Feb. 11, 2026

Jeff Hurst on Why Midterm Rentals Are Gaining Ground in a Mature STR Market

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Midterm rentals are moving from a side option to a real strategy. In this episode, Alex & Annie sit down with Jeff Hurst, CEO of Furnished Finder and former HomeAway and Expedia Group leader, to explain why 30+ day stays are gaining traction as many STR markets move into a more mature phase.

Jeff breaks down what makes midterm rentals different from short-term rentals, what demand is actually driven by, and why midterm can be a strong fit for operators looking for stability, fewer turnovers, and a guest profile rooted in real-life transitions.

Episode Chapters:
01:04 – Jeff’s background and how he views category shifts in rentals
06:16 – What Furnished Finder is, and what “midterm” means in practice
07:24 – Why the category is still early, and what professionalization looks like
08:35 – Who midterm guests are and what they need from a stay
12:01 – How midterm works operationally: screening, leases, deposits, and payments
22:48 – “Return on furniture” and the investment logic behind midterm
26:58 – Regulation, market maturity, and why more operators are taking midterm seriously
32:15 – Why midterm is gaining ground in saturated (mature) STR markets
33:21 – What types of properties fit midterm demand, and what does not

Connect with Jeff:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-hurst-atx/
Website: https://www.furnishedfinder.com/

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#vacationrentals #shorttermrentals #MTR

00:00 - Meet Jeff Hurst And His Journey

03:35 - Why Midterm Rentals Are Surging

07:25 - Inside Furnished Finder’s Model

12:14 - Brand, Inventory, And Who Really Books

17:28 - Use Cases And Demographics Shift

22:59 - How Leasing And Payments Actually Work

27:10 - Investment Math And Furniture ROI

32:45 - Regulations, Markets, And Demand Trends

37:12 - Go-To-Market And Distribution Integrations

43:05 - Property Management Playbook For Midterm

48:30 - MLS, GDS, And Tech Gaps

WEBVTT

00:00:01.840 --> 00:00:06.080
Welcome to Alex and Annie, the real women of Vacation Reynolds.

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With more than 35 years combined industry experience, Alex User and Annie Holcomb have teamed up to connect the dots between inspiration and opportunity, seeking to find the one story, idea, strategy, or decision that led to their guests' big aha moment.

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Join them as they highlight the real stories behind the people and brands that have built vacation rentals into the $100 billion industry it is today.

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And now it's time to get real and have some fun with your hosts, Alex and Annie.

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Welcome to Alex and Annie, the Rule Woman of Vacation Runnels.

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I'm Alex and I'm Annie.

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And we are joined today by Jeff Hurst, who is the CEO of Furnished Finder.

00:00:46.320 --> 00:00:47.920
Jeff, it's so good to have you on the show.

00:00:48.240 --> 00:00:52.000
So good to see y'all again and happy to be back in the short-term rental orbit.

00:00:52.320 --> 00:00:55.280
Well, you've been absent for really just a hot minute.

00:00:55.280 --> 00:00:56.320
It hasn't been that long.

00:00:56.320 --> 00:01:00.399
But I know there is likely some people that aren't familiar with you and your background.

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So why don't you share a little bit about your story and then we'll get into what Furnished Finder is all about.

00:01:05.439 --> 00:01:06.000
Sounds good.

00:01:06.000 --> 00:01:09.680
So I got into the short-term rental space in 2010.

00:01:09.680 --> 00:01:13.040
I was an early-ish employee at Home Away.

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I was the first person in the strategy department there.

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Was at Homaway from 2010 and ultimately became the chief strategy officer when we sold to Expedia in 2015.

00:01:23.599 --> 00:01:29.680
Stayed on and was the chief commercial officer for those following the show with Alex and Annie.

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It was a job kind of like Tim Rosolio has now.

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And so I had that for several years.

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Tim was on my team for a long time.

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I was then the president of uh Verbo and Hummaway.

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And then after that, I was the co-u-lead of marketing for Expedia Group and then the chief operating officer for Expedia.

00:01:46.079 --> 00:01:48.640
So I left about three years ago.

00:01:48.640 --> 00:01:56.640
Um, although, judging by the comments I get on LinkedIn about someone needing a refund for a Hummaway property, it's like I never left at all.

00:01:58.000 --> 00:01:58.799
That's hilarious.

00:01:59.120 --> 00:02:01.920
These past two years, I have been the CEO furnish finder.

00:02:01.920 --> 00:02:09.199
And so we are a midterm rental site, very much a throwback, so a classified site like the RBO in 2011.

00:02:09.199 --> 00:02:11.919
And we help people with 30-day plus rentals.

00:02:11.919 --> 00:02:17.840
Uh it's a fast-growing category, all furnished, all monthly stays, or typical durations about three months.

00:02:17.840 --> 00:02:29.280
And uh increasingly we've been overlapping on the short-term side, and you know, saw how many familiar names you had and was kind of begging my way onto the show so it's gonna see everybody again.

00:02:30.000 --> 00:02:34.879
I remember when you've you pulled out a comment form on our website and I got it and I sent it to Annie.

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I was like, oh my God, yes, of course we're gonna have Jeff on the show.

00:02:37.360 --> 00:02:40.400
But we were we were excited when we saw that you wanted to come on.

00:02:40.400 --> 00:02:43.199
So uh definitely excited to have the conversation today.

00:02:43.199 --> 00:02:58.960
And you know, for our listeners, I feel like we've we constantly keep hearing this, and especially at events that I've been at lately, most recently IMN, which is uh more short-term rental versus traditional vacation rental type operators, I would say, that attend those events.

00:02:58.960 --> 00:03:03.439
Um, that companies are trying to get into midterm rentals if they're not already doing it.

00:03:03.439 --> 00:03:13.039
I mean, they're seeing this as an opportunity whether they want to do it as an additional uh offering within the company or they have to do it because of regulation.

00:03:13.039 --> 00:03:18.159
But you know, it's kind of an interesting spot that you're in that it's there's nothing new about what you're doing.

00:03:18.159 --> 00:03:29.360
I mean, for years I booked winter rentals here in North Myrtle Beach, and those were three-month rentals, and there wasn't a whole lot of options uh at that point for where you could specifically put that type of inventory.

00:03:29.360 --> 00:03:39.759
But I guess my my first question would be I mean, going from the behemoth of the Virgo Expedia, large OTA days to what you're doing now, I mean, uh just tell us what it's like.

00:03:39.759 --> 00:03:42.879
I mean, like there's gotta just be the massive differences.

00:03:43.680 --> 00:03:47.439
It's um it it is it is honestly, it's refreshing.

00:03:47.439 --> 00:03:52.479
And so uh, you know, I've got a 16-year-old daughter, she just started driving three weeks ago.

00:03:52.479 --> 00:04:04.000
I've got a 13-year-old son, you know, for anyone who listened to Sarah and T for some period of 2019 to 22, like I was always coaching basketball, and it's like now he's outgrown my coaching, but like I wanted to be home more.

00:04:04.000 --> 00:04:10.960
Um, and uh a really hard thing about Expedia, both Expedia Group and Varbo, just from a career perspective, was how global it was.

00:04:10.960 --> 00:04:17.519
And so I was a pretty senior executive, and like we had offices in 90 offices and pretty much every time zone, except a few in the Pacific.

00:04:17.519 --> 00:04:19.600
And so like it just never turned off.

00:04:19.600 --> 00:04:29.040
And so what I've really loved about uh the chapter at Furnish Finder is you know, most of the teams in Austin, Texas were together Tuesday through Thursday.

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Most of them worked with me at Homo Air Expedia, like we all kind of know each other, and we're just solving this one thing in the US.

00:04:36.959 --> 00:04:42.959
Like we're and and you know, you mentioned the the occasion of like, well, hadn't this stuff kind of been around forever?

00:04:42.959 --> 00:04:46.720
It's like, you know, that that's very much how I felt in 2010 with vacation rentals.

00:04:46.720 --> 00:04:56.720
And I was like, you know, there you'd always been able to go to the mountains and go to the beach and maybe a lake house, but then all of a sudden you could go to Hollywood and you could, you know, stay in these places everywhere.

00:04:56.720 --> 00:04:59.199
I think monthly furnish is kind of having that moment.

00:04:59.199 --> 00:05:00.959
Like we don't have a big leisure business.

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We have a big like, is it near a hospital, is it near a university, is it near a commuter corridor business?

00:05:06.000 --> 00:05:14.480
It's got more in common with like where you're gonna see an extended stay in America or where you're honestly gonna see like a new um Lenar home development.

00:05:14.480 --> 00:05:17.120
Uh, like those are the types of areas they gravitate towards.

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They're smaller footprint, they're a lot cheaper.

00:05:19.040 --> 00:05:24.720
And so that that's really a different occasion than like the core leisure verbo occasion.

00:05:24.720 --> 00:05:29.040
And I think what's exciting is all these things are kind of starting to bleed together.

00:05:29.040 --> 00:05:38.160
The Zillow occasion, the apartments.com occasion, corporate travel, a lot of the hotel development is actually in midterm rentals and like this extended stay concept.

