SEGMENT GAP
Sarah:Hello.
Sarah:Welcome back to another great week.
Sarah:My name is Sarah Karakaian.
Annette:I am Annette Grant, and together we are--
Both Annette & Sarah:Thanks for Visiting.
Sarah:Let's kick this episode off like we do every week, and it's sharing one
Sarah:of you, our loyal listeners, who's using our hashtag on Instagram #STRShareSunday.
Sarah:If you use it, we will find you, and we will share you here on the pod.
Sarah:Annette, who are we sharing this week?
Annette:This week we are sharing @littlewolflodge.
Annette:Again, @littlewolflodge.
Annette:They are from Crestline, California, and it is a 1930s cabin.
Annette:I want to go through a couple things that I love.
Annette:One of them is that they have a fireplace in not only the main
Annette:gathering area but also in the primary bedroom, and they're original.
Annette:I do think that they have installed electric logs, but still an amazing thing
Annette:that you don't see very often in the primary bedroom in the short-term rental.
Annette:So looks very luxurious.
Annette:Another thing that I love that they have done in their listing, I was
Annette:appreciative of, they said they take organization and aesthetically pleasing
Annette:very seriously around here, and the picture is of their kitchen utensils.
Annette:And I love it because they have all black, I'm going to say silverware, but I guess
Annette:it's not silverware if it's all black.
Annette:But yeah.
Annette:Wait, I don't know.
Annette:Now I'm confused.
Sarah:Utensils.
Annette:Okay.
Annette:Utensils.
Annette:Thank you.
Annette:I was like, well, I don't know.
Annette:It's double tasking there.
Annette:It's not only showing you that they do care about the aesthetics, but
Annette:what they're equipping the kitchen with, because it has all their plates
Annette:and bowls, all their glassware.
Annette:I just really liked them weaving that in a simple post.
Annette:And they just have some really great use, and I've not seen this
Annette:as much in some Instagram profiles.
Annette:They've used the mirrors in their home to take reflections
Annette:of what else is in the room.
Annette:It's just something interesting I haven't really seen used that much,
Annette:and I really enjoyed it on their feed.
Annette:So well done @littlewolflodge.
Annette:Check them out.
Annette:Give them some love, and use our hashtag so we can give you some love.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:Really well done.
Sarah:Okay, so we're going to get into today's episode, and listeners, get ready.
Sarah:We're going to interview a woman who left behind her corporate career for
Sarah:hosting, which while it's hard to do, we've heard that story before.
Sarah:But here's a story you haven't heard, is she made it her priority
Sarah:to get 70% direct booking.
Sarah:Let's hear how she did it.
Sarah:Today we have Kerri Gibson, who is a CPA who spent the first 22 years of her
Sarah:career in international technology and development for tax and accounting firms.
Sarah:So she likes numbers, and now she's got this short-term rental, and she's
Sarah:obsessed, dare we say, with direct bookings and the power of her brand.
Sarah:Kerri, welcome to the show.
Kerri:Hi, ladies.
Kerri:Thank you so much for having me.
Kerri:This is a highlight.
Kerri:I have a little crush on both of you and your show, so I'm delighted to here.
Annette:Um, well, we have a crush on your direct booking percentage,
Annette:and so I think all of our listeners are going to be crushing hard too.
Annette:But Kerri, could you take us back a little ways to your CPA days
Annette:and how you've transferred into the short-term rental industry?
Annette:We want to get the background.
Kerri:Certainly.
Kerri:I think, like many of us in the short-term rental industry, my path
Kerri:here was very winding and not clear, and ended up here unexpectedly.
Kerri:As you said, I started my career as a CPA, which I knew right away wasn't for me.
Kerri:I love numbers, but the traditional CPA role, so I ended up in technology back
Kerri:when software and financial technology was really new, so I was-- they hired
Kerri:me, and they were like, okay, taxes.
Kerri:It's important.
Kerri:We don't know what we're going to do with you, but let's go.
Kerri:So I worked for a startup for 10 years, and then I joined
Kerri:an international multi-billion dollar company, I think in 2010.
Kerri:So this was about 10 years into my career, and so going from a small
Kerri:startup to a huge international company was a big deal for me.
Kerri:I was a little overwhelmed at first, but in both parts, both of these
Kerri:jobs, I actually liaised with the government, which to me is the
Kerri:crowning jewel of my corporate career.
Kerri:I love the government relations work so much, which obviously, with
Kerri:everything going on in the industry now with regulation, has helped us out.
Kerri:But I actually helped create some of the first bridges between the
Kerri:financial software industry and the IRS Department of Treasury.
Kerri:And I actually was an advisor to the Obama administration when they
Kerri:implemented Obamacare, the ACA Act.
Kerri:It was really, really cool.
Kerri:I got invited to the White House twice to testify on the impact of the
Kerri:implementation of the law into the tax system, which was-- I kept my little
Kerri:name plates, of course, Kerri Gibson, Walters Clore, White House invite.
Kerri:So I worked there for seven years, and it was super interesting and
Kerri:super fun, but super intense.
Kerri:Like I said, international, it was just going 24/7, no time off, waking
Kerri:up for meetings all hours of the night.
Kerri:And along the way, I lost myself.
Kerri:And I just hit a point of burnout.
Kerri:You hear people say burnout, but it's a real thing.
Kerri:And I knew when I had my moment, I was like, this is not the path
Kerri:that I want my life to end up in.
Kerri:And I knew that, and I had my moment.
Kerri:And so it was in January of 2017, on a Friday afternoon, I
Kerri:said, I have to make a change.
Kerri:And I spent my weekend writing my resignation letter, and
Kerri:turned it in on Monday.
Kerri:And I did work out a two-month notice because I was an executive.
Kerri:It was not something you could just walk away from.
Kerri:And so, yeah.
Kerri:That was the end of that milestone, that point of my career.
Kerri:And honestly, when I left, I had zero clue what I was going to do.
Annette:Oh, I was going to say, did you know like, hey, I went on this vacation.
Annette:I found the spot.
Annette:You really had no next step.
Kerri:No next step.
Kerri:And that was part of what scared me for so long in making the change
Kerri:because I'd been talking about it with my husband and business partner for a
Kerri:few years, and he had encouraged me.
Kerri:We actually worked for the same company.
Kerri:He worked for the Canadian division, and I worked for the US division.
Kerri:So he knew a lot of the pressure I was under.
Kerri:I had read an article, I think it was in Fast Company, that
Kerri:said, when you go, go, go.
Kerri:When you know you need to make a change, you often have to walk
Kerri:away to give your time to decide what that change is going to be.
Kerri:Because before that, all I had heard was, don't make a change until
Kerri:you know what you're going to do.
