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Vacation rental revenue management: an introduction to the basics

This is a guest post by the team at Rented, who provide revenue management technology, tools, and services to help vacation rental managers optimize their portfolio of properties.

Starting on a revenue management journey can be complex, so let’s start with the groundwork.

Revenue management defined:

“A strategy that uses data to predict consumer behaviour to optimize product availability and price for maximum revenue growth.”

Supply and demand in the vacation rental industry

The rules of supply and demand are different in the vacation rental industry than they are in any other.

Because yes, a hotel room is a tangible product, but it’s also a perishable commodity. As soon as that room is occupied, it vanishes from the inventory.

Based on a variety of external factors, like seasonality, consumer behaviour, or big events in the area, inventory is therefore in constant flux.

Price is elastic if there is a clear relationship between occupancy and a unit’s price. Drop the price and raise occupancy or vice versa.

For example, let’s say we charge $100 a night at our 50-room hotel and end up with 50% occupancy. If everything else was business as usual, it would make sense that lowering the price by $5 would increase our occupancy by 5%.

But what if you drop your price by $5 and get a 10% increase in occupancy? This means there’s no longer a one-for-one relationship between occupancy and price, making the pricing inelastic.

Key aspects of vacation rental revenue management

The foundation for a successful vacation rental revenue management strategy includes:

Putting it all together

Dynamic pricing works effectively when we can strike a balance between a competitive price that still encourages an increase in occupancy, without taking too much of a hit on our revenue.

– Art, Rented’s dynamic pricing tool

Data is king when it comes to revenue management

The modern hospitality industry runs on data, especially when it comes to dynamic pricing.

The volume and accuracy of the data can determine the agility of your revenue management strategy, and with the introduction of the internet, data of all sorts is in abundance.

Vacation rental data types

There are two major types of data in particular that are relevant to revenue management: scraped data, and actual or authoritative data. 

You are your best source of data

So where do you get good, actionable data for your dynamic pricing strategy?

Start with what you already have! Data from your property management system is the best source—you’re probably using it to make operational decisions right now. 

When you dig into your own data, you learn all sorts of interesting tidbits that can be useful for vacation rental revenue management. Useful data can include:

Depending on how long you’ve been in business, your reservations data can show you the differences in reservations over various lengths of time, from year-over-year to week-over-week.

These data points can start to shape your dynamic pricing strategies.

Implementing a dynamic pricing strategy

We’ve defined revenue management and the key metrics vacation rental managers will need to evaluate for their listing, in order to determine a pricing strategy.

Using this information, how do you actually implement this strategy to see results for you and your homeowners? 

Many property managers set weekly or monthly rental rates well in advance, but it’s important not to overlook one major benefit: being able to adjust these dynamic pricing options according to what works best for the property at any given point and time.

When you have real-time market data to inform these decisions, you will produce results that your homeowners will appreciate, increasing your lifetime customer value. So how do you get started?  

Speak to us today!

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