00:05:38.160 --> 00:05:40.800
And so you're just seeing more flexible living.

00:05:40.800 --> 00:05:46.160
And we're a platform that I think, you know, is appealing because it's simple and cheap.

00:05:46.399 --> 00:05:46.560
Yeah.

00:05:46.560 --> 00:05:59.920
I mean, I would say also the I would say a big difference for your job now, your past role is when you're with a public company, even the company doesn't turn off, but then everything you do has so many layers of decision making that goes into it.

00:05:59.920 --> 00:06:03.600
So you can pivot a lot quicker, you can make decisions, you can try new things.

00:06:03.600 --> 00:06:11.040
Out of curiosity, you said we're off camera, you're you're not like a booking site, like a traditional OTA, you're not operating in that sense.

00:06:11.040 --> 00:06:12.319
What is Furnish Finder?

00:06:12.319 --> 00:06:15.600
What's the foundational operation look like for you guys?

00:06:15.920 --> 00:06:16.160
Yeah.

00:06:16.160 --> 00:06:20.079
So the the value product, it's $199 a year.

00:06:20.079 --> 00:06:25.279
You buy a subscription, we host your listing, and then you get you basically get inquiries.

00:06:25.279 --> 00:06:27.040
Uh there's three types.

00:06:27.040 --> 00:06:32.480
You can get what we call a booking request, which is like an inquiry with more form fields and you learn more about the tenant.

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You can get a direct message, which feels like an inquiry or direct message on Airbnb or Virgo.

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It's like, hey, do you accept pets?

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And it's like, yeah, it says they're right in the listing, but thanks for double checking.

00:06:41.360 --> 00:06:48.160
Um and then, you know, because we're classified, we also will behind a button is basically the phone number.

00:06:48.160 --> 00:06:52.800
And, you know, it's a it's it's a 90-day stay, it's often for work.

00:06:52.800 --> 00:06:55.839
And so it's very frequent people will actually visit the house in person.

00:06:55.839 --> 00:07:00.240
You know, they pay with ACH or sometimes cash or check, they do a FaceTime.

00:07:00.240 --> 00:07:05.439
And so it's a much more direct line of communication through our site.

00:07:05.439 --> 00:07:09.519
And we're not nearly as involved, really involved at all in the transaction.

00:07:09.519 --> 00:07:11.839
We're just there to help get eyeballs on your site.

00:07:12.000 --> 00:07:12.959
Yeah, that's great.

00:07:12.959 --> 00:07:14.240
And I'm interested too.

00:07:14.240 --> 00:07:18.000
I mean, how much does brand matter in in the midterm space?

00:07:18.000 --> 00:07:21.279
I mean, that's a big thing that we talk about all the time as far as short term goes.

00:07:21.279 --> 00:07:24.319
But does brand matter for the consumers you're going after?

00:07:24.480 --> 00:07:28.560
You know, um, probably not, you know, but it would there'd be some asterisks to it.

00:07:28.560 --> 00:07:30.959
You know, there's a few larger branded players.

00:07:30.959 --> 00:07:39.839
Uh there's one called Blue Ground, there's one called Landing Pad Split, while their room rentals is kind of a branded player, but not to the same extent you'd find in vacation rentals.

00:07:39.839 --> 00:07:49.040
And then, you know, where brand might show up more is there are people like who are making a choice between like a Hilton and staying in an a uh monthly furnished rental.

00:07:49.040 --> 00:07:51.360
And so like that that's more of a distinction.

00:07:51.360 --> 00:07:59.439
Of our inventory, it it you know, it is it's 20 years ago in the sense that like it's 85% independent landlords who have a single property.

00:07:59.439 --> 00:08:02.160
You know, this is not a lot of large managed inventory.

00:08:02.160 --> 00:08:06.639
You see more of that on Zillowandapartments.com, and then you obviously see more of that on Airbnb.

00:08:06.639 --> 00:08:09.279
And so for the most part, there aren't really brands available.

00:08:09.279 --> 00:08:17.759
Like the brand is like, I'm gonna go talk to Betsy, who's got a two-bedroom, you know, studio or duplex, and she lives next door.

00:08:17.759 --> 00:08:21.920
Like, I'm going to talk to her, pick up the phone, FaceTime, and maybe go visit.

00:08:21.920 --> 00:08:28.399
I think we're very early in professionalization, and we're gonna see a lot more of it as the category matures.

00:08:28.720 --> 00:08:34.240
Do you see the crossover into some of the traditional vacation markets as an opportunity for you guys?

00:08:34.480 --> 00:08:37.840
I think it it will be, but it'll be for a minority of the inventory.

00:08:37.840 --> 00:08:40.000
We're not good at filling a four-bedroom in Aspen.

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I don't think we're gonna be good at filling a four-bedroom in the Gulf Coast.

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And so, like you think about who's using our side, they're traveling for work, and a lot of that is skilled trade.

00:08:47.440 --> 00:08:51.360
There's relocating families, which is the use case I think is most possible.

00:08:51.360 --> 00:08:55.519
Traveling healthcare, which is really a price point that isn't gonna work for most short-term rentals.

00:08:55.519 --> 00:09:02.960
You know, you're talking like $1,600 a month, you know, that's not gonna spin off versus, you know, renting out 10 nights as a short-term.

00:09:02.960 --> 00:09:04.240
And then there's a lot of academics.

00:09:04.240 --> 00:09:08.240
And so there'll be overlap markets, but it'll really be for these smaller footprints.

00:09:08.240 --> 00:09:13.679
You know, you're kind of like, especially, I'd say your one bedroom or your studio plus a bonus room type of thing.

00:09:13.679 --> 00:09:15.440
Um, and then your two bedrooms.

00:09:15.440 --> 00:09:27.120
Eventually, I think you'll see more and more, not your core leisure destinations, but like your your Austin's, your Los Angeles's, your Seattle's, where part of the housing stock is a monthly furnished rental.

00:09:27.120 --> 00:09:39.840
And people who are moving to a new neighborhood actually are like, I'm gonna go live in one of these for four months and be sure this is the neighborhood I want to be in, and really dial in like, do I want to be on that street or this street or this side of this artery or that side?

00:09:39.840 --> 00:09:41.919
I think that's gonna get to be a lot more common.

00:09:41.919 --> 00:09:50.000
And then over time, you know, I've kind of become more of a believer in what Chesky's been saying for a long time around, like, I do think people are just gonna live this way.

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Like, there is a generation who's just gonna not buy furniture.

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And that's gonna be a way they save money and invest in something else and just live in these types of rentals, but they need them to not just be in Myrtle Beach and 30A and Aspen and Steamboat.

00:10:04.960 --> 00:10:11.759
Like they need them to be in Plano and outside of Austin and in, you know, Chico, California, and wherever they need to end up.

00:10:12.080 --> 00:10:12.240
Yeah.

00:10:12.240 --> 00:10:25.120
I worked with the the Hello Landing group for a while, and and I and what they're doing is really interesting just because they're, you know, they have within their ecosystem kind of like a club where you can move around to different properties and different cities.

00:10:25.120 --> 00:10:31.759
And I think that I think it's spot on, given the advent of sort of like that nomadic worker, like people can work from anywhere.

00:10:31.759 --> 00:10:34.720
I think that that's if you're young, my husband and I talk about it all the time.

00:10:34.720 --> 00:10:44.960
It's like if we had been able to do that when we were in our 20s, you know, late 20s before we had our son, like that would have been a great life to be able to just go out and you know, really see where you wanted to, where you wanted to land.

00:10:44.960 --> 00:10:48.000
But then we got sucked into vacation rentals, so we got stuck to work.

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So we're all here.

00:10:50.559 --> 00:10:59.600
Yeah, you know, what what's been interesting demographically is how much of the I thought that use case you're describing was going to be like when my daughter gets out of college.

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Uh what surprised me, it's got way more to do with my mom.

00:11:03.039 --> 00:11:17.120
You know, it's actually like it's actually the boomer generation and late Gen X who are getting one of these for three months to be close to a newborn child, or they're getting one of these for three months to not be in Texas in July, August, and September.

00:11:17.120 --> 00:11:26.159
And they're they're moving around that way uh because they've got you know equity in their home that they may not want to sell the home and they might actually be renting out their home or building an ADU.

00:11:26.159 --> 00:11:30.799
And so I've been surprised how much older the demographics are who are embracing this.

00:11:30.799 --> 00:11:33.759
And I think a lot of that is because of the success short-term rentals had.

00:11:33.759 --> 00:11:38.960
They destigmatized staying in these homes and like picking up the phone and like, oh, it'll be fine.

00:11:38.960 --> 00:11:40.799
I'll just talk to the landlord and we'll figure it out.

00:11:40.799 --> 00:11:44.000
Like, I don't think people would have thought that way 15 years ago.

00:11:44.320 --> 00:11:45.360
Yeah, definitely not.

00:11:45.360 --> 00:11:48.879
And how does it work on your site as far as the process to book something?

