INTRO
Speaker:Hello, listeners, welcome back for another great episode.
Speaker:My name is Sarah Karakaian.
Speaker:I'm Annette Grant.
Speaker:And together we're--
Speaker:Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:Let's start this episode like we do every week, and that is sharing one of you, our
Speaker:amazing, dedicated listeners, who's using our hashtag on Instagram, #STRShareSunday.
Speaker:On Sunday, we'll share you on our Instagram channel, and we'll share
Speaker:you also here on the podcast.
Speaker:Annette, who are we sharing this week?
Speaker:This week we're sharing @thevermontaframe.
Speaker:Again, that's @thevermontaframe, and it is hosted by Monique and Jason.
Speaker:And I just want to give a little shout out because we have our live event
Speaker:coming up, and I had the pleasure, Sarah also had the pleasure of
Speaker:meeting Monique live and in person at a short-term rental event recently.
Speaker:So if you haven't got your ticket, buy your ticket so you can meet all
Speaker:the hosts from all over the country.
Speaker:But let's talk about their A-frame.
Speaker:One thing that I love about, just in general, their feed is there are so many
Speaker:photos of people enjoying the space.
Speaker:I think sometimes we have all these photos that we took during the photo shoots of
Speaker:getting the listing up and running, but really being able to envision yourself
Speaker:in the space is really, really important.
Speaker:And I think that they've done an amazing job of not only showing
Speaker:people in the property, but also the landscapes around the property.
Speaker:So inside, outside, enjoying everything that the property has to offer.
Speaker:Some cool things too.
Speaker:They are pet friendly, so there are a lot of pets throughout the photos, which,
Speaker:if you're a dog lover, you're like, yes, I definitely want to take my pup there.
Speaker:One thing we want to note, they offer dog shampoo.
Speaker:So pet shampoo.
Speaker:If you take your pup on the hike with you, you can wash them down after.
Speaker:And then a lot of exterior photos because it is an A-frame.
Speaker:I feel like there's a lot of people that that's an exciting thing for
Speaker:them to do is stay in the A-frame.
Speaker:And so she's just done a great job of doing a lot of carousel pics, reels,
Speaker:and then also just video of everything.
Speaker:So I love it.
Speaker:I want to stay.
Speaker:And by the way, I love the exterior color of The Vermount.
Speaker:It's so precious.
Speaker:It's so cute.
Speaker:Check it out.
Speaker:Give them the love.
Speaker:Also, the other thing I want to highlight is their highlights.
Speaker:There are so many of them, and they've got it dialed in there, so I can go and
Speaker:check out all the things in their area.
Speaker:Well done.
Speaker:Check them out.
Speaker:I'm 19 times super host and premier host.
Speaker:Crushing it.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:We're going to have a special episode today.
Speaker:We've been told by many of you listening, by our coaches, by our members in our
Speaker:membership that y'all are curious about behind the scenes of Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:Not just behind the scenes of our business for our property management, but also
Speaker:what we do for Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:What is a day in a life like?
Speaker:Well, we recently hired our first full-time employee.
Speaker:Her name is Colleen Prochaska.
Speaker:She worked on our property management side for the past year and a half.
Speaker:We have absolutely been stunned by how much this woman can
Speaker:handle, how much creativity she has, how much patience she has.
Speaker:And Annette and I just kept saying it'd be so great to have Colleen on the team.
Speaker:And so because of all your support of Thanks for Visiting, we are
Speaker:able to do that and bring her on as our officer of operations.
Speaker:And so she is really just managing the day-to-day of Thanks for Visiting and
Speaker:all the content creation we're doing.
Speaker:And so we're going to ask Colleen what it's like because we asked her to leave
Speaker:her full-time job at a Hilton hotel.
Speaker:Who did we think we were?
Speaker:Let's find out.
Speaker:INTERVIEW
Speaker:All right, Colleen Prochaska, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:All right, Sarah, I'm going to have you do a small bio for Colleen, and then
Speaker:we're going to let her take it away.
Speaker:Well, from my perspective, let me tell you what happened when I met
Speaker:Colleen, and it'll include her bio.
Speaker:And then Colleen, if you can fill in the blanks there.
Speaker:But it was summer of 2021, and I get an email with a resume attached
Speaker:from this woman, and it has that she is currently a hotel general
Speaker:manager, and I'm like, what is this?
Speaker:I have some color in the story here.
Speaker:Sarah literally is like, Annette, I think I'm getting pranked.
Speaker:I think I'm getting pranked right now.
Speaker:Someone is sending me a resume that is too good to be true.
Speaker:I'm totally getting punked.
Speaker:And I'm like, no.
Speaker:First of all, I don't think people sit around with fake resumes for--
Speaker:well, maybe they do, but that's my feedback for the litle part of the--
Speaker:That is very true.
Speaker:And truly, Colleen, I was very close to just archiving your email because
Speaker:I was looking for an inspector, and I almost archived your email.
Speaker:But I did read her resume, and she had a storied history in both Hilton and
Speaker:Marriott brands as a general manager in the sales department as well, I believe.
Speaker:And we hopped in a call, and I remember trying to take the interview seriously,
Speaker:but I couldn't help but ask her like, why are you applying for this job?
Speaker:Because it was so part-time and very entry level.
Speaker:So with that, Colleen, why don't you share with us-- take us
Speaker:beyond, previous to that point.
Speaker:Share with us your storied history in hospitality, why hospitality.
Speaker:And then take us all the way up to that moment that you decided to apply to
Speaker:work at our property management company.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:I don't have a thing that I can point to as far as working in hotels.
Speaker:I've wanted to work in a hotel my entire life.
Speaker:So since I was a little kid, we check into hotels, I'm exploring them.
Speaker:I want to look everywhere, go behind the front desk, know every
Speaker:single thing that's going on.
Speaker:So started working literally at the front desk of a hotel.
Speaker:I went to school for just a broad business management, started working
Speaker:at the front desk of the hotel.
Speaker:Started loving those opportunities to make a guest super happy.
Speaker:Those connections are really what-- it was just exciting that you can make a
Speaker:call that'll change someone's entire stay.
Speaker:Um, I was looking at the sales team, and their schedule was
Speaker:a little nicer, and they could move a little bit more mountains.
Speaker:And I was like, wait, now, I want to work on the sales team.
Speaker:So then I started lobbying, give me all your admin work.
Speaker:I'll do whatever.
Speaker:Until I earned a spot on the sales team, which was awesome.