Kerri:It's going to kill your career.
Kerri:And so I was paralyzed a bit by that fear of like, okay, everyone says it's easier
Kerri:to get a job when you have another job.
Kerri:I knew I didn't want that.
Kerri:So yeah, that article in Fast Company really inspired me.
Kerri:I actually had it on my bedside for quite a while.
Kerri:But when I left, I just knew something else had to be out there.
Kerri:But my first step was to just rest and relax.
Kerri:The amount of black yoga pants in my laundry for a month after was shocking.
Kerri:So the first thing I did-- actually, I had moved to Quebec in 2015 full-time,
Kerri:and I was living in an area where French is the primary language.
Kerri:So out of cultural and social responsibility, I moved to
Kerri:France for three months, and, uh, learned French, which was amazing.
Kerri:It's not a hard way to sacrifice yourself, but that was really cool.
Kerri:I did learn French, and I really focused on that and just resting
Kerri:and healing while I was there.
Kerri:When I came back, still had no idea what I was going to do.
Kerri:And we bought a house that was in the same neighborhood we lived
Kerri:at with the idea of flipping it.
Kerri:That, okay, I'm going to do this.
Kerri:I'll work with a contractor, and I'm going to think about what comes
Kerri:next, um, while I'm doing this.
Kerri:Because I'm just not a sit around person, at all.
Kerri:Honestly, I don't think I Netflix binged at all.
Kerri:Not one time during my sabbatical, which is sad.
Kerri:So yes, I started that.
Kerri:So it was really therapeutic.
Kerri:We were doing the renovation, which I found I loved, but at the
Kerri:same time, I was also doing a lot of self-discovery and exploring.
Kerri:Simon Sinek's book, Know Your Why, was just like, oh my God.
Kerri:I still listen to it over and over.
Kerri:And then Gary Chapman's Five Love Languages really helped me sit down and
Kerri:think about myself and who I was, because I had lost my values along the way.
Kerri:Um, my personal values, I was so out of touch with them.
Kerri:So at the end of about, I think it was at nine months, the house was done.
Kerri:I was attached to the house, and we live in an area where STR is legal,
Kerri:and so I said, let's go for it.
Kerri:So we flipped it into a short-term rental.
Kerri:And what I found during this year and the process in getting into
Kerri:STR is that it really aligned with my core values, which was so
Kerri:surprising because I'd taken the time.
Kerri:But we found we had a knack for design and decor, and for renovating.
Kerri:Taking something old that had such a soul that had just been let go and
Kerri:creating something beautiful out of it with a new character and a new chapter
Kerri:of its life was just really fulfilling.
Kerri:And then I found in the hospitality part-- one of my level
Kerri:languages is acts of service.
Kerri:And from my time in corporate of being burned out and knowing how important
Kerri:my vacations were to me, to be able to provide something for people where they
Kerri:could walk in and be like, this is it.
Kerri:This is vacation.
Kerri:I really feel that I can spend time in here.
Kerri:I feel relaxed right away and create moments with my family and friends.
Kerri:And still, that's what means the most to me.
Kerri:When people, I guess, say to me, Kerri, I felt like I was really connected with
Kerri:my family, my friends, everything was just what we needed, that fills my heart
Kerri:and soul more than anything, because I know how hard it is to get those moments
Kerri:in our super crazy fast-paced lives.
Annette:I want to ask a question about numbers because it sounded
Annette:like you bought your first property with the intention of flipping it.
Annette:So I'm sure you were doing a lot of the numbers based on flipping this property.
Annette:You made it sound like it was a very quick decision, like, oh, we're
Annette:just going to short-term rent it.
Annette:But talk us through, you and your husband and business
Annette:partner-- was it a quick decision?
Annette:Did you run the numbers of like, wait, we were anticipating flipping it, getting
Annette:these funds, maybe buying another?
Annette:Talk us through the numbers and the discussions of putting it on the
Annette:market versus keeping it yourself.
Kerri:Yeah.
Kerri:So before we actually even bought the house and before we flipped
Kerri:it, I had my Excel sheets.
Kerri:I was running scenarios left and right.
Kerri:Constantly, while we were renovating it, I was watching the markets to
Kerri:see where prices were at, how much, because we actually got the house
Kerri:for a really, really good deal with someone who had started a renovation.
Kerri:And the house was completely destroyed on the inside, and they were
Kerri:overwhelmed and just wanted out of it.
Kerri:So we were able to come in at a really rock bottom price and take
Kerri:it off their hands, actually within hours of it hitting the market.
Kerri:Um, we moved really fast because we had talked about it on and off, but when this
Kerri:one hit the market, I called Phillip, and I was like, we have to buy this house.
Kerri:And he looked at it, and he was like, yes, we do.
Kerri:He is like, call the realtor.
Kerri:And I called the realtor, and we put an offer in front of her within a few hours.
Kerri:And so yeah, it was literally on the market.
Kerri:I saw it at 7:00 PM, and we had it off the market by 7:00 AM the next day.
Sarah:This is the beauty of chatting with your partner.
Sarah:I know there's a lot of people listening out there who maybe haven't
Sarah:dove in yet, and so you always wonder what that first step is, and it's
Sarah:doing that work of knowing what market you want to be in and why.
Sarah:What does the perfect scenario look like?
Sarah:We call that the buy box.
Sarah:What's in your buy box?
Sarah:That way when you shared it with your partner, he saw right away, like, oh
Sarah:my gosh, this aligns perfectly with what you and I have been talking about.
Kerri:Yes.
Sarah:I'm sure aesthetically, numbers-wise, the whole thing.
Sarah:And then you get to be that person who you're always mad at when you
Sarah:put an offer and they beat you to it.
Sarah:You know what I mean?
Sarah:Because you're there first, and it's strong.
Kerri:Yeah.
Kerri:I will say for the first three to four that we bought, yes.
Kerri:People were so mad at us because we got people really-- we got a reputation for
Kerri:just being the hoarders of the area.
Annette:That's okay.
Kerri:Because yeah, there were other people-- we're in a
Kerri:short-term rental-friendly area.
Kerri:It's a four-season rental.
Kerri:They know the where.
Kerri:I am two kilometers from the second tallest ski mountain in
Kerri:Quebec and five kilometers from the biggest lake in Quebec, which
Kerri:has a huge water sports, boating.
Kerri:It's amazing.
Sarah:I want to put you on the spot.
Sarah:So listeners, we did not ask Kerri these questions before we hopped on, so this
Sarah:is not fair to her, but I want to her.
Sarah:So Kerri, if you don't know, just say, I'm not sure.
Sarah:So what does your market look like?
Sarah:How are your properties performing?
Sarah:Are they high cash flowing?