00:11:48.879 --> 00:12:01.120
Is it, I mean, it's you're not actually booking, I know that, but once it goes over to the property management company, is it just, you know, whatever their rules are that if they do background checks or anything like that, is there anything that's enforced on your side?

00:12:01.600 --> 00:12:04.000
Way more like a long-term lease than it is short-term.

00:12:04.000 --> 00:12:06.799
You're gonna sign a lease, you're gonna do a tenant screening.

00:12:06.799 --> 00:12:07.200
Yeah.

00:12:07.200 --> 00:12:13.519
Um, you know, it'll be relatively a smaller deposit versus what some of the vacation rental deposits might be.

00:12:13.519 --> 00:12:15.360
Uh, you're gonna pay month to month.

00:12:15.360 --> 00:12:20.240
Overwhelmingly, you're more likely to be using like ACH, Venmo, check, cash.

00:12:20.240 --> 00:12:26.639
Uh credit cards do get used, but um, it's not, it's not dominant as much as it is in short-term rental.

00:12:26.639 --> 00:12:34.960
Um and, you know, and and as a landlord, you're not you're not playing that like Jenga game, that Tetris of how do I fill up my calendar and all these bookings.

00:12:34.960 --> 00:12:39.440
Like for the most part, you take a booking, over a third of the time they extend.

00:12:39.440 --> 00:12:45.039
You know, we've got a colleague who's had someone in their monthly furnished rental for almost two and a half years.

00:12:45.039 --> 00:12:45.919
They're just happy.

00:12:45.919 --> 00:12:52.240
And so they just stabbed, and all of a sudden you're like, wow, well, I'm making more money than I would as a long term, and this has been an awesome outcome.

00:12:52.480 --> 00:12:53.679
Yeah, that's interesting.

00:12:53.679 --> 00:12:54.159
Yeah.

00:12:54.159 --> 00:12:58.879
It seems so much more simple than what we're doing on the short-term side.

00:12:59.360 --> 00:13:01.120
You know, it is less rate.

00:13:01.120 --> 00:13:07.679
You know, I I think a a you know, finding a great short-term rental is still just like a world-class investment.

00:13:07.679 --> 00:13:13.039
But I think it's easier to find a great midterm rental, which is better than a lot of average short-term rentals.

00:13:13.039 --> 00:13:16.159
And the the downside is like I've got three short-term rentals.

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They're all property managed now.

00:13:17.360 --> 00:13:18.559
I used to self-manage.

00:13:18.559 --> 00:13:20.559
I emotionally love all three of them.

00:13:20.559 --> 00:13:21.440
My kids love them.

00:13:21.440 --> 00:13:22.799
There's poor memories at them.

00:13:22.799 --> 00:13:29.679
Like, I bought them a little bit for the investment, and they've been good investments, but I bought them a lot for like this is a part of the family.

00:13:29.679 --> 00:13:31.679
And like midterms don't have that.

00:13:31.679 --> 00:13:41.200
You know, like I'm buying a quadplex on the outskirts of Austin and hoping to have like grad students and traveling nurses or, you know, traveling professors, whatever it is.

00:13:41.200 --> 00:13:49.120
You know, it's much more of a cash return profile as opposed to like a passion project that you're, you know, really hosting people.

00:13:49.120 --> 00:13:50.320
Uh, there's a middle ground.

00:13:50.320 --> 00:13:55.200
You know, people do have ADUs and people do have people that live next door to where it's can be a bit blurrier.

00:13:55.200 --> 00:14:02.159
But for the most part, I'd say this is more of a financial investment, whereas short-term rentals often have a vanity component or an emotional component.

00:14:02.399 --> 00:14:03.440
I was gonna ask you about that.

00:14:03.440 --> 00:14:09.519
Are you working with any institutional investors that are building out some of these in in specific markets?

00:14:09.519 --> 00:14:15.519
Or I mean, I I guess you could really go anywhere, but you know, what what is your focus at you know at present?

00:14:15.759 --> 00:14:24.960
You know, we I mean, we're over, you know, our mission is independent landlords and you know, and increasingly we're hoping to reach them through the software providers and um, you know, and even property managers.

00:14:24.960 --> 00:14:27.919
But the uh we don't have a big multifamily play.

00:14:27.919 --> 00:14:30.159
Uh we don't do anything with institutional investors.

00:14:30.159 --> 00:14:41.279
I think our pad split and landing are probably our bigger, you know, among our bigger customers and they're big, but there's not a dynamic yet that feels like Cosago and Vicasa and Evolve and VTrips or whatever happens after VTrips.

00:14:41.279 --> 00:14:44.399
Like there's not that aggregation at a regional or state level.

00:14:44.399 --> 00:14:54.399
You know, I think it's more likely to be that realtors are kind of rolling this up as property managers as part of like their long-term property management business extension because the economics are quite a bit different.

00:14:54.399 --> 00:14:58.720
I expect the institutional capital, it's certainly coming in through hotels.

00:14:58.720 --> 00:15:02.399
You see a little bit of it, like um Placemaker is an example.

00:15:02.399 --> 00:15:13.279
They just did a deal with Hilton and they're like taking stock, you know, in partnership with the multifamilies to have like an entire floor of two and three bedrooms and one bedrooms at there's one in downtown Austin, there's one in, I think, the domain.

00:15:13.279 --> 00:15:14.960
You know, and I think you'll see more of that.

00:15:14.960 --> 00:15:23.519
I don't think you'll see it as communities because a lot of the use cases, you're actually trying to join a community, not like be there with a lot of vacationers.

00:15:23.519 --> 00:15:28.960
If you're my family and I'm moving to Seattle, like I don't want to move into a community full of other people moving to Seattle.

00:15:28.960 --> 00:15:36.080
Like I want to move into a community full of people who know Seattle and live there and whose kids have been in school there for three years, and my kids can meet their kids.

00:15:36.080 --> 00:15:38.639
And so, like, you're looking for a little more permanence.

00:15:38.639 --> 00:15:50.399
I describe them as like, it's almost like every community, every neighborhood should want to have five to ten of these as an asset because they help people whose roof burns down, whose plumbing bursts, you know, who sold a house and they don't know where to go next.

00:15:50.399 --> 00:15:54.320
Well, hey, go move into my midterm rental, take it for four months while you find your next place.

00:15:54.320 --> 00:16:01.120
Like, you're excited to do that for your neighbors in a way you may not have been excited to have like the bachelor party come in for the three night weekend.

00:16:01.360 --> 00:16:01.919
Right.

00:16:01.919 --> 00:16:02.559
Yeah.

00:16:02.559 --> 00:16:03.600
Good point.

00:16:03.600 --> 00:16:04.399
Good point.

00:16:04.399 --> 00:16:09.840
Now you mentioned that you're working on some integrations with most of the PMSs within the space.

00:16:09.840 --> 00:16:23.200
Is that going to be just as a like content API to get photos, descriptions, or is there going to be some component of booking it online that actually is like making a record of a booking and then the rest of the path is actually confirmed once it gets over?

00:16:23.440 --> 00:16:27.679
We'll start with rates and rates and photos, or rates and dates is available now.

00:16:27.679 --> 00:16:33.759
Content, photos, descriptions, and kind of the messaging component is very shortly around the corner.

00:16:33.759 --> 00:16:38.159
We don't have any plans to do booking, and I'm personally against it.

00:16:38.159 --> 00:16:47.519
What I'd like to see as power would actually feel like if you wanted to book, it would be more of a click to reveal a button that actually just puts you in, you know, Alex or Andy's website.

00:16:47.519 --> 00:16:50.720
It just it would it would almost look work more like a meta-site.

00:16:50.720 --> 00:16:55.600
Like I'm not trying to make any commission on the booking, and so I don't need it to happen in my infrastructure.

00:16:55.600 --> 00:16:59.840
So it would feel more like, you know, send a message here, ask questions.

00:16:59.840 --> 00:17:09.920
If you're ready to book, you know, we're happy to send you off to that link because a lot of our customers are already including, hey, you can see my inventory at this link, or if you want to book, here's a payment link, that sort of stuff.

00:17:10.240 --> 00:17:10.880
Oh, how nice.

00:17:10.880 --> 00:17:12.319
I miss those days.

00:17:12.640 --> 00:17:13.680
Yeah, it is.

00:17:13.680 --> 00:17:15.200
It's it's it's a time machine.

00:17:15.440 --> 00:17:16.319
Yeah, it is.

00:17:16.319 --> 00:17:19.680
So it's it's a per listing uh per listing fee.

00:17:19.680 --> 00:17:20.079
Yeah.

00:17:20.640 --> 00:17:26.640
There are there are discounts if you're you know, if you have, I think, more than five listings, you start to earn discounts and they get bigger the more inventory you add.

00:17:26.640 --> 00:17:31.359
You know, for anyone not aware of it, I'd say like, you know, don't beat yourself up.

00:17:31.359 --> 00:17:38.400
Like I was in charge of corporate development and buying stuff at Verbo and was in the industry for 15 years and I had no idea this site existed.