Speaker:And then from there it's like, yeah, being a sales admin's fun, but a
Speaker:director of sales is super cool.
Speaker:They get to go out for lunches.
Speaker:They're going to need to buy people special gifts.
Speaker:This is so awesome.
Speaker:So I became a director of sales.
Speaker:And it's awesome.
Speaker:And there's always that spot in my heart for sales, but when you're looking at
Speaker:the GM seat, you're like, wait a second.
Speaker:That person is deciding everything.
Speaker:They are making every decision for the hotel.
Speaker:And I liked that it started and stopped with them.
Speaker:And I could see the GMs that I had make a decision, and I could see what
Speaker:that decision did for the business.
Speaker:So I was like, no, I want that job.
Speaker:So I told my GM, hey, I want to be the GM of this hotel when you move on.
Speaker:How is that going to happen?
Speaker:So then I started that process, and I actually became the GM of the hotel where
Speaker:I was originally a front desk agent.
Speaker:So pretty cool.
Speaker:Then I moved around with hotel.
Speaker:So I've been a hotel GM for 10 years total.
Speaker:I found you, Sarah, on Instagram, um, with one of your properties that
Speaker:was viral, and I started actually following that property, and then found
Speaker:your guys' Instagram and found you.
Speaker:Obviously, fangirled nonstop.
Speaker:And I was like, I want to be these people.
Speaker:This is so cool.
Speaker:I had an interest in short-term rentals, and I thought that it was
Speaker:almost like a way that you could marry hospitality, which I was obsessed with,
Speaker:but actually be your own business.
Speaker:So yeah, you had posted basically a job for that type of work.
Speaker:And I was like, let me just toss it out there and see, um, if I could, number
Speaker:one, manage both, but then number two, if she'd even have a conversation
Speaker:with me, thinking if I could at least chat with you about something, maybe
Speaker:there'd be a spot for me in your world.
Speaker:And I actually interviewed with you, I don't know if you
Speaker:remember, inside a guest room.
Speaker:I took my laptop into a guest room.
Speaker:Oh yes, I do remember that.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:And the lighting was terrible.
Speaker:And I'm like, don't think I'm horrible employee, but I'm here, $800 a week.
Speaker:So this is basically my home.
Speaker:So yeah, that's how I ended where I ended up where I am with you.
Speaker:Well, and let's take the listeners even further, because listeners,
Speaker:we want you to understand why this episode would be of value to you.
Speaker:And it goes beyond just putting something out there and going after it because I
Speaker:think that's one of Colleen's most awesome things about her, is she just puts it
Speaker:out there and then goes and gets it.
Speaker:So first of all, I actually ended up hiring someone else
Speaker:for the job, to be honest with everyone, and Colleen knows this.
Speaker:I offered the job to someone else who had, I thought, more bandwidth to
Speaker:give me Monday through Friday, 9-5.
Speaker:I was nervous that she was running an entire hotel, and I wanted to make sure
Speaker:I had someone to focus on our rentals, but I couldn't help but be curious about
Speaker:why Colleen would want to work with me.
Speaker:And so I remember giving you maybe a shift, Colleen, isn't that-- an
Speaker:evening shift in guest services.
Speaker:So that person that I hired full-time, she actually ended up moving on to another
Speaker:opportunity and Colleen stepped into the 9-5 role because I saw that Colleen
Speaker:could juggle a lot of responsibilities.
Speaker:She was fantastic with the guests.
Speaker:And then Annette and I met with Colleen because we're building
Speaker:out a new product within Thanks for Visiting for beginning hosts.
Speaker:And I said, Annette, we have to involve Colleen in this because she
Speaker:is truly guest-facing, really using all the channels, and our property
Speaker:management software, and all the things more often than I am these days.
Speaker:Let's get Colleen involved.
Speaker:And so Annette and I went to Cincinnati.
Speaker:We like to immerse ourselves in a beautiful space.
Speaker:We went to a beautiful hotel, invited Colleen for the day, and
Speaker:we really got to work on creating this new product, which we will be
Speaker:launching hopefully later this year.
Speaker:But in that day, I could just tell there was a lot of great synergy
Speaker:between Annette, Colleen, and myself.
Speaker:And long story short, I hopped on a Zoom call with Colleen late at
Speaker:night, like we often do, and I asked her, I was like, what would it take
Speaker:for you to leave your really comfy corporate job and come work with
Speaker:Annette and me at Thanks for Visiting?
Speaker:And so, Colleen, when we asked you that, what was going through your mind?
Speaker:So many things.
Speaker:I don't know if you remember, I'm very rarely speechless.
Speaker:I have something to say all the time, and I don't think I said anything for five
Speaker:minutes, and I was just standing there.
Speaker:I was shocked but excited.
Speaker:It's funny because going back, initially when you said that I probably
Speaker:didn't have the bandwidth, at that time in my life, I probably didn't.
Speaker:So it ended up working out the way that it did.
Speaker:I was running an incredibly busy hotel at the time.
Speaker:I think I would've figured it out, but I have no idea how I
Speaker:would've juggled all of that.
Speaker:So then obviously our relationship grew as that position grew.
Speaker:And I don't know if you remember, one of the first things that I
Speaker:asked was, could I still work for the property management side?
Speaker:Because I love talking to guests so much, and I love that side of it, and
Speaker:I didn't want to miss out on that.
Speaker:But as far as what was going on in my mind, I was pumped out of my mind
Speaker:to be a part of Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:So I was like, it's an almighty yes, I think is what I said.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Obviously, let the listeners know a little bit, Colleen.
Speaker:There is so much synergy between hotels and short-term rentals.
Speaker:With all of your years in the hotel and now a few years in short-term
Speaker:rentals, give us some behind the scenes.
Speaker:What are some of the blaring differences?
Speaker:This is completely different and is night and day, and it
Speaker:never crosses the line there.
Speaker:What are some of the things that stick out to you being on--
Speaker:Night and day differences are going to be your staff size, of course,
Speaker:and also the concept of shifts.
Speaker:So I was just talking to somebody about this the other day.
Speaker:In the short-term rental world, you have to be so on your game and so dialed in
Speaker:because it's just you, where if at 10 o'clock at night the guests arrives at a
Speaker:hotel and their TV doesn't work, number one, I have a maintenance guy that's on
Speaker:staff, so I can just run up and fix it.
Speaker:Number two, I've got 200 other guest rooms I can choose from just to pop them into.