Sarah:Was the cash-on-cash return ridiculous?
Sarah:Does it continue to be that way?
Sarah:Any numbers you can give us in terms of actual performance
Sarah:over the past few years?
Kerri:Gosh.
Kerri:Yeah, so I almost feel it's not fair just because of where we are.
Kerri:So when I first started renting, it was towards the end of 2018.
Kerri:So we were just starting out in 2018, building our
Kerri:properties, launching in 2019.
Kerri:So we were renting for about a year and a half, and I would say we were newbies.
Kerri:I was learning the market.
Kerri:I was not on my pricing game.
Kerri:I was constantly running my Excel spreadsheets, looking at the
Kerri:competition, really just learning.
Kerri:And then we had COVID, and here, we were shut down.
Kerri:Completely shut down for three months.
Kerri:So I feel like that first year and a half I was really building up and leading.
Kerri:And I would say our numbers weren't great at that point because I was still
Kerri:trying to get the credibility, get the experience, and learn the market.
Kerri:So yeah, I didn't have my pricing strategies in place, and I didn't know
Kerri:the rotation of the seasonality, and when people booked, and how far in advance.
Kerri:But then COVID hit.
Kerri:And oh my goodness, because we are a drive to location from Montreal,
Kerri:Quebec City, Toronto, Ottawa, we did not have a day off for two years.
Kerri:So we cash flowed incredibly well.
Kerri:Really, really well.
Kerri:I would say well over a 100%, because our nightly rates were-- people
Kerri:were taking whatever day they could get, um, to get out of the city.
Kerri:And there was no such thing as low season and shoulder season.
Kerri:We were glad when restrictions started letting up because us and
Kerri:our team, we were just exhausted.
Kerri:And it stayed like that through April of this year.
Kerri:And then we're seeing the same thing as everybody else.
Kerri:It's like the brakes hit, and we're right back into the trends of pre-COVID, which
Kerri:most of my experience in that is coming back because I had looked at all the
Kerri:tourism sites and gathered all the data there, which is how I was trying to figure
Kerri:my own strategies when we first started.
Kerri:So I'm able to look back and see, okay.
Kerri:Because at first, in May, I was like, oh my god, oh my god.
Kerri:Who's going back to the corporate world?
Kerri:We're going to have to rock-paper-scissor this one out.
Kerri:And it's just started picking up.
Kerri:So I think for us, we are back in what's going to be a regular flow
Kerri:of reservations, and timing, and shoulder season, and low season.
Kerri:And we have to learn that.
Kerri:I have to adopt my cashflow strategies.
Kerri:I have to adopt my perception for when reservations are going to come in.
Kerri:All of that has to change.
Kerri:And I'm looking back at historical data from the tourism sites
Kerri:to really help me with that.
Kerri:And that's really just been the past month where I was like, okay, where I
Kerri:started digging those numbers out again, just to give myself a better feeling.
Kerri:And it's true.
Kerri:We're mirroring.
Kerri:So like right now, we're heading into summer, and reservations, the past
Kerri:two weeks have just been nonstop.
Kerri:So we're picking back up, and we're starting to get back our US
Kerri:and international guests as well.
Kerri:So we cash flowed really well, but I don't think it's a fair
Kerri:comparison going forward.
Kerri:I'm going to learn a lot in the next year.
Kerri:So let's chat again this time next year.
Annette:I want to unpack something you said really quickly before we carry on.
Annette:You said something, that you go on to tourism sites to look at historical
Annette:data, I think is what you said there.
Annette:Can you explain to us what you're lookingfor?
Kerri:Definitely.
Kerri:Yes.
Kerri:The government sites often out there, the tourism board, so I use Statistics Canada.
Kerri:I use Statistics Quebec, and then Statistics Eastern Townships, which
Kerri:is the region that we're located in.
Kerri:So federal, province, and then region.
Kerri:And so because of my knowledge of government organizations from my whole
Kerri:entire career, I've always worked with the IRS Department of Treasury,
Kerri:I know that there's all this data that's out there, and I knew it had
Kerri:to be the same for this industry.
Kerri:So before we even bought the first house to flip, I was
Kerri:looking at bed and breakfast.
Kerri:Everybody's dream.
Kerri:Though that business case made no sense anyway, I sliced and diced
Kerri:it in the community we were in.
Kerri:So that's when I started going out and looking like, what is working?
Kerri:Um, once we were flipping this house.
Kerri:So that's the first place I went, was to tourism Canada, and then into
Kerri:tourism Quebec, and there is a ton of data out there, and it was, especially
Kerri:at the Quebec level, really well broken out not only by accommodation
Kerri:but accommodation type, from five-star hotel down to rest at camping.
Kerri:So I was able to get right in there for our region and our type.
Kerri:So there is more information out there, I think, than people are aware of, because
Kerri:this is how budgets are set in government.
Kerri:They have to make their case just like anyone else.
Kerri:And so to prove their case, they have to have the numbers.
Kerri:And so those numbers are available to anybody if you just want to start digging.
Annette:Kerri.
Sarah:Thisisgood.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:I want to hang out with you, but then I'm like, oh, what's goingon with your head?
Annette:I'm like, we're going to all the stats.
Annette:No, that's a great-- I just wanted to bring that-- you just glossed over it
Annette:because it's part of your activity, but I wanted our listeners to know that too.
Annette:So we flip this house, we hold onto it, your cash-- I know you also said your
Annette:husband is no longer working corporate.
Annette:Take us through after that house goes live.
Annette:What are the next steps to you guys completely changing
Annette:yet pivoting your whole lives?
Kerri:Certainly.
Kerri:So we took it live, and right after we bought it, another
Kerri:chalet came on the market.
Kerri:And so our next series of houses, our next two after that actually never even hit
Kerri:the market because people started calling us and saying, the neighbors and others,
Kerri:hey, we're going to sell this chalet.
Kerri:Do you want to buy it?
Kerri:And we jumped on both of them right away.
Kerri:When we jumped on them, I had no idea.
Kerri:So all of a sudden, I went from having one that was on the
Kerri:market to two right behind it.
Kerri:And in this time, my husband changed jobs and actually moved to Vancouver.
Kerri:So I'm prepping all of these chalets, including our house
Kerri:that we once lived in for rental.
Kerri:So we had our chalet, and the one that we had just done, and then one that
Kerri:was in okay shape that I was able to furnish at the time, and another one
Kerri:that was another complete disaster.
Kerri:When I took down the first wall, squirrel party for years.
Kerri:Yeah.
Kerri:My husband was working in Vancouver.
Kerri:I was doing the back and forth, but I was really focused on getting as many
Kerri:properties as we could up and going, because here's the thing, the other place
Kerri:where we're at, it's a sound investment.