00:17:38.400 --> 00:17:41.440
Like when I got here, they had almost 200,000 customers.

00:17:41.440 --> 00:17:44.480
We've got 240,000 now, 300,000 homes.

00:17:44.480 --> 00:17:45.680
Like it's big.

00:17:45.680 --> 00:17:49.359
And it's um it's it was very just below the radar.

00:17:49.359 --> 00:17:51.599
It was very much focused on traveling healthcare.

00:17:51.599 --> 00:17:53.200
And then it got huge in the pandemic.

00:17:53.440 --> 00:17:53.599
Yeah.

00:17:53.599 --> 00:18:03.839
No, it's in in the Myrtle Beach area when I've had family or friends move down here and they've asked me for help finding a, you know, mostly an annual rental or six months or whatever it is.

00:18:03.839 --> 00:18:09.759
Typically I would go to the rental company's websites that I know that were short-term, but they offered long-term rentals.

00:18:09.759 --> 00:18:11.839
Um, sometimes found something.

00:18:11.839 --> 00:18:19.279
Then otherwise I'd look on like apartments.com and like, you know, there's like some like more solo rentals, apartment lists, yeah.

00:18:19.279 --> 00:18:23.599
But I I don't know that when I've done it in the past, I found furnish finder.

00:18:23.599 --> 00:18:33.359
But to me, you know, looking at it, okay, could Airbnb or does Verbo Airbnb booking, do they, could they support this, you know, in the future more significantly?

00:18:33.359 --> 00:18:34.240
They could.

00:18:34.240 --> 00:18:42.880
But I feel like from the product position, like, you know, it doesn't make sense to go shop in one place for something that it's that it's not.

00:18:42.880 --> 00:18:50.880
You know, it's like, you know, you don't you don't go to to Target for certain things and you don't go to you know, crate and barrel for certain things.

00:18:50.880 --> 00:18:53.440
Like, I mean, it's it's it's use case driven.

00:18:53.440 --> 00:18:58.319
And I feel like it's it's a little bit noisy when you try and mix everything together there.

00:18:58.319 --> 00:19:05.119
Is I mean, is that kind of where you guys sought of like this this niche mentality is really where to lean in to get the most effective turnout?

00:19:05.519 --> 00:19:14.000
It it's absolutely about focusing on a niche that you know is a small part of Airbnb's business and an even smaller part of Zillow or uh apartments.com's business.

00:19:14.000 --> 00:19:21.200
You know, um, I think Zillow's got, you know, they've got millions of rentals and they've got 50,000 furnished rentals for less than a year.

00:19:21.200 --> 00:19:22.880
You know, it's a it's just it's small.

00:19:22.880 --> 00:19:31.119
And on Airbnb, anything is bookable for more than 30 days, but it'd be pretty rare for something nice to actually be bookable for 120 consecutive days.

00:19:31.119 --> 00:19:36.799
Like it's almost a sign that it's not high quality if it's available for that long uninterrupted.

00:19:36.799 --> 00:19:42.960
The reason we think we exist in particular versus an Airbnb is it really has more to do with communication and pricing than anything.

00:19:42.960 --> 00:19:45.359
And so, you know, our average booking is $6,000.

00:19:45.359 --> 00:19:51.119
Airbnb's take, you know, whether it's a traveler fee or, you know, in the new commission model, you know, it's 10 to 15%.

00:19:51.119 --> 00:20:14.480
If you're traveling for work and doing the six to nine months of the year and have a you know median American income, you're gonna pay Airbnb like two weeks of take-home pay to accept the booking, or you're gonna do like two hours of work and actually talk to the landlord and visit the place and do a FaceTime and probably feel more confident about what you're getting into and say enough money to pay for your spring break tomorrow beach.

00:20:14.480 --> 00:20:20.319
Um, so you know, we really view it as like we think the occasion merits something that is not as expensive.

00:20:20.319 --> 00:20:23.119
And because of that, we need to keep the solution lighter weight.

00:20:23.119 --> 00:20:32.880
So the loot solution feels more like Zillow or Apartments.com and it's priced that way, but we're trying to build more of a search experience and filtering that's more modern like Airbnb.

00:20:32.880 --> 00:20:38.400
But like, you know, it is not as slick as Airbnb because we won't invest that much because we want it to be cheaper.

00:20:38.640 --> 00:20:42.799
You mentioned that a lot of this is the Gen Xers and like, you know, the older crowd.

00:20:42.799 --> 00:20:47.119
Are there any other trends that you're seeing within this space that maybe people aren't aware of?

00:20:47.119 --> 00:20:49.440
Like if they have properties, they should be thinking about.

00:20:49.759 --> 00:20:56.160
To me, what's exciting about it as an investor, you know, I mentioned I've got three vacation rentals, none of them are within an hour and a half of my house.

00:20:56.160 --> 00:21:02.160
What's exciting about this as an investor is you can do it, you can almost certainly do it near your house.

00:21:02.160 --> 00:21:14.480
You know, it's like you may live in a three-bedroom home in a you know neighborhood with a great school district, and you've probably never looked at what it costs to buy a duplex with two one-bedrooms or two, two ones in your neighborhood.

00:21:14.480 --> 00:21:15.759
Like that inventory exists.

00:21:15.759 --> 00:21:16.960
It exists in my neighborhood.

00:21:16.960 --> 00:21:25.680
And so the the opportunity is really, I think it's more approachable because you like you know who's in your neighborhood, you know who goes to kids school with your kids, you know who's moving, who's coming and going.

00:21:25.680 --> 00:21:33.759
And so you can tailor the experience, but you can also like really be more hands-on because the place can be five minutes from your house.

00:21:33.759 --> 00:21:41.039
Um, and that that's really different than like the lead, you know, live in Dallas, own a leisure in uh Broken Bow or in South Padre.

00:21:41.039 --> 00:21:42.160
Like it's just different.

00:21:42.160 --> 00:21:49.599
And so I think that's the biggest unlock is that it opens up a lot of not only more affordable, but more accessible inventory for investors to manage this.

00:21:49.599 --> 00:22:00.640
And then as a property manager, especially those in urban who may have been hit by 30 day regulations or capacity constraints, it opens up another way to try and make money that's not as thin as being a Long term.

00:22:00.640 --> 00:22:04.720
And you know, I think a short-term property manager will be excellent at midterm.

00:22:04.720 --> 00:22:10.160
But the difference is like they they should be charging less for it because you're going to turn it over three times a year instead of 55.

00:22:10.640 --> 00:22:11.039
Yeah.

00:22:11.039 --> 00:22:22.559
And so from the furnace side of things, I think that's where, you know, there's a lot of people that have long-term rentals, and that's more common as something that, you know, has been what you invest in for real estate.

00:22:22.559 --> 00:22:27.279
But um, like my husband and I, we have two duplexes and but they're not furnished at all.

00:22:27.279 --> 00:22:29.279
Um, and we do annual rentals there.

00:22:29.279 --> 00:22:31.039
I think we would do a semi-annual rental.

00:22:31.039 --> 00:22:32.799
I just haven't had anybody ask for that.

00:22:32.799 --> 00:22:37.680
But the risk to it, making it furnished, you know, that's that's something to be thought about though, too.

00:22:37.680 --> 00:22:43.519
Cause it's like, you know, I mean, people are not always kind with the places that they stay in for a long time.

00:22:43.519 --> 00:22:47.920
So how do you factor that in as far as the return on what you're doing here?

00:22:48.240 --> 00:22:52.319
Yeah, I I often describe midterm rentals as the return on furniture.

00:22:52.319 --> 00:22:59.920
And so, like, if you've if you've got a duplex that's working well as a long-term rental, your risk is the cost of the furniture.

00:22:59.920 --> 00:23:04.960
And your opportunity is how much does the cost of the furniture increase your, you know, your monthly yield?

00:23:04.960 --> 00:23:13.119
The uh we typically see if you add furniture to a long term, you're gonna make, you know, at least 30%, maybe closer to 50% more per month.

00:23:13.119 --> 00:23:16.960
You know, you'll have a little bit more vacancy, but like that's a that's a big number.

00:23:16.960 --> 00:23:22.240
And so uh and furnishing a midterm rental, this is not furnishing a beach house.

00:23:22.240 --> 00:23:24.880
You know, think like $7 a square foot.

00:23:24.880 --> 00:23:36.400
And so, you know, you can furnish a duplex for probably, if you were furnishing one side, you know, you're probably talking about maybe 10 grand, which might pay itself back in six to nine months.

00:23:36.400 --> 00:23:41.279
And then you might have two to three years of actually just making another 30 to 50 percent every month.

00:23:41.279 --> 00:23:53.119
And so what I encourage people to do who are in uh who are in your spot is actually like put it on the site unfurnished and tell people you'll furnish it for them when they sign a lease, and then they know they'll get new stuff.

00:23:53.119 --> 00:23:58.960
You'll know you have a tenant, and they might rather have two twin beds instead of a king in each bedroom or something like that.

