Heads In Beds Show - Predictions For Where The Book Direct Movement Is Going (With Mark Simpson)
Episode Date: October 7, 2024Welcome to our first-ever guest BONUS episode! We're joined by Boostly CEO Mark Simpson from his home in the UK to talk all things "Book Direct" movement: where it's going, what's working wel...l, what we need to leave behind and a lot more. A special thanks to Mark for reaching out and joining us.Enjoy!⭐️ Links & Show NotesPaul Manzey Conrad O'ConnellConrad's Book: Mastering Vacation Rental MarketingConrad's Course: Mastering Vacation Rental Marketing 101Mark SimpsonBoostly🔗 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.
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Welcome to the Heads in Bed 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.
All right, Paul, good morning.
How's it going?
Well, you know, it's a little more full room
we're talking with today,
but I'm excited about today's discussion.
I'm riding the high from yesterday's football,
American football here, but it's a good time for me.
So how are you doing, sir?
I can't think of a worse topic to start with
than who happened to play the American football.
Right, exactly.
I think we're contractually obligated to do it.
So I will say you're very happy.
I'm almost happy, which is kind of like the definition of a sports fan.
And I think that's a universal human experience.
If your team is not very good and then they almost win,
that's like so frustrating, like they could have won, but they didn't win.
And then when your team is supposed to be mediocre, shall I say, Paul,
but then they end up eating, it's very good.
That's cool. Like, that's a fun experience for the listeners.
If you want to go Google,
this will be come out many weeks later at this point,
but you'll see that the Patriots lost the Seahawks.
And then you'll see, unfortunately in overtime,
and then you'll see the Paul's lovely Minnesota Vikings
took down the mighty vaunted 49ers,
which is a bit unexpected.
So I'll get stuff there.
Well, we couldn't have predicted that.
And we also couldn't have predicted two things
that are going to happen today,
which is that we have a predictions episode coming your way with a few thoughts and ideas.
And this was Mark's idea.
He pitched it to us.
So we'd never had a guest on the podcast before, Mark.
So welcome.
I think I've been on your podcast.
So it's fun to reciprocate as you are first ever guest, 107 episodes in.
So how's it going?
What's going on?
What's going on in your world today?
Thank you.
Thank you very much for having me.
I'm a big fan.
So it's been a pleasure to be on here.
And I come in from the over angle.
So I've got, I support a soccer team. That's very good.
That was playing the underdog and we lost at the weekend. So it was unexpected,
but they, it was a flip of this is that I took, uh,
two of my boys to their first ever game at Anfield and it was the
most perfect day. The weather was amazing. So it was nice and sunny.
Didn't have to walk to the ground in the rain and have the boys complain. And everything went
absolutely perfect that day apart from the result. And I was talking to my nine-year-old
the next morning and I said, listen, what would you rather? Would you rather have it
being the most perfect day, but the result we lost? Or would you rather have had it where
it was raining, our tickets didn't work to get in, you know, we missed our takeaway pizza later on, but Liverpool won.
And he was like, yeah, no, you're right.
We'll have it the other way.
So yeah, it was a mix of emotions,
but now really happy to be on here.
Thanks for having me.
And yeah, excited to dig into this topic.
Yeah, I'm with you, Mark. There's something to that.
I think you can have a great time
and go to a sporting event, even if your team loses,
if a lot of other stuff goes right. It's hard for me to have a bad time, for example, at Red Sox game, which is what I did when I was a kid, because I have such fond nostalgic memories of going to those games with my with my dad. So even if they lose, like it's still fun just to be there at the park, like there's lots of things that entertain you even if the game isn't very good. But now the games are a lot faster total sidebar. So you kind of have to pay attention more than you used to in the past. Again, things we pay attention to on this show is prediction.
So that was again kind of Mark's idea here.
We'll beat this one up a little bit.
Where's the book Direct Movement going?
Paul and I really thought about this one.
We put together a bit of an outline and some different predictions and ideas.
So let's dive into it.
Paul, do you want to take the first one and kind of where do you think this is?
What's the direction that we're heading in?
That's something we talk about a lot,
but I don't think we've ever done anything exactly on this on this topic before.
Yeah. I mean, I think it's something that I think we should
hope that it benefits us if it is going to grow. And I think,
you know, our first prediction is it will grow slightly over
the next few years among professional hosts, property
managers. But it's also not going to be a straightforward and
it's not going to be easy for maybe the single property hosts
there. I think that that's something where, logisticallyistically some of the pieces you have in place, there's
just more that you can have in place. When we're talking about the book direct movement, namely a
direct booking website and a lot of those single property hosts that are just managing on an Airbnb
or a Verbo or just using those distribution channels, not taking everything into their own
brand, into their own booking website, their own booking engine.
It's just it, it's an opportunity that maybe they're not ready for it.
But when we're looking at the professional posts, those professional
property managers, though, you know, 50 plus 25 plus, however we're deeming those.
I think they are, they're set up for success.
And as long as we're, you know, we'll talk about a little more in some of these
points as well, educating
people educating those travelers, those potential guests
on the benefits of the book direct movement, I think that it
should grow. I mean, that's, that's what we're going for
here. So I know that kind of a vanilla topic to start here. But
you know, what are both of your thoughts on whether we will see
growth in that book directly?
Yeah, I mean, Paul and I think are in agreement on this mark,
obviously, I'll go to you in a second. I and curious what your thoughts on it. But I think if
you have the ability and the, I guess, like, execution
opportunities in front of you to grow your marketing efforts and
movements, then I think yeah, like book direct should become
easier for you. But I think it's, you know, like Paul said, I
think it's gonna be really hard if you have one property to
continue to make progress. It's not that you can't make any
progress, I just think that's going to be more challenging.
And it depends a lot on what type of inventory
comes in over the next few years.
It may depend on the location, the market, the area.
But certainly over the last few years,
we saw an explosion of those single two, three,
four property hosts maybe.
They came in, the money was good, it was easy.
Are those people gonna kind of fade out?
It was more of a side hustle, wasn't their main thing.
Maybe the more professional managers will take over
and they might have more execution, that sort of thing.
