Great news—Airbnb is now accepting submissions for new exper...
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Great news—Airbnb is now accepting submissions for new experiences! List your Experience has reopened. The goal is to find am...
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What brings you to the area? Who are you coming with? When do you think you’ll arrive? Airbnb hosts have a number of questions swirling through their minds when they receive a booking. And many hosts take the opportunity to get to know their potential guests by asking these questions before guests book instantly. It’s not required, of course; but, adding questions to a pre-booking message can help drum up more information about potential guests, simplify the booking process, and ensure a great relationship with guests from the start.
Next month, Airbnb is launching an improved feature: pre-booking message. It’s a better way for hosts to add a greeting and ask all of the questions you want before guests book instantly. (You’ll have plenty of room, too, because we’ve increased the character count. And if you currently use welcome message, there’s no need to change anything.) Your potential guests will read your message while they’re booking, and be able to respond to your questions before confirming their reservation.
Here are some ways to make the most of Airbnb’s pre-booking message feature.
5 pre-booking message tips from fellow hosts
1. Start by thanking your potential guest
“I think it's a good way to build trust and a way to encourage a good stay,” said host Juan, of Colombia.
2. Ask about what’s most important
Think about the one thing that would make a great (or not-so-great) stay for you and your guests, and ask them about it in your pre-booking message, like these hosts do:
3. Invite guests to re-read the listing and House Rules
When writing your pre-booking message, take the opportunity to remind guests of any crucial listing details they may have missed. “I put myself in the guest’s shoes,” French host Marie Line said. “Sometimes we are so happy to have found the apartment of our dreams that we hurry to reserve it—I once booked an apartment without realizing sheets weren’t provided! So, I think if the hosts had invited me to read their listing again, I wouldn't have made that kind of mistake." Other hosts offer these suggestions:
4. Get to know your guests
To customize your hospitality and let guests know you care, hosts recommend asking questions like these:
5. Showcase your hosting style
Some hosts ask a lot of pre-booking questions while others ask none. Hosts recommend reflecting your hosting style—whether it be laid back or strict—when you’re asking questions in your pre-booking message. This will also help guests determine if it’s the right fit:
Once you’ve saved your pre-booking message, potential guests will automatically receive it when they use book instantly. Creating a pre-booking message once will help simplify the booking process, give you more peace of mind, and let guests know they have a wonderful stay ahead.
Thanks for all these comments this is why I will never instant book.
When will these changes take affect? I'm still unable to include all the information that I'd like in my welcome message because of the word count restriction. This article is dated in June and states that the changes will happen "later this month," but I'm not seeing this yet.
Hello, I am a new host, and I like the idea of pre-booking questions, especially when the reservation register one (1) guest and them they say that forget to mention that there is 5 in total. Thank you.
I have chosen “instant booking” option just for those guests who have reviews or their ID verified. Never had any problem. If any guest doesn’t have Verified ID , I kindly ask them verify it . Who is a real Airbnb guest - never refused .
I also never get replies to the pre-book questions I ask which include key things like setting a code for the door lock and how many beds they need made up. I end up having to ask them again.
John, women get to be a little sexist in that regard, when safety is concerned. I don't have a problem with a woman refusing an unknown single man in her home. There's a whole set of issues there,you that and I will never know. Just saying.
I love that you are trying to update prebooking to be more responsive. I only wish there were check boxes to show that they had read the rules.
The biggest issue I have had is that my house is not appropriate for young children that are toddlers through 4 years old since the house is not baby proofed and has breakable art. In addition I have a flight of stairs and balconies. The only option you have available in booking questions is to state the house is not suitable for 0-2 years old.
I have had several people sneak 14 month old babies in and wonder why they got a bad review from me.
I had one fellow book for one and then called him only to find out that he was bringing a 9 member family (2 over my limit of 7 people and 4 beds). Or sometimes guests that do read my rules say "they are so small - please do not charge me extra". I have to explain that it takes extra work for me to prepare a safe environment for young children and although they think it is nothing for the small children to sleep on a couch or floor, my license does not discriminate in the age of people that occupy the house. And children take much more work to clean up after. I need to plan to accommodate young children so that my house is protected and they are protected. I want everyone to have a good time and that takes planning.