Speaker:It's so funny because in short-term rentals, the expectation is still there
Speaker:of top of tier hospitality, but you don't have that support system to make
Speaker:mountains move like you do at hotels.
Speaker:So you really have to make sure that you are very proactive in the short-term
Speaker:rental world, where hotels, I hate to say this, they are proactive, but
Speaker:we don't check 150 TVs and 150 guest rooms every single day, where at a
Speaker:short-term rental, no, you probably do.
Speaker:You probably check every TV at your space, every turn.
Speaker:So that was a huge, huge difference.
Speaker:Another difference I would say is maybe the-- at a Hilton, yes, there's
Speaker:different brands of Hiltons or whatever, but the system is pretty cookie cutter,
Speaker:where at a short-term rental, you may have to talk to a guest 3, 4, 5 times
Speaker:throughout their experience because they want to know how something works,
Speaker:or where a restaurant is, or whatever.
Speaker:It really feels more like you truly are hosting somebody in
Speaker:the short-term rental world.
Speaker:At a hotel, it definitely feels a little bit more transactional.
Speaker:So how much a guest talks to you, which is awesome, in the short-term
Speaker:rental world, it's so different from hotels, um, where it's just
Speaker:very black and white, I would say.
Speaker:What do you feel about a guest's understanding pricing, and dynamic
Speaker:pricing, and fees, the difference between hotels and short-term rentals?
Speaker:That's such a good question.
Speaker:I would say that guests do probably not understand the difference in the sense
Speaker:that a hotel's pricing, the price that it is, somewhere in there, all of those fees
Speaker:are in the same sauce in a hotel where it's just not cut out and listed the way
Speaker:that it is in a short-term rental world.
Speaker:There might be more questioning of fees and things like that in the
Speaker:Airbnb world as well as-- in a hotel, well, they'll just pull out their
Speaker:app with all these different OTAs and all these different channels.
Speaker:Or they'll book a hotel tonight somewhere else for cheaper, or do
Speaker:whatever they're going to do and just-- there's so many other options.
Speaker:So as far as marketing yourself or pricing yourself appropriately, it's so much more
Speaker:important to me in the short-term rental world because the options are different.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:So as far as your super house status, and your ratings, and all those
Speaker:things, all of that goes into account in your pricing, I would say, in the
Speaker:short-term rental world, where in a hotel, it's more set and forget.
Speaker:Ifthe guest doesn't like it-- and also the guest will haggle with
Speaker:you at the front desk anyway, so it's like-- you know what I mean?
Speaker:You have your system, and you roll with it, and you're comfortable with it.
Speaker:It's not as dire.
Speaker:Going back to Colleen in 2021 when you were working that one shift and we
Speaker:started training you in terms of making sure-- while you had less experience.
Speaker:Our listeners are no stranger to me admitting that I'm a control freak,
Speaker:but what would you say to someone who's listening right now, who's also new
Speaker:themselves in the short-term rental world, what surprised you as you were
Speaker:learning about short-term rentals that you wish you knew before you started
Speaker:training, before you got started?
Speaker:What did I wish I knew before?
Speaker:This is a good question too.
Speaker:My approach to it is going to be so much different because I do come
Speaker:from a hotel hospitality standpoint.
Speaker:So I remember my first shift, Sarah, because I remember you said, oh,
Speaker:watch a couple shifts, see the flow of how we respond or whatever.
Speaker:And I remember the first booking request that came in,
Speaker:which we have instant book on.
Speaker:So booking request is here, we got to figure out can this
Speaker:guest stay with us or not.
Speaker:It was this intense experience of reading their reviews, and where are they coming
Speaker:from, and why are they coming to town?
Speaker:At a hotel, you would never ask anybody any of those.
Speaker:I would never ask somebody checking in to a hotel, why are you coming to town?
Speaker:Never.
Speaker:So I remember getting that booking request, and I was hanging out
Speaker:with somebody, and I remember saying, I'm going to accept it.
Speaker:And when I finally hit accept, I was on pins and needles.
Speaker:Like, was that a good accepting?
Speaker:Was it not?
Speaker:Of course, now I realize that's awesome.
Speaker:That's life all day long.
Speaker:You're getting book requests or whatever.
Speaker:But the whole concept of that, in a short-term rental world, you're asking
Speaker:the host and the person you're hosting, are you guys a good fit for each other?
Speaker:In a hotel, it's like, just hook them, book them.
Speaker:Heads and beds.
Speaker:So yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What do you think about that, Colleen?
Speaker:Do you think we're too into the whole matching process in short-term rentals
Speaker:because of the sensationalism of media, and parties, and short-term rentals,
Speaker:and that sort of thing, or do you think in your experience now, two years down
Speaker:the road, that it's a good thing and that it's a good practice to have?
Speaker:I think it is the absolute correct practice to have, the matching, because
Speaker:it truly-- people who are staying in an Airbnb do want a specific experience.
Speaker:They are booking for a specific reason, and they are usually wanting a home that
Speaker:has charm, or specific coffee setups.
Speaker:The number of people that will write ahead of time to just check which coffee
Speaker:makers you have and what options you have, from a hotel standpoint, it's crazy.
Speaker:You offer them drip coffee and tell them to have a nice day, but
Speaker:these people want to know, is this going to work for me, for my needs?
Speaker:And I think that if you think about it from a hospitality standpoint, you
Speaker:do want to make sure you're matched up appropriately because the last thing you
Speaker:would ever want is for someone to come to your space and it not be perfect for them.
Speaker:And that's okay if it's not.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:We ran out and got a coffee maker, somebody who just wanted drip
Speaker:coffee the other day, so we're--
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:We're cool hosts too.
Speaker:We offered Keurigs, and French presses, and a Chemex, and this
Speaker:guest just wanted a drip, Mr.
Speaker:Coffee, so we went out and got it.
Speaker:I'm here for that though.
Speaker:Got to keep it easy.
Speaker:Easy breezy.
Speaker:Easy breezy.
Speaker:We've stayed a lot of places, and I yell, I'm like, this has too.
Speaker:I just want to coffee pot.
Speaker:Make it easy for me.
Speaker:I'm like the grandma, which I love grandmas.
Speaker:So if there's grandmas out there, I'm with you on this.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Colleen, let's--
Speaker:If that's their version of home.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Their version of home.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There you go.Boom.
Speaker:That is a quote.
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:Put it on t-shirt.
Speaker:Let's do it.
