it's a great, it's a well done feature. But the downside is I think that you
can stuff 20 things in there. And when there's 20 restaurant recommendations for a place that I might be three or four,
maybe five nights at the most, that's I'm not going to do all 20 no matter what.
I don't care how hungry I am.
I'm not going to go to 20 restaurants in four days.
So give me your top six or seven or maybe top three across four categories or something
like that to make it a little bit more palatable.
And I think that's probably the advice that I would give there is that at this point,
this is not really made for search engines or for optimization or for traffic purposes. This is that narrow thing that you're really giving people a recommendation
of there. So those are the things that I think make the most sense there. Back to the property
angle though. So there's like this, these two components of it. I think you nailed it with
Wi-Fi, door codes, all that kind of stuff, access, getting in the property, et cetera.
One thing that felt to, I felt this way at the recent stay that we did, not the one a month ago,
but the one that we did back a few
months back is that i feel like some people don't make any effort to make their properties more
simple for the average new guest coming in who's never stayed there before right and i forget who's
talked about this before i think it might have been tyan i just talked about this before with
like labeling light switches and things like that so when you walk in there's like a little label of
like dining room light overhead light like that kind of stuff so that's always one thing that i
find is like an evie an obvious low-h. It's like someone's going to walk in this
property every week for hopefully the next 10 years or something like that, who's never been
in it before, say for a few rebookings that you might get, and who doesn't know anything about
the property itself. And you have to get them up to speed, hopefully very quickly,
so they're not frustrated. And the technology can certainly be a component of that. I was reading a
Twitter thread the other day from someone saying, i put smart tvs in all my properties
but i make the guests use their login they have to log into their disney plus they have to log
into their netflix and stuff like that and that to me feels like kind of a negative thing i want to
walk in the property and not have to sit there and type on the little keyboard in the property
my long password and me with my one password passwords that i use are always like long and
complex i'm like i just want to log in and it just works.
And it always surprises me when people cheap out on like small things like that inside
of property.
So I think inside of a guidebook and inside of that guest experience, I think you want
to provide as much as possible.
And I think you want to simplify as much as possible too.
And be like aware of what the guest is coming in and what they're experiencing.
They might arrive, it might be dark, like having the lights on and putting some of that
information in the guidebook.
Hey, we have five smart TVs in the property.
This was the case for the property
we stayed at in Florida, by the way.
They were all the same brand, all the same everything.
And then each remote was labeled on the back, right?
It was like living room TV.
And then you flipped over the label on the one upstairs
and it was like upstairs TV.
And they were, so if you figured out one,
you figured out all of them very quickly.
It wasn't like one was a Vizio,
one was a Samsung and things like that.
So I think going back to the guidebook piece, your guidebook can be a lot simpler if you keep
it simpler on purpose, right? If you keep it simpler, I feel like intentionally you're going
to have a better outcome on the guidebook because you can be like all the TVs work in the same way,
like all the remotes are labeled, here's how they're labeled and stuff like that. So those
are some things to explore. Another thing I've seen is a lot of more clients who are working
with doing videos. It used to be that they thought that maybe it had to be like super high production value. And we've talked about this
on a video marketing episode that we did a while back. It doesn't have to be like the highest
quality on earth don't intentionally make something low quality just for the sake of
whatever. But even having an iPhone on a tripod pointing at something and explaining it in a five
second, you know, 25 second video can save someone a load of trouble. And then you can then send the
videos a response if someone were to have a question or those sorts of pieces. So those are just some different layers, I think,
to explore in the guidebook. But yeah, make it simpler, make it clearer. I think, especially
the bigger the property, the more you can do inside the guidebook, maybe you're incentivized
to like, oh, there's all this different stuff. But some people can figure things out on their own.
I think you want to stick to things that you get the most questions out. And maybe that's my
departing thought here on this, which would be that the guidebook in my mind would be a place
that you can refine a lot version one of the guidebook when the first
guest arrives should hopefully look very different than version 12 of the guidebook after you've
hosted 50 different people in that property and you found all the little problems and things that
people were having with it for sure. So here's the thing that I think that gets the most negative
connotation from those guidebooks is about house rules. We get to hear about Airbnb
house rules all over the place. How do you feel about house rules? How do you feel about the
craziness of some Airbnb house rules? Dive into that one a little bit here.