So Mark, I'll go your way,
because I'm assuming you've, I can tell from looking at your sites that you work
with a variety of people, one property up to many, many properties. What's your take on this from
that smaller segment to the larger segment? Yeah. And I think the context is that all three of us,
we're not coming up this with data behind us. You know, if we were to speak to Jamie Lane,
ADNA, or, you know, any, anybody of our sites that are looking at data on a day-to-day basis,
they'll be able to provide a little bit more numbers behind the predictions. But I feel like what we all have, the three of us,
is that we see and hear a lot of what's happening within the industry. I obviously speak and hear
for a lot of hosts who are at the start of their journey, or they're getting into their journey,
or they're well on their way to being
short-term rental host, professional host.
I feel like there's three categories.
There's one that's the hobbyist host,
then you've got the professional host
and then you've got the professional company.
So the hobbyist host, in my opinion,
is somebody that is dabbling in the market,
like you say, they've either owned their property
or they are managing a property for a homeowner
or they're doing like an hour charge rent to rent model.
And they'll either have one or they'll have two, three, four
but they won't have more than four.
And they're just, like you say, they're dabbling.
They're seeing if this is something for them.
This may be one income stream of many in their life
and they may even have a W2.
They may have other long-term commitments and this is just dabbling.
They're hobbyists hosts. So you park them here and then you've got in the middle,
you've got a professional host. So this is somebody that has gone that next step.
They've maybe, you know, done all the things. This is their core focus.
Maybe it's them by themselves or them and their partner that's doing this
or they've got partners and they are, again, they either own or they manage or they do the
arbitrage or do a bit of everything.
And they've probably gone past that seven, eight, nine, ten property market and they're
moving on to the next stage.
They're looking to grow and scale their business.
They're starting to, you know, new levels, new devils.
And we've all been there where you've got people to hire, virtual assistants, in-house
people.
You've got all these other headaches and all these other plates to spin.
And then you've got the professional companies.
I mean, maybe, you know, those are more that probably be watching this on LinkedIn.
They'll be the ones that are, you know, down the line, built a very firm, solid brand and
business and they are on the next stage to scaling and potentially exiting down the line.
And with the Bug Direct movement, I I feel depends on who is in those three
categories, it differs in where it is in your day to day world, right?
The hobbyist host doesn't care.
Doesn't care about book direct.
It is just solely focused on probably one platform, which, you know, Airbnb.
It, it, they probably don't even have a PMS, which I think is a very key
indicator when I speak to a host, if I wanted to grow on it, if they have one.
And you know, they, they are literally just relying on that one platform.
If it all goes well, great.
If not, no worries, they'll pivot and they'll just go look at something else.
So book direct for them is nothing.
My day to day is trying to educate them to help them to decide mentally if they
want to be a hobbyist host, or if they want to graduate into being a professional host.
I mean, that's literally what I do every day with the podcast, with the books and
everything.
Then you've got the professional host for them.
If they haven't got book direct in their mindset, they are never going to get to
that next stage.
This will just be a nice lifestyle business.
And that's it.
I feel like the people that I speak to a lot are in this category because they go, ah,
that's what book directives.
This is what it is.
This is what a website is.
This is, I've got that.
I've got this thing called insert PMS, but I've never done more than had the free listing
site that goes on there.
And then that's where their growth will be.
And then the professional company, they've got a very solid book, direct basis, they've got a very solid brand, they know exactly who their
customer is, their avatar is, you know, and they are growing, whether that's
through acquisition, whether that is for the management company, whether that's
through however they do it.
So the movement is there.
And, um, I feel like over the next few years, what you will find is that
percentage wise and you know, if we had Jamie Lane on this with us from
DNA, you'll be able to give some but the hobbyist host it will just decrease, decrease, decrease,
decrease, decrease the amount of bookings per direct to OTAs. The professional host will increase
hopefully, fingers crossed that's what my belief is and then the management companies, the big
professional companies, we'll see. I'd like to think that a lot of them will increase, but the bigger you get and the bigger
at scale it gets, it actually turns out to be a lot harder to have a massive chunk of
your revenue direct because you're battling so many different elements as you get to that
massive level.
Well, this was a bit back in the feed mark.
You may have listened to this one where we talked about Vakasa and obviously that's the
largest property manager here in North America and and certainly the US and they have you know,
whatever the number is at this point, somewhere between 35,000 38,000
somewhere in that range. Unfortunately, not trying to be rude, but that number
is going down. You know, if you look month over month, the year, year, they're
managing fewer and fewer properties, but they're phenomenally successful
market book direct. I mean, like we may criticize a lot of what they do as far
as their acquisitions, their, you know, future turning of companies and things
like that. But I mean, if you go look at their public reports for public data, I mean, they're getting four to $500 million a year of direct they do as far as their acquisitions, their future turning of companies and things like that. But if you go look at their public reports, public data,
I mean, they're getting four to $500 million
a year of direct bookings.
It's actually really phenomenal when you look at it.
So people are going to the Vakasa website
and booking directly.
There may be other issues that we don't have the time
or scope to discuss on this call today,
but it's not that they're unsuccessful
the direct marketing side of it.
It seems like you're exactly right Mark.
They struggle on execution.
Some of the bottom, that last layer of cleaning maintenance, you know property care homeowner relationships
Those kind of things is where they're struggling but they're not bad at marketing nor are they bad at getting bookings directly
There seem to be you know, according to the reviews and the feedback that you see online bad in other areas
So I'm with you on that
I don't know if there's you know more that layer in there Paul or anything else to add in if not
We go to the next one. No, I think we're good. Yeah
So I so here's my second thesis here for the book direct movement, which is that the
quality of your book direct marketing doesn't matter as much
as the quality of your book direct property or properties.
And that side of it. So we just did recent conversations, Mark,
we had about this triangle. And it's based on Dan Kennedy's
ultimate ultimate marketing plan, which is message market media.
And we kind of adapted it and made it more specific to the
vacational industry. And we talked about the property or guest demand. So like, what is
that? What is that guest looking for? What are you offering? What is what do they desire?