Speaker:I want to talk about one of the places that I think that you especially shine.
Speaker:There's two things that are almost like second nature to you, Colleen,
Speaker:which one is just the answer is yes, for the guest, taking care of the
Speaker:guest no matter what and fix the-- it's, yes, let's just figure it out.
Speaker:Do you think that is specifically from hotels and hospitality, or is that
Speaker:mixed in with a little bit of just you and your style of hospitality?
Speaker:Because I ran into some general managers at restaurants, at hotels,
Speaker:and I don't think it's second nature to them to be solution-based
Speaker:and, yes, let's figure it out.
Speaker:Have you always been like that since the start of your career, or is that something
Speaker:learned over time of like, let's lead with yes and figure this out for the guest?
Speaker:I would say that in general, in my personal passion in life, yes, I love
Speaker:being able to make someone happy and being able to do something for someone.
Speaker:With that said, I've had tons of very great leaders in my life, and also bad
Speaker:leaders that you learn from as well.
Speaker:And when you are in a driver's seat, even as a front desk agent and you feel
Speaker:empowered to do something, somebody's having a unfortunate experience,
Speaker:and you can order them a pizza, and you can watch that day change, for
Speaker:me personally, I don't know how it wouldn't fill you up and why you
Speaker:wouldn't just become solution-based.
Speaker:So if they're not that way, they should try it out because it's fine on that side.
Speaker:And also, as I've grown in my career, you can see the revenue
Speaker:benefit of being solution-based.
Speaker:You can see the review benefit.
Speaker:So obviously, it helps every plate that you have.
Speaker:But just being a kind person is really where the solution-based thing comes from.
Speaker:You segued for me.
Speaker:You didn't even know this.
Speaker:That was going to be my second strong suit of yours especially, is being able to
Speaker:zoom out and holistically look at revenue.
Speaker:Let's talk about your expertise in that, what you've brought to stay while
Speaker:hosting-- I think that you just shine in that, and I believe a lot of that is you
Speaker:being responsible for the bottom line at a lot of the hotels that you've worked at.
Speaker:Walk us through how you've taken your revenue management from a
Speaker:hotel and now really made that your shining spot in short-term rentals.
Speaker:I think that our listeners, that's one thing I really
Speaker:want them to learn from you.
Speaker:I mean, that is a skillset.
Speaker:People in hotels, that's their full-time job, is revenue management.
Speaker:And us as hosts are required to be the designer, the guest services,
Speaker:the inspector, the cleaner, the maintenance, and the revenue manager.
Speaker:So how can you help our listeners learn from your storied
Speaker:career in revenue management?
Speaker:How can you help them today with how you're using that in the business?
Speaker:The gist of it is that revenue cures any mistake that's made.
Speaker:So the leaner that you are from a-- and this is true in hotels, but true in any
Speaker:facet of your life, the more money that you have, the better everything goes.
Speaker:So when you're running a hotel and you have all these expenses and you have
Speaker:this and this and this, yes, you can keep cutting and cutting and cutting, but
Speaker:at some point, I'm like, wait a second.
Speaker:If we increase our rate or we increase our occupancy, one of the two, or both,
Speaker:if you're feeling really froggy, then everything just gets better from there.
Speaker:So where I spent most of my career, yes, we had a full-time revenue manager
Speaker:dedicated to our property, but the GM had the final say in what we were going to do.
Speaker:Revenue management, I know no one wants to hear this, it is an educated guess.
Speaker:If I had a crystal ball, that'd be [Inaudible], but that's not the case.
Speaker:You have to look at trends.
Speaker:You have to look at history.
Speaker:You have to make a call, and you have to be willing to take some
Speaker:risk in order to see what sticks.
Speaker:As Sarah says, throw it on the wall and see what sticks.
Speaker:We're taking a risk right now in our property management business with weekend
Speaker:rates, and there's some weekends where you're so excited by Wednesday, and then
Speaker:like right now, we have a property that is vacant this weekend, and I'm sweating.
Speaker:So that's the way it goes.
Speaker:But ultimately, I guess my advice would be that, yes, you understand that it's
Speaker:not a perfect science, but you can perfect it in that you can keep good records.
Speaker:You can check in often.
Speaker:You can know where all of your properties are standing rate wise.
Speaker:You can know what your occupancy looks like.
Speaker:You need to look at your booking windows.
Speaker:And all those things all feel very heavy and intimidating, but it's not.
Speaker:It's just a matter of spending some time.
Speaker:Just like you spend time practicing your towel fold, you spend time
Speaker:learning your booking window.
Speaker:It's all the same.
Speaker:It's just a different flow.
Speaker:And I think so many people are like, oh, but I'm just not wired that way.
Speaker:Well, nobody is.
Speaker:It is just practice.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:And then you just-- I will say, I do have a knack for forecasting.
Speaker:I don't know why that is.
Speaker:That's probably just--
Speaker:Well, you have a lot of reps in.
Speaker:You have a lot of reps in.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a good point.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Let's share, though, data over drama.
Speaker:What was it?
Speaker:Two or three weeks ago, you were sweating out a property that you felt,
Speaker:when we're using the key terms, you really felt like revenue was down.
Speaker:Correct?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:I was positive revenue was off.
Speaker:So Colleen was absolutely positive revenue was down, feeling it
Speaker:in her gut, like, this sucks.
Speaker:This is terrible.
Speaker:Why is revenue down?
Speaker:But let's talk to our listeners about what happened when we researched
Speaker:the actual numbers and how they can use that to help them too.
Speaker:Talk through that exact property.
Speaker:Yeah, so that exact property, and this is not one that-- which I
Speaker:give all the properties the utmost respect, but this one isn't owned
Speaker:by the property management company.
Speaker:So there always feels that extra layer of responsibility because you're
Speaker:reporting to an owner in this case.
Speaker:So I was already on pins and needles.
Speaker:And April was such a great month.
Speaker:Occupancy, in my opinion, for April for our market was through the roof.
Speaker:It was 74% occupancy.
Speaker:I remember it.
Speaker:And it felt like every single day we had a booking.
Speaker:Then May hits, and I had started a new strategy with pricing because I
Speaker:thought 74% occupancy is great, but we probably-- this is a bigger house.
Speaker:It's a expensive turn.
Speaker:I just thought we could probably get more money and sell it as a bigger house and
Speaker:do less turns, and I just was-- whatever.
Speaker:So I tried to push this rate, and I felt like occupancy
Speaker:was flushed down the toilet.
Speaker:I was like, what is going on here?
Speaker:It's hard when you make a call like that on a bigger house.
Speaker:There wasn't a lot of triage I could do at that point.
Speaker:Well, numbers run, and I was right.
Speaker:The occupancy was down.
Speaker:We were at 50% occupancy compared to 74 the month before.
Speaker:So significantly less people, but we had actually made almost four grand more than
Speaker:the previous month because of the rate.
Speaker:So it was crazy.
Speaker:That is crazy.
Speaker:That is where the numbers-- I know that we're so conditioned
Speaker:when we see things online.
Speaker:I'm at 90% occupancy, 98% occupancy.
Speaker:And it's like, wait a second.
Speaker:Is that that cool?
Speaker:You have an actual month that was at 50% and you were up $4,000?
Speaker:I would rather take that $4,000 than the 24% more occupancy.
Speaker:So volume is vanity.
Speaker:Profit is sanity.
Speaker:So knowing your numbers and staying in your lane when it comes to
Speaker:your spreadsheet, your numbers is really, really important.
Speaker:You don't know what anybody else's expenses are.
Speaker:You don't know what their overall revenue is, and so it is hard to
Speaker:put blinders on, but you have to.
Speaker:Because if Colleen was just sitting here in a normal conversation saying,
Speaker:oh my gosh, our occupancy's only at 50%, it's down 24%, we would immediately
Speaker:think revenue was down significantly, and it was the exact opposite.
Speaker:So I just want to applaud that of like, okay, yes, you
Speaker:were sweating it for a second.
Speaker:You mentioned something there too.
Speaker:You pushed the rate.
Speaker:When you pushed the rate, and you increased the rate, that experiment
Speaker:that you ran, was it a percentage?
Speaker:I know you said sometimes you've just to work on it and take some risks.
Speaker:What was your calculated risk there?
Speaker:So I had made a decision that I was going to increase rates at every property
Speaker:in our area by 20% on the weekend.
Speaker:And the reason for that is because we are sold out every single weekend.
Speaker:And old GM hotel, somebody's both seen, oh, my property
Speaker:ran 94% occupancy last month.
Speaker:Age old thing.
Speaker:Okay, well, you need to increase your rate.
Speaker:Nobody should be running 94% occupancy.
Speaker:That's crazy.
Speaker:Well, I was thinking to myself, when I'm doing these dance parties, because we're
Speaker:sold out on the weekend, like, hello, we need to be pushing the rate higher.
Speaker:So I increased the rate by 20%.
Speaker:Well, we were still full.
Speaker:So I was like, wait a second.
Speaker:Let me try.
Speaker:So I bumped it to 25% for May, which, again, it's risky, but it was calculated.
Speaker:We knew of some events that were going on in the city.
Speaker:It wasn't just waving a wand.
Speaker:You still have to be logical about it.
Speaker:So we increased by 25% of the 20% increase.
Speaker:So just an additional bump.
Speaker:And yeah, it worked.
Speaker:And I actually compared it with some other software, and we killed
Speaker:it for May, so it was just awesome.
Speaker:Yeah, our Q2 was fantastic.
Speaker:Wait, I think you just told me you were nervous about this weekend.
Speaker:Was this the first one weekend night?
Speaker:Colleen, she always sends me just offhanded comments.
Speaker:She's like, also don't fire me because we're not booked.
Speaker:Doomsday.
Speaker:No, I know.
Speaker:Don't fire me.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:I actually think most hosts out there, if we could get everyone raising
Speaker:their hands right now, if you have open weekends, you are freaking out.
Speaker:Like, wait a second, what's wrong with me?
Speaker:Why am I not booked?
Speaker:So the last thing I want to talk about pricing and occupancy with you, Colleen,
Speaker:because I do think it's also one of your sweet spots, is what do you do
Speaker:when you know you've pushed the rates?
Speaker:I know there's some discounting, there's some specials, there's
Speaker:some stuff that you do also to make the listing more approachable.
Speaker:So what are some of those tactics that you use also?
Speaker:So you can always run a promotion on Airbnb, which will highlight your listing.
Speaker:It'll slash the pricing.
Speaker:And one thing that I think people get tripped up on with that is that it's
Speaker:like just taking the rate down, but it takes a percentage of your ADR, so you're
Speaker:not-- I don't want to spoil anything, but it's not a true-- when people see
Speaker:that, it's not a true 25% off your rate.
Speaker:That's not real.
Speaker:It's off of your average rate.
Speaker:So I think people are sometimes afraid to use that feature because they don't
Speaker:fully understand what's going on.
Speaker:The other thing is-- I do this sometimes where I'm like, don't fire me.
Speaker:I do this sometimes, is adjust our minimum requirements because
Speaker:sometimes the minimum, say, won't necessarily make sense.
Speaker:This week in particular, if you're in a beach town, you're
Speaker:probably killing it this week with the 4th of July being midweek.
Speaker:But for our market, and I've made note of this because 4th of July
Speaker:is on a Tuesday, which means it's going to be on a Wednesday next year.
Speaker:This is going to be the same thing next year.
Speaker:We need to probably plan better.
Speaker:You might want to shift some of your items where that might link up better
Speaker:with what people's time off will be.
Speaker:So this is going to be a soft weekend for us because nobody's
Speaker:doing anything this weekend.
Speaker:They probably took Monday, Wednesday.
Speaker:So nobody's doing anything this weekend.
Speaker:ButI also give Colleen credit too.
Speaker:Our guests aren't doing anything, but then Colleen immediately switches
Speaker:her operational brain, and she's already giving our cleaning team the
Speaker:go ahead to go a little deeper, spend a little more time with our turns.
Speaker:Same with our inspectors.
Speaker:How can we love up on our guests?
Speaker:The way your brain works, Colleen, it's not even just 10 steps ahead.
Speaker:It's just like 10 steps to the left and right, and that is awesome, especially
Speaker:where I need someone who can help me think in every single direction.
Speaker:You do that.
Speaker:Is that learned, or is that just a skillset you've had your whole life?
Speaker:Another good question.
Speaker:I probably had some skillset like that, but you worked in a hotel, Sarah, so
Speaker:you know you got time to lean, you got time to clean, all that stuff
Speaker:of people are always in your face.
Speaker:At a hotel, you're open 365 days a year.
Speaker:Same as you.
Speaker:So we have to get it in where we can.
Speaker:So if we have a slow period, then yeah, let's polish some glasses.
Speaker:As I told the ladies today, let's high dust, because we're not
Speaker:churning and burning right now.
Speaker:So let's make sure that when this space is rented, that it's perfect
Speaker:for the guests because we have the opportunity to take a breath.
Speaker:Wait, you just taught me something.
Speaker:I mean, I can understand what high dust is, but is that
Speaker:a hotel term, to high dust?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Get up high.
Speaker:Listen, anytime you're at a hotel, I mean, don't but get
Speaker:up on the bed and go likethis.
Speaker:I'm not getting on chairs looking for high dust.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Well, somebody is.
Speaker:They'll bring it to you in their hands.
Speaker:So yes, it's best just to get up there, high dust, edge your corners, baseboards.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Baseboards are my love language.
Speaker:Get in there.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:AD BREAK
Speaker:We've been told, Colleen, by a lot of our HBMM members, so that is our Thanks for
Speaker:Visiting mastermind membership, and by listeners, what have you, Annette and I
Speaker:are truly perplexed every time of like, people want to know more behind the scenes
Speaker:of Thanks for Visiting, not as it relates to our rentals or to our short-term rental
Speaker:strategy education, but truly behind the scenes with our personal lives, or
Speaker:behind the scenes of Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:So you've now been with us for several months, plus you had a behind
Speaker:the scenes view when you were just the product management company.
Speaker:What was most shocking to you when you got a behind-the-scenes peak into
Speaker:Thanks for Visiting, the education and the edutainment that Annette and I do?
Speaker:What was most shocking for you?
Speaker:Most shocking, I don't know if you guys remember my first, I came up
Speaker:for a soft day, and it was you guys filming a podcast, sitting in a room
Speaker:watching you guys truly just sit here and have a conversation about-- you
Speaker:are certainly educating the masses but also doing this in real life.
Speaker:So take the Hosting Hotline for example, someone calls in, they ask a question,
Speaker:and then you two really volley it back and forth on what really is the best thing to
Speaker:offer this guest, or the best solution.
Speaker:And just watching it happen in real time is so cool.
Speaker:I know you guys probably don't get it, but from a fan girl
Speaker:standpoint, you're like, so this is how the magic happens right here?
Speaker:You guys just bounce back and forth on what's the best sheet?
Speaker:That's socool.
Speaker:It's very magical.
Speaker:It's magical.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then also getting more inside your actual membership and the
Speaker:resources in there, as far-- I tell it to people all the time.
Speaker:If you could imagine going into a group that has truly this many like-minded,
Speaker:intelligent people that are driven, I mean, you don't get those types of
Speaker:opportunities to be in a room with people like that very often that are walking
Speaker:your same walk, talking your same talk.
Speaker:That's pretty unique, and I think it's special.
Speaker:So you can go in there, and I am in that Facebook group, and I
Speaker:learn something every single day.
Speaker:And I think that as far as what is most surprising and impressive that
Speaker:you guys have been able to find, create this community of actual, intelligent,
Speaker:excited hosts, it's just cool.
Speaker:I'm just thrilled to be a part of it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I want to say something too about that, listeners.
Speaker:Whether it's inside our community, or coming to our live event, if
Speaker:you have not connected with other hosts, please find somebody.
Speaker:I know Airbnb has a ton of local community groups that you can become a part of.
Speaker:You might have a meetup in your town.
Speaker:Rent Responsibly has meetups.
Speaker:Obviously, the revenue is amazing, hosting the guests, but that has been one of
Speaker:the greatest gifts, is to connect with all of the hosts across the country that
Speaker:are, like Colleen just said, amazing.
Speaker:Their properties are amazing.
Speaker:The product that they supply the guests is amazing.
Speaker:And more importantly, they are amazing, amazing humans.
Speaker:Sarah and I, every day, we consider ourselves so lucky that we get to
Speaker:connect with them inside of our group and lead them, and then they lead us also.
Speaker:But yeah, I think what you just said too, Colleen, is that there is
Speaker:something to learn every single day.
Speaker:Like, what in the world?
Speaker:If you think you have it all figured out, you do not, because--
Speaker:that's the one thing I love about the members in our membership.
Speaker:They will be very, very honest with us that like, yeah, I thought I already
Speaker:knew everything, but then I joined, and I realized I didn't know anything.
Speaker:And so I also want to offer that, that things change every day, and
Speaker:there's so much more to learn because so many hosts have so many like
Speaker:amazing things that they are doing.
Speaker:A lot of creativity in there.
Speaker:Colleen, what are you most excited about when it comes to Thanks for
Speaker:Visiting, knowing what our initiatives are and what we want to do with
Speaker:the brand and the communities?
Speaker:What are you most looking forward to in the next six months to a
Speaker:year with Thanks for Visiting?
Speaker:Well, certainly, I cannot wait for the live event in September, Columbus.
Speaker:So I'm excited for that.
Speaker:I'm excited to meet a bunch of people in person that we're chatting
Speaker:with and emailing with every day.
Speaker:And then as far as big picture for Thanks for Visiting, I think I'm most excited
Speaker:for all of the different hosts that Thanks for Visiting is going to be able to serve
Speaker:with the products that they're providing.
Speaker:In Thanks for Visiting, there is something for everybody, no matter which stage
Speaker:of their journey they're in, to be able to continue to serve, and ultimately,
Speaker:this company is still very much so in it on the property management side.
Speaker:So they will continue to be able to keep serving.
Speaker:It's education that will just grow and grow and grow and flourish.
Speaker:It's exciting to be a part of something that is serving so many and can pivot to
Speaker:serve more as they need to which is cool.
Speaker:Love it.
Speaker:How are you feeling now that you're two, three months outside
Speaker:of being a GM, which is your entire career, was working in a hotel?
Speaker:You mentioned $800 a week.
Speaker:Annette and I, we work really hard, and when we do-- listeners,
Speaker:we do ping Colleen at night and on the weekends if we need to.
Speaker:We do try to respect her time, but share with us, and be
Speaker:completely honest, Colleen.
Speaker:We promise we won't do anything after the record button is pressed, but be
Speaker:honest about that change in your career.
Speaker:When you said your whole life, you wanted to be a general manager,
Speaker:and now you're essentially with an online company that's a startup.
Speaker:Verysmall.
Speaker:And you're working from home.
Speaker:No front desk.
Speaker:No front desk.
Speaker:And you're still juggling the short-term rental side, the management side, and the
Speaker:content creation side, and our membership.
