@Linda3345 Here's the thing- there are a hundred amenities that attract a guest to a listing or not. All Airbnbs, except for hotel listings, or generic condos, etc. are more or less unique, as they are private homes.
Airbnb has a long list of "opportunities" they suggest you add or offer to get more bookings, but most of them are not offered by the host because they do not suit the listing or the host. No matter how long Airbnb suggests I offer same day bookings, or long term bookings, or use instant book, that is never going to happen- it doesn't suit the way I choose run my listing or my lifestyle.
XX % of guests are looking for places with pools, hot tubs, TVs, Wifi, pool tables, washing machines, dishwashers, full kitchens, Keurig machines, home office, ocean front, lake front- the list is endless.
Fine. They can filter for the places that offer what they want and book them.
There are remote listings with no Wifi or cell signal at all. They get booked. There are places with no kitchen, they get booked.
The listings that attract the type of guests who are a good fit, and have the least amount of hassles with guests are those that market towards the type of guests that will be most suited to what is offered. If you're trying to attract business travelers or digital nomads, you need a home office space and strong, reliable Wifi. If your place is good for families, you need some unbreakable dishes for kids, washable paint on the walls, bullet-proof furnishings. If you're out in the countryside, with no stores or restaurants nearby, and sketchy Wifi, you don't want to attract city slickers who will be out if their element and freak out if they see an ant.
Trying to attract any and all guests is not a great strategy. Most businesses and their advertising depts know this, whether it's a clothing company or a car manufacturer. They identify their target demographic and create imaging and wording to market towards those people.