And what awareness are you generating for that property? So in other words, if you have
a property that people want, if you market it correctly amongst different channels, and
we can talk about those channels, and you ultimately know who is looking for that property,
you can be successful. That was sort of the thesis that we came up with. And I think that
matters quite a bit. Because one thing that I'm sure you see
Mark on your side of things is that some people put a lot of effort into
marketing things, maybe even building in a nice custom boosted website.
They might even try to do advertising marketing on their own and they're kind
of marketing a property that's not very good.
So maybe you could speak to that side of it, which is that the property itself
matters just as much as the quality of your marketing that you're doing for
that property.
What's your thoughts on that, Mark?
Yeah.
of your marketing that you're doing for that property? What's your thoughts on that, Mark?
Yeah, so with this, I feel that the way
that we're gonna move into is very different
to how companies been working in the past.
And let's just say professional hosts,
because the hobbyists hosts, like we say,
they're just dabbling, but the professional hosts,
let's just focus on this segment because in the past,
and if you're a management company,
we all know the general route, how it goes.
You are managing maybe your property or you're managing your parents'
property and you're doing well.
And all of a sudden a friend of a friend reaches out saying, Oh, I've
got a place down the road.
Can you do this?
Yep.
You know, it's very much, you say yes.
As you're getting going, you say yes to everything.
And as business owners, we're all guilty of this.
I've done this.
I'm sure all of you have done this.
You've just, you pile on the yeses and there comes a certain point in time where
you have to kill your darling, so to speak, you've got to remove the properties
that do not suit your overall brand.
And this is very hard to do in the management world because, you know, the
owners that you get on board, you, you know, you speak from pretty much every
day, whether it's good or bad or everything in between,
but it comes a point in time where as you grow your brand,
there will be properties that fit that brand,
and there'll be properties in your portfolio that don't.
Right?
And you can probably now, everybody watching this,
even on the ones you own, you can go through your portfolio,
look at what your overall brand is,
and you'll be able to very quickly go,
yes or no, does it suit.
Now, whether you've got the courage to kill them is another story, but when it
comes to marketing, what is going to happen is this, is you always got to
remember that the riches are in the niches, right?
The niche that we talk about is very, very key to your growth moving forward.
I just stayed literally this weekend talking about Liverpool.
I took my boys to go and stay
in a short term rental for two nights.
And I discovered somewhere, found somewhere,
booked somewhere, I'm not gonna name the company,
but the branding was pretty cool, easy to remember name.
Property was just a shell.
The location was unreal.
It's in between two massive stadiums.
It's in the city center.
It had parking, which we drove, so we needed that parking option, but the actual property itself was a shell.
Now that was a management portfolio.
So they weren't directly, couldn't go and change all the decor.
They couldn't change all the interior, so to speak, because obviously they had to
get their homeowners say so, but it was a really poor guest experience as soon as
I set foot in the door, right?
Everything up until that point, great.
Communication, key codes, all of that.
Great.
As soon as I stepped in the door, it was like, oh, and you know,
this is the problem because I they've got other properties and this
brand that they've got. They, the other properties may be great.
I don't know. I ain't stayed in them, but that one just let them down.
And I feel like this is what's going to happen, especially as they grow,
especially as every professional company now hosts tries to grow is that you've got to make sure that yes,
you've got your guest avatar.
We talk about your ideal guest,
the guest that you want to walk through your doors.
Yeah, but as you grow,
you're going to have a property avatar as well.
Just like you're going to have a staff avatar
and whatever avatar that you have,
but that property avatar is key because when you get,
say five properties and they all fit the same brand, they all fit your same E-force, they've got the same, you
know, decal, they've got the same promotional things that are going around.
When I go home and I speak to a friend of mine who says, yeah, I'm going to
Liverpool, I'll go, oh, you should go and stay with Bum, insert name instead of
going, oh, you should go and I stayed at this Airbnb.
And that is the key in my opinion, to marketing our growth is what people say about you
when you're not in the room.
And that is a big part of it for this crowd,
for this professional host crowd.
Yeah, I mean, I agree.
But Paul, any reaction to kind of what Mark's saying there
with like that story, I feel like it's a common one
we've heard before.
Yeah.
I mean, that is, that's, having watched so many people
try to grow that business from eight, 10 to 20, 30, 40, 50,
you do. You get into that point of you're not holding to... Maybe you don't have the brand to
find. Maybe you don't, for whatever reason, maybe you haven't put that much thought into it. As Mark
said, a lot of people just fall into this. I'm managing this one. I'm helping a buddy out here,
family here, and then all of a sudden I have a 10 property management company that I'm running.
And I didn't have time to put in those best practices, the baseline to have a successful
brand business. Once you hit those scaling points, wherever that is for you, and when you're adding
on people, when you're adding on two properties a month, three properties a month, something like that. At a certain point, you have to decide, am I
growing to grow? Am I growing to get 100, 200, 300? Am I growing to make sure that I have that
brand, that's growing a representative brand? Something that, again, having condos in Smokey
Mountains, probably not that helpful. Having cabins in 38, probably not that helpful.
Making sure that you have the right property for the right market,
I think is really important.
And Mark, I think you hit the nail on the head there with making sure that people are talking
about you to drive that desire long term because a lot of people are doing the social selling for you
after they've come to your place.
So yeah, they may post the photos, but the last thing you want to do is see that message a week
later that, oh, it just wasn't that bad. And nobody likes that tag of, oh, this property
management company, they're terrible. Now you've got some virality that you might not like coming
through. And I think that together, you guys really nailed the head on what can be a really difficult
part of that owner acquisition strategy is what do I want to bring on?
Do I want to bring on a smaller number of properties that really fit my brand?
Or do I want to bring on more and more and just bring in the revenue and see where everything
falls after that?
Yeah. I think, Mark, you explained it well, too, where it's like that,
I guess, like, you're starving and the property represents, you know, satisfying your hunger,
so you just take anything on. And Paul, you know expensive these leads are, right?
When you're doing homeowner marketing and you're trying to scale
and you're doing whatever it may be, whether it's direct mail, whether you're doing digital,
this is a tricky problem to solve, like getting more inventory.