00:23:58.960 --> 00:24:07.039
And that gives you some certainty before you bite the bullet and advertise furniture, and it also gives them uh a benefit so you can kind of have the best of both worlds.

00:24:07.200 --> 00:24:10.640
We'll be back in just a minute, but first, a word from our premier brand sponsor.

00:24:10.960 --> 00:24:12.400
Hello, my name is Jesse Lear.

00:24:12.400 --> 00:24:15.359
I'm the founder of Epicurean Furnished Departments here in Columbus, Ohio.

00:24:15.359 --> 00:24:20.400
One of the things that makes our company unique is that we operate fully in the midterm rental space.

00:24:20.400 --> 00:24:27.119
So we cater a lot to medical travelers, executives who are relocating, families who are in the middle of large renovations, folks like that.

00:24:27.119 --> 00:24:30.480
And we really strive to nail it when it comes to hospitality.

00:24:30.480 --> 00:24:31.599
That's our main goal.

00:24:31.599 --> 00:24:37.359
We've been using Host Fully for about five years now, and we tried several other property management softwares before that.

00:24:37.359 --> 00:24:50.960
We really struggled to find one that would not only accommodate the uniqueness of our midterm rental business model, but also one that would be reliable and then come with a lot of the integrations that we needed with other softwares in order to automate what we were doing with a relatively lean team.

00:24:50.960 --> 00:24:57.200
Since we came on board with Host Flee, we've really grown as a company, not only in terms of size, but also in terms of sophistication.

00:24:57.200 --> 00:25:06.720
As we pivoted into the midterm rental space and started to build a reputation in our local community, with that came the need to really be more sophisticated on the back end with how our automations work.

00:25:06.720 --> 00:25:15.119
Because as a small company, we couldn't afford to hire 30 people right off the bat to take care of a lot of the tasks that needed to be done in order to deliver the type of service we were committed to.

00:25:15.119 --> 00:25:24.319
So in order to do that, we really needed great software partners who could help us put our best foot forward and automate a lot of recurring tasks rather than hiring a bunch of employees.

00:25:24.319 --> 00:25:28.400
And that's one of the things that Host Flee really helped us with and has helped us with as we've grown.

00:25:28.400 --> 00:25:35.920
One of the things that really made a difference for us and our partnership with Host Flee was when they started really working on the data analytics side of the software.

00:25:35.920 --> 00:25:42.960
And in other words, helping hosts really get a better grasp on what their metrics look like in terms of average daily rate, Rev par.

00:25:42.960 --> 00:25:48.240
So it's not only saved us a lot of time, it's allowed us to run the business in a way that's been a little bit more organized.

00:25:48.240 --> 00:25:52.160
I think from the very beginning, the setup process was very smooth.

00:25:52.160 --> 00:25:55.599
And then as we've grown, they've made it clear that they're very open to feedback.

00:25:55.599 --> 00:26:04.799
So there's actually a section of their website where users can log in and provide feedback and vote on certain changes and solutions, and they take them pretty seriously from what I've seen.

00:26:04.799 --> 00:26:10.160
So it's pretty important for us to be able to sort of flex their software to accommodate what we're trying to do.

00:26:10.160 --> 00:26:17.759
The fact that they're willing to take feedback and add new features and tweak features to accommodate hosts like us is really one of my favorite parts of working with them.

00:26:17.759 --> 00:26:25.119
I recommend Hostfully to people in my network all the time because I see it as the perfect blend of affordability, features, and reliability.

00:26:25.440 --> 00:26:29.279
Looking for a smarter way to manage your short-term rental operations?

00:26:29.279 --> 00:26:33.839
Get started with Hostfully and bring everything into one streamlined platform.

00:26:33.839 --> 00:26:40.079
Alex and Annie listeners, get free onboarding when you mention you heard about Hostfully from the Alex and Annie podcast.

00:26:40.079 --> 00:26:42.480
Click the link in the description to get started today.

00:26:42.720 --> 00:26:48.640
I don't think it's more wear and tear than a vacation rental because it's usually one or two people at a time and they're like working all day.

00:26:48.640 --> 00:26:53.440
Yeah, they're not, yeah, they're not, they're they're working and sleeping, but you are gonna have way more usage.

00:26:53.440 --> 00:26:58.079
You know, they're there every, you know, if you're doing it well, it's 340, 350 nights a year of rental.

00:26:58.240 --> 00:26:58.400
Yeah.

00:26:58.400 --> 00:27:02.720
Your team shared some data points a couple of weeks ago, some some stuff that you had done.

00:27:02.720 --> 00:27:11.440
And I remember asking the question, and we were talking about it off camera, like what does has regulations done to impact kind of the growth, the growth that you're seeing?

00:27:11.440 --> 00:27:30.240
And I I don't know that I I don't know that you ever like had the full data on that, but I was curious if if you are seeing impact there, like the like tangible numbers that you can see and like and specific to New York, did you see a like a large amount of inventory come on the site after New York kind of shut down the short-term side?

00:27:30.559 --> 00:27:34.319
What we saw, and and I'd encourage people, uh, maybe we can put it in the show notes.

00:27:34.319 --> 00:27:48.880
There is a we just published a kind of first of its kind industry report with air DNA, where we combined their data with ours to try and like demystify what's going on with short-term rentals uh and midterm rentals in the intersection.

00:27:48.880 --> 00:27:55.200
New York and LA are the biggest examples in their data set of things that have changed a lot since these laws passed.

00:27:55.200 --> 00:27:56.559
We didn't feel it as much.

00:27:56.559 --> 00:27:58.960
So we did see more inventory come on in New York.

00:27:58.960 --> 00:28:04.319
I think because of the tenant type we have, we actually saw more come on in New Jersey.

00:28:04.319 --> 00:28:11.839
You know, we actually saw more people who needed to get to New York, but maybe couldn't afford the monthly rents that were going to be in New York.

00:28:11.839 --> 00:28:17.279
And so are commuting in from other places and like, you know, on kind of like the, you know, a train commute.

00:28:17.279 --> 00:28:21.359
And so, you know, among the fastest markets we had were uh Jersey City and Haboken.

00:28:21.359 --> 00:28:25.680
Uh but Manhattan was it was fast, but it wasn't nearly as fast as some of the others.

00:28:25.680 --> 00:28:28.400
And so we're typically more mass market.

00:28:28.400 --> 00:28:31.839
You're more likely to see us in like commuter hubs, up and coming cities.

00:28:31.839 --> 00:28:38.400
You know, the biggest trend we have is like AI data hubs and skilled trade needs to move around to places where there's not a lot of lodging.

00:28:38.400 --> 00:28:42.000
Um, as it relates to regulations, like it's unequivocally there.

00:28:42.000 --> 00:28:50.799
It's hard for me to say it's this much of it, but like of the 20 fastest growing cities that we observed, all 20 have some sort of short-term regulation.

00:28:50.799 --> 00:28:54.160
But honestly, like almost every city has some sort of short-term regulation now.

00:28:54.160 --> 00:28:54.480
Right.

00:28:54.559 --> 00:28:54.960
Yeah, something.

00:28:55.200 --> 00:28:56.720
It's hard to know for sure what it means.

00:28:56.720 --> 00:29:00.079
Like, even if what's on the books is loose, they've all put something on the books.

00:29:00.640 --> 00:29:00.799
Yeah.

00:29:00.799 --> 00:29:03.119
I'm curious from the advertising perspective.

00:29:03.119 --> 00:29:07.440
I mean, people are generally going to go on a vacation every year to some extent.

00:29:07.440 --> 00:29:11.920
People are not necessarily booking a midterm rental every year.

00:29:11.920 --> 00:29:16.640
Um, but it's something that you have to stay in front of them so that when that is what they're looking for, they remember you guys.

00:29:16.640 --> 00:29:22.960
But what does it look like from a go-to-market standpoint for Furnish Finder compared to your old days?

00:29:23.359 --> 00:29:23.839
Yeah.

00:29:23.839 --> 00:29:28.880
Um, you know, if if you go back to the old enough days, it feels more similar in that.

00:29:28.880 --> 00:29:40.079
It's um, you know, if you go back to like 2010, it actually feels pretty similar in that we've got a handful of core tenant types that get a ton of value out of our products and tell their friends.

00:29:40.079 --> 00:29:42.079
And so like it's mainly referral.

00:29:42.079 --> 00:29:42.640
Wow.

00:29:42.640 --> 00:29:54.079
Um, and that if you went through a divorce and needed a place to stay and found it on Furnish Finder and like it really worked out and helped you stay closer to your kids and your commute and all that, like you'll tell someone else you might go through that unfortunate situation.

00:29:54.079 --> 00:29:57.839
If you know somebody who's roof caught on fire, plumbing burst whenever, same thing.

00:29:57.839 --> 00:30:02.319
We're not as heavy in search advertising as um the vacation rental business was.

00:30:02.319 --> 00:30:05.759
So we do advertise on Google, but it's not as big for us as it was there.

00:30:05.759 --> 00:30:10.480
We do more, I mean, I've done more podcasts this year than I did in the prior 15.