Yeah. So I think it's so funny because some of the best hosts are people that I see that have
great reviews and a lot of clients that we have that have great reviews, not just on their own
site, but on Airbnb. It seems like there's direct correlation between how many house rules they
impose on people and how good their reviews are. And I think Richard fatigue has posted his house
rules on Twitter before, but it's, um, we hope you had a great stay. Please lock the door when
you walk out, something like that, right? To that effect. That's the house rules. Now I get it
because it's one of those things where if you it's that's the Nordstrom employee handbook,
I think, which is use your best judgment in all situations at all times or something like that.
I love that idea, but then it's then someone inevitably does something very stupid. And then you have to deal with it. So the condo example, I can point
to on the guidebook is clients of condo buildings don't smoke on the balcony. That's like a common
one that I see when you smoke in the balcony, you think it's only impacting you, but it's not
because the smoke goes up, the smoke goes down, the smoke goes left, the smoke goes right. Other
people on the balcony, and then they're dealing with the same smoke that you're dealing with.
If it's tobacco, cigarette smoke smoke people aren't too bothered by
they don't like it but they can understand it when it's the green stuff when it's the devil's
lettuce so to speak people get very upset at that especially here in south carolina where it's not
actually legal and there's police called and there's all sorts of problems that can arise
from that so that's an example of one where it's you can't just say in the guidebook don't smoke
on the balcony you have to like my frame on it in the guidebook is that you have to give a reason.
Smoking in the balcony causes folks above you and below you who may have breathing issues
to ingest your smoke.
That's not fair.
Please go to the smoking area out in the parking lot over here where everyone's going to smoke,
right?
So I think that's, I think if you're going to have the house rule that if you have to
have it in there, in my mind, you have to wordsmith it a little bit and make it seem
a little bit more palatable than it might actually be, or at least explain why that is the case. But what I don't like, and this is,
I feel like something that I see in guidebooks, or I see these property descriptions is rules for
the sake of rules when things, these things just don't happen very often, or it's common sense.
I've always hated that part of the guidebook process where there's someone in there that's,
yeah, say this, say this, say quiet hours at this time, say all this stuff. And I'm like,
you could just do that, like sign in the property. That can be very subtle. That could just be a
little sheet when they check in. that could be on the fridge. I
don't like the idea of wasting guidebook real estate or property description real estate,
which is where I see this sometimes on stuff that's so obvious and so clear that you shouldn't
do it that way, that it's just a waste of like overall time and effort and energy. So my guidebook
rule section, if like I was my property, I would put as few in there as possible. And it really
would be more of the Nordstrom style please respect our home please respect the property other
guests will stay here after you we want to keep it in great shape for a lot of folks to enjoy
that's that encompasses 60 70 of don't damage this don't leave the don't leave don't spill
red wine on the sofa that kind of rules that you sometimes see in a guidebook and and then for the
rest i would explain every rule that i had to put in there for why i have that rule so it's not just no smoking in the balcony it's no smoking in the balcony because and
then explain in a friendly way why that's the case but maybe you've experienced this as well
in your career what's this is something i think the the painful ones that you see are when a guest
unfortunately gets on social media and says i have to do the dishes and i have to take out
the garbage i'm just doing all the work i would have done at home. Why did I even, first of all, you're going to a
different space. So it's not just like being at home. Yeah. Are these things that you wouldn't
have done necessarily? Like you weren't going to put garbage in the garbage can or you, there's
some common sense type of things that go a lot more viral than I think they should. Certainly.
that go a lot more viral than I think they should, certainly.
I don't know.
That's, I think you're hitting it on the head there with you want to be as minimal as possible.
And it is.
I mean, there's some common sense stuff.
