The Koerner Office - Business Ideas and Deep Dives with Chris Koerner - $200K in 45 Days From One Airbnb (Start With $0 Down) - Ep. #314
Episode Date: July 3, 2026Check out my newsletter at �...�https://TKOPOD.com and join my community at https://TKOwners.com━I sat down with Kyle Miklasz, founder of Big Sky Barnhouse, to talk about how he turned an old Wisconsin dairy barn into a wildly successful Airbnb business. Kyle shared how he found the property off-market, put everything on the line to buy it, then used a single $500 Instagram reel to generate around $80,000 in bookings before opening. We also talked about why he focuses on large-group, experience-driven stays instead of generic rentals, how he finds overlooked barns and warehouses, and how his newest Wild Wild Warehouse launch became his biggest one yet. Finally, Kyle broke down how someone with less money can still get into the space through Airbnb co-hosting.You can find Kyle here:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kylemiklasz/Big Sky Barnhouse: https://bigskybarnhouse.com/Big Sky Barnhouse Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigskybarnhouse/Wild Wild Warehouse Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wildwildwarehouse/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kylemiklasz/Enjoy!---Watch this on YouTube instead here: tkopod.co/p-ytAsk me a question on or off the show here: http://tkopod.co/p-askLearn more about me: http://tkopod.co/p-cjkLearn about my company: http://tkopod.co/p-cofFollow me on Twitter here: http://tkopod.co/p-xFree weekly business ideas newsletter: http://tkopod.co/p-nlShare this podcast: http://tkopod.co/p-allScrape small business data: http://tkopod.co/p-os---
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We hit 200,000, 45 days out from launch, and then we hit 300,000 and just three months out from launch.
We pumped in, I think, $500 into one Instagram ad on a reel that we made.
It wasn't even video.
It was just like static images.
For $500 one time, how many in bookings per day were you getting for that first period?
Our average booking size is somewhere between $4,000 to $5,000 a booking.
And there were some days we were getting five to six bookings a day.
Oh, my gosh.
And then at that point, I was like, this deserves my full time in attention.
This is something that deserves to be scaled.
Like, there's clearly a gap in the market.
We had 10 to 15 people a day reaching out why they couldn't book the dates they wanted because there was a regular group that booked it.
We had a wait list of hundreds of people that were waiting for the second one.
I would say the better option for no money down to get into like managing an Airbnb would be through co-hosting.
And you can co-hosts property.
And I know a lot of people that have had major success in growing their co-host business and then, you know, taking their cash flow and then starting to invest in properties and buying their own.
So co-hosting is like being a property manager on steroids.
Like you're more involved, but you're making more money, right?
I know some people that have gotten, you know, 10, 20 co-host clients in as short
as six months.
Co-hosting is a great way to get into the industry.
Once I figured that out, the entire strategy of the company changed.
Meet Kyle.
Kyle spent a decade grinding away at corporate jobs at Coca-Cola and Nestle.
And then he blew it all up.
His savings, lines of credit, 401K, he went all in on a beat-up dairy farm from the 1800s.
This wasn't just any barn. This barn was down the road from his grandparents' place in Wisconsin where he used to spend summers with his 21 cousins.
Now, his dream was to give that same experience to other families and make a profit while doing so.
So he bought a barn that nobody wanted in a town that nobody had ever heard of.
And then the craziest part about all this, he spent 500 bucks promoting one Instagram real with zero followers and made $80,000 before he ever opened.
Yes, 500 bucks to Instagram with no experience.
with content or Instagram or anything, and he turned that 500 into $80,000 before opening.
Now he's got 15 of these unique Airbnbs.
So if you don't have the money to buy an Airbnb, fear not because we talk about co-hosting
at the end, which is a way to do what he does without having to buy your own Airbnb.
And no, it's not that scammy Airbnb arbitrage that you see those course gurus talk about.
You're going to love it.
Okay.
So, Kyle, are you confident that by the end of this episode, people will have enough information
to get started in short-term rentals?
Absolutely.
All right.
Even if they don't have a ton of money.
Absolutely.
All right.
If you had like three sentences to describe what makes your Airbnb's, your short-term rentals different, what are they?
Yeah.
I think we create some of the most immersive, experiential hospitality destinations in the country.
And I think what we do differently is we're not just opening up another Airbnb or a place to sleep.
We're creating experiences because people don't just want to travel for a place to sleep.
They want to travel for an experience and to create memories.
So once I figured that out, the entire strategy of the company changed, that we wanted to create experiences and memorable things that people wanted to share with people.
They're not going to send you a picture of a cool couch they sat on at an Airbnb or where they slept in a bedroom.
They'll send you a picture of the indoor petting zoo or the helipad that they got picked up on in their backyard for a sky tour or an indoor pool that has a swim up bar and a rock climb wall.
So we started focusing very heavily on the guest experience and heavily investing in amenities in the properties that we were building that we knew we're going to, A, go.
viral on social media, but also create these things that we're inventing and innovating in the
space instead of just copycatting another operator out there. Because you go to a place like the
smokies, you'll see thousands of cabins. They all use the same amenities and they do the same thing.
So we wanted to be different. We wanted to create new things that people were going to stop their
scroll and travel across the country to stay at. Okay. So of all the different types of Airbnb's,
you know, barn and miniums, tree houses, whatever, like what are yours? What do they look like?
I specialize in acquiring overlooked commercial structures and turning them into places that people actually want to travel for.
So things like barns primarily and also warehouses now, you know, that you drive by every day throughout rural America and it's just another barn, another warehouse.
It might look dilapidated or might be 100 years old.
A couple of our properties are dairy barns from the 1800s.
And we thought people really enjoy the history of the property and the structure and what it used to be and what we've turned it into.
So I personally don't use the MLS much.
I use commercial platforms like CREXY and LoopNet and Land.com to acquire the properties
and basically overlook buildings that everyone else thinks they have no life and there's no
redevelopment and there's no adaptive reuse.
We come in and we turn them into destinations.
Okay.
And how many properties do you have today?
15.
Okay.
And if you were to break up all 15, with regards to like category, airplane hangers, barns,
whatever, how would they break out?