Kerri:I already knew that because where we're located, between the mountains and the
Kerri:lakes, and it's one of the most known vacation areas in Canada, I'm always
Kerri:going to be able to sell these houses.
Kerri:Especially, I was buying them at rock bottom prices because
Kerri:they were in horrible shape.
Kerri:So with me doing the work and working with contractors, we
Kerri:slowly built up to an inventory of four over the next three years.
Kerri:And then my husband moved back to Montreal.
Kerri:His business, the company he worked for transferred him
Kerri:back there, and COVID hits.
Kerri:And so we moved back into one of our chalets, and he was just so unhappy.
Kerri:And the opportunity came up.
Kerri:The fallout is they decided to sell the branch of the business he was
Kerri:working for, and they offered him a buyout package, and he jumped on it.
Annette:That's awesome.
Kerri:Yeah.
Kerri:So he jumped on it, and so the thought was, you know what, he's going to
Kerri:spend the next six months to a year.
Kerri:We're going to ride out COVID and see how it goes.
Kerri:And we acquired another chalet during COVID, as it was going on.
Kerri:So that was number six.
Kerri:And he and I actually fully renovated that one top to bottom by ourselves,
Kerri:because in addition to being a finance person, he's also a very handy person.
Kerri:He says if he had a career do-over, he would be an architect.
Kerri:But he learned how to do everything.
Kerri:And some of his friends are in contracting and construction,
Kerri:and they really mentored us.
Kerri:And of course, we hire out electric and plumbing, but as far as all of the work
Kerri:of just building and decorating, the non-technical stuff, we really jumped
Kerri:in and did that together, and we found that we worked pretty well together,
Kerri:our design aesthetic at that point.
Kerri:Like you said, we've been doing it three or four years.
Kerri:He was always having input to what I was doing.
Kerri:And this is not all hunky dory.
Kerri:We had some pretty big explosions where it was like, I'm not giving in.
Kerri:This is what I want.
Kerri:But we've also found when we compromise our two ideas together is where we
Kerri:get the beauty of what we've done.
Kerri:But yeah, so after that one, we're like, we think we can do this?
Kerri:To be very upfront, though, the houses were-- that was the beginning of COVID.
Kerri:We were just starting to cashflow because of COVID, and we knew that we had to
Kerri:make a significant shift in our lives and how we spent money because we were,
Kerri:for the first time in our lives, going to have no regular salary coming in.
Kerri:So that required us to redo a personal look too of like, how
Kerri:do we live our lives personally?
Kerri:Where do we spend our money in order to we can give this a shot?
Kerri:So we did a lot of adjusting of how we spend money, where we
Kerri:put our money on the extras that we have, those types of things.
Kerri:We like to say we traded money for happiness because we truly did, but it has
Kerri:come with a fair amount of sacrifice, and learning, and starting over in some ways,
Kerri:but it's come with a lot of happiness, and leading, and creating our own path.
Kerri:AD MARKER
Sarah:Speaking of money, really quick, because we have so many other questions
Sarah:to ask you too about where you're at now.
Sarah:But when it came to buying all these houses, how were
Sarah:you doing that financially?
Sarah:Was it because of the lucrative corporate careers?
Sarah:Were you guys paying all cash?
Sarah:Did you have a private money lender?
Sarah:How did you guys do that?
Kerri:So the first couple were cash.
Kerri:We both did have lucrative corporate careers.
Kerri:He was still working.
Kerri:So the first two we bought with cash and paid for the renovations out of pocket.
Kerri:Again, we save on that significantly by me being involved.
Kerri:And then Philip was also working on the weekends when he lived and was here.
Kerri:So we were able to save a significant amount doing that.
Kerri:We are now at the point where we have a combination of bank
Kerri:lenders and private investors.
Kerri:But we've paid off all the private investors, so now we have two that
Kerri:are fully paid for out of pocket.
Kerri:And then we have four that we fully paid for the renovations,
Kerri:but we have a mortgage.
Kerri:We put 20% down, and then we have a mortgage on the rest.
Kerri:For us, going forward, because we are out of the personal cash that
Kerri:we want to invest in this, we don't want to touch retirement and those
Kerri:types of things, so we'll either be pulling equity out of the houses or
Kerri:going the private investment route.
Kerri:We have people all the time asking if they can invest.
Kerri:We'll have to think about both of them, to be straightforward.
Kerri:I love that we drive and make a 100% of the decisions ourselves.
Kerri:And anytime you bring in a partner, no matter who they are, family,
Kerri:friend, that dynamic shifts.
Kerri:Phillip's actually out right now finishing up the last bathroom
Kerri:renovation for one of our chalets.
Kerri:And then the six that we have on the market are just rocking and
Kerri:rolling, complete cash flowing now.
Kerri:No more renovations.
Kerri:So we have some big financial decisions to make this year as well.
Annette:I'm going to ask a very naive question here.
Annette:Your chalets, is there something that defines it as a chalet?
Annette:Is there something about the home that "it's now a chalet"?
Kerri:Yes, thereis.
Annette:Whatisthat?
Annette:Helpme.
Kerri:It's architecturally.
Kerri:So the design of the back half of the house is sloped.
Kerri:It's like the back half of the house is an A-frame, but the front is not.
Kerri:So our houses, the back is a 100% slope down to the ground, and then the front is
Kerri:just a slope to the first level windows.
Annette:Okay.
Annette:And would you buy outside of a chalet, or is that in your buy
Annette:box like, it has to be a chalet?
Kerri:It is not in the buy box.
Kerri:So it was at the beginning because we actually live in the neighborhood.
Kerri:We don't live next to any of them, so we're close to all of them.
Kerri:So literally, we can ride our e-bike if we need to go service
Kerri:the chalet, which is really nice.
Kerri:My team is really close.
Kerri:But it is not a requirement anymore.
Kerri:And in fact, we're looking at different options right now.
Kerri:Right now the properties here are so hot because of COVID.
Kerri:And while the rest of the market's cooling, it's not here.
Kerri:We almost have to go out of our buy box and redefine our brand and how we make
Kerri:it fit in because our brand's really become quite well known in the area.
Kerri:So if we did something else that didn't align with it, we'd almost
Kerri:have to start a different company.
Annette:That's what I was going to ask because it is your brand name.
Annette:So let's talk about, you've got these listings up.
Annette:Your direct booking, let's get into that a little bit.
Annette:Did you even know about direct booking when you got started?
Annette:Were you just on the OTAs?
Annette:Let's spill the tea on how you got to the 70%, because I know our listeners
Annette:want to know, and we want to know.
Kerri:So I started out on the OTAs like everybody, because at first, I had no
Kerri:idea if this was even going to be a thing.