If you got to do a little more,
if that means you have to do a little more guess betting
to ensure that you don't have to write rules
because someone's going to be crazy and wild,
then maybe that's a solution you have to look for
and looking for something like that. And solution you have to look for and looking
for something like that. But and there are solutions like that out there. You can bet you
do that deeper guest vetting and new stuff like that. It's I think when you see just what happens
when someone does take it too far, or as a guest perceives it is taking it too far. It just
always comes out to negatives, even if it's tongue in cheek and
you're joking, make sure your guests understand that. And they're like, it is, if you're in it,
there's some businesses out there that absolutely could be have fun with it and do that type of
stuff and make a crazy rule list knowing that, okay, it's not really a crazy rule list, but
you have to have a pretty good relationship. You better have a lot of returning guests. You better
have a lot of relationships already built up because if you're just a big company that's
going to, that has hundreds of rentals and you're putting in an exhaustive list of rules for all of
your, of house rules for all your individual properties, I think you're going to get some
negative blowback of some kind. Maybe not negative reviews, maybe not this, but someone's going to
look at that and say, this just seems a little ridiculous. I don't, at that point, I don't think all good
headlines are going to, all headlines are good headlines is going to apply in that area.
And there's, and some of that commentary that goes viral, Twitter being the place that I see
it most commonly, it's always the comments will say something to the effect of, I won't stay in
Airbnbs anymore, the term like that, because because of this because of this sort of potential expectation. But it's so funny. I want
this to be an interesting study to do. I wonder if there's a way to do it now. And now that Airbnb,
I think is more public about what is it now there's like a feature in Airbnb where it's like
what the host requires you to do. If we could scrape all that and look across 100 or 1000 of
the top listings in like a competitive market, pick a Destin, pick a San Diego, pick a Orlando,
Florida, pick a Myrtle Beach, etc. I think you would find that most of the top listings in like a competitive market, pick a Destin, pick a San Diego, pick a Orlando, Florida, pick a Myrtle Beach, etc. I think you would find that most of the top property
managers and hosts don't have what these exhaustive lists. One of the ones I see is very reasonable in
my mind is like garbage to the curb, something like that. And there's services out there that
help you with that as well. And then ones around like time based things. So if it is a tight turn,
you have to start the dishwasher before the cleaner gets there, because otherwise the
dishwasher won't be done. And it's like the new guest is going to come in at three o'clock, we don't start the dishwasher to
two o'clock, it's we're toast, that sort of thing. So those things in my mind seem ones that are
reasonable. And I feel like you can't get that upset about a tour list if it takes five minutes,
if it takes five minutes for you to put my dishes, you're being unreasonable by saying that's some
egregious thing that a hotel would make me do this. We hotel centralized. So like, the fact
that people try to compare these two things in this context, like if you just put two minutes into thinking about it, even if you weren't in our industry,
some a cleaner, like the one that we experienced when we were in Massachusetts visiting my
grandfather, she had to drive there from 35 minutes away, 40 minutes away, it's in the middle
of nowhere. Obviously, there's a little bit of a bigger chore list there. And I think it was
unreasonable. It was like piling sheets into a certain spot. It was things that I it took me
five minutes to do. So how can I sit there and say, this person is unreasonable by doing it that way? I think the best thing to do is keep the
property in good shape. That's why I think having these more simple rules is best because then if
you do have an issue, then sure, you can call it out and go towards it. But once you let that guest
into that house, in my mind, if you're the property manager or whether you're the owner of
that property, it's not really your property anymore. It is like you own it, but it's like
you have to bend the property towards what they want to do. So if they want to be a little bit messy on vacation, I don't know, I could live
with that. If I was a property manager or host, I'm like, you're gonna be a little messy. Now,
if someone's excessively messy, like I certainly wouldn't want to host them again. And if they're
like, almost going out of their way to be messy, I understand that. But in my mind, you have to
that's what the cleaning fee is for to deal with these sort of things reasonably. So the guidebook
is your chance to get back to the core topic there of messaging, to make sure they understand why the rules are the way they are. But ultimately, I would try to
make it as minimal and as friendly as possible from a language perspective. And I certainly
wouldn't have a list of no, don't do stop. I wouldn't want that because I think that just to
your point that just nothing about that feels hospitable. Nothing about that feels if you're
if you're staying with a friend who you didn't know that well, maybe like hung out a little bit
before, but you never stayed at his house before, or her house her house you may say you might pop in your shoes off and be like
oh yeah of course no problem but if you're like no shoes in the house like it just it comes out
across so much more poorly even though the net effect is the same ah you might pop in your shoes
no i don't mind at all it's such a different sort of like tone and i think that's where
the guidebook should do that because you're not there to police it so the only way that you're
going to get your point across is to try to be friendly and try to explain it otherwise you, you're just going to end up with, to your point, these viral threads of these people are very unreasonable.