14 of the 15 are under the brand, Big Sky Barn.
house. So they're all either renovated old barn barns from the 1800s that used to be active dairy barns. One of them,
which is our newest brand we just launched, is wild wild warehouse. And it is a rural Iowa warehouse outside
of Des Moines, Iowa that we took. And it was just an abandoned warehouse in the cornfields of Iowa,
known to be somewhat of a boring state. And we turned it into one of the best, most exciting
vacation rentals in Iowa. Okay. So your first one ever, walk me through that. Like how did you find the
property? How did you look at it, etc.? Yeah. It was a great story. I was still working my data software
job, slinging data, and had a break. I was on lunch. And I was at the time planning to build a barn. And I
wanted it to look rustic on the outside and resemble my grandparents' barn when I was growing up.
And sorry, were you wanting to build this for an Airbnb or for your own personal use?
For a vacation destination, for my family, but also to welcome other families. And I actually found
the first one that we ever did on a realtor.com article. They post every single week of the most
organic viral homes on their platform that got the most organic clicks that week.
And number one on that list was our flagship location.
And it was like number two was like this $50 million of Tennessee estate.
And I was like, how was this dilapidated dairy barn in arena, Wisconsin, like a no name
town in the middle of nowhere at Wisconsin, number one on this list.
And I was going through every single week's list just to look for consistencies of like what
types of homes were going the most viral on realtor.com when they became for sale.
And I was just curious.
I wanted to know what that home sold for.
I thought that it got gobbled up.
So through doing public search records on that property,
I found that it was actually taken off market a few months ago.
And I went directly to the white pages and started a white page account and found every single number affiliated with that last name and made 50 phone calls in the next 30 minutes until I found someone that was the owner of that property with that name.
And then I was out there three hours later touring it and had a handshake deal before I left the property.
So that's how I found.
And sorry, you said this, it had already sold or it had not sold you.
It was for sale when it hit Realtor.com's organic home.
And then I went to go do public search records on if it sold, what price it was for, who's the new owner.
But I saw that it was taken off the market a couple months ago.
Okay.
So it was listed on Realtor.com.
It got a ton of organic virality just because of how unique it was.
And you're like, whatever happened to this, you do some digging.
What did it sell?
It was taken off market.
Correct.
It was taken off market.
And that was really intriguing to me.
So I was planning to build a barn at that time from scratch.
but through doing research, and, you know, I was like, where's arena, Wisconsin?
And it ended up being 45 minutes from my grandparents' barn in Wisconsin and the same part of the state.
And that was even more appealing to me from my experience growing up at my grandparents' barn.
So it's kind of how I came across it and just started cold calling.
And yep, that's the one?
That's the flagship.
This is the first one ever.
First one ever.
Okay.
All right.
So did he ever tell you why he took it off the market?
It was when the golden era of post-COVID interest rates started skyrocketing in 2023.
Okay. So the market just softened and he didn't get as much interest as he hoped?
It started shifting from a major buyer market to a major seller market to, you know,
interest rates going up and converting, you know, the pendulum shifts. And he was listed a little
bit too high because of all the work that he put into it. And he just took it off market because
they were just using it for their family and they owned it outright and um it never it never looked
anything like this we did the conversion obviously but the actual bone conversion from a dairy barn to
a base home was already done before we bought it i'm almost surprised like it went so viral i got so many
clicks and he didn't just like stick it out because if i'm him i'm thinking i knew my i knew my barn
was special but holy crap number one on this list like someone's got to buy this you know yeah he
actually wasn't even aware that he was number one on. Oh, wow. Okay. Well, that changes things.
Very old school concrete guy, you know, his realtor got some good features and pressed for him.
But that market, if you remember in early 23, it started shifting very rapidly.
Oh, yeah. From early in 23 to 2020. So that changed buyer sentiment and seller sentiment as well. And that's
kind of why they weren't able to sell. Well, it was a double whammy because people weren't like staying in Airbnb's as much as they were
during COVID either. So it was it was a double whammy, right, for the Airbnb market.
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. The middle got crushed in Airbnb for a while. And it kind of shifted what
it's looking towards in the future right now. Okay. So you're like 30 minutes west of Madison. Is that
right? 30, 40 minutes straight west of Madison. Yep. Okay. So you reached this guy off market. It was no
longer listed and what do you say like because this is the hardest property that you know
most people will ever buy because you don't really have a track record it's hard to sell them on a
vision you're just selling them on your you being a dreamer um what was that conversation like
i was you know it was really just um i'm very open and transparent you know i'm i'm big on
networking and you know introducing myself to people um that might be good business partners or
people that i want to buy yourself from and um i just asked him if he still was interested in selling and
he said maybe. And I just asked if I could come take a look at it. And he said, I'll meet you there
in three hours. And I closed my laptop, blocked my calendar and got right in my truck and started
driving there from Chicago. Okay. And so this is smart. I love for those listening. Like,
if you want to do a deal like this, like potentially a life changing deal, you got to get in front
of the person, in person, right? Whereas if you're like trying to scale this and like, you know,
you're adding, you're going from 14 to 15 and your time is,
much more limited. That might not always be possible, but I think it was really smart of you to get
in front of him in person, belly to belly, as they say, because this is kind of unique ask,
right? Absolutely. Okay, so I think I found the original article that you saw on Realtor.
Let me share this other screen. 945,000. Was that what it was originally listed for? Is this it?
Yep. It was originally listed for 945 when it hit market. Okay. And then he took it off, you know,
He doesn't have as much leverage anymore.
How does that pricing conversation go?
We ended up acquiring it for 775.
Awesome.
Okay.
And we actually, we got it commercially reappraised last year for $2.1 million.
Wow.
Okay.
775.
What was financing like?
Most of our properties, they're all commercial financing with small local community banks.
And so 20% down, 25-year amortization, three to five-year boom.
Okay. And did you, what about financing the like the buildout? How'd you pay for that?
We took out a business line of credit on a property that I had down in Tennessee and maxed out our equity on a cabin that we had in the Smoky Mountains. And then I also took out a home equity line of credit on my home that my family lived in and then also used a portion of savings.
Man, all right. So you just went, you just went all in on this. Had you had you had you seen a,
any signals from the market like that or any,
have you done any test with ads or landing pages?
We're like, man, all I've got to do is get this open and I know it's going to be hot.
Or were you just like, it was the number one on realtor.com.
I know this is very virulable.
It's just going to work.
It just has to.
I started seeing trends and unique type of structures and unique types of experiences
combined with large group stays for family reunions.
And those three combined.
combined with my experience growing up in my grandparents' barn, you have to trust your gut at some
extent.
People say trust your gut, but really your gut is an accumulation of millions and millions of
experiences that you have and knowledge that you have that you can make in a couple seconds.