Kerri:I'd done all my research to see.
Kerri:But yes, I started out on the OTAs, plus I was renovating the chalets.
Kerri:I did not have the capacity or the bandwidth to even really think about it.
Kerri:I don't even know how I knew how, but I knew direct booking
Kerri:was an option from the get go.
Kerri:So I was like, first I'm going to see if this is even a thing before I pay any
Kerri:attention to this concept of direct book.
Kerri:When I knew it was going to be a thing, I immediately became intent
Kerri:on direct book because one thing, coming from my corporate background,
Kerri:you don't want to ever build your house on someone else's lane.
Kerri:I know that is such an overused phrase right now, but it is so important.
Kerri:If you build something good and successful, and then someone else
Kerri:comes along and says, I'm going to use that for something else, you've
Kerri:got no recourse except the unpack it.
Kerri:And so I fully, 100%, believe in guiding your own destiny
Kerri:and building your own business.
Kerri:Even when I was in corporate, when I was looking at new products to develop,
Kerri:I was looking at the buy build partner.
Kerri:To build, you might partner to get you off and get you to market faster, but at
Kerri:the same time, you need to be building to have your own solution that you own
Kerri:because at any point in time, any of the OTAs, but most notably Airbnb, they can
Kerri:switch up their strategy at any point in time, and you're held hostage to that.
Kerri:Like right now, they've got this huge focus on going back to
Kerri:rooms in people's houses, back to their roots, so they're saying.
Kerri:And so you never ever know.
Kerri:And the vacation rental industry is changing so much.
Kerri:Airbnb's going to react the way they're going to react, and they can also decide
Kerri:at any point in time to pull your listing for, honestly, no good reason, just based
Kerri:off of word of mouth of someone else.
Kerri:And so I just refused to put my heart and soul into building something that
Kerri:someone else has the right to take away.
Kerri:So yeah, that was just firmly instilled in me, is that I
Kerri:needed to own my own business.
Annette:What were the steps?
Annette:Take us back to you starting this.
Annette:Give our listeners some digestible next steps for them.
Annette:They are only on Airbnb right now.
Annette:What would you advise them to do?
Annette:What can they do that's digestible for them to take action?
Kerri:So a direct book strategy is not just about having a website.
Kerri:I want to emphasize that because a lot of people, I think, they'll
Kerri:build a website, and they will come, and that's simply not the case.
Kerri:There is a lot that goes into the strategy of having it.
Kerri:Not only do you need to have a website, you also need to have a
Kerri:verified Google Business Profile.
Kerri:You need to start your social strengths, and you need to have good
Kerri:content that will drive all that in.
Kerri:Now, back to your question that said where you start, that's all very overwhelming.
Kerri:I've been doing this for five years, and there's still steps that I haven't
Kerri:completely finished and going through.
Kerri:So I would say the first thing to do is to write out your set of requirements
Kerri:of what you need and a digital presence.
Kerri:And I'll be honest, a lot of these things I got, I was
Kerri:like, I know I need a website.
Kerri:I know I need a way to collect payment.
Kerri:I know I need a reservation system that goes with it.
Kerri:But do you know how I built most of my requirements because I didn't know
Kerri:that much about direct booking sites?
Kerri:I went to all of the vendor sites and started reading about what
Kerri:they did, and I built a spreadsheet that had all of the different
Kerri:capabilities that they had on there.
Kerri:And then I identified the vendor, and then I was able to align with
Kerri:where I knew I wanted to take my business with complete independence.
Kerri:So I knew I wanted to be independent of the OTAs, that I wanted to be able to
Kerri:provide guests a digital experience, and that I needed a channel manager and a PMS.
Kerri:Those were my basics right there.
Kerri:And so when I was going through that, it was very young market.
Kerri:This was 2018.
Kerri:So the most important thing to me at that point was roadmap.
Kerri:I have to say, if I was reevaluating right now, there's some really powerful
Kerri:tools out there that my process, I think would be a bit different.
Kerri:But I ended up going-- for me, the vendor I chose, I have not regretted.
Kerri:And the biggest reason I haven't regretted them is because they
Kerri:checked all my initial boxes.
Kerri:PMS, CMS, website, and payment processing, and reservation system.
Kerri:And they continue to innovate and release updates.
Kerri:And the other thing is, for me, customer support.
Kerri:They rock.
Kerri:They were also the best during my interview process and my
Kerri:demo processes with answering questions and getting there.
Kerri:And they haven't let me down on that.
Kerri:So I think the first thing, because there's so many options out there, is
Kerri:getting familiar with what's out there, creating that list, and then identifying
Kerri:where you want to take your business.
Kerri:For me, this was going to be my full-time business income where I was going.
Kerri:So I needed something that was going to be a very robust tool and that had
Kerri:a very robust marketplace eventually.
Kerri:My website, when I started, was very basic.
Kerri:I mean, it was like, here's the properties, book.
Kerri:There was nothing fluffy about it at all.
Kerri:And you can't start fluffy.
Kerri:Fluffy comes with time.
Kerri:All of the activities that go around it, the telling of the story.
Kerri:All of that comes with time.
Kerri:But the most important I thing I did after that that I think gets
Kerri:overlooked a lot is getting verified your Google Business Profile.
Kerri:That establishes you as, I own this land.
Kerri:I own this property.
Kerri:I'm a real business.
Kerri:And so then, because any website you're going to get, it's going to need to
Kerri:be verified by Google, so getting that process out of the way, you're
Kerri:already an established business, especially if you can start getting
Kerri:reviews there, even before you have a website asking guests that were
Kerri:very near and dear, hey, will you go leave me a review, helped out a lot.
Kerri:And then I would say just starting the social streams.
Kerri:And that was-- I had a Facebook page for six months.
Kerri:My husband was like, this is ridiculous.
Annette:That's okay.Yeah.
Annette:Step by step.
Sarah:So I've got a ton of questions for you that I hope our listeners are
Sarah:also asking, so I can satiate them.
Sarah:Okay.
Sarah:Let's talk about Google.
Sarah:You have more than one property.
Sarah:Do you have Google for business for each individual property, or
Sarah:is it for your umbrella brand?
Sarah:Start with that.
Sarah:What did you decide was right for you?
Kerri:So I have two Google Business Profiles.
Kerri:Three chalets are on one street, and three chalets are in another.
Kerri:So the three on each road that are close by are under one umbrella.
Kerri:The reason that is is that I personally would have a different one for each chalet
Kerri:if I could, but Google wouldn't let me because they were so close together.
Kerri:They were like, no, no, no, this is the same business.
Kerri:So I was able to do different ones.