So I would encourage you to allow us to set age limits and have the person booking check a box that they have read and understand the rules.
Every cancellation I have received I do not see as a negative. Sometimes it’s a blessing that some cancellations happen. Most often someone else ends up booking anyway. Perhaps that booking would have been a nightmare guests. Every cancellation is an opportunity for that next great guest to book.
I too have had negative reviews from other Airbnb hosts. I chalk it up as they are unhappy people. I know I have a great listing. If nothing else it shows a different perspective in the reviews. They are so few I don’t pay much attention to it.
What a lovely life attitude. I'd love to recruit you into my Independent Christian based business. sbalmario@marykay.com
Susan1229 - you’re touting for business for your MLM??????
(I entirely believe in Network Marketing, it’s a WONDERFUL business model, but you are WAY OFF MARK here)
It is sad this additional verbeage and correspondance is necessary for hosts. It is the requesting guests that need to take the lead. It should be up to the potential guest to ask about any of their special needs. Host can refer to info in the listing or answer a question.
THE PEOPLE WHO NEED TO BE MORE GRACIOUS ARE THE POTENTIAL GUESTS. More and more often I am getting "REQUESTS" to book that are an ANNOUNCEMENT that they are coming on a specified date and how do they get the keys. They are guests and that should not be misunderstood.
This is not socially acceptable in any culture I know of. I totally disagree with the hosts from Spain that hosts have no right to know why guests want to stay in your home and what they are going to be doing in it. It is my home whether I live in it or not. I have to repair the damage, account for their activities within a residential neighborhood of people I don't want to alienate, and want and need their support. It absolutely is a host's business. There are ways to go about gleening the information from them BUT WE SHOULDN'T HAVE TO. Perhaps this effort should be targeted to ALL people who are making a "REQUEST TO BOOK" or an INQUIRY.
The more we know up front, the more we can assist with things they might not know enough to ask and the faster we can send an ACCEPT. The more hosts know about guests, the less Airbnb will hit the national news in a negative way.
There are hosts who own multiple units in condominiums, have only bare necessities, have management companies take care of bookings (automatically accepted), arrange for entry often by code, and have automated evaluations (everbody is a good guest regardless) and have no involvement in maintenance and not care about the potential neighbors in adjacent units.
Airbnb has gotten so large that the variety of business models from cold to warm friendships and it is not going to be able to continue to dictate a one syle fits all rules and regulations. It is OK to offer suggestions to make things helpful to various kinds of hosts, but requiring more and more of hosts and less and less of guests is going to send Airbnb hosts away to other listing agents.
Example: I now do not know if there are going to be infants up front, regardless that my space may or may not be set up to be infant friendly. We don't know if there are going to be teenagers coming to an all adult neighborhood (or a soccer team of 12 boys with one adult coach) as Airbnb calls over 12 an ADULT (this being the worst afront Airbnb refuses to address). If guests are afraid of rejection for either of these two reasons, so be it. Hosts certaninly know what is appropriate for their property for safety and security and the neighborhood. This is not a race or religion issue. It is a safety issue.
Hosts have to be allowed to decide how their property can be legitimately used and within the confines of its location.
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@Diana0&**bleep**&Wade
I love your incredibly well written and easy to read post. (And I love Flagstaff.)
Thanks for your great ideas.
Thanks for using paragraph breaks and writing like a careful, intelligent person should write. This forum could use more like you.
I agree with everything you wrote, and I wish more Airbnb hosts had your attitude.
I too am prepared to move my listing if necessary. Reading this forum, and interacting with other contributors on the forum, really scares me sometimes.
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I have never had a really BAD guest but I did have a guest who mischievously loosened every handle in the place and dismantled the smoke alarm. The toilet handle, shower head and kitchen sink handle were loosened enough to fall off when touched. Fortunately, I noticed all but the toilet handle and my next guest found it and tightened it before it fell off. (He was a sweetheart and told me about it)
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That is an incredible story!
Pray tell, do tell us more. LOL
What kind of review did he leave and how did you review him?
What do you think is behind his behavior, a mentally ill person? Or just a mean wacko.
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