But we all, if you're going into that professional, to Mark's point, or that really large-scaled company to solve, like getting more inventory. But we all if you're going into that
professional to Mark's point, or that really large scaled
company, you have to get more inventory. So you got to figure out ways to do it effectively and efficiently. But if you're
too picky, then it makes it really hard to grow because then
you're even being more restrictive on like the leads
you have coming in. Oh, that's no good. That's no good. Okay,
I'll take that one, and so on and so forth. So it's a it's a
challenge. I don't think anyone here sitting in our seats, and
being the position that a lot of those folks are in trying to
balance everything out because it is hard. Well, I just add on to that as well. I don't think anyone here is sitting in our seats and being the position that a lot of those folks are in trying to balance everything out because it is hard.
Well, I, can I just add onto that as well?
I've just literally gone through this process with, with Boosley.
Like we've literally felt this rough of it.
We had 1,962 websites and we cut them by half.
We've just cut it down to just over 900 now.
And so we've had to sort of kill our diamonds because so many people, so
many support things were coming in.
So many of the, the, the customers that we had didn't fit the niche of client
that we wanted to work with moving, moving forward.
And you know, it's, it's not a nice process.
You have to deal with the backlash.
You have to have some pretty awkward conversations and all of those things.
But now what about four or five six
months later we're coming out the other end and it is such a better business on
the back of it so it's you know doesn't matter what niche you're in doesn't
matter what you're doing this has to be done and you know when you're starting
you have to say yes like you just say you have to say yes you got to take it
all on you have got to learn right but moving forward as you, the power is saying no, because when you say no,
it actually opens up more opportunities for yes. So hopefully,
if you're in this position, just take out advice and go for it.
Don't put it off.
Don't delay ripping the bandaid off because it just makes it worse down the
line.
All right. So here's a theoretical question. Obviously, Mark, you know,
you know where you ended up now, but if I approached you 10 months ago,
let's say before you started this process and I said, Hey, Mark, we're going to go ahead you ended up now. But if I approached you 10 months ago, let's say before you started this process,
and I said, hey, Mark, we're gonna go ahead
and chop the number of clients who are working with that half.
What would your reaction have been before that?
Would you have been receptive to that idea
or you would have pushed against it and been,
in other words, would you be open
to someone telling you that back then
or you would have been pushed against it
and been like, no, I don't think you're right about that?
So I have been told this for the last maybe year and a half
and I put it off, put it off, put it off, put it off, put it off, put it off.
And I delayed it right.
And ripped the bandaid off and it was 10 times worth of what it could have been if I acted and did this a lot, a lot sooner.
So I am testament to this.
I've, you know, I, I can stand here being on the other end should have done it way sooner, 10 months, 18 months, when the person came in to Boosley to help with all of this, suggested this.
And I was just like, no, because I was set in my ways.
My mindset wasn't right, but yeah, hindsight is amazing.
It's the most, it's the superpower that I wish I had more than any of the
superpower, uh, better than flying.
Yeah.
Better than everything.
Right.
Um, hindsight is an amazing tool and you know,, trust me on this one, just don't delay.
So if you're watching this, if you're a manager
and you've been sort of procrastinating this over the summer,
if you've had just those properties or those owners
or those ones that are just like,
you see the message come through on WhatsApp or email
and you just have a little shutter inside,
then I think that's the little telling point to you
that you gotta go and do what you gotta do.
Yeah, I think that's a good way to think about it.
All right, so we'll go to our next one here, next topic point.
So here's my take on this.
The only way that Book Direct will grow meaningfully
is if the guest is more educated,
but educating solely on cost hasn't proven
to be the most effective methodology of education, right?
So every single piece of Book Direct marketing
that I typically see,
and Paul, maybe we could talk about this first,
seems to say Book Direct and Save, and I'll be honest, I put that in a lot of our client ads, so if it's clients listening, like yes, I do put that I typically see, and Paul, maybe we can talk about this first, seems to say, book direct and save. And I'll be honest, I put that in a lot of our client
ads. So if it's clients listening, like, yes, I do put that in your ads, because I think
that is not, it's not an invalid form of messaging. But obviously, it's not perfectly sufficient
to cover all of the benefits of why someone would book direct. So that gets us started,
that gets the conversation started, or I get a better deal when I book direct, but it's
obviously not enough to complete the process. Maybe Paul, you can speak to what are some
other thoughts or ideas of book direct beyond
just the fact that maybe quote unquote, it's a little bit cheaper.
I think it is. I think we've it's not this isn't a new movement by any things. I think
we have put in the effort over the past few years, but the the niche in this case is probably
hurting us a little bit because there is such a varying landscape
in the short-term rental vacation, whatever you're going to call that or how you're going
to deem it. Is it those hobby hosts? Is it the professional property managers there?
So as professional property managers, there's more of an effort going along, but there's
millions. And again, Jamie Lane could give us the number there,
millions of single properties that,
it is the only way they're accessible
is Airbnb or Verbal.
So it's very difficult to talk about the benefits
of booking directly there.
That is, it does have to come from,
it has to come from a grassroots effort
of all those professional property managers and somehow
collectively as an industry here. And again, I don't know how you do it because there is
enough competition. And Mark, I do like the idea of you kind of touched upon that and
I can kind of throw it over to you here, but talking about when these individual property
managers kind of come together and kind of collaborate and co-op in kind of different ways there, there is more power
there fighting a larger Airbnb or a larger directory site or something like
that. So if you can hop in there and talk about what you see on the, just the
education that needs to happen across the board on Book Direct.
Yeah, no, happy to, because this is the whole reason why Boosley was created
eight years ago, I was at a hospitality tourism meeting in the UK and my little
town of Scarborough and there were a hundred hosts there and they were all
bemoaning the fact that so many of their bookings were coming in through third
parties, et cetera.
And I just stood there in a room, like group of people that just, you know,
it was like a round robin discussion.
And I was like, well, what are you doing to actually drive your own bookings
in terms of educating the guests? And they just looked at me with a blank expression.