Kerri:And the reason I would do them all differently if I could is
Kerri:because that's how many times you show up on the Google map.
Kerri:When you type in Google, chalet for rent in Orford, I would have six
Kerri:properties showing up instead of two.
Sarah:Interesting.
Sarah:Yeah, I like that.
Sarah:And then when it comes to-- Yes, you had your channel manager, and your
Sarah:digital presence, and a really basic website, and a way to collect money,
Sarah:but you have a 70% direct booking rate.
Sarah:And you said that you were cash flowing like crazy, so
Sarah:your occupancy was up there.
Sarah:What do you think the biggest driver for conversions were for you?
Sarah:Was it inviting past guests to come back?
Sarah:Was it the Google search and just having the chalet be in the name?
Sarah:What was that thing that converted lookers into bookers?
Kerri:We have a 40% return guest rate.
Kerri:The lowest hanging fruit anytime you build a direct book site is
Kerri:return guests and referral guests.
Kerri:So those are people that are more than likely going to book.
Kerri:All they need is a place is to pay now, book now.
Kerri:So the fanciness doesn't matter to them because they've either experienced it or
Kerri:they've heard from someone that's raving about it and you have to experience it.
Kerri:I think the next thing after that converted was our Google Business
Kerri:Profile because people were just going and looking from everywhere,
Kerri:and they were typing chalets for rent or chalets for rent Easter Townships.
Kerri:And at the time, we were one of the very few Google verified that was not a hotel,
Kerri:and all of the hotels were closed down.
Kerri:So the only thing that could rent then was standalone establishments
Kerri:like short-term rentals.
Kerri:So that was definitely a huge converter for us.
Kerri:Then as I built out our social, one thing that COVID allowed me to do was
Kerri:I collaborated with micro-influencers in the area who created content.
Kerri:And I say micro-influencers because they specialize in the region.
Kerri:So it's not a huge influencer that has people from all over the world
Kerri:following whose chances of ending up right here are pretty slim to none.
Kerri:So some local influencers.
Kerri:We're an outdoor area, so skiing and outdoor sports.
Kerri:We're dog-friendly.
Kerri:People with dogs.
Kerri:So collaborating with them.
Kerri:And they came in, and they created the content.
Kerri:They created the post, the socials.
Kerri:We created the experience.
Kerri:So that's how we actually skyrocketed our social, was with micro-influencers.
Kerri:And the stick rate is really high because they're micro-influencers,
Kerri:and they're people that actually are interested in the brand.
Kerri:So you'll see a lot of times people, after an influencer or giveaway, your followings
Kerri:will skyrocket, and then they plummet.
Kerri:We don't have that because we tend to stick locally.
Kerri:I'm branching that strategy out into Ontario and New England
Kerri:right now as people are full back into their travel habits.
Kerri:So that has been-- I know there's a lot of disagreement out there about influencers,
Kerri:but absolutely, for me, they work.
Kerri:And again, it's micro-influencers.
Kerri:It's people who speak to your niche.
Annette:So the listeners, we're hearing that, but give us an
Annette:idea of is it 2,000 followers?
Annette:Is it 10,000?
Annette:What are you defining?
Annette:Where did you see that success?
Annette:Can you give us actual numbers around micro?
Kerri:Yes.
Kerri:So I do everything from 3,000.
Kerri:I had a journalist who does dog-friendly content creation here this past weekend.
Kerri:Three months ago, I had over a 100,000 followers.
Kerri:Actually, was hooked up through our local tourism.
Kerri:They connected me with her.
Kerri:So if you guys want to talk about getting involved in local tourism boards.
Kerri:So I would say my sweet spot, though, for where they hit is probably around
Kerri:the 50, 60,000 is where I'll hit most.
Kerri:But honestly, I've had some at 15 and 20,000 that also did really, really well.
Annette:Thanks for defining that because 50 to 60, when I think micro, I think
Annette:more of the 3,000, not the 50, 60.
Sarah:But also I think micro comes into two.
Sarah:Who is their reach?
Sarah:So yes, the number of followers, and of course, that engagement rate.
Sarah:But also, for us, if it's Columbus tourism or Columbus dog content, that micro, in
Sarah:terms of reach, it sounds like you were super concentrated on literally your area.
Kerri:And my niche.
Kerri:I know who my guests are and why they're coming to me.
Kerri:I have to say, on my first collaboration, I was nervous as heck.
Kerri:But I'm like, what am I giving up?
Kerri:A couple of nights stay?
Kerri:And it was amazing.
Kerri:They still create content for me now.
Kerri:For me, there's a dual purpose when I do a collaboration, and it is either
Kerri:reach of their social or their content.
Kerri:They create beautiful visuals.
Kerri:And I think that's one of the reasons our website also converts very well
Kerri:now, past Google and all, is because we have beautiful pictures and video on
Kerri:there that we've invested in over time.
Kerri:You could put the most beautiful scene in the world in front of me, and it would
Kerri:look like a hippopotamus took the picture.
Kerri:So I know I can't do it, so--
Annette:Stick to the spreadsheets, Kerri.
Annette:Stick to the spreadsheets.
Kerri:Right.
Kerri:Exactly.
Kerri:I know.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:You're not snapping any photos.
Annette:You just said you know your client and you know what they're looking for.
Annette:Let's talk about your brand and who wants to enjoy the Hygge.
Kerri:I put a lot of thought into who I wanted to serve because
Kerri:in our area, we have everything from value to high-end lux, and
Kerri:neither one of those speaks to me.
Kerri:In fact, the word luxury just makes my skin crawl.
Kerri:It makes me think of high maintenance people who you can never please.
Kerri:I know that's not it, but that's how I feel, and I wanted to avoid that word in
Kerri:my marketing as much as I possibly can.
Kerri:But I knew I wanted to look for people who-- for where they were staying was as
Kerri:much of the experience of the vacation.
Kerri:It's not just a place to sleep, but a place they intend to hang out.
Kerri:People who want to enjoy the outdoors, and whatever realm that speaks, because
Kerri:not only do we have a ton of outdoor activities, we also have beaches.
Kerri:We have amazing Nordic spas.
Kerri:We have live music.
Kerri:But people who being in the outdoors is good for their soul, where they
Kerri:want to stay as an experience, they do tend-- we're in the upper 75 percentile
Kerri:of the market as far as pricing goes.
Kerri:So they're not price sensitive, and they tend to be people with either no kids
Kerri:or older kids because they're coming to do an activity, get out and about.
Kerri:We're in the mountains.
Kerri:Pushing a stroller up the biking trail or up the-- is not a whole lot of fun.
Kerri:So we tend to start seeing people in the middle part of their career
Kerri:who are high stress, getting away, and the outsides is their go-to.