But when you really break it down, it was those three things.
Yeah.
So it's interesting because that gut that you're talking about can go one of two ways.
Luckily, it went one way where you're like, I know this market inside it out.
I know what a good value is.
I'm tracking Airbnb, you know, demand.
I'm like in this world.
So I have a unique insight and unfair advantage, if you will, into knowing that this is a
killer deal and I'm going to make it even better.
Right.
So that's one side of your gut.
The other side can be total like proximity bias and confirmation bias.
And you're just like, like you have all this nostalgia for the area and for your grandparents
barn down the road.
So like you're over indexing on how much other people will love it.
Right.
And so people can, you know, use those same life experiences or data points to make bad
decisions because they, you know, they're extrapolating their thoughts, nostalgia experiences on everyone
else and it doesn't always work out that way. But I think in this case, I mean, hindsight 2020,
of course you made the right decision. But I love to say everyone has an unfair advantage, right?
Everyone does. Unique insight, perspective, whatever, like a four-year-old does about dinosaurs.
He probably knows more about dinosaurs than I do. That's an unfair advantage. I do about other things.
So you were smart and that you leveraged what you knew into something profitable.
And that's the thing.
Like I started seeing that the middle portion of the Airbnb market was getting crushed,
you know, two, three bedrooms and just a place to lay your head and being very market
dependent, like people going to Nashville or the Smokies or suburban city centers.
Like even pre-COVID, that was already shrinking.
But post-COVID, the middle of the entire market, like 90% of what the middle was, was getting
crushed.
So I wanted to dissect that and find out who.
was still excelling and why and where were the fastest growing parts of the vacation rental industry.
And it was five, six bedroom plus unique structures and unique experiences.
Yeah.
I mean, with some exceptions, like the worst place you could be is a generic three bedroom home
in Orlando, right?
Or a generic three bedroom cabin in Broken Bow, Oklahoma.
Because that's everything.
You either need to be, it's got to be a barbell strategy.
You need the cheapest, smallest place that anyone can afford that will be booked no matter
what or the biggest place that's 16 plus people where four families can split that $2,000 a night
charge and it's not very painful for any of them, right? But the messy middle is where like people
succeeded during the peak but are getting crushed today. Absolutely. And, you know, a lot of
operators compete on price. And one of the biggest pivotal moves that we made as a strategy from a
company perspective was competing on experience instead of price. If you compete on experience
instead of price and not have to slash prices to try to get people to book your place,
but you're competing on the experience that you know you're going to deliver for people in groups.
I think that's where you want to be and you want to be original and inventing new amenities
and creating experiences that don't exist is really what we do.
Yeah.
Now, I mean, I had a 16-person Airbnb a little before this in 2022.
And that's kind of where I had my light bulb moment.
I started using AirDNA and all these other third-party sites to start researching other markets.
And that was my big unlock is Airbnb is really good if you have a really big place,
really unique and really big. And I almost like tripled down and bought a bunch more units,
but I didn't. And I'm glad I didn't just because I've done out of the sense that was a good use,
that were a good use of my time. But I'm tracking. So 775 on this, you put in like 150 and change
just for the note just to buy the thing. And then you leverage yourself to the help basically as
much as you're able. How much did you end up having to spend on renovations for this?
Post-closing CAPX was about 100 to 125,000. And that was to add all. It's not bad at all.
Yeah, yeah, it was the structure itself was really unique already.
It just needed improvements to the indoor pool, the outdoor pool.
We love doing slides off the decks, building indoor jungle gyms.
We built an indoor like jungle gym commercial playground,
renovated the party shed area, which is a different structure separate from the barn.
And we put a nine-hole commercial mini golf course where the cows used to be milked on the first floor with an arcade.
So we added a lot of those things to it.
And in addition to furnishing it and amenitizing it and home decor and whatnot.
How did you do all that for 125?
Was there sweat equity?
Like were you getting creative there?
Yeah, I mean, the most recent ones, obviously we have a crew of carpenters that work for us mostly for, you know, full time.
And but for the first one, it was my wife and I and our kids and, you know, grandma and grandpa and brothers and sisters, cousins coming by and helping us do the setup.
So we didn't have too much of a labor expense.
You know, it was kind of like a family setup.
And we got it done in 30 days.
We bought it September 1st and we were out of there by the end of it.
Sorry, 30 days, you said.
30 days. Yeah, we bought it on September 1st, 2023, and we launched the page September 30th,
2020. And we were up and running. Okay. Did you do anything to promote the property other than
launching it on Airbnb? We didn't want to rely on Airbnb solely as the only place where we're marketed.
So we started an Instagram page. We did a little case study on what we should call the brand. It should
have been barn something barn house. And we landed on Big Sky Barn House. And we started the Instagram page,
Big Sky Barn House. We pumped in, I think, $500 into one.
Instagram ad on a reel that we made. It wasn't even video. It was just like static images
of the actual place. And we were just calling out the amenities. And that one reel, I think,
got over 500,000 views and started generating from that one reel four to five bookings a day from
the time we launched the page. Oh my gosh. All right. So you launched, you said September 30th,
the Airbnb? Yep. And when did you launch this first Instagram reel? I think it was September 3rd or
fourth. Okay. So before you opened. Right. It was way before we opened.
We were there in construction.
Yeah, it was like a couple days after we bought the property.
How did you have good enough pictures by that point?
We used a lot of the existing images and then we actually rendered in some of the amenities
that we were installing into the images.
And then we caveated on the listing page.
Some of these images are renderings, but the base home is what it is.
Yeah.
Check back on at the end of the month for the, you know, post construction images.
And we just caveated that on the page.
Yeah.
And if for some reason, some person sees the real images after already booking like,
you're not going to hold them hostage, right?
Like, who cares?
It's worth the risk.
Did you post this video?
So you started a brand new Instagram page for this?
Zero followers.
Yep.
Okay.
Did you post this video organically, let it play out for a while and then put paid money behind it?
Or did you start with paid immediately?
Post it organically for the first week.
And then I started the meta advertising account and then put about $500 into pushing the
real into, you know, you can select your market and demographic and whatnot.
Okay.
I think this is like, I don't know what we're about to talk about.
but this has been the biggest alpha, the biggest takeaway for me so far. And, you know, results,
results not typical, results not guaranteed, whatever. For $500, you were getting how much in bookings
every day? For $500 one time, how many in bookings per day were you getting for that first period?