00:30:10.480 --> 00:30:17.920
Um, and so we do more PR, we do more um influencer podcast, and we do a lot more on Meta and Facebook.

00:30:17.920 --> 00:30:23.359
And so I'd say the um, and in general, we spend a lot less money on marketing than the OTAs do.

00:30:23.359 --> 00:30:24.799
So we we obsess on this.

00:30:24.799 --> 00:30:30.720
Like if we've got unique inventory and you know it's the cheapest you can find it on our site versus anywhere else, then why shop around?

00:30:30.720 --> 00:30:35.200
Like there's not a need for a book direct movement if we're letting you book direct.

00:30:35.200 --> 00:30:38.160
And so we're trying to like fill that niche for this category.

00:30:38.400 --> 00:30:38.640
Yeah.

00:30:38.640 --> 00:30:44.079
You mentioned um that there wasn't kind of any conferences that that fit this space.

00:30:44.079 --> 00:30:49.759
So do you think that, I mean, again, we were you know discussing there are managers out there that that are doing this.

00:30:49.759 --> 00:30:54.079
I mean, I was just consulting with one that's in Indianapolis and she does short-term and midterm.

00:30:54.079 --> 00:31:06.880
Um, and you know, do you think that there's a potential for you guys to start going back to some of the traditional conferences to be able to represent Furnish Finder and if people want to talk about it, I'll be there.

00:31:07.039 --> 00:31:12.640
Um, and so you know, that there's there's conferences for what I'd say like the uh entrepreneurs and individual investors.

00:31:12.640 --> 00:31:13.839
There's a midterm rental summit.

00:31:13.839 --> 00:31:23.519
I went to, it was called National Association of Residential Property Managers, and then it was at uh Colorado Springs at like a you know, the nice hotel there.

00:31:23.519 --> 00:31:25.599
And like nobody wanted to talk to me.

00:31:25.599 --> 00:31:29.200
Like nobody had any interest in furnishing properties and making more money.

00:31:29.200 --> 00:31:33.119
And so, you know, I think there will be more open to listen in short term.

00:31:33.119 --> 00:31:38.640
And the the niche that's needed to be filled is actually like urban and suburban property managers.

00:31:38.640 --> 00:31:44.960
Like who's going to go start what used to be these micromanagers who might have, you know, it's it's probably more of a lifestyle business.

00:31:44.960 --> 00:31:48.799
You might have 20 or 30 homes, but they're all within half an hour of the place you live.

00:31:48.799 --> 00:31:54.559
And so it's not as though you need your remote manage or figure out all the cleaners as much because you're not cleaning that often.

00:31:54.559 --> 00:31:57.440
I think that'll end up becoming a pretty big thing.

00:31:57.440 --> 00:32:04.079
And I think the software component feels way more like short-term than it does long-term, with the exception of you don't need as much merchant solution.

00:32:04.079 --> 00:32:04.799
You know, we'll see.

00:32:04.799 --> 00:32:10.000
I'm optimistic we can be the thing that's kind of the connective tissue between the long-term side and the short-term side.

00:32:10.000 --> 00:32:15.279
But I think the short-term people are gonna come on board faster because I think they're a little bit more agile in the way they think about these things.

00:32:15.519 --> 00:32:21.839
Yeah, I think they're more agile, but I also think that going into 2026, you know, there's a lot of hesitation from this year.

00:32:21.839 --> 00:32:25.759
You know, the last couple of years have not been super strong, especially compared to COVID.

00:32:25.759 --> 00:32:34.160
But you've got so many owners that came into owning a short-term rental thinking that they were just gonna be making you know crazy amounts of money all every year, all the time.

00:32:34.160 --> 00:32:35.359
And that hasn't been the case.

00:32:35.359 --> 00:32:41.759
And you look at markets that are extremely saturated, like Myrtle Beach, where I am, or Panama City Beach, where Annie is.

00:32:41.759 --> 00:32:50.559
And, you know, I mean, there's there's so many properties that you it gives you more of an advantage to be a midterm or long-term rental at this point furnished.

00:32:50.559 --> 00:32:52.960
That there are plenty of, I mean, there's so many people.

00:32:52.960 --> 00:32:59.279
Myrtle Beach is the number one most relocated to destination in the country and has had that for the last few years.

00:32:59.279 --> 00:33:06.400
So people are moving down here all the time, and it's very hard to find somewhere to move when you're first looking for a job or figuring out where you want to live.

00:33:06.400 --> 00:33:19.359
So if you have the option to do that from a condo on the beach, that you know, that homeowner can make, you know, probably more to be honest, if they can have it rented solid for the entire year as a mid or or annual rental through this.

00:33:19.359 --> 00:33:20.880
I mean, that makes all the sense in the world.

00:33:21.119 --> 00:33:28.799
Yeah, and I I think that the the critical distinction to that use case, you're probably as or more likely to be successful with a condo three blocks from the beach.

00:33:28.799 --> 00:33:34.559
Like you don't have to have like the real wow factor that you need for that that can't miss occasion of like.

00:33:34.880 --> 00:33:36.240
Yeah, keep a little more cozy.

00:33:36.720 --> 00:33:48.240
Yeah, you know, you because you because you're you're gonna be working or you're gonna be in school or you're gonna be like, you're not gonna be there to enjoy it as much, but you are actually thrilled to be able to walk to it or you know, bike to the beach or go take a dip, or you know, however that feels.

00:33:48.240 --> 00:33:53.759
And so, like, I wish there was something here that felt more like a panacea for what in some markets is a short-term rental glut.

00:33:53.759 --> 00:33:58.640
I don't at all think short-term rental boom is over, but I think it is in a more mature phase.

00:33:58.640 --> 00:34:00.799
A lot of this inventory is not gonna be a fit.

00:34:00.799 --> 00:34:05.119
You know, our average ADR for a month is like right around $2,000.

00:34:05.119 --> 00:34:13.679
You know, it's just, it's a very different people will have overinvested in short term, and then they're thinking they can get that return in midterm with less vacancy.

00:34:13.679 --> 00:34:15.679
And like, that's just not how the math's gonna work.

00:34:15.679 --> 00:34:21.280
But there will be a lot of homes that were like kind of okay short terms that might be great midterms.

00:34:21.280 --> 00:34:25.920
And so, like, we'll be working with people on like, well, how do you find the one that's a good fit?

00:34:25.920 --> 00:34:28.719
And what are how do we get the expectations right?

00:34:28.719 --> 00:34:35.280
But I I can't count how many calls I've had that's like, well, when are you gonna be in Aspen and help me rent all these six bedrooms that are skiing ski out?

00:34:35.280 --> 00:34:36.239
I'm like, never.

00:34:36.239 --> 00:34:39.679
Like that's just not that's not what we're built to do.

00:34:40.079 --> 00:34:42.639
I live in a very heavy military area.

00:34:42.639 --> 00:34:55.519
And I feel like the military component of it and and um, you know, some people have tried to be in that space, but getting into military rentals is is a whole different ballpark because you have to have you have to meet certain regulations.

00:34:55.519 --> 00:35:00.239
I mean, you have to have people have to be vetted by FEMA and like have your ID numbers for government rentals.

00:35:00.239 --> 00:35:12.400
But do you think that that's an area that you guys could kind of peel off as a separate offering within Furnish Finder to be specific for like military, you know, people who are PCSing out of different markets and going to bases for temporary, that type of thing?

00:35:12.800 --> 00:35:16.239
It's um it's a good market for us, but it's not huge.

00:35:16.239 --> 00:35:23.119
Um, and what we see is um, you know, because we're a classified site, it's actually a little bit easier.

00:35:23.119 --> 00:35:27.360
Like we don't have to be in the middle of that certification process for how you get paid by the government.

00:35:27.360 --> 00:35:29.519
You know, you just have to work it out with the landlord.

00:35:29.519 --> 00:35:40.880
And I think it opens up that in some of those occasions you might have an officer who's moving, who's actually has transitional funding available that's different than you know what the uh regulations require.

00:35:40.880 --> 00:35:42.880
And so we're I I see it.

00:35:42.880 --> 00:35:46.000
I, you know, San Antonio, Fort Hood's really close to us in Austin.

00:35:46.000 --> 00:35:50.079
Um, but you know, I think it's probably like less than 5% of our business.

00:35:50.079 --> 00:35:53.440
Um, and I hope we could keep doing a great job at it.

00:35:53.440 --> 00:36:03.920
It in general, traveling for work's like a third of the business, healthcare is 25%, relocating families is 20%, and then grad students and professors is about 10%.

00:36:03.920 --> 00:36:06.480
And so between those, you're close to 90.

00:36:06.480 --> 00:36:13.599
And then military would fall, you know, somewhere in the other, along with what I'd say are like digital nomads and those use cases.

00:36:13.599 --> 00:36:18.960
And so we're not investing in military, but I know we've got it, and I know that there's opportunity there.

00:36:18.960 --> 00:36:24.639
We're really investing in being sure corporate understands what we do, and in particular, relocating families.