Speaker:You really take care of our members inside of our membership.
Speaker:What is that like?
Speaker:It's an adjustment.
Speaker:I will say that I have had seasons of being a GM where you're so--
Speaker:it's all the same cliche stuff.
Speaker:It's the beginning of the year, you're going to crush every goal, your IFO is
Speaker:going to be through the roof, you're going to have the best service and all--
Speaker:I don't even-- what's IFO?
Speaker:Income from operations.
Speaker:Your bottom line.
Speaker:I'm like UFO?
Speaker:Stuff you put in the bank.
Speaker:I don't knowwhat IFO is.
Speaker:The majority of my career was with the same company.
Speaker:And they are very IFO-driven, and they are very service-driven, and scores.
Speaker:They developed me into what I am.
Speaker:But anyways, at a hotel, as much as it sucked sometimes,
Speaker:you weren't really in control of your day, it was always exciting.
Speaker:And there was a ton of human contact.
Speaker:So you talk to people all day long.
Speaker:As a matter of fact, you'd get in your car, and you would drive home in silence.
Speaker:You wouldn't even turn the radio on because you're so done talking to people.
Speaker:So I was worried that, would I get lonely?
Speaker:Would I get bored?
Speaker:Would I get whatever?
Speaker:But what I'm finding is that I'm actually incredibly passionate about this work,
Speaker:which is-- I guess I'd have to answer this question like in nine months because I'm
Speaker:still in out of body right now of how my--
Speaker:I love what I'm doing right now.
Speaker:I also do something new every single day.
Speaker:Obviously, you guys are just two people.
Speaker:I know sometimes you guys make up names, and we're at a water cooler or
Speaker:whatever, but in general, the team that I get to work with every day is awesome.
Speaker:And on top of that, it's such a different community as far as-- in the group or
Speaker:other people that I'm, communicating with, it's just such a different type
Speaker:of person that I'm talking to every day.
Speaker:So I would say that side of the tank is still full.
Speaker:But yeah, no, there's times where an ex-employee or somebody I used
Speaker:to work with will text me some drama, and I'm like, give it.
Speaker:Give me every drop.
Speaker:Don't leave anything out.
Speaker:Whatever.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, I'm very fulfilled where I am right now, though.
Speaker:No, actually, I think that's good point To talk to hosts about, because
Speaker:I know a lot of hosts, their goal is to become a full-time host and grow
Speaker:their portfolio and potentially quit.
Speaker:If they do have a full-time job, quit that full-time job.
Speaker:That was a huge transition for me when I went from going to an office every
Speaker:day to just my short-term rentals.
Speaker:I think that's probably why I linked arms with Sarah and have not let her go.
Speaker:So hosts, again, it is going to be a transition for you because going
Speaker:to the office, maybe having that corporate salary, having those certain
Speaker:things that you've been doing for so long, it is going to rock your boat.
Speaker:And again, I think that's why, again, Sarah and I have linked arms and
Speaker:then created even more of a bigger community because we're like, oh
Speaker:my gosh, there's other hosts that are out there that are lonely.
Speaker:And I do just want to bring that up of like, if you're doing real estate
Speaker:investing, it's a different lifestyle.
Speaker:Hosting is a different lifestyle, and we would not be good podcast hosts or
Speaker:good leaders if we weren't honest with listeners that this dream that you
Speaker:might have to only be a real estate investor, to only be a host, it is going
Speaker:to come with its own set of challenges.
Speaker:It's going to come with you being the CEO and having to maybe do all the jobs or
Speaker:choose your team that will do the jobs.
Speaker:But there is definitely a transition in all of it, because also hosting
Speaker:is a choose your own adventure.
Speaker:So that can be fun, but it is a rollercoaster of like,
Speaker:do I know what I'm doing?
Speaker:Do I not know what I'm doing?
Speaker:What is the income going to be?
Speaker:What is the seasonality?
Speaker:So there is definitely some risk involved and some major life changes, whether
Speaker:you're coming to work with us, Colleen, or a host out there is choosing to
Speaker:go all in on their hosting business.
Speaker:We just need to let you know that it's going to be a big
Speaker:change, but we are here for you.
Speaker:Obviously, you can listen to us all the time.
Speaker:You can watch our YouTube.
Speaker:You can join us in our membership.
Speaker:But that is why Sarah and I do what we do also, because we want to be
Speaker:there for you on your hosting journey.
Speaker:And I want to ask you, Colleen-- I mean, I myself am a go-getter.
Speaker:If I say I'm going to do something, I pretty much dig my heels in, and I do it.
Speaker:Even if I end up hating it halfway through, I'm like, no.
Speaker:Said I'm going to do it.
Speaker:Got to finish this.
Speaker:So any host out there right now, or someone who wants to host but maybe
Speaker:isn't quite ready to buy a property and they still want to be in this
Speaker:industry, what advice do you have for them on how to reach out to a company
Speaker:or to a human who they're admiring or who they want to do what they're doing?
Speaker:What advice do you have for them to just take that first step, send out
Speaker:that resume, pitch them your pitch?
Speaker:What do you have to say to that host out there or someone who's
Speaker:interested in the industry?
Speaker:I would just remind that person that what you're selling is
Speaker:yourself and what you have to offer.
Speaker:The most anybody can ever tell you is no.
Speaker:Some people might say it nice than other, but ultimately,
Speaker:you have to shoot your shot.
Speaker:Nobody is going to knock on your door at your house and say, hey,
Speaker:you want to be a whatever, for me?
Speaker:The only other thing I would recommend is, and I'm sure if any of my family
Speaker:members listen to this, they'll roll their eyes because they agree,
Speaker:but never stop talking about it.
Speaker:I never stop talking about-- in that case, I told everybody my
Speaker:master plan to be Sarah Karakaian's right hand, whatever she needs.
Speaker:From the day I sent that email, that was my plan, and I was
Speaker:never going to let it go.
Speaker:Then when I decided, oh, I want to buy a property, every person I know
Speaker:knows that I want to get a property.
Speaker:I never stop talking about it.
Speaker:So I would advise people the same thing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Let's tell people too, your grand plan, your whole reaching out to Sarah
Speaker:to help with inspecting, to helping Thanks for Visiting, let's tell
Speaker:everybody your overarching goal here is to buy short-term rental properties.
Speaker:I mean, you're a homeowner now for you and your boys, but
Speaker:that is the grand plan for you.