Our average booking size is somewhere between $4,000 to $5,000 a booking. And there were some days we were getting
five to six bookings a day. Oh my gosh. What would you say the total ROI was, not including
repeat guess, but just for the first guess, for all those bookings that came directly attributable
to that $500 campaign, how many booking? That's a great question. I believe when we were
fully done and we left and the page was up and running, I'm sorry, the page was up and running
when we fully finished the construction and we were, you know, gone and we're just like, okay,
now we need to figure out our full marketing plan because we're done with construction. I think we had
around 80,000 in bookings during the setup. Oh my gosh. So $500. And then we had, you know, around
75, 80,000 bookings before we left. So, I mean, by the time you open, you've paid back half of your
down payment, basically, or three quarters of your buildout costs, however you want to look at it.
Are you just like bouncing off the walls? You're just like, this is a home run. We did it.
Like, we've made it. Yeah. It's crazy because I remember like two days before closing, I was like,
what am I doing? I'm like betting my life on this. Like I'm pulling out home equity lines of credit,
taking out savings. I'm leveraging another property I have if it doesn't work. Like, I could have
gone bankrupt if it didn't work out. But I went all in because I believed that it was going to work.
And even though there were people around me, you know, being like, what are you doing?
That's crazy. Something that I felt really passionate about. And I just had a gut feeling that I knew it was
going to work. And right after we set it up and we got the professional pictures done of the setup,
the bookings soared from there. I think we hit 200,000, 45 days out from launch. And then we hit
300,000 in bookings, just three months out from launch. And then at that point, I was like,
this deserves my full time in detention. This is something that deserves to be seen.
scaled. Like there's clearly a gap in the market. We had 10 to 15 people a day reaching out why they
couldn't book the dates they wanted because there was a group that booked it. You're like,
we need more barns, baby. We had a wait list of hundreds of people that were waiting for the
second one that we said we were going to open up soon. And then we ran into the issue of how,
where are we going to find the next one and how are we going to do it again? And at that point,
it was when I put in my notice at my corporate job and then just went full time into building us.
Did you start coming up on your prices as your waitlist grew? Yeah, we made a big mistake in
pricing. We were not set up.
on dynamic pricing for the first few months.
So we had a flat rate for weekends and weeknights before we got set up on price labs,
which is our dynamic pricing software where you can set baselines.
So it doesn't, but like the pricing is very elastic.
I mean, the average lead time for our bookings is six to eight months.
But like if there's a date that starts getting five, four, three, two months out,
it'll drop from 1,500 to 1,000 to 700 a night.
But on the flip side, if it's something that people are clicking, just like airline
ticketing works, and you have 500, you know, people click a date for a group at one
property, it'll go up to $4,000 a night. So we've seen as high, it's in the four, high fours, low
fives for a night, but as low as, you know, seven, 800 a night. So the software, once we unlocked
that for our operations, it unlocked much more profitability for our pricing strategy.
So you, you charge between $700,000 and $5,000 a night based on demand and seasonality,
et cetera. That's insane. What is your occupancy on this first unit average?
At this unit, because it's still our flagship. And none of the other properties have beat it yet,
which is one of my personal goals is to open up a location that will be in this one,
is portfolio occupancy floats between 45 and 48%.
And this location is at around 65%.
Wow. And for some context, like if you owned an apartment complex, you'd be broke, right?
Yeah. Like you just can't. But for Airbnb, that's very good from what I understand.
Absolutely. As a portfolio, I don't think I'd ever want to be above 50% occupancy. The property
needs time to breathe for maintenance and improvements. And people just like wear and tear.
Well, the same principle is true and other asset types as well.
Like with an RV park, you never want to be at 100% occupancy because it means you're too
cheap.
93, 95% is perfect because it means you're, you know, you've got equilibrium for what that market
will bear.
Looking back in hindsight, it's been three years plus.
What about that property made it so successful that you realize now that you didn't back?
That's a great question.
I think it's the history that comes with the property.
There's signage that we have up in the property that salutes back to, you know, this was an
1800s dairy barn that was an operation in the area and like fed the region. And there's history
behind it. It's not a new build. It's not there was original owners. And, you know, they used to
own the 500 acres behind us that you still have beautiful views to. You know, there's a lot to
it. I think we are along a U.S. highway, which is similar to like a hotel strategy versus
traditional Airbnb. We have a lot of traffic that comes down U.S. Highway 14. So I think being along
U.S. highway in conjunction with being a building that was an old dairy barn that was dilapidated,
that was converted to something crazy, unique, and special.
But also having the mass amount of square footage that we just have with an indoor pool and
an outdoor pool.
The other properties have indoor outdoor pools with the historical component of being a building
like this.
And it's just a great area.
It's not just Madison Metro, which is one of the fastest growing metros in the Midwest,
but we also have all of the Frank Lloyd Wrights, whereas I'm down in Spring Green that people
have to take Route 14 past our property to go to.
Okay.
Do you have any bearing on what percentage of your sales come from your location?
just drive by? We did put up a hundred foot mural on our structure facing the highway recently. And I think
we've gotten a lot more through organic search from that. But I would say, you know, it's hard to give
an exact number to that, but I would say it's somewhere between like 10 and 20 percent through organic.
Wow. Now, if I got these numbers straight, your first three months, you made all of your money back,
right? Give or take 150 on your down payment, give or take 125 on your buildout. And you made 300 grand in
bookings the first three months. Is that right? In bookings.
but they were paid out over the next 12 months.
Sure.
They hadn't been all fulfilled yet, but that's crazy.
Okay, so 2025 for this unit alone, what was your revenue and profit?
Revenue was around 330,000 and profit was in the low 40 percentile.
40, okay.
So like 140,000, is that right?
130 profit?
Around there.
Yeah, we did do a refinance too, so we were compressed a little bit to pull out equity,
but it was between, I believe, 130, 140,000 net profit after office.
Wild. Okay. So you make back your down payment every year, basically. And your payments on this,
are you sell the note on it? Yes. Payments are what, you know, $4,000 a month? They were before we refinanced.
So we refinanced at the new value at $2.1 million. So we got the new note. We still left 30. We still left
30% equity. And we did a 70% LTV. So our new note is, you know, 1.2 something. So I think it went from
4,000, a month in principal interest payments up to, I believe it's 9,000 a month now. Okay. And it was
You got an appraisal at 2.1, you said? Correct. Okay. So just to get our listeners or viewers up to
speed, pay 775 puts 20% down. He puts 125 grand into it. So you're all in 900 grand, give or take.