00:36:24.639 --> 00:36:38.000
You know, we think that if people put the same energy that investors did into short-term housing, you know, finding, building the ecosystem, investing in, and making it a big lodging use case as they do into midterm, like I think it'll notably move the needle on just like the housing shortage in the US.

00:36:38.000 --> 00:36:46.639
We'll invest in more duplexes and quadplexes and build things in a way that help house people in a more affordable way, but also add inventory so that there's more flexibility.

00:36:46.639 --> 00:36:48.159
And we hope we can be a part of that.

00:36:48.400 --> 00:36:48.719
Absolutely.

00:36:48.719 --> 00:36:56.800
What from the technology side is missing to make this a uh more reasonable approach that short-term rental hosts can do this within their current software?

00:36:56.800 --> 00:37:01.440
Like, do they have to do it, have a different software to be able to manage this type of inventory?

00:37:01.760 --> 00:37:03.920
It's overwhelmingly our work, not theirs.

00:37:03.920 --> 00:37:15.199
And so, you know, we we're we'll build these integrations to where adding it feels like adding distribution in any other form, except that you'll have to, you know, go into your time machine and realize we're a subscription classified site.

00:37:15.199 --> 00:37:18.559
So you'll have to like pay us up front instead of get paid along the way.

00:37:18.559 --> 00:37:21.360
But it'll start to work just like everything else on that front.

00:37:21.360 --> 00:37:23.519
You know, you import your content, your description.

00:37:23.519 --> 00:37:27.599
There'll there'll be some fields we have that might be new to the software layer.

00:37:27.599 --> 00:37:33.920
You know, in particular, uh as it stands now, we host a we just host a flat monthly rate.

00:37:33.920 --> 00:37:42.960
You know, we don't have dynamic pricing based on season and how many days and discounts built in for seven versus 14 versus 30 versus 60 versus 90.

00:37:42.960 --> 00:37:46.159
Like, and so we're a little bit retro in that sense.

00:37:46.159 --> 00:37:49.360
That's morehouse illow and apartments.com work like, well, what's your monthly rent?

00:37:49.360 --> 00:37:50.480
It's 2100.

00:37:50.480 --> 00:37:52.239
Like that's the number.

00:37:52.239 --> 00:37:54.559
And so we'll have to work on some of that stuff.

00:37:54.559 --> 00:37:58.079
And then we do have things we care about for some of our use cases.

00:37:58.079 --> 00:38:00.559
I think things like blackout shades are big.

00:38:00.559 --> 00:38:02.800
So we have a lot of traveling professionals who work night shifts.

00:38:02.800 --> 00:38:11.440
And like people knowing that it's comfortable for night and what the parking situation is is probably a little bit more nuanced in our use case than it might be in a vacation rental.

00:38:11.440 --> 00:38:15.679
And so there may be some need to adjust filters or get content for the tech layer.

00:38:15.679 --> 00:38:18.559
But otherwise, like it's it's the same thing.

00:38:18.559 --> 00:38:22.800
And we need to solve our tech problem to make this easier for short term to just turn it on.

00:38:22.800 --> 00:38:24.239
We need to be sure we got the right demand.

00:38:24.480 --> 00:38:28.400
Besides just from from your side of things, though, what about on the other side of the house?

00:38:28.400 --> 00:38:32.320
So, I mean, the management of the property, like it doesn't seem like it's just easy.

00:38:32.320 --> 00:38:33.360
That's different.

00:38:33.360 --> 00:38:37.440
But I mean, it's work orders and and you know, monthly accounting and everything else.

00:38:37.679 --> 00:38:40.079
You know, I I think it's just so much easier.

00:38:40.079 --> 00:38:46.320
You know, your average stay 96 days, you do a deep clean before they get there and a deep clean when they leave.

00:38:46.320 --> 00:38:50.960
You need to figure out, you know, if something like, you know, if something breaks, you've got to be there to fix it.

00:38:50.960 --> 00:39:00.239
But it will probably be less frequent than if there's, you know, three families there for spring break, then two adults and a cab there working for three months.

00:39:00.239 --> 00:39:06.880
And so, you know, you need to be prepared for maintenance, but I don't think there's anything system-wise that's bespoke or unique.

00:39:06.880 --> 00:39:09.440
You know, you're just doing a lot fewer turnovers.

00:39:09.440 --> 00:39:16.880
And then the marketing of it is it's less turnkey than marketing your short-term rental because we're not a booking site and we're one of the bigger, probably the biggest player.

00:39:16.880 --> 00:39:31.039
And so people do hustle a little more of like build a relationship with local insurance placement or know, you know, if you're close to a larger corporate company that might be moving executives in and out or has an intern class as a big use case, things like that.

00:39:31.039 --> 00:39:39.199
They might hustle more to have those relationships than you would as a short-term rental where you're probably counting on repeats, referrals, your own marketing, and the big OTAs.

00:39:39.440 --> 00:39:39.679
Yeah.

00:39:39.679 --> 00:39:50.719
So I feel like most short-term rental companies, if they have long-term, they use a different system to manage the long-term inventory, like App Folio, and there's a there's a few other ones, but I've never really known what the reason is.

00:39:50.960 --> 00:39:54.159
I think some of that is how they connect to apartments.com and Zillow.

00:39:54.320 --> 00:39:54.719
Oh, okay.

00:39:54.719 --> 00:39:55.280
Gotcha.

00:39:55.519 --> 00:40:06.559
You know, we hope to be in a spot where we could pull in from Appfolio or TurboTenant or RentReady the same way we'd pull in from Hostfully or Logify or, you know, go pick your uh PMSC.

00:40:06.960 --> 00:40:15.920
Are you guys helping build relationships with, say, you know, the bigger corporations, the big companies, the hospitals, those type of things, or is that all dependent on the host in the community?

00:40:16.159 --> 00:40:18.880
No, most of them will use our site also.

00:40:18.880 --> 00:40:37.280
But I'd say the most productive hosts, you know, think of it as, you know, in your in your yesteryear before phone numbers, email addresses, and everything were obfuscated by Airbnb, you know, somebody gets a booking from a nursing agency and then they get to know the person who placed the nurse, and then they stay in touch.

00:40:37.280 --> 00:40:42.719
And maybe maybe that nursing agency reaches out to them directly next time instead of through Furnish Finder.

00:40:42.719 --> 00:40:43.840
Like that might happen.

00:40:43.840 --> 00:40:49.119
The same thing might happen with a corporate agent, and the same thing might happen with an insurance agent.

00:40:49.119 --> 00:40:56.159
And so as we introduce you to first-time customers, you've got an opportunity to turn them into repeat customers and maybe serve them in a different way.

00:40:56.159 --> 00:41:03.199
And there's more of that than I think you have in short-term rental because travel agents isn't a huge part of the short-term rental ecosystem.

00:41:03.199 --> 00:41:08.400
Whereas for insurance placements, nursing staffing companies, corporate, it's a pretty big part.

00:41:08.400 --> 00:41:16.320
And so, you know, if you find out one of those placement agents that says a lot in your neighborhood, like you can turn that into most of your book of business potentially.

00:41:16.320 --> 00:41:19.599
Not great for Furnish Finder, but like, okay, we need to go help somebody else.

00:41:19.760 --> 00:41:19.920
Yeah.

00:41:19.920 --> 00:41:22.239
Are you guys um able to connect to GDS?

00:41:22.480 --> 00:41:23.039
Not yet.

00:41:23.039 --> 00:41:25.519
And we're working on what that should look like.

00:41:25.519 --> 00:41:32.880
You know, we we've got a you've got the GDS component, but then think of like the separate side as the MLS component, which is actually where as much or more of the content is.

00:41:33.199 --> 00:41:33.519
Right.

00:41:33.519 --> 00:41:34.159
Gotcha.

00:41:34.159 --> 00:41:35.360
What about MLS?

00:41:35.679 --> 00:41:36.960
I I think that's the interesting one.

00:41:36.960 --> 00:41:43.119
And like that's what's so defensible about what Zillow and CoStar built is like interestingly, there's I don't remember the number.

00:41:43.119 --> 00:41:46.159
There's I think thousands of MLSs, at least hundreds.

00:41:46.159 --> 00:41:49.280
It's not like you go connect to it like you do the GDS.

00:41:49.280 --> 00:41:54.480
You actually have to go connect, you connect to Austin and San Antonio and Houston and you know Corporate.

00:41:54.880 --> 00:41:55.840
Yeah, that's a heavy lift.

00:41:56.079 --> 00:41:58.320
And so it's it's a heavier lift than I thought it would be.

00:41:58.320 --> 00:42:01.199
And so we need to figure out if we can do that with a partnership or what that looks like.

00:42:01.440 --> 00:42:06.480
Oh, I didn't realize there wasn't one central hub that just you dialed down by like zip code or something like that.

00:42:06.719 --> 00:42:10.480
No, there's I mean, I I think Zillow believes they're maybe building that hub.

00:42:10.480 --> 00:42:15.119
Um, but there certainly is you know much more for a long-term unfurnished audience.

00:42:15.360 --> 00:42:15.679
Wow.

