Despite all the current challenges, according to news agency Reuters,

San Francisco based home sharing giant, Airbnb, is scheduled to launch an Initial Public Offering (IPO) possibly in this December.

Pundits have widely speculated that it could achieve a company valuation of more than a mind boggling US$30 billion, citing the justification was to take ‘advantage of the unexpected sharp recovery in its business after the Covid-19 pandemic roiled the travel industry’.

If the prediction materializes, it will become one of the largest and most anticipated of all U.S. stock market listings during 2020.

The company said in July ‘that customers had booked more than 1 million nights in a single day for the first time since 3rd March’.

Vrbo, one of Airbnb’s biggest competitors, owned by travel conglomerate, Expedia Group, appeared to confirm this optimism, by reporting that they had returned to bookings growth in June.

Therefore now may be an opportune time for Airbnb to access the public capital it most likely ‘desperately needs’, while investors may be enticed to buy the IPO based on improving trends.

Airbnb’s chief executive officer, Brian Chesky, has publicly stated ‘we’re going to keep our options open’ regarding the listing, despite writing a letter to employees in May ‘that its business had been hard-hit and revenue for the year was expected to be less than half of what the company earned in 2019’.

Announcing at the same time that Airbnb was letting go nearly 1,900 staff members or a quarter of its workforce worldwide.

No-one can doubt the phenomenal growth of Airbnb from its humble origins in 2007 when the initial three partners rented out a spare apartment loft space with inflatable air mattresses serving as beds, until it currently boasts representation in 191 countries across the globe.

Quite remarkable when you consider the United Nations lists of total of 193 member states worldwide.

Speculation has remained rife for years on what the overall Airbnb influence, negative or positive, has been on the traditional hotel and other accommodation sectors across all major markets.

The much respected Smith Travel Research performed a study across 13 global markets and their conclusion may have surprising reading for some.

  • Airbnb occupancy was the highest in markets where hotels had high occupancy.
  • Hotel occupancy was significantly higher than Airbnb occupancy.
  • Airbnb guests typically stayed longer than the average hotel guest, with roughly half of Airbnb room nights coming from trips of seven nights or longer.
  • Airbnb’ share of business travel was substantially smaller than its share of leisure travel.
  • Hotel average daily rates (ADR) were generally higher than Airbnb rates.

Experts commonly agree that any real comparison is viewed a bit like apples and oranges, but if you look across our region, despite the emergence of Airbnb, annual average hotel occupancy has remained fairly stagnant for a decade.

This is, perhaps, an area where a great deal more evaluation is needed and while our Government has the use of a greatly underutilized abundance of salaried civil servants, they may consider it a suitable time to research and produce more accurate local results that could prove invaluable in effective marketing strategies.

71 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – What is Airbnb?”


  1. @ Cuhdear Bajan
    October 13, 2020 9:57pm

    Rationality, Foolishness, and Adaptive Intelligence was the core of my situation.


  2. Cudhear Bajan, your 10:21, is right on target. when I stayed in a family house, the caretaker, not a relative used to put the essentials in the fridge for me. Sometimes they would cook a meal. On my last visit I stayed at an airBNB in Sunset Crest. they had their own garbage can and had a private collector come every two days to remove the garbage. She had 3 apartment in the house. The other houses around used to dump their garbage in the lady’s can and put it all on the ground when full. She bought me dinner from Massy, but I told her it would be better to put the essentials in the apartment for future guests. The thanked me profusely. She was young and Guyanese Indian.


  3. @cuhdear
    That kind of advice is priceless.
    It generates good will and happy customers who will give you pleasant reviews and references.

  4. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Critical Analyzer October 13, 2020 9:55 AM
    “Had I been government, I would have focused on setting up our own AirBNB like registry on through the BTA/BTMI…”
    +++++++++++++++++++
    I made a proposal to Invest Barbados to do exactly this, but…
    They are bureaucrats, not entrepreneurs, so I have come to the conclusion that it is not worth my while to wait on them.
    So that’s what I started out to build myself. We should have launched sooner, but we spent 6 weeks building a fancy Airbnb type direct booking program for our website only to learn that hardly anyone wants to reserve a place to stay for a whole year without inspecting the place and the neighborhood for themselves. So we have become real estate agents and we will simply help clients secure just the right place after they are here in Barbados to see what is available personally.

  5. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Cuhdear Bajan
    If you wish to list your place for rental to long term people here on the Welcome Stamp, please list it on the Remote Work Barbados website at https://remoteworkbarbados.com/en/housing/for-rent/454/all_houses.
    First register using the form in the top right, then go back to the link above and click the ‘Add House’ button.


  6. Considering it.

  7. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @PLT
    I’m not surprised your proposal to add a registry to their site was rejected. Chances are the site will be updated in the not too distant future with something like that.