Cash out of pocket. You're all in almost 300 grand. It performs very well. You say, hey, let's get an
appraisal in here. And you had it appraised as a short-term rental, which is a big difference than
as a piece of real estate that's going to be listed on Zill, right? So you get it appraised.
someone who knows what they're doing with short-term rentals, they say 2.1, you say,
awesome, bank, let me pull some money out. They say, we'll lend you 70% of that 2.1. So you,
you refinance it and you pull some cash out and presumably put that cash into another property.
Correct. Yeah, that funded our next three properties through the cash out. Wow. Okay. What did your,
like, we don't have time to go through number two through 15, but what were some highlights from
properties number two through 15, especially number two? Like, I'm curious how the second one looked compared
to the first one. Yeah, the second one, we went down to the Bourbon Trail. So we went to Kentucky,
and we opened up our first location down outside of Lexington in Lancaster, Kentucky. And
that one was a newer built barn dominium. So the strategy is, you know, not just old barn houses,
but barn-like structures, commercial-like structures, and new barn dominiums. And this one was in the
heart of the Bourbon Trail. So there was major horse tourism and major bourbon tourism that carries
that market. And it was an underserved market. There's a lot of demand, 12 months of the year
for bourbon tours on the bourbon trail. And obviously, you know, with Louisville and Lexington and
all the hundreds of distilleries there, that was really appealing. Just really digging into the air
DNA and B&B Calc data, that market really popped out at me for, there's a lot of barn-like
structures in horse and bourbon country. And there's a lot of people that are willing to travel
for that experience. And that was number two. Were you concerned at all that you didn't know that
market anywhere nearly as well as you did the first market? I was. But I feel like if you have an
emotional attachment to a certain city because everyone always wants to invest in their backyard.
They want to be able to have a 30 minute or one hour drive to somewhere they invest. And that's
very limiting. So I just removed that entirely from our strategy and started looking at it from a
data perspective. Like where does it make the most sense to deliver an experience where people are
going to travel to and it'll still be a part of the brand, but still be within the Midwest
corridor or we're building our audience that is fast growing on social. Okay. Is if you, if I forced
you to choose one thesis for this entire business model, is it make a product, a property so good
so virulable that people can't help but to share it.
And whatever we share about it is much more likely to go viral than a generic property.
And that is going to do our heavy lifting on the marketing side.
Is that the thesis?
I'd say so.
I would also say that the thesis is to create a moat.
If you don't have a moat around your vacation destination or your business, it's going to be
very easily replicable.
And people can just come in and copy it.
And when you create a moat around your business, whether it's the market or your strategy
or the amenities or the property to,
type and the structure type, you create something that is very hard to copy. And I think that's
what we try to focus on. Yeah, because like up in Wisconsin, like anyone could start an Airbnb that had
a dairy farm theme, right? Cool. Whatever. But how many other people can buy a competing property
within a 30 minute radius that literally used to be a hundred plus year old dairy farm that fed the
region that was still habitable? It was like it had to check so many boxes that that was your moat.
You couldn't copy and paste it. Absolutely. Yeah, from property type to
you know, even just going to like rural markets, like rural markets are overlooked a lot too,
in addition to the property types that we go after. And a lot of the towns that we go to,
they're less than a thousand person towns. And they're in rural America, given an hour drive to a major
metro, but they're in rural Midwestern America. And that's also very hard to swallow for a lot of
investors in the vacation rental space, going to a market that doesn't have major demand.
Sure. We've kind of gone against the grain in that realm and doubled down on rural destination
days. Well, let me, let me dive in on that because a thousand person town, you know, on an island
sounds like a terrible idea, but many of these are within 30 minutes of a 100,000 person town or a 30,000
person town. So what metric do you look for to delineate between rural and to rural? Yeah. It starts with
the major metro, whatever it is, because all of our properties are no more than a 60-minute drive
from a major metro in Midwest America. So then I'll break down of those major metro cities,
which ones are fastest growing, have the best economic growth, which companies are.
moving there from the Fortune 500. What does population growth look like? What does crime look like?
Just a bigger picture of that major metro and then just look at a zoomed out picture of a one hour
drive around that major metro and find something with more acreage, less neighbors,
unique property type. Okay. So like your Des Moines property, La Cona, that is, what, an hour from
Des Moines? 40 miles southeast of Des Moines. Okay. 52 minutes, Google Map shows. 39.6 miles.
Was that your most recent property? We just said, we acquired that on April 20th, 2026,
and we just launched the page on June 4th.
That is our most recent one.
And so you did 14 barns and then one warehouse most recently.
Yep.
It's our first warehouse that we did.
How do you make that jump and why?
Yeah, it was, you know, we built the Big Sky Barnhouse brand from 1 to 14.
And I built this brand a year ago and it has been sitting on the back burner.
And Wild Wall Wall Warehouse is kind of like the wild child born from Big Sky Barnhouse.
It's more eclectic.
It's more fun.
And in my opinion, when you have warehouse space compared to like Barn Dominium or Barnhouse space,
you have sometimes five to 10,000 of massive wide open square footage with 16 to 20 foot ceilings
and like 105 by 50 foot structure where you can stack.
This is a blank slate.
Blank slate can.
Yeah, blank slate.
It's like a dream for a designer builder to come in and put an indoor pool, full court
basketball, commercial playground, karaoke bar.
Most properties just don't have that amount of space to stack something in one space
and put it all in the same room because that's going to really appeal to our guest avatar.
So really breaking down what our guest avatar was looking for.
from the barns. We wanted more wide open square footage to heavily amountedized wide open square
footage spaces. Okay. How many square feet is this warehouse? It was 8,000 square feet now. It was about
7,000 when we bought it. And we added a second story to the warehouse with like a motel style
overlook with new bedrooms. Okay. And then break down the numbers on this. What did you pay for it?
What did you put into it, etc. Yeah. The new financing structure that we've been doing on the most recent
deals is acquisition plus buildout with a commercial lender. So we bought it for 400,000 and our buildout
cost was 550. So total project was 950. And we put 20% down on the 950 price. And then the bank funded
the 550 buildout for everything that we did to convert it. Okay. So you put the 550 buildout plus the 400
together. And all you put in was 20% on the total. On the 950. Correct. Yeah. Okay. How long did that
take to build out. 40 days to the to the to the tea. How are you guys doing that so fast? That is so fast.
