The next time you notice an AirBNB host with multiple listings, the person may not in fact be an enterprising subletter or an enterprising landlord welcoming guests in a residential area. It might be an actual hotel. Hostels and hotels that aren’t part of a chain have embraced the idea of such a large platform. Yes, they use AirBNB, which has about 2 million rooms available on any given night, as one of many ways to draw customers.
There’s also a hidden advantage: AirBNB takes 3% of the fee for the customer’s stay. The mega-travel aggregators charge as much as 25%. Expedia, which owns multiple online travel agent sites, recently announced that it plans to acquire Homeaway, a site that does peer-to-peer room and home rentals like AirBNB.
The service’s rule is that they have to make it clear what they are, and not masquerade as individual hosts. or B&B owners.
TO FILL ROOMS, HOTELS ARE TURNING TO AIRBNB [FastCompany]
by Laura Northrup via Consumerist
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