So first thing I did is I went to the tourism board, the local tourism board, and I asked
what education is there for like educating our hosts. And there was none. So I started
up a Facebook group called the hospitality community. I've been doing it for many years.
And you know, we, we, the
greenery, our family business that we exited from, we were very
good at educating the guests.
We had it everywhere, book direct.
We, we educated what it actually meant, how you can do it.
And it doesn't just save you money.
You actually get earlier check-in times.
Um, that one tip alone that I shared is always gets people's attention
because I talk about how you put earlier checking times on your direct booking materials
and websites and copy, and then you go to your OTA and you put a later check out
check in time, sorry.
And the psychological aspect that has is unreal.
So it doesn't always have to be cost.
It's obviously the, the, the perks as well.
And if you go and look at what the big chains do, Hilton, Marriott, et cetera,
go look at their website, go look at their, uh, their pages on when they talk
about booking direct, it isn't always about cost.
It's, you know, you get free wifi, early check-in, late checkout, et cetera.
And so education comes in many forms.
I set out on a mission back then to educate a million hosts.
If I could educate a million hosts and they then into an educate their
guests, then we've got the movement back up and running and growing, et cetera.
The problem is, is that so many people don't know what to do.
Don't know how to do these things.
That's what drove my book, the book direct playbook, because there's
101 ways on to do that.
And it, my whole philosophy and thinking is if I can educate as many
hosts as possible and give them three or four little things to do, where to place it, how to do it, how to get the message
across and they go and educate their guests and let's just say they've got a
hundred guests or a thousand guests coming through their business every
year then that is how we do it. We're not just going to do it from one person. It
couldn't just be me stood on a soapbox talking about it. We had to do it with a
power of numbers, the power of the co the collaborate and the numbers that we see at a high level are always skewed
because you're right.
We've got the hobbyist hosts here who don't care.
We've got the professional hosts here who are caring more and more and getting
better and better at educating.
And then we've got the big, big players like the cast, or et cetera, who have
always been good at it because they've got marketing teams galore that can do
all of this, pay all the money and ads and all of those things to do.
So, so for me, as long as I see this middle category, the professional
hosts growing, that's for me is the main thing because I'll never be able
to impact the hobbyist hosts.
And the big professional company is already doing it.
It's this, it's this middle ground and it just starts at education.
And you don't have to just rely on costs because a lot of people, yes, it's
a factor, but it's not the deciding factor.
If you can say to a family of five, I'm a family of six, right?
And I, we say we're driving three hours to our destination.
If you can get across that, if you book direct, you get an earlier check-in.
If you book via an OTA, you've got to wait till six o'clock to check in.
I know in the back of my mind, I've got four kids, I've drove three hours of them
in the back.
And if I get to the property, I've then got to wait a few hours before I can check in,
or I can just book direct and check in early. And also as well get a nice little welcome basket
and all the free Wi-Fi and stuff. I'll be like, I'll do that every day. So it's just how we get
across to it, how we get that cross and that messaging across to the guests. And the one thing,
our final thing I will say on this, I learned this from a book by Donald Miller
called a story brand.
The major message in that story brand book
is that if you confuse, you lose.
And that is so key.
I think the problem is, as I see so many people
and I've seen thousands of people's websites,
I've spoken to thousands upon thousands of hosts.
The main thing that they get wrong when they're doing this is that they confuse their messaging and that's when they
lose.
Well, I think it's so funny, Mark, that story you just told about the, uh,
checking in with a bunch of kids thing.
Not only would I not mind paying less and getting better benefits, I would pay
more to check in early.
You know what I mean?
So if the OTA was, I'll just make it up a thousand dollars for this day.
And then what you're describing, I can check in early, I get a welcome
basket, and so on and so forth was $1,100 I would pay $1,100,
you know, to get the better experience as opposed to, you
know, the other way the other way around. So I think that's a
good reframe, because it's a value discussion that it's not
actually a cost discussion, because the guests may naturally
go in their brain are it's cheaper. Why? Why is it cheaper?
And then, you know, I've told this many clients before in the
past, a lot of clients like the middleman, they like the fact
whether you like it or don't like it, that they can go to Airbnb
and cry, I saw a bug, I saw hair in the shower, and therefore you have to refund me, they like
having some power and control in that relationship. So when you say book direct, they say, Oh, no, I
don't know if I can trust you enough to fulfill in your promise and deliver me the experience
that I want. And if you don't deliver it, I feel like I have no recourse or no, you know, minimal
recourse. Whereas when I booked through Airbnb, again,
the host may not like it or enjoy it,
but they feel like they have someone
that they can talk to that's going to mediate
that situation more effectively.
Now, all of us on the call here know
that Airbnb doesn't always mediate those situations
effectively, excuse me, but that's the guest perception,
right, is that they feel like, well, if I book an Airbnb,
I'm protected.
I have this insurance.
I have this coverage, and so on and so forth.
So we have to kind of break through that. And I think your example of sound, it's actually
funny you brought that up. I was going to bring that up, the check in idea or the Wi Fi
from the hotels and things like that, because that's a more apt, I think value discussion
over just Yeah, it's like 50 bucks cheaper on my website versus the other sites. And
I've suggested to many clients recently, even Mark, some clients don't charge any sort of
guest service fee at all when you book directly on their website. And what it turns out what happens their business is
they have no budget for marketing, even like a larger
or more professional host, I've had to talk to them and
convince them, you might want to consider putting some kind of
fee there. Now, it should be less maybe than what's on the
OTA. But why not put eights the number in my mind, 8% is like a
very reasonable fee. It's far less than you see typically on
the listing sites. But that's your that can be your marketing
budget, you can take that 8% off of your reservation
and put that into funding your advertising
and funding your marketing goals and so on and so forth.
And there's ample evidence at this point
that the guest is not that bothered by the service fee,
otherwise Airbnb wouldn't grow.
If the guest hated the service fee and really disliked it,
then Airbnb would be flatlining.
And that's obviously not the case.
Airbnb is growing and they're taking more reservations in
outside of seasonality.
So, there's some data there to kind of back up what my thesis is.
I think many people just aren't doing it.
And then they leave themselves making a direct booking actually too cheap,
so cheap that they're actually not making as much money as they could
to then go invest into buying a website through Mark and taking, you know,
advertising dollars and working with us to deploy and things like that.
So, yeah, cost is one thing, but I think we did a decent job.
They are covering some of the other things.
Paul, did you want to go down number four there?
I think it speaks to what I was just kind of talking about
with Airbnb, but what's kind of,
you want to add into that one?
Yeah, I mean, I think the biggest,
or one of the biggest factors in the struggle
for the direct movement is Airbnb's growth
or staying relatively flat.
I mean, I think that still to this day, the most painful,
but the most like visually astonishing
picture is actually looking at the search trends results and seeing Airbnb
vacation rentals and verbal just those terms alone and the growth that you've
seen with Airbnb people people just know it has become synonymous with vacation
rentals just because just like it was 1415, everything was a VRBO. Not
everything was a buy owner vacation rental. However, VRBO at that point, not verbal, had
figured out, they'd figured out their branding to a point where that was the term. And now
it's Airbnb. And I think as long as that is the case, that that equity is built up, people
are going to continue to search for Airbnb in here.
Now they may not always end up on the Airbnb website.
I think for right now it's going to be the case, but that's the key there is that that's
what people know.
So that didn't mark your point to the education point.
We need to educate people that there are other places where it's not an Airbnb.
It is a short-term rental.
It is a vacation rental. Maybe it is a matter of terminology and nomenclature
of trying to get people to say more of a short term rental or a vacation rental, something
like that. I think it's going to be hard to penetrate that armor until there's a chink
in the armor of some kind. And I don't see that happening right now,
just based on the volume that's there.
And I think similar to the discussion we've had
the last few weeks or months here about Google,
and it hasn't gotten better per se,
but there hasn't been, I mean, even AI overviews,
which I think we can maybe agree were really bad.
That was still just a small little dip that maybe made people think about something other
than Google for half a second. Maybe DuckDuckGo, maybe Bing. Maybe they started to think about
some other options, but nobody switched over. Nobody's continuously having a bad experience. If people are continuing
to have a bad experience on the site, yeah, maybe they will start to look for some other places or
on the mobile app, whatever that is. But I think as long as there's innovation on the Airbnb
side of things, it is going to be tough to combat just that fortress that they've built up, for lack
of a better term, around their vacation rental and short term
rental community here, but I can throw it back over to anybody.
And there's some red meat there. Glad it boys.
Well, I'll go first than Mark. And then I'm curious your
perspective on this, because I think if there's an argument for
Airbnb, that's the argument, which is that more people are
going to search Airbnb, London, for example, you know, to your
recent state mark, or they're going to search Airbnb, Paris,
or something like that. Certainly, this is the case in major US
cities as well, more than almost any other generic search term,
right. So even if we ranked well on Google for some of these
these terms, like, we're just never going to get the
awareness that Airbnb has. So I think that's an argument for
them. The I think the stat that you're referring to there, Paul
was the fact that I forget exactly number off top my head,
someone can fact check me, or I can put a link in the show
notes. But I think it's somewhere in the range of 40%
of Airbnb bookings now are made directly on the app. So not
not only are people not even searching some terms on Google
or looking through other methodologies or places or things
like that, they're just literally opening up the Airbnb
app on their phone and purchasing things. It's actually
similar. I don't know if Amazon is quite as large or like
prominent maybe in the UK mark, maybe you could educate me on
that. But like my wife would just go to Amazon and buy
things. She's not even going to go to Google and look for
things if she wants to buy something
for, you know, our kids a toy, or we had to buy them new backpacks for school recently, she just
goes on Amazon, she doesn't even consider any other options. So Amazon has become, in a way,
like a search engine or way that you find the solutions, just like Airbnb for some people is
like, Oh, I'm just gonna go to Airbnb, and I'm gonna find a place to stay for my, you know, the
soccer match or the football match that I want to go to, right. So that's kind of one way to think
about it is that with their dominance, that's
strong, it's hard because they, you don't even give really the chance, the
opportunity to book direct if they're only going direct to Airbnb.
So I think that is the, the, the, the battle we're fighting against.
So I'm curious your reaction to those thoughts, Mark, cause that seems like
the biggest pro that Airbnb has from our perspective.
This is why I love this podcast.
It's such like high level discussion.
You're making me write stuff down as you're talking, because there's
things I want to talk about because this is such high level discussion. You're making me write stuff down as you're talking, because there's things I want to
talk about because this is such a good discussion.
So number one, the, and I've spoken about this a lot.
I've spoken about this on stage in front of a lot of people, a lot of hosts in, in America
is that the, my worry is, is if we don't do something now specifically in this middle
category, the professional host, we're in danger of where Airbnb does what Amazon has done
to e-commerce and books, right?
So, Conrad, you all know this,
for every book that I sell on Amazon,
Amazon takes 66% of every dollar,
66 cent of every dollar that comes in, right?
It's bananas.
And there's nothing that we can do.
There's literally nothing we can do.
What am I going to do?
Start up a book publishing company in my back, my back room.
No, it's not going to work.
I'm not going to go print it all off.
It's very, very, very hard to, to come beat with that because there's
been nothing that's been done.
We are still very fortunate in 2024, the part of recording just
cup spin onto Q4, but when a booking comes in on Airbnb, we still find out who the person who is buying from us,
name, last name, phone number, right?
Amazon, I haven't got a clue.
10 people could buy it, I don't know who they are, right?
That is my worry.
Now, when it comes to search, you're right,
this whole Google experience at the moment
is a little bit bananas, and you're right though,
Bing, DuckDuckGo, they haven't really come up with,
people aren't switching to there. I feel the true test of time will be moment is a little bit bananas. And you're right though, being duck, duck, go. They haven't really come up with people.
I'm switching to there.
I feel the true test of time will be when open AI bring out their search GPT.
I think the even truer test of time is when Siri gets better and Alexa gets better.
So Siri right now is being trained on open AI Alexa, Amazon Alexa has been
traded on the Anthropic model.
I think that is going to be the true test to Google's.