I'm looking at pitchers right now and you got was that a bowling alley. And in the Iowa location,
we have an indoor party pool room that has an indoor heated in ground pool open year round.
Next to that in the warehouse space, we have a full court basketball and soccer arena that doubles
is a toss a touchdown arena. And then next to that we have like a commercial grade like nice
kids playground like the ones that you'll find at like a church or a school. We're not
competing with like everyone's backyard, like the wooden ones that rot and kind of showed, you know, age over time.
So like a huge commercial playground wrapped by a custom infinity mini golf course.
And then on the other side of that we did a custom cowboy karaoke bar that has like a karaoke stage, a real karaoke machine and just immersive artwork throughout.
We work with an artist Eric Carroll who comes in and he's one of our partners and he designs and does all the murals throughout to kind of make it this immersive environment.
And then we put 300 hex lights on the ceiling that changed the.
the entire ambience of the place. And those lights on the ceiling also change to music. There's like
a music sensing mode, which changes it to like a party warehouse, which is awesome for family
reunions and groups coming in. And in addition to that, the outdoor has like a fire pit and hot tub.
And it's a really special place. It's been our most successful launch to date. We open the booking
page on June 4th. We're sitting here on June 29th. And we have roughly 190,000 in bookings in the last
25 days since we launched, which is by far head and shoulders, the most successful launch.
we've had. And I think it really comes down to like, I remember like touring this place. And I was like
sitting here in this like empty shop that was like gravel floors and had nothing in it. And I'm like,
grinning ear to ear and the realtor's looking at me like, it's a shop with gravel floors.
What like, what do you see here? Gravel floors. Jeez. And I was like, this is going to be
amazing. Like this is going to be the best place ever. And she's like, it's a shop. It's used for
storage. And really just the blank canvas square footage is what was appealing to me. And, you know,
we've got, this place has gotten 15 million views in the last couple weeks since we launched the
And we started launching all the media and working with influencers and partners.
People have really liked the new concept and the new brand that we've launched.
So the plan is to build the Wild Wild Warehouse brand in conjunction with Big Sky Barnhouse
and grow at the same way we did the barn brand moving forward, but kind of like sister
companies.
I'm just like Florida right now because this is about as rural as you get.
Oh, yeah.
Like you're an hour from a metro, aka Des Moines, Iowa.
like an hour and Lacona has 354 people in it and is this a place that has like some
random like like Hamilton Missouri people come from all over the world to go do quilting right
does it have a place like that or is it just there's nothing in Lacona there's there's
Lekona has a great community and I've got to meet like everyone in the community probably most
of the people in the town like really sense of pride of like where they're from and what they do
So like the community itself is awesome.
But outside of, there's nothing really in La Cona.
There's one dive bar called Backroads, which is an awesome bar.
And our crews were there eating dinner and plain billiards for most of the buildout.
And there's really nothing to do in La Cona itself.
Like Wildwall Warehouse is the only attraction in town.
If you go a little bit farther outside of La Cona, obviously you have like Des Moines Metro and everything that Des Moines has to offer, which is the fastest growing.
Is this it right here?
No, if you go north of where city center?
right here.
If you go north on that main road and then zoom in, you'll see it.
Right.
No, if you zoom in a little bit, just north of that square and then go down on the left side of that road.
If you go south.
Right here?
No, you keep going south of there.
Keep going.
Keep going.
It should be one of those places right on the left there.
Right there.
Okay, because I know that I saw the picture of the football field.
So, yeah, we're right across from the football field.
That right there on the left side of the football.
field not across the street so no they didn't have the google maps updated yet but yeah we're that that
area where it's all brush on the left if you go left yeah that's where it is right now but this is
probably not updated with the build okay but it's right across from the football field what was this
warehouse used for before just storage commercial storage oh my gosh and how many acres was it on
uh we have about three acres i believe okay
Like a commercial storage warehouse with 8,000 square feet, there's thousands of those.
Why did you pick this one?
Des Moines Metro is the fastest growing metro in the Midwest.
There's been, if you go to downtown Des Moines, there's cranes everywhere.
There was, I think, a $3 billion development plan that was announced a few years ago to
Des Moines City Center.
So there's new skyrises, apartment buildings, new subdivisions being built out more and more
into the rural area every single week.
And there's a lot of Fortune 500 companies coming and opening up their headquarters.
and population is just booming in Des Moines Metro.
So there's more and more of a base that we can draw from.
But the economic data was astonishing when you look at it.
So we wanted to be just outside of that, you know, a 45, 50 minute drive away.
Yeah.
So is this going to be more successful than your first launch then when it's all sudden done?
I hope so.
It is definitely pacing to take the number one spot.
I think in two to three months we'll know for sure if it does.
But it has been the most successful launch in a four-week period from any of the properties
have launched.
How much do paid Instagram reels play into your strategy or is,
organic of the bigger needle move. Yeah, we don't do any paid ads on meta anymore at all.
So everything is organic. We do work with a select few travel influencers that will, you know,
we'll give them a free night's day, and they'll come in with their friends and family,
and they'll feature the property and they'll collab post with us on social. But we do have an in-house
media team that does all the content and editing and everything for the brand. And we just go
all organic. Now, like, I'm totally with you on having an idea to do stuff like this. I'm, you know,
I get it. But how do you get, where do you get ideas to put these hexagonal,
lights and the artwork and the carryout.
Like where do you source all that inspiration from?
I think it comes down to, you know,
creating a moat around your business.
Like I looked at the top five Airbnbs in Des Moines Metro before I bought this one.
And I studied their pages for weeks.
And I saw why they did so well and what they had and what they were missing.
And more importantly,
what from our internal data at our portfolio,
we can start to see, you know,
consistencies between, okay,
people want pools,
whether they're indoor or outdoor.
If our guest avatar is family that has a little bit more disposable income and they have 20 to 40 people in their group, they want a nice playground, something they'd find at a church or a school. So we started investing heavily into pools and indoor commercial playgrounds that are heated and cool year round. And just other unique experiences like the helipads and the indoor petting zoos and things like that. But for this property specifically, I think it came down to that. Okay. How many people are on average or staying at your properties? I'm sure there's a broad range. But take for instance, your newest one and your oldest one, how big are these group sizes? Because I
On Airbnb, you can only filter for 16 plus, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we do have a direct booking website where we're 35% direct now.