Speaker:That is why you are educating yourself.
Speaker:And that's also what I think is super admirable, is you're not just like, hey,
Speaker:I need to go all the way in, and find this property, and buy it, and do the thing.
Speaker:You're like, wait, what's the next step that I can take in that dream?
Speaker:So I think if you could share that a little bit too with the listeners,
Speaker:what is your dream there on the short-term rental ownership side?
Speaker:Dream, dream, dream is run property in our favorite vacation destination.
Speaker:So that would be like, you've made it.
Speaker:And then, yes, similar to the revenue management, uh,
Speaker:there's risk in everything, but I'm about calculated risks.
Speaker:So when Sarah said, hey, I don't know if you'd want to do guest
Speaker:messaging once a week, I thought to myself, no, this will teach me what
Speaker:to expect if I was ever doing this.
Speaker:And then, hey, what about revenue management?
Speaker:What do you think about our pricing or whatever?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, I would love to know how that works in the short-term rental.
Speaker:So I was thrilled that I got to basically get real time training so that when I'm
Speaker:ready to rock, I'm truly ready to rock.
Speaker:And it doesn't feel like a risk when you finally do it because
Speaker:you have all your ducks in a row and you know what to expect.
Speaker:Not saying that you couldn't buy a property and figure it out, but why do
Speaker:that when you have the ability to have community to help you along the way?
Speaker:I love that because so many people can preach just like, buy the property, and
Speaker:some people put themselves in a situation that maybe they're not ready for, which
Speaker:I'm all here for pushing yourself, and I'm here for getting out of your
Speaker:comfort zone, but I love that you took the path that was best for you, Colleen.
Speaker:I saw this quote, and that's sick of me saying it, but it really stuck out
Speaker:to me, of, if someone invites you on a rocket ship, or offers you a seat
Speaker:on a rocket ship, don't really care about what seat you're sitting in.
Speaker:Just get on the rocket ship.
Speaker:Now, I don't have a crystal ball, and neither does Annette.
Speaker:We have some plans about where Thanks for Visiting's going, and where our property
Speaker:management company's going, and all that good stuff, but Colleen, what I love
Speaker:about you is your list-- we had that talk too about when we asked you what
Speaker:it would take to leave your hotel job.
Speaker:Obviously, Marriott and Hilton have a much more predictable
Speaker:future, potentially, than Annette and I do, and Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:And so you really just said, get me on this rocket ship.
Speaker:Let me help you fuel it.
Speaker:Let me help you drive it at certain times.
Speaker:And that can be so scary.
Speaker:But my goodness, the rewards are ridiculous, especially
Speaker:where we want to take this.
Speaker:And so I just admire you for that.
Speaker:You've got two young children, and Annette and I don't take knowing that lightly
Speaker:when we invited you onto our rocket ship.
Speaker:So any listener out there who is considering a calculated risk, as Colleen
Speaker:said, to really consider it because, Colleen, what is the alternative?
Speaker:Let's say this doesn't work out.
Speaker:Let's say in six months, this isn't your jam, and you miss
Speaker:the front desk, and you miss--
Speaker:I mean, I think probably go on Indeed right now and get 55 jobs.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Well, that's what you guys said to me.
Speaker:You said that to me, Sarah.
Speaker:You said, hey, if you don't like it, or it doesn't work,
Speaker:just go get a job at a hotel.
Speaker:And the way that you said it, I was like, I will not go get a job at a hotel.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We just said some really-- I laugh, like, Indeed, ha ha ha, like it's
Speaker:not-- yeah, we don't take it lightly, but that's the alternative too.
Speaker:I think sometimes we get so-- I do this.
Speaker:I don't want to turn the chapter, and sometimes a chapter needs to
Speaker:end, and you need to start a new one.
Speaker:It's like a book doesn't have the same freaking chapter the whole way through.
Speaker:Sometimes you got to start a new one, end one, start a new one, end one.
Speaker:It's like if you don't ever start a new chapter, you never know
Speaker:what's going to be written in that.
Speaker:So this one's going to be a really long chapter, Colleen, so be ready.
Speaker:It's going to be a good chapter.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Both of you.
Speaker:I'm like, no, we're not ending chapters anytime soon.
Speaker:We can have volumes or whatever you call it.
Speaker:Trilogies.
Speaker:Trilogies.
Speaker:I don't read--
Speaker:Harry Potter.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Whatever.
Speaker:Fun books.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Well, listeners, be prepared.
Speaker:You're going to see Colleen.
Speaker:You're going to hear from her on the show.
Speaker:You're going to see her in the content that we produce.
Speaker:If you have questions for her, reach out to us.
Speaker:We're happy to answer those.
Speaker:But really we just wanted to give you some visibility of our growing team.
Speaker:And the reason we're growing our team too is we want to serve you the
Speaker:best that we can, and we need help.
Speaker:So, um, Colleen is here to help us in our mission to uplevel
Speaker:what it means to be a host.
Speaker:Well, I also just want to kick it back to you.
Speaker:The reason Colleen is here, and the reason we, Annette and I, and Colleen now, can
Speaker:dream is because you tune in every week, because you leave us five-star reviews.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Leave us a review.
Speaker:Please.
Speaker:Begging.
Speaker:Because you engage with us on YouTube, and Instagram, and therefore, we can
Speaker:attract really awesome guests, and awesome sponsors, and you come to our conference.
Speaker:So it's that same economy that we have in the short-term rental world where
Speaker:we all have to be great hosts so guests can really trust staying with us.
Speaker:Same with Thanks for Visiting and the content.
Speaker:Just thank you for tuning in with us.
Speaker:It is not lost on us.
Speaker:It is all tracked too.
Speaker:So we can say, see, people like this content.
Speaker:So if you want to be a part of our content creation, um, you can always
Speaker:reach out to us at thanksforvisiting.me.
Speaker:You can DM us.
Speaker:We have workshops.
Speaker:We've got our live conference coming up.
Speaker:Be a part of Thanks for Visiting.
Speaker:It is so much more than Annette and myself.
Speaker:It is now Colleen, and her boys, and our coaches, and our members.
Speaker:It is this growing, awesome, breathing thing that is all rooted
Speaker:in leveling up what it means to be a host, and we thank you so much
Speaker:for allowing us to do our thing.
Speaker:With that, I'm Sarah Karakaian.
Speaker:I'm Annette Grant.
Speaker:And together we're--
Speaker:Thanks for Visiting.