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Wouldn't it be great if you're web listings contained the phrase "please click here for a complete guide to our property and how to enjoy it." As an example, try this listing site, and compare it to the property owners own website. I want to help you build that special site.
The real estate and vacation industries jumped on the web in a hurry. Go to Google and search if you like. You will find so much and also miss so much. How will a surfer every find you? We'll get back to that later. It suffices to say that finding exactly what you want is one of the big problems on the web.
Your surfing client would like to hit one web site, type in his vacation requirements and be able to find every property that meets his needs. The airline industry solved this problem years ago because there aren't that many airlines and even there are even fewer airline reservation systems. Any travel agent, and now, any surfer can find every flight.
By comparison the vacation rental industry has no consolidated list. Properties are scattered in hundreds of separate data bases if they are in a data base at all. Calling or surfing one listing service will only yield the properties in one database.
Free rental calendar, guestbook, and newsletter: Rentors.org offers free rental
calendars and guestbooks you can use even if you don't have a website. They
also produce an quarterly newsletter with valuable tips. It's a very worthwhile organization.
Books, forums, seminars, websites, and other resources for property owners:
Rentors.org is a very good all around site in addition to providing free calendars, guestbooks, and (not free) credit card services. Sign up for their e-mail newsletter. They maintain an archive of old newsletters.
This website by VacationRentalOwner.com has a very good resources page.
How to Rent by Owner from Christine Karpinski offers seminars for vacation property owners , has a good question and answer page about by-owner rentals
, and promotes her forthcoming book, How to Rent Vacation Properties by Owner.
Alfred and Emily Glossbrenner website promotes their book, How to Make Your Vacation Property Work for You! and has some helpful information online.
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Road Map to your Vacation Property Dream by Christophoner Cain.
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CyberRentals.com has useful newsletters. See their archive and sign up for the mailing list.
The Yahoo discussion group is helpful too.
Vacation Rental Owners Association
is like, the total package with membership fees. I haven't paid so I can't tell you much about the value of their services.
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Kathleen Plumley at Plumley Drafting creates professional floor plans for vacation rentals.
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The Non-Designer's Design Book by Robin Williams is not about vacation rentals at all. It's about creating nice looking printed materials and websites. It emphasizes four rules: Contrast, Repetition, Alignment, and Proximity. It will help you learn why your listings on VRBO, A1Vacations, CyberRentals, and GreatRentals don't look as good as you'd like. Your listings violate the "Contrast" and "Alignment" rules.
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useit.com: Jakob Nielsen's Website is not about renting. It's about usability and particularly about website usability. Read his "Alert Box" which contains such articles as, "Top Ten Web Design Mistakes of 2003."
About property management services: Few owners can handle all of the management chores of the house they live in much less a rental property hundreds of miles away. For that you can use property management services. This one is a good example. The point is that many services also create a small web page for you and list your property on their website.
About web property listing services: If you use a property management service, you'll probably get a web listing. If you want your property to get more Internet exposure, there are a number of classified add type web services. You'll pay a fee for your advertisement. At the minimum you'll probably get a few pictures and maybe a small website. At the max you'll get an online reservation and payment system.
The point of these services is to make your property easier to find on the Internet. The more listings you have the better chance you guests will find your place on the Internet.
A web site beyond a property management or classified listing: I cover this here, but let me remake a few points: Your property needs exposure on the web that you get from the services but these services don't present your rental as the unique place it really is. To repeat myself once more: Wouldn't it be better if you're web listings contained the phrase "please click here for a complete guide to our property and how to enjoy it." As an example, try this listing site, and compare it to the property owners own website.
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