So we're relying less than less than legacy OTAs like VRBO on Airbnb.
But the thesis from the start was 20 was the magic number.
If you can sleep 20 people for a large group stay.
So the first one in Arena, Wisconsin was 20 people can sleep.
We started moving more towards 30 and 40 person group stays.
Okay.
You know, and higher bedroom counts.
And this one in Iowa can sleep 30 people.
Okay.
And then diminishing returns.
after 30, I imagine. You start to get a lot more corporate retreats when you go bigger than that.
And youth groups and things of that nature. But 40 is our biggest one that we have.
Now, one of the bigger risks with having, you know, big Airbnb properties like this are parties.
That's what we struggled with. What do you do about that? Like, you know, obviously there's going to be
parties, but like a destructive party or a teenage party. Like, how do you manage that?
Heavily guest vetting and making sure that your marketing is consistently directed towards your guest
avatar. So we set them up to be family friendly. And then all of our marketing is direct.
directed towards families. So we naturally draw that type of guest avatar because of that. Not to say that
you don't get the occasional bachelor party here and there, but usually because of the price point that we're at,
the groups that even come in to have a good time, whether it's a bachelor party or a mom's wine
trip or whatever it might be, they're usually some of the more respectful groups because they're not
trying to look for a place that's cheap that they can just throw a banger of a party.
When I had my 16 person Airbnb, I got this booking, didn't think anything of it. And this
stranger with an anonymous account DM'd me on Airbnb and said, hey, look at this screenshot. And it
was a Snapchat screenshot of someone announcing my property as a party for like high schoolers.
They were charging like five bucks ahead. And I'm like, thank you so much. I owe you dinner at the very
least. I canceled the booking. I'm sure I avoided some crazy, some craziness that night.
But there were also some parties that slipped through that were major headaches. Airbnb's done a great
job on their platform to mitigate like fake accounts because we've ran into that a few times where we've
had law enforcement and removed groups that had fake accounts that booked it for something similar.
But they've increased their measures on making sure that, you know, there's no fake accounts doing anything like that.
Yeah. What tools do you use for doing research? Like what is your total tech stack for like pricing out, you know, competitive research, like finding new areas, new properties, etc.
Yeah. Great question. We use hospitable for our property management software. So we link all of our properties from our direct sites and all the OTAs that we're on to hospital. And, you know, we obviously have all of our automated guest messaging with high touch point across 10 messages from time of inquiry to post.
checkout and everything in between. It's one of the best software. We've actually built our direct
website off of the hospitable API as well. It integrates the best out of any other property
management software that I've seen. So hospitable number one, it's like the glue of the ops of the
business. For acquisition and perform analysis and just like researching markets and whether you
want to get into co-hosting, B&B Calc is the, I'd say the best one that I've used. It's similar to
AirDNA, but I think it's better than AirDNA. And it is a software tool that you can use. You
can type in any address and you can get a general overview, but then you can go in and modify it
and tweak it and make it completely customizable, even add in your own branding onto it. You can share
it with, you know, realtors, bankers, investors. You can do your own performa analysis and they have a new
markets tool where you can like compare market side by side and even like operators of property
management companies side by side. So it's a phenomenal tool that I've, you know, it's probably one of the
the biggest components of like how I've been able to scale is effectively using B&BCal. Okay. Anything else
of note? Any other tools? We use
Claude, Gemini, and ChachyPT
quite a bit as well for the design and buildout phase
and for inspiration on our renderings.
I'd say like a lot of these
designs that we have, they're very immersive, they're very
filled with, very much filled with like artwork
and how do you render
an indoor pool with a rock climb wall
that has a swim-up bar? Or how do you change a warehouse
from nothing to something? So for rendering
design and coming up with inspiration for what we
want something to look like, we use those
three apps a lot for a lot of our renderings,
which could be very costly if in the past,
to get CAD drawings and work with an architect.
And it would have taken weeks on end to get something back that would have been a first version.
Within minutes, you know, we can have first, second, third renderings within, you know, just a
couple minutes.
So we use that quite a bit for inspiration and developing.
When you first spent that 500 bucks on your first property, did you like a geo fence,
everyone who saw that ad to a certain area or not at all?
We, if I remember correctly, we went to, we put in certain zip codes that we knew people
were traveling to that area for.
So it was very Madison, Wisconsin.
and heavy and like metro Madison, but then it was very like other big major metros within a three
to five hour drive from Madison as well. So obviously, you know, Chicago, Minneapolis, Des Moines,
Southwest Michigan, every other major metro in that area. If that first campaign went so well,
why not, why not do more paid? I mean, obviously you're eating plenty of eyeballs, but even more
eyeballs equal, you know, higher rates. We've started to go viral organically on social and grow a big
a big following from that point. And the organic views and like really honing in on that strategy
strategy was just a better use of our time and better dollar spent with like hiring an in-house
content team. Gotcha. 2026 this year, what we what do you think your total revenue and profit will be
across all of your properties? We're pacing towards three million gross across the portfolio.
And there should be somewhere in the 40th percentile for gross profit. Wow. Okay. What other like
Airbnb niches do you think that are really hot right now?
now, but you're too focused on to chase after.
Homes that have their own private pond or own private lake on the property that you don't
have to share.
I'm under contract on one right now.
Are you really?
Yeah.
Not for Airbnb for my own use case, but it's nice to have that in my back pocket.
Yeah.
And I would say like homes that just have like massive acreage that you can put things in like ATV
trails and like golf courses, things like that.
Golf is a huge amenity, whether it's mini golf or a par three or a part green or bunkers
or whatnot or just golf carts on the property.
golf is a big amenity across different applications that I would say is pretty big. Yeah, I'm under contract on a
231 acre ranch right now. Really? We're at 50 minutes from downtown Dallas. That's awesome.
It's for like me and my family like to just hunt fish, but there's like a six acre pond. It borders a small
river. Like it's got everything. There's no there's no home. There's a shop, but there's no home yet. But it's
something I plan to own for the rest of my life. That's awesome. Are you west of Dallas or what direction?
It's northeast of Dallas.
Okay, cool.
And 45 minutes from my house.
Very cool.
That sounds awesome.
Yeah, I'm going to get a big excavator and dozer and I'm just going to have fun out there.
That's the dream.
Okay, so acreage, ponds, anything else, any other type of random niche?
If you're not going to go big, I would say going small would be the move.
But like, avoid the middle.
Like two bedroom to four bedroom is where you're crushed.