    Looking at your site, I suggest you try to standardize all the listings added to force listers to give alot more information about the rental to quickly answer questions renters would have since they are coming long term and will be easier on them the more amenities details known upfront.
    1) Have a Utilities Section specifically listing which utilities are available and included/excluded/optional in the rental price. i.e. Electricity, Water, Internet, Cable.
    2) Have a Rooms Sections listing each room alongwith checkboxes for the main contents in the rooms i.e. Living, dining, bathroom, kitchen, office, etc.
    e.g. Kitchen section should include checkboxes for dishwasher, fridge size, stove size, sink type, microwave, etc. Bedroom sections should include bedsize, wardrobe type, etc..
    3) Add an upload video walkthrough. You can create a youtube channel and post uploaded videos there after you vet them and link them to the listing.

  8. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Lawson October 13, 2020 8:56 AM
    “Peter can you be more specific on data…”
    +++++++++++
    The Terra team said that they rented 70 long term villas in 30 days.

  9. Adrian Loveridge Avatar
    Adrian Loveridge

    Peter,

    you state

    ‘hundreds of millions of taxpayers monies subsidising employment in hotels’
    Gosh! I thought that is what the employers and employees contribution to the NIS funds was supposed to do! Have I got it all wrong?

    ‘The NIS is designed to provide employees with assistance when income earning is effected’

  10. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Adrian Loveridge October 14, 2020 3:53 PM
    “Gosh! I thought that is what the employers and employees contribution to the NIS funds was supposed to do!”
    ++++++++++++++++
    The NIS is not supposed to favour one sector of the economy over another. If hotel workers get their wages subsidised so that they can open hotels again, what about restaurant workers, what about transportation workers, what about maids and gardeners who take care of villas? So you can see how one sided and unfair that is. The NIS is designed to provide unemployment insurance to workers… that is what the “i” stands for. When you bend it to subsidise private sector business operations, because make no mistake that is what it is doing, then it is no longer insurance… it is corporate welfare.

  11. Adrian Loveridge Avatar
    Adrian Loveridge

    Peter,
    I partially agree, BUT what are you really saying? Have the contributions made by employers and employees of hotels since the inception of NIS, including the compounded accruement of interest over that entire period already been exhausted? If this not the case then the use of the word ‘subsidise’ is inaccurate. Someone would have to product credible evidence to prove that these funds have been totally spent already, otherwise we return to the NIS mission statement ‘ The NIS is designed to provide employees with assistance when income earning is effected’.


  12. @Adrian
    I commend your commitment to your craft but surely even you can see the disproportionate, even excessive government support of tourism “industry” in the island?

  13. Adrian Loveridge Avatar
    Adrian Loveridge

    Dullard,
    thank you, but I do not think its disproportionate. When any other sector contributes anything close to what tourism does, then I will support that sector to the same degree. Look again at the level of taxation on tourism, starting with departure taxes, VAT, room, ancillary service levies, additional taxation of car rental vehicles etc., etc., and you will get some idea of the lack of Government support in real terms.
    Even the BTMI is now financed by the private sector taxes.
    And what is Government’s contribution?
    The disaster’s of Hotel and Resorts (GEMS), lease of a Carnival ship for CWC2007, Harrison’s Cave and so on. There alone is over ONE BILLION DOLLARS squandering of taxpayers monies already without private sector involvement. Add the damage caused by the unilateral granting of concessions to Sandals, which inevitably has severely damaged investment and you get a better picture of reality.


  14. Most of these island has tourism as the dominant (and often the sole) contributor to their economy.

    The easy answer is to say tourism is the key to economic recovery. This provides no additional information.


  15. @ peterlawrencethompson. Your idea is producing results.

    “High-end real estate developers are beginning to reap dividends from the 12-month Barbados Welcome Stamp initiative, which was officially introduced just over two months ago.”

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/10/15/bbig-buyers-purchasing-properties-seeking-investment/


  16. Donville inniss the old industry minister is probably trying to figure out why he may be going to jail for 36 grand and the bidens will get nothing for the million dollar grift they have been running.
    So Hants this is how this stuff works. Biden is exposed platforms like twitter cancel anybody talking about it …the media says twitter
    it so it is false and biden lays low
    High end developers are reaping benefits the article says people looking for investments, paper printed it …it must be true better scrape everything together and invest…..self fulfilling prophecy


  17. twitter cancelled it


  18. https://barbadostoday.bb/2020/10/16/tourism-official-expects-no-major-fallout-from-cdc-travel-advisory/

    I agree. I think the average US citizen can read and sift the news for themselves.

    Currently, given the US handling of COVID 19, the CDC warning is nonsensical. My fear is that as COVID-19 continue to run rampant in the US, Barbados may import some COVID-19 as we open our border to others.

    The government has to be continually vigilant and maintain their safety protocols as the number of visitors increases.

    Have a great day Barbados

  19. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Critical Analyzer October 13, 2020 9:44 PM
    Your suggestions are all excellent ones. I will be implementing some of them right away, and others when I have grown my team to the scale that gives me the capacity to implement. Thank you.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading