@Susan @Ben551 @Robin
At Rob: Welcome back! I believe your presence has been sorely missed by everyone myself included. Glad you are well and had a great holiday. Sign me up for the mosaic fan club although keep in mind people who are good at EVERYTHING can just get annoying after a while!!!
At Ben: Just included you because you seem interested in everything. A refreshing quality I must say!
At Susan: This is really in reply to your mention. Thank you for the heads up in another post.
For anyone interested in a first hand explanation, when this happened to our account I did specifically ask if it had anything to do with using the Pro Tools and they were very clear - with me anyway in that conversation - that using the Pro Tools has NO impact at all. Of course, especially with these guys, you can never say never and it could be prudent to expect that this may change down the line.
For those hosts who remain under the threshold, you can change your account from business to personal at any time without repercussion as it stands now so it is a pretty safe bet that it is okay to use. If they are going to lump you into the Business Profile because of your earnings you just have to accept that with as much grace as you can muster as far as I can tell and using the Team function will have no bearing one way or the other.
For us in Australia, the threshold is definitely $15,000 in earnings in a one year period that automatically makes you a business profile. There is NO other criteria in the designation - NONE. It is supposed to be automated to pick up when you hit the threshold and then stops payments until you re-classify your profile from personal to business. If you manually try to change it back to personal it just loops you through the process again because the program continues to pick up that you have surpassed the maximum exempted earnings. Expect to submit your verification photo about 6 times by the way - yes, the same one over and over again.
I wonder if they are working on the previous 365 days or the financial year calendar? Hard to say as our financial year starts on July 1 so for us it could be counting 9 months of earnings but for others the financial year could begin January 1, 2019 which shifts things considerably. We block out the calendar for January as it is school holidays here before the new school year begins and we never would have made $15K in the time slot when we were redesignated in January based on a financial year starting that month.
It has been so quiet on the CC about this I suspect the majority of other countries are working on the financial year calendar starting just 2 1/2 months ago and as soon as it rolls around to hosts reaching the threshold, we will see more about it here. That is the only thing I can think of. Curious to know if any Aussie hosts have surpassed $15K and not been swooped up in the net. Please check the last 365 days and from July 1 and mention if this is not the case for you. (hahum Rob ie).
I think that 6 or 8 unique listings that you manage by yourself, continue to greet each guest and give personalised recommendations about the area should not be lumped in with “Professionals” or “Agents”. A couple of guests have come out to the farm to meet our albino baby camel (who gives kisses and has an ear chomping fetish that guest love) and then go for a ride on the ATV - so it is not as though we are in a category of an anonymous agent who does not meet or engage with their guests.
We had overseas guests not long ago who had booked with “core” hosts for their 3 weeks of prior travel to coming here and they had not met one single host along the way - not one. They were quite disappointed by this and were guests who appreciated being able to engage. Over here they call them a “Ghost Host”. These guys should be in a category of their own as well!! To me they are more egregious than agents. Talk about stepping away from the original Airbnb concept and these guys are the poster children.
Other hosts really need to stop demonising those doing a good job with multiple listings. I am in absolute awe of hosts who have over 100 listings and are SuperHosts. Put it this way, if you have one listing and you are a SuperHost, it is 100 times harder to achieve because all the listings are factored into one set of totals. If you have to manage just one ugly duckling in the bunch this can severely impact your ratings through no fault of the obviously super conscientious host. Of course the agent can give tips about what would make the listing a success but who knows if the owners would comply. Please get over the misconception that agents don’t care. These folks are a valuable addition to the platform for the guests looking for their type of property.
This new category designation Business vs Personal has nothing to do with 6+ listings or being a Pro Host and everything to do with the earning power of the listing. You can have 6+ listings and stay under the radar if you don’t cross the earnings threshold. The designation at this time appears to be entirely based on earnings no matter if you are a Professional, Business, Core or Ghost Host. Can you be a Core Business host?? hoho.
The only time Airbnb hands over any information is when they are required to do so by law. They will not be putting a distinction of personal host or business host on the listing until the government requires it of them and will not be releasing any information until compelled to do so by law.
Creating the data before there is a request and perhaps using it as a bargaining chip - or not - let's be fair - could still be seen as them just being pre-emptive if this is slowly rolling out around the globe. May as well do it in one shot instead of a long slow drawn out painful process.
They did also say that in time these changes would apply to the USA, India and China so “y’all” over there on the other side of the globe are not off the hook either.
So, so, so in agreement with you about the distinction between Business and Professional Hosts. At the moment, it looks like they will catch a lot of Core and Business Hosts in the Professional “net” with the low threshold of $15K (about $21.3K USD) earnings per year. Trust me, this policy has already been rolled out here. Well, our listings are test cases so perhaps not to everyone yet but it is definitely in the testing / roll out phase now.
Susan you absolutely crack me up. The first time I read one of your posts there was mention of folks being more concerned about the location rating and keeping SuperHost than focusing on the real issues. I was taken aback and thought perhaps you were a bit of a “meanie”. I totally see your point now. There is much on the CC that just passes right over hosts heads and they don’t understand the importance of the information. Keep steaming along Susan and maybe your well informed and crucial posts will be heard.
As for that very vague clause - that really made me laugh, it could realistically apply to every host on the planet. Too funny. You are absolutely right, they likely do not want our contact information on our listing. What’s next, a direct link to our business website?? Good Grief. It doesn’t seem the other ATOs are subject to these stringent regulations.
However, having said that, in the last 6 months BDC has made it possible for guests to contact hosts by email prior to booking. They do not block out phone numbers so perhaps this is for the same reasons? Seemed odd to me. Mind you BDC also has 2 specific sites for either professional hosts or holiday rentals - villas dot com (it was some years ago). Maybe this is how they escape the need for the distinction?
Personally, I think including hotels is a good move. I like staying in hotels and would now consider looking at Airbnb to book - last minute only. I could also wind up checking out what else is available in entire property listings. If you don’t get guests like me on the page, I will never even see your listing. They have tapped into a whole new market which is great for every listing that may now get viewed by these potential guests. More page views and more folks creating profiles increases the chances of a booking for everyone. The Community arguement can be shot down in flames by entire property listings who can tell you that the guests do not come for the sense of community. They have been around for a long time so blaming the Agents is not going to wash on this one.
Susan, you should ask John Oliver to do a show about Airbnb. If anyone could get him to look into the answers it would be you or Rob might have a moderately slim shot too. haha Love his show and can just imagine what he would have to say! That would be awesomely entertaining!!, Lisa