And if they're unreasonable, not only is that not going to come back and stay again, not the given, but they're just not going to leave you a good review.
They just, it's putting a bad taste in your mouth.
It's giving them something better when hopefully you can get them something a little bit sweeter for sure.
Correct.
Awesome.
What else on guidebooks or did we cover the gamut there from property to area info to everything? All of a sudden, you've got a small flood in the house. But I think it is.
I think it's important to get in the minds of guests.
Like, use the feedback you get from guests.
And I think that's why doing surveys, doing all these things is going to help build a better guidebook.
So take that information.
Take the feedback you get.
Take the reviews you get. And actually read them.
Use chat.
Plug them into chat.
GPT.
Do something like that,
get an assessment. And again, lay that out, use the data you've got to put better information out
so that you're giving ultimately those guests a better experience. And if the guidebook isn't
giving guests a better experience, you're missing somewhere. So try to fix it and do something else,
I would say. Yeah, no doubt about it. There's a reason that it's early on in the book,
like I was talking about, we're at the top, which is that I think
this is your second piece of content, you do a property description, that's your first piece of
content. And then you do a guidebook, that's your second piece of content. And it's to your point,
though, there broadly that you shared earlier, it's not just the experience of here's a restaurant I
go to, it's the experience of the property. And I think the better you can do there, the more
professional you seem and appear, the better your reviews are. And ultimately, you can save yourself some headache as well.
So I like that to put a bow on it.
So that's all we got on guidebooks.
Again, Touchday is the one that I recommend a very biased there.
I know there's other platforms and companies out there that offer guidebooks.
Definitely check those out too.
Do your due diligence, do your research.
But the guys over there at Touchday are fantastic, do a great job.
A client, but not sponsoring this episode.
But let's say they're informally sponsoring an episode if they listen to this later on.
Just great product out there.
I know some PMS platforms have this kind of functionality
built in. What is sponsoring this episode in some respect was the book that we mentioned earlier.
So if you'd like, you can go on Amazon and pick up Mastering Vacational Marketing. While I was
on my vacation, Paul, I noticed that you can buy this in Aruba and it would cost $38 to ship it
from I'm assuming like Florida down to Aruba. So I don't think I'll ever sell a copy in Aruba.
We have sold in the US, we sold in the UK, we sold in Canada. I think i sold one in new zealand there was one in australia so this print on demand stuff
is amazing shout out to amazon like they get a lot of negative i guess like credit or whatever
but they let someone like me who's not going to sell hundreds of thousands of these copies
he's going to sell them to people to listen to the show that's going to that are vacation managers
that are going to get some value out of the book i'm selling her for 15 bucks you really can't
beat it they ship it to you straight to your door you get it you're going to learn a lot from it and we talk about guidebooks in the lightweight section which is early on the book. I'm selling it for 15 bucks. You really can't beat it. They ship it to you straight to your door. You get it. You're going to learn a lot from it. And we talk about guidebooks in
the lightweight section, which is early on in the book. So if you haven't yet picked that up,
we would certainly appreciate that. If you made it this far in the episode, 30 minutes in,
hopefully you appreciate what we're talking about here on the guidebook side, and you can leave the
show a review as well. So two review requests from you. Hopefully it's not too painful. Not
a long checkout list, so to speak. If we were giving you a task list, just two things on it,
find the book, leave a review, listen to the podcast, leave a review. We'll catch you in the
next episode of the Heads and Beds show. Thank you so much. We'll catch you next time.