My Lexus has kicked in.
We'll leave that in because that's what these voice assistants are. They're interrupting you when you don't want them to.
Exactly.
That'll be the true test to Google.
If it doesn't go well for Google and voice takes off, then you're right.
Airbnb will only get more powerful because people do just go straight to the app. Right? And you're right, Airbnb will only get more, more powerful because people do just go
straight to the app, right?
And you're right.
When, when I want something in the, in the UK now, and from a shopping basis, we
don't go search on Google.
We know what we know to be true, which is, which is Amazon, unless, unless, um,
I buy these energy drinks from this company called a Neutronic and you get
them packs of 12 and it's better to buy direct because they've built a brand awareness around it, right?
Pack of 12, they're really good.
You can buy on Amazon, but they've built their brand up
so you can go straight to their website and buy.
For the most part, you go into Amazon.
Now, the reason why I say all of this
is that the place that I stayed with at the weekend
in Liverpool, I found their listing on Airbnb. Right? So I discovered
their list on Airbnb. I started my search on Airbnb. I did all the filters. I looked
at the map. I came to their listing. Now the reason why I talk about their brand
is that their brand was prevalent throughout their listing. They had
billboarded their brand name on their listing. So I knew, I knew to do a Google search
for their brand name in said Liverpool.
So I could find their direct booking site.
That's what made me go back to their site
to book direct, right?
So they had had the education.
I don't know if they've done it on purpose
or by accident or whatever.
They weren't a Boothly customer.
They had just somebody that I found randomly
to book with them, right?
So they had done the right things to educate me
to go from my Airbnb listing to go direct.
So Airbnb is just gonna grow.
They're gonna pump tons of money into it
and there's gonna be other OTAs
that pump tons of money into it
and they're gonna be that first point of contact.
But if you're a smart professional host
and if you set your listing up in all
the right ways, then you will drive somebody to your listing and then you
will drive them to your direct booking site.
Obviously you can't go onto your listing and go, Hey, find me a, you know,
www.bumbumbum.com because that is not allowed.
It's going to get flagged and all other things, but there's definitely
clever ways of doing it.
And so from that, you will hopefully pick up, let's say three out of every 10
bookings, but that is better than what everybody else is doing again.
Hobbyists hosts don't care.
So the overall book direct movement, I feel like in the next few years is going
to probably drop because there's going to be a lot of hobbyists hosts come in.
Yes.
Maybe regulations shake them out.
Yes. There may be more barriers to entry.
I always say the problem with this industry
is it's only one step above MLM, multi-level marketing.
There's literally one step above
where there's a bit more money to pay,
but there's literally nothing else stopping me
from going to that house over the road,
saying, A, your house is for rent, give it to me.
I'll do all these things, I'll get it.
And I can literally get it on Airbnb tomorrow.
Right.
There's regulations coming in to stop that.
It depends on where you are in the world, but for the most part there isn't.
But if the morbid regulation comes in, which I think is a good thing, it may
shake out that bottom hobbyist market host.
And it will just mean that there's going to be, you know, like it says in here,
if there's less supply, less people coming
onto Airbnb, what does that mean to the whole market? Who knows? But I feel like if, as
long as I personally can impact this middle ground, this professional host, and we can
get them to increase their direct bookings, that is a, that is a win for me because there's
no slowing down the Airbnb phenomenon. What they are doing next with AI and all of these
things is only going to strengthen their brand, but they're not going to personally take stuff away from the book direct crowd.
What they'll do is they'll just take even more bookings away from booking.com
and Verbo who again, are niching down in their own little things and trying to
do all of their things that they're doing.
That's what they'll take from.
So I feel like I've just thrown so many different things in there, but
no, it's okay.
If he threads, I'll pick up and pull on Mark from my perspective.
Then.
So I think the awkward platform thing, by the way, that could probably be a whole podcast
episode that we do just on how to like, subtly nudge people off platform, right? Following all
the terms and conditions of the rules of Airbnb, we're not advocating that you do something you
shouldn't do. And, you know, to your point of like, you don't want to get banned off Airbnb,
or, you know, remove that listing from your platform. What it goes back to even to your
example from a few minutes prior, later check-in date for Airbnb guests
versus book direct guests.
Nothing in the terms and conditions,
I'm assuming you've jilted that, that would not allow that.
And yet it can nudge people your direction.
It's probably not one thing, right?
It's probably five or six things, right?
If you just kind of keep nudging,
you can get some benefit there.
So I think there's a lot of angles to explore there.
Here is actually the next point.
So it details perfectly into kind of what you're saying there,
I think ultimately Mark.
My next point was you can win the direct booking battle,
but the direct booking war may be being lost overall right now. And that's okay. Right? So I
think the one thing about what you said that's very true that I agree with is that you're fighting
your own individual battle. So even if the Airbnb sort of large cruise ship, if you will, is going
on its own track and you can't really in your little ship change course or
really do much to modify, you can still win your own little war. So you can get more direct bookings,
even if the overall direct booking marketplace is maybe being a little bit softer or going down a
little bit, because you are in control of your own website, of your own brand. You can go buy a
custom website and get it built out. You can go leverage a PMS. You can go do your own search
marketing, social marketing, email marketing. These are all things completely within your control that
you can actually take action
on.
So maybe that's just more of a philosophical note or question.
But I think of it like layers, Mark, where it's like things way outside is like things
I have no control over.
I have no control over the US economy right now.
I don't know who's going to get elected to be the next president.
Don't know.
Don't want to make any sort of political statement there.
It is what it is, right?
That's the things way outside of my control.