I would say avoid urban city centers just for zoning and neighbor.
purposes, but also like you're going to go small, like just go one bedroom
couples getaway. If you're not going to do like the large family reunion,
I would say like the couples getaway is definitely something I'd be interested in, but I would do it
in a way where it was more of like a resort where you have like 10 or 20 like couples getaway
cabins on something that has a pond or a lot of outdoor amenities that can be shared,
which I've seen a lot of developers kind of getting into and there's it's still within the unique
experience build out, but it can be a couple's getaway where you have, you know, maybe 20 or 30
Airbnb pages. If someone wants to book it for every single one and you have couples that want the
whole place, great. But I think if you're not going to go really big, just go really small for
like the property site. Okay. What would the playbook be for someone that doesn't have a ton of cash
that wants to like start dabbling in this? Like is there a way in this industry to like test before
you go all in or like use someone else's property? Like I know that like Airbnb arbitrage like
house hacking is like not as sexy as gurus make it out to be. But what are you seeing?
Yeah. Arbitrage was really big for year.
from like 2010 to 2020, it's really hard to be successful in Airbnb Arbitrage.
There are some people that I know that do still very well with Arbitrage, but it's immensely
harder to be successful in arbitrage.
But arbitrage is a great way to start a lease, a long-term lease, you know, and then spend
$5,000 on furniture and then launch it on Airbnb as long as your landlord is okay with it.
There are some markets where you still can do that with load and no money down if it comes
furnished.
I would say the better option for no money down to get into like managing an Airbnb and get experience
in real estate investing in that space would be through co-hosting.
And you can co-host someone else's property that is the owner that maybe they're not in Airbnb
yet or they have potential to and you can show them what they could be making if it's their second
home or if they're planning to move or they could be upset with their current property
manager like effectively you'd be taking over property management and marketing of a property.
And I know a lot of people that have had major success in growing their co-host business and
then taking their cash flow and then starting to invest in properties and buying their own.
Tell me, like, an example of when co-hosting has gone well based on what you know and what that
structure looked at. Yeah, I think if you're going to get into co-hosting, you have to be, you know,
you have to come across as the expert in Airbnb management. And I'm going to go back to B&B
Calc. Like B&B Calc is the best tool they could use to get new co-hosting clients.
And if you can go to a property owner that has never been showed anything like a Performa or a software
tool that shows what they can make and you can confidently guarantee it, as best as you can.
I know some people that have gotten, you know, 10, 20 co-host clients in as short as six months.
And now they have this portfolio of Airbnb's that they manage and great experience that they're getting,
sometimes 20 to upwards of 30% of all of gross revenue you make as a co-host.
So it's a great way to get your foot in the door and start managing an Airbnb business by, you know,
it's not easy.
You still need to be resilient and persistent and be a hunter.
But if you, if you're passionate about it and it's something you really want to get in,
co-hosting is a great way to get into the industry.
So co-hosting is like, you know, being a property manager on steroids.
It's like you're more involved, but you're making more money, right?
And what, like, how does that look, though, if like with this first barn that you bought and you need to make real investments, who makes those investments?
Or does that not really work for co-hosting?
For co-hosting, I mean, if when you get to, there's different types of co-hosting, right?
But like, there will be some properties that aren't Airbnb's yet and they're going to want the co-host's opinion on what the buildout should be.
How do we set it up to be something that's going to be unique in the market?
So I think, I think the more that you can get the comp set and really fine tune and customize the B&B Calc report.
and bring that to them through your pitch on why you should be their co-host and their property
manager and marketer, the more success you'll have. But I think if you just come in randomly and say,
hey, I want to manage an Airbnb for you, you're not going to look like a professional and you're not
going to be someone that they can trust managing the property. So I think it really comes down to just
like professionalism and having like customized reports and just really knowing the market and
their business and who you're going to attract and what improvements or renovations you should do.
And from a co-host perspective, you'd have to convince the owner to come up with the renovations
itself. It's a little more difficult if there's major renovation involved versus if it's a property
that maybe has five or six bedrooms. It's in a great market and they use it as a second home or they're
unhappy with their property manager. You can come in and kind of swoop under them and get a contract sign.
So is it safe to say that the playbook for co-hosting, if you have no experience or much money at all,
would be to use some of these cheap tools to find like a high demand area and a high demand unit type in that area.
And then just do cold outreach, look at the tax records, Zillow, Redfin, whatever, to find some
that fit that criteria, do cold outreach to them and say, hey, FYI, I'm pretty tapped into this
market. Did you know that your property would rent for 1,200 a night and would stay, you know,
rented 50% of the time? I can manage all this for you. There's no risk to you. I'm going to take 30%
of the gross revenues, but I will manage literally everything else. Is that kind of the pitch and the
strategy until you get a yes? 1,000%. But I think before you go do that, I think there's so much
free knowledge on podcasts out there about co-hosting. You know, I've spent months on end learning about
things in the Airbnb space on podcasts in different realms before really just attacking the market.
So I think just like all the free knowledge that you can just gather out there first from John Bianchi,
Jeremy Worden, Bill Faith. There's a lot of people out there that really taught in Patrick Switek
out in Josh Retrie. I was at his conference a couple months ago. Awesome dude. He runs one of the
biggest co-host companies out there at the co-host company. I think like learning from like their
podcast and everything that they put out there and potentially, you know, either working with them or just
learning from their free knowledge that they drop, those avenues before you go out and just start
putting the work in. I think having like a good base knowledge and understanding before just like
attacking the market would be a great way to start. Okay. Anything we should have covered that I neglected
to ask you about? I don't know. We covered a lot. Well, where can people find you or your properties?
Yeah. Yeah. On Instagram, you can find me at just at Kyle McClash. That's K-Y-L-L-E-I-K-L-L-A-S-Z.
And then our two Instagram pages that have all of our properties and everything we do are just
big Sky Barnhouse and Wild Wild Wild Warehouse all across social.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, it was a pleasure.
Thank you, Chris.
Hey, guys, if you're still listening to this,
it's probably because you haven't had a chance to take your AirPods out,
you're still mulling the lawn, you're still driving, what have you.
If you're still here with me,
I would really, really love and appreciate a five-star review on Spotify,
Apple, or wherever you get your podcast.
It would mean a lot.
If you want to go the extra mile,
share this episode with a friend that might have an interest in starting a business.
It would mean a ton.
Hope you have the best day of your life today.