Sarah:That's such a hot tip, Kerri, for everyone listening, because
Sarah:I feel like we feel like we have to-- you know what I'm saying?
Sarah:We feel like we have to use certain trigger words to get someone's attention.
Sarah:But it's like you don't want just anyone's attention because if they come and stay
Sarah:with you and they don't have a good time, that reflects on your reviews,
Sarah:whether it's on Google or the OTA.
Sarah:So because I stayed at places or I-- back in the day, when we used to do
Sarah:consulting, and people would use the word luxury in their listing, and you're
Sarah:like, this is so far away from luxury.
Sarah:It's not bad.
Sarah:Sometimes it was bad.
Annette:But you could just tell they were using the word.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:It's like, this is not luxury.
Sarah:And so you're going to attract these people, and it's not going to be
Sarah:a good situation for either party.
Sarah:And I love that you're giving permission to say you don't have to
Sarah:be luxury in order to be successful.
Sarah:You can be who you are.
Sarah:Attract who wants to stay there, and it's going to be a match made in
Sarah:heaven, and they're going to love it.
Kerri:I love the way you say that.
Kerri:Yes.
Kerri:That is 100% the case.
Kerri:I think exactly what you're saying, one of the keys to being
Kerri:successful in hospitality is being authentic to who you are and the
Kerri:experience you want to provide.
Kerri:And don't shy away from it.
Kerri:I'm very clear on what we do and don't provide, and what
Kerri:the experience is going to be.
Kerri:And if I'm talking to someone on the phone or emailing, and they're asking
Kerri:for an experience that I don't provide, I have a very good relationship with
Kerri:all the other short-terms around here.
Kerri:I will happily refer them to someone else because I want
Kerri:them to have an amazing time.
Kerri:And just because I'm not a fit this time doesn't mean three vacations down
Kerri:the line I am not the right fit for the group that they're having come.
Kerri:But yeah, the last thing I want is a guest to come and to fall
Kerri:short because we were not clear on who we are and what we provide.
Annette:What don't you?
Annette:What are the most common things you're like, no, don't provide that?
Annette:Not going to, and they do choose someone else.
Kerri:Spas.
Kerri:Outdoor hot tubs.
Annette:Ooh, none of the chalets have hot tubs or spas?
Kerri:No.
Sarah:She's still killingit.
Annette:I want to know.
Annette:What's the spreadsheet say though if you installed them?
Sarah:But sometimes it doesn't matter.
Annette:I'm just asking.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:What does the spreadsheet say?
Kerri:Thespreadsheet says that I will make more revenue.
Kerri:The off spreadsheet says I will lose the credibility I have in the
Kerri:community and with the local government to create an experience that honors
Kerri:the culture and the spirit here.
Annette:That's why everything doesn't fit in a spreadsheet.
Annette:I lovethat.
Kerri:It doesn't.
Kerri:It doesn't.
Kerri:And this is another thing I am very clear on.
Kerri:We're in nature, but we're a community of 288 ski chalets
Kerri:that were built in the 1960s.
Kerri:It's a very iconic place in Quebec.
Kerri:Everybody knows the chalet boat, the place with the orange roof.
Kerri:So when you look at our pictures, you'll see everything has the orange chalet roof.
Kerri:You're going to see your neighbors.
Kerri:You're going to hear your neighbors if everyone's outside having
Kerri:a barbecue at the same time.
Kerri:And yeah, you can expect to have a community experience because
Kerri:we're very walk and dog-friendly.
Kerri:Everybody's always out.
Kerri:So it is a little community, and we choose not to have hot tubs because of
Kerri:the noise factor with it being so close.
Kerri:And many of our chalets, one step aside, also has a retired person who
Kerri:lives next door that doesn't want to hear someone who, while not partying
Kerri:at 11:00 PM, is out in the hot tub, is loud, having a beer, talking with
Kerri:their people, and noise escalates.
Kerri:And we're very clear.
Kerri:And when people ask, we say we don't have spas, and when they
Kerri:ask why not, we tell them that.
Kerri:They're like, oh, I get that.
Kerri:That makes sense.
Kerri:And I would say that's probably-- we do have people
Kerri:say, but we really want to spa.
Kerri:And I'll say, great.
Kerri:And I will tell them people that I know that do have spas, but I'll also
Kerri:tell you those people have neighbors that make their lives not fun as soon
Kerri:as there's too much noise at 11:00 PM.
Sarah:Well, you said you left your other job to find happiness.
Sarah:So also it's like, yes, you'll make more money, but if that impacts
Sarah:your happiness too, and being a business owner, it's like, heck yeah.
Sarah:You get to make that decision.
Sarah:And you know what you're missing out on, but you don't care.
Sarah:You know what I mean?
Sarah:Those are the perks of being a business owner that I don't
Sarah:know that we lean into enough.
Kerri:I agree.
Sarah:We could talk business all day.
Sarah:I have one-- it's a big question because it could be a whole episode in itself.
Sarah:Talk to us about how you leverage your email marketing.
Sarah:How big of a component is that for you and your conversions, inviting guests back?
Sarah:And if you could, just real quick, what do those sequences
Sarah:look like after a guest stays?
Sarah:Do you touch them every month?
Sarah:What does that look like?
Kerri:So to be fully transparent, it needs to be bigger.
Kerri:We're really focused on-- right now, we have around a 1,000 email addresses.
Kerri:The biggest way that we have been collecting is through cards that we leave
Kerri:in the chalet that says, sign up for our email list and get 10% off, and they can
Kerri:leave their email and we sign them up.
Kerri:Or they were already guests, or they come to our website.
Kerri:They can, of course, sign up on our website.
Kerri:We have the subscribe here.
Kerri:But really with the cards, we're trying to get at the OTA guests or the
Kerri:guests that didn't book that was there.
Kerri:But we are in the process, hopefully, it goes live next week, of launching Enso.
Kerri:And one of its components is the email collection, like a StayFi.
Kerri:So really being able to elevate that.
Kerri:Right now, we email them once a month, and we don't like the spam.
Kerri:So our once a month email has a chalet spotlight.
Kerri:So we talk about something we've been doing with the chalets.
Kerri:We have a local activity spotlight.
Kerri:So we highlight whether it's the cross country ski trails are open or, hey, boat
Kerri:season has started, whatever it may be.
Kerri:And then we highlight a local business, something to do near the chalet.
Kerri:So they really feel like they're getting a taste of the region
Kerri:because, for us, they come here for the region, not just for the chalet.
Kerri:And so the more we can talk about their more inclusive
Kerri:experience, the better it is.
Kerri:We do email once in a while when we have a promo or a special, but I want
Kerri:to grow that email list, and I want to be more consistent with emails because
Kerri:it's not the biggest conversion.