As I get closer and closer, I start to have more control where I decide to buy the properties or invest in the properties. I can't
really control that market, how well it may go, but I kind of can do my research and try to find
the right ones. All the way down to like how I photograph and put my listing on Airbnb back to
your example from a minute ago, that's 100% of my control. In fact, if I don't do it, no one else
will do it, right? So it's like, as you get closer and closer to like the core of what the actual
problem is, you get more and more, I guess, like, empowered to like do things that will actually help you and get
your business in better shape. And you can win the little battle even if the overall war is being
lost. And maybe that's what some people need to hear is kind of my thoughts with that, you know,
point that we have in that line, which is like, it's okay, like some of these things are outside
your control. And that's okay thing to say, it doesn't matter, because you can still do what you
need to do to have some success there. So Paul, I don't know if you have anything else you want to add in that point
Maybe it's just more of like a battle cry. Don't give up. We got a few more things to go over. I know but I
Mean it's an awareness thing. It's just it's it's knowing more than anything else that that there that you are battling
other
Entities out there the OTA is the meta search site. You're battling more than that
So taking a more of an active role and trying to drive more of those direct bookings,
yeah, you might not win the war right now, but those battles, it is.
You can prove those battles out in the short term, put those best practices in place, and move on there.
Yeah. Awesome. All right, so last one here. I'm curious your thoughts on this one too, Mark,
because you kind of touched on it a second ago. Airbnb may be taking market share away from like booking.com, for example,
and you may see this, I see this all the time.
Oh, we're gonna start a new listing site
and it's gonna be better because we're gonna do thing XYZ.
And currently this other listing site only does ABC,
we're gonna do these other things
and people think they have a unique marketing angle there.
I don't really see it because I think
most of these new marketplaces
don't actually have a novel idea.
In fact, many of these marketplaces seem to want to return to an era
that has passed us by like we're going to return to this book, direct era.
We're going to return to something that's been a little bit different
or the old way of doing it.
So maybe something to that effect.
And I just don't think that's a viable path.
So Mark, I'm curious your reaction first.
What's your idea between if a new OTA were to grow and be successful,
what would the actual value proposition of that OTA have to be for to grow
in today's marketplace?
I feel for an OTA to come into this marketplace now and to be uber powerful
and to be deemed successful is it would have to really focus on it, on a niche.
And whether that niche is purely pet travel, whether that is purely for the
LBGTQ community, whether it is for
solo travelers or whatever.
If, if there was an OTA to come in and, you know, I don't think we're going to
have another Airbnb story anytime soon personally, but that doesn't mean that
you can't be successful if you were to focus on a, on a niche, whatever that
niche may be, and there are plenty of examples out there that aren't in the news every week, every day.
You're the ones that aren't top of mind for most,
but for a few there are.
And I feel like that's a big takeaway for the big sites,
but also these professional hosts,
even for people who are wanting to grow and scale
is really focus on your niche moving forward.
Because I say, I love that thing about control.
Like last week I had a session with my therapist and I was getting really
overwhelmed in my day to day.
Tuesday was not a good day.
Wednesday I had a call with the therapist and he reminded me of this.
It's focus, manage, outcome.
And he goes, you focus on what you can manage on what the outcome is. Like you said, there's so many factors that you see in your newsfeed, in your
world, in your day to day that you have got no control over at all.
Well, there are certain things that you can control the outcome of.
And those are the things that you focus on.
You forget about 99% of it and just focus on the one.
Now, if you're listening to this or watching this and you've got one property
and let's say, um, you do minimum seven night bookings right this is a wild
example 52 weeks in a year let's say take two weeks off for like maintenance that's just 50 bookings
you have got to get over the next 12 months out of the millions of people that are searching around
the world for places to stay or the thousands of people that are searching maybe in your area where your property is,
you've just got to get 50 of them
to come and stay with you, right?
So you can focus on managing that outcome.
So again, it comes back to who is your ideal guest?
Who is the ideal person that's gonna walk through your door?
Who is your property ideal for, right?
And then you just combine the two
and then you go and find where they're hanging out,
wherever they're hanging out.
And you just go and make sure you spend your time there.
And if you can focus on that outcome,
then you'll be in a much, much, much, much better place.
So my advice to everybody is just focus on your niche.
Don't get attracted by the shiny object
because as you're growing,
there'll be tons of shiny objects that are flown your way.
Just keep powerful on that message.
And I feel like if anybody's looking for additional education videos,
there's some really good content by Alex Hormozi that is out there right now on
YouTube. And he talks a lot about this. Obviously he's not talking about our
industry, which is hospitality. He's talking about a general vibe,
but there are definitely some real good nuggets that you can take away and you
can bring into your, into your day to day.
Yeah. I think one of his things, Mark,
I've listened to a lot of stuff before is like one customer, one business model,
one avatar to get to $1 million of revenue,
which I think is such a nice way to think about it of like,
I can kind of do one thing really well for a certain period of time and get to
a million dollars of your revenue, which is tricky in this industry. Because do you mean a million
in gross bookings or do you mean a million in management? That's kind of two different
things depending on the business model and stuff like that. But generally speaking, like
I think there's some truth to that. One thing I see a lot, Mark, I don't know if you see
this as well when you're building sites for folks is they want to go to that second market
so early, like they have five or six or seven properties in one market. And they go, oh,
now I'm going to go over here. And that's something Paul and I've talked about that
link before in this podcast that I don't like,
because it's like you've scratched the surface, you know, you've only got seven listings. Now,
maybe I could make an exception for like what you're describing. We only offered the five
bedroom pet friendly homes in this market. Well, there may only be a certain number. So there's
carve outs to that. But generally speaking, people I think quit way too early on a single market,
they want to diversify and go somewhere else when they barely again gone very deep into one single market. And I think that's a mistake a lot of you know, that scaling maybe professional host trying to be like the really large host kind of falls into so yeah, well, we didn't get to everything that we want to talk to today, Mark, but that's probably a good sign because it means that we can come back maybe into a part two down the road. So thank you for being the first ever guest. We appreciate it. Paul, anything else you want to lean in here for before we let Mark go for today, or we leave this one in good shape?
No, I think we've taken enough of this fine gentleman's time.
I think it's time to move on to the next one here.
Yeah, probably late afternoon over there.
So we record the mornings.
But for you, Mark, I know it's later in the day.
So we thank you for opening on.
If you made it all the way to the end,
we need something from you, which
will help the podcast, Algorithm Gods, benefit us.
We need a review.
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but we'll take a review anywhere.
Leave us five stars,
just like the five star listening experience you just got
and we'll catch you on the next episode.
Thanks so much and have a fantastic day.