Kerri:It could be.
Kerri:It converts when we send a promo.
Sarah:Mm-hmm.
Kerri:But yeah, I can 100% be doing more of that.
Kerri:We've been collecting email addresses for two years now, and so that is one of our
Kerri:strategies this year is to increase that.
Kerri:Because that's the only thing that you own, your email, your podcast.
Kerri:Everything else is owned by someone else that can choose to do something different.
Kerri:They can choose to deactivate your account.
Kerri:I have an amazing friend who provides the candles for our chalets.
Kerri:Over 10,000 followers.
Kerri:She still doesn't know why Instagram killed her account.
Kerri:She had to start all over.
Kerri:So your email address, your podcasts, your owned assets are really important, and I
Kerri:need to do more with building those up.
Sarah:You're crushing it, Kerri.
Annette:What is your paid marketing budget?
Annette:What percentage of your revenue are you spending on that?
Kerri:So I'm spending $500 a month right now.
Annette:Oh, shegave us straight.Love it.
Kerri:Yeah.
Kerri:$500 a month split equally right now between Google and
Kerri:Meta, Facebook, Instagram.
Kerri:And right now it's high because I'm leading into-- right now is summer
Kerri:season, people still booking for that, or last minute, but we're also
Kerri:starting to get bookings for ski season.
Kerri:That is the other benefit to the new planning, the new ebbs and flows of post
Kerri:COVID travel, is people are getting more comfortable with booking further out.
Kerri:So we are having more demand for ski season that we've never had before.
Kerri:I only took reservation six months in advance.
Kerri:I recently opened the calendar for nine months in advance because of that reason.
Kerri:It'll go down during low booking season.
Kerri:September, October, and April, May, I have learned-- for reservation,
Kerri:I'll probably take it down.
Kerri:Oh, and one thing that we just did, I'm super excited about is we just took
Kerri:out a print ad in one of the biggest health and wellness magazines in Quebec.
Kerri:That was--
Annette:You'regoing to have to let us know how that goes.
Kerri:Yeah, so I am going to be able to because I have a QR code on the ad
Kerri:inside and then on the emails that they send out for all of their-- because
Kerri:we're on the front cover, on the inside.
Kerri:That was quite an investment.
Kerri:But it's our target market.
Kerri:It's one of our official business partners.
Kerri:And so even from all the email communications that-- it all goes to
Kerri:the same landing page you can only get to from clicking on a link or QR code.
Kerri:So I'm going to be able to track whether ornotthatworks.
Annette:Exactly your return on investment.
Annette:Love that.
Sarah:That's amazing.
Annette:You were just very diligent on doing your due diligence before you
Annette:chose the direct booking, your PMS, CMS.
Annette:Who did you choose?
Annette:People are probably like, she just said the vendor.
Annette:Who is the vendor?
Kerri:Lodgify.
Annette:Okay.
Annette:We want to share that because I know they're like, wait a second.
Annette:You did all this research, and you're beaming about it.
Annette:So we want to make sure that we gave that.
Kerri:I don't regret my choice with them.
Kerri:There's so many like Hostfully, and so many that have come along since that I
Kerri:know are absolutely crushing it too that I would definitely be giving a fair eye
Kerri:to if I were making the decision today.
Kerri:But Lodgify is the hub of our business.
Kerri:And so for me to untangle Lodgify, for me to use a software, it
Kerri:has to plug in to Lodgify.
Kerri:And right now, I would have to back everything out.
Kerri:It would just be a nightmare.
Kerri:And my experience with them is so great.
Kerri:I have no reason to leave them, to even look anywhere else.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:No, but I love what you just said because a lot of people want to jump platform
Annette:to platform, and you got to sink your teeth in, learn it, and then, like
Annette:you said, untangling, it can't be fun.
Annette:The third and last question is like, we need to come hang out
Annette:and see these chalets in person.
Annette:We're super thankful that you've been on the show, but we need to
Annette:bring ourselves to you now, since you've shared our time with us.
Sarah:Is that a question or a demand?
Annette:It's both.
Annette:It's both.
Kerri:I would love to have you guys and your families, so anytime.
Kerri:You just let me know, and we'll find you a chalet.
Sarah:Let's get other people--
Annette:We'llbook direct.
Sarah:Yes.
Sarah:Look at other people booking direct.
Sarah:Where can people reach out to you if they want to talk more business?
Sarah:They want to book a stay in this-- I don't even like outdoors and I'm
Sarah:interested in seeing your area.
Sarah:So where can they find out more about you?
Kerri:Hey, Sarah, we have wineries too.
Kerri:We're on the wine route.
Kerri:We're on the cheese route.
Kerri:We're on the French [Inaudible] route.
Kerri:So like I said, it's not just an outdoor-- I didn't hit on those at all.
Kerri:We have everything.
Annette:I mean, Kerri, you've got impressive direct booking, but I feel
Annette:like you are in the sweet spot of world.
Sarah:No, and now I want to invest in Kerri.
Sarah:Kerri, you knew what you were doing.
Sarah:So yeah.
Kerri:Just to add this little icing on top of the cake, our region was named
Kerri:one of the top 52 places to visit in the world by the New York Times this year.
Annette:Congrats.
Kerri:We are pretty amazing.
Kerri:So come.
Kerri:Come see us in the Eastern Township.
Kerri:So I am so passionate about this, and I love, love, love helping others.
Kerri:So please, anyone, don't hesitate to send me questions.
Kerri:There's our website, and so our email address is on there,
Kerri:so it's just info@chalets.
Kerri:Chalets with an S.
Kerri:Hygge, H-Y-G-G-E.
Kerri:I'm sorry, I'm saying it in French in my head, trying to do it in, uh, English.
Kerri:And then our Instagram handle's the same, @chalets_hygge.
Kerri:And then same for Facebook and YouTube as well.
Kerri:And so hopefully, soon Pinterest.
Kerri:It's my new, uh, passion, my new interest.
Sarah:Yes.
Sarah:Pinterest is a good interest.
Sarah:So we will, of course, put all those in the show notes, listeners.
Sarah:So if you're driving, if you're on the treadmill, if you're
Sarah:in the shower, don't youworry.
Annette:If you'recleaning toilets at your short-term rental.
Sarah:Cleaning toilets, folding fitted sheets.
Sarah:I hope you're folding them the way--
Annette:Wrestling with a duvet.
Sarah:Annette and I showed you on Instagram.
Sarah:We had those in the show notes.
Sarah:Thank you so much for your time.
Sarah:With that, I am Sarah Karakaian.
Annette:I'm Annette Grant, and together we are--
Both Annette & Sarah:Thanks for Visiting.