00:42:15.679 --> 00:42:16.400
Interesting.

00:42:16.400 --> 00:42:17.119
Interesting.

00:42:17.119 --> 00:42:25.039
Well, one question that we like to ask people that come on the show, Jeff, and especially someone like you that's been in this and on two different sides, but for a long time.

00:42:25.039 --> 00:42:36.800
If you could go back and do do this whole career differently or just see things differently from when you started 10 years ago or 15, 20 years ago, what would you have done, knowing everything that you know now?

00:42:37.119 --> 00:42:38.000
Oh my gosh.

00:42:38.000 --> 00:42:40.480
Um, we might need another episode.

00:42:40.480 --> 00:42:51.199
I think my biggest, my biggest regret in the Verbo journey was like, you know, like the deadly set of envy versus Airbnb.

00:42:51.199 --> 00:43:00.480
Uh, I think we went through a period where we were just trying to catch up to or be a better version of Airbnb at the things they were clearly better at than us.00:43:00.480 --> 00:43:07.119


And uh I, you know, I think we wasted years uh kind of kind of chasing down that rabbit hole.00:43:07.119 --> 00:43:19.760


Um and I wish we had earlier really tried to stood for something different, which I think they're doing, still doing a good job of today, around like this complex family uh use case and like be serving a different audience than what Airbnb serves.00:43:19.760 --> 00:43:21.599


I think the industry would have been better off for that.00:43:21.599 --> 00:43:28.159


And I think we certainly would have been better off as a company if we had realized sooner that maybe we weren't gonna be, weren't gonna be number one.00:43:28.159 --> 00:43:30.000


We were gonna play a different role in the ecosystem.00:43:30.000 --> 00:43:32.159


So that's probably the top of my list.00:43:32.159 --> 00:43:38.239


There might be something around going back to the earlier point of like what's different about being an executive there versus an executive here.00:43:38.239 --> 00:43:51.519


The further I got along that career, the more my interactions with customers felt as much like media or big customers as they did talking to someone who was an individual homeowner or maybe an up and coming property manager in a smaller market.00:43:51.519 --> 00:43:58.159


And um, it's so hard to keep doing that as you get to scale that feels like billions or tens of billions.00:43:58.159 --> 00:43:59.760


Um, but that's what's been refreshing about.00:43:59.760 --> 00:44:11.280


This role is like, you know, I spend a remarkable amount of time like in a bigger pockets forum or in LinkedIn and talking to somebody who's got a home and understanding how they use our product and how to make our product better.00:44:11.280 --> 00:44:13.599


And I think that's what's been great about the software space.00:44:13.599 --> 00:44:16.239


I think the software guys have really done a good job filling that niche.00:44:16.239 --> 00:44:19.760


Software's come so far, like even in the last five years.00:44:19.760 --> 00:44:22.800


It's amazing, even as an owner using a property manager.00:44:22.800 --> 00:44:24.159


It's amazing how much better I was.00:44:24.159 --> 00:44:26.480


I think I think two of my properties are on Guesty now.00:44:26.480 --> 00:44:28.480


It's just amazing how much better they are.00:44:28.480 --> 00:44:32.159


And you can tell they're obsessing over these little use cases over and over.00:44:32.159 --> 00:44:44.960


And I think at some point the vacation real industry, and we played a role in that, probably got too focused on the big picture and not enough focused on like a great stay and a great occasion, in particular for the owners.00:44:44.960 --> 00:44:51.920


I think for you know, for managers out there, uh, I thought the episode you guys did with Sarah was great, and she and I used to talk about a lot.00:44:51.920 --> 00:44:57.760


I think that managers still miss the boat on how much credit they should take for things that aren't bookings.00:44:58.079 --> 00:44:59.679


Um, 100%.00:44:59.679 --> 00:45:00.880


Yeah.00:45:01.280 --> 00:45:06.320


And, you know, uh they're they're really, you know, I've got three different managers.00:45:06.320 --> 00:45:09.440


None of them are great at what I'd say like is CRM.00:45:09.440 --> 00:45:18.239


You know, they've got me on their traveler emails, but none of them are great about like, hey, just, you know, wanted you to know that uh a family had a great stay at your place in South Padre last week.00:45:18.239 --> 00:45:20.880


They left a five-star review, and this is how much money you made.00:45:20.880 --> 00:45:26.800


It's like you see it in a statement, you feel it at the end of the year, but like that type of stuff builds real connection.00:45:26.800 --> 00:45:34.079


And it's like they spend more of the time with the connectivity with uh uh travelers, you know, with the guests than they do with the owners.00:45:34.079 --> 00:45:36.400


And they're clearly good at it because they're good at the guest side.00:45:36.400 --> 00:45:43.440


And I think they can do a lot more with the owners and really lean into like, hey, I'm protecting a half million dollar or a million dollar asset for you, and here's what I've done.00:45:43.440 --> 00:45:45.440


And like, aren't you glad I'm here?00:45:45.440 --> 00:45:49.039


Um, and having self-managed for a decade, like I'm very glad they're there.00:45:49.039 --> 00:45:52.400


And I know how much work it is, but I don't think most people do.00:45:52.800 --> 00:45:59.760


Yeah, I think um I've been doing um, I left kind of the corporate world too last year and started my own consultancy, um, Annie and Co.00:45:59.760 --> 00:46:03.519


And one of the things I've been working with people on is just that like owner relation piece.00:46:03.519 --> 00:46:20.880


And I think with AI, AI is gonna remove some of the monotony and some of the things that have to get done, but it's gonna allow people to be able to like foster those relationships that they might not have been doing because they were so focused on the guest and sort of the property level and just really not touching and building with the owners.00:46:20.880 --> 00:46:26.719


And so I think that you know, Sarah says it really well about how just you know being proactively communicating with your owners is really important.00:46:26.719 --> 00:46:32.000


And we had um John Suzuki on and a couple of times we love talking with him because he's such a relationship person.00:46:32.000 --> 00:46:38.480


And I think now that we're diving so much more into AI, that that connection, people are craving that even more.00:46:38.480 --> 00:46:40.639


And I think owners want it just as much.00:46:40.639 --> 00:46:45.199


And the managers need to be able to go to those owners in good times and bad times.00:46:45.199 --> 00:46:49.840


But if they do that, that relationship is solid and they're not gonna go anywhere.00:46:49.840 --> 00:46:56.239


And I just I think that the more technology can take some of the stuff away, it's gonna allow people to be the freedoms to build those relationships.00:46:56.239 --> 00:46:58.079


That is the core of hospitality.00:46:58.079 --> 00:47:04.639


And whether you're renting for a week or you know, 90 days or beyond, hospitality is still part of all of it.00:47:04.800 --> 00:47:04.960


Yeah.00:47:04.960 --> 00:47:07.840


Well, and that's the difference between a co-host versus a property manager.00:47:07.840 --> 00:47:14.079


It's like I think homeowners sometimes just think that a property manager is really just a co-host, that they're just managing bookings.00:47:14.079 --> 00:47:15.760


They're getting bookings or managing the bookings.00:47:15.760 --> 00:47:37.119


There's so much more to it, you know, and the property managers that are doing it right, they're showing every time they go to the property and they're showing that they don't charge for that because it's like you want them to understand like they're not just sitting in this building all, you know, all day long and not going to your property and not having to deal with the guests and not even have to deal with the guests, but have to, you know, provide the great hospitality on your behalf.00:47:37.119 --> 00:47:38.400


I mean, there's so much more to it.00:47:38.639 --> 00:47:44.239


You know, and I I thought the um the insight around like I love it when they suggest things that aren't broken.00:47:44.239 --> 00:47:51.440


And it also creates a dynamic where when something is broken, it doesn't feel like the only time they reach out is that something's broken.00:47:51.599 --> 00:47:51.760


Yeah.00:47:52.000 --> 00:47:55.360


It's like here's an idea, here's something that went well, here's an improvement you might make.00:47:55.360 --> 00:47:57.599


Oh, the AC you got to replace it, it's broken.00:47:57.599 --> 00:47:58.159


Sorry about that.00:47:58.159 --> 00:48:02.960


And it's like, okay, well, the last three conversations were cool, and I'll fix the issue.00:48:08.320 --> 00:48:11.039


Yeah, you don't have to say, like, don't worry, nothing's wrong.00:48:11.039 --> 00:48:12.000


But how are you today?00:48:13.199 --> 00:48:21.360


You know, and I think that that that piece, you know, that piece in midterm is different because, like, for the most part, you're gonna hear every 90 days.00:48:21.599 --> 00:48:22.320


Yeah, you're not gonna do it.00:48:22.320 --> 00:48:27.199


Because the stuff in the middle is the kitchen same, or it's yeah, the hospitality is different there.00:48:27.199 --> 00:48:29.440


Well, super interesting to talk to you today, Jeff.00:48:29.440 --> 00:48:31.679


And I'm so glad that you reached out to come on the show.00:48:31.679 --> 00:48:36.079


This has been um definitely something we've been interested in and excited to have you on.00:48:36.079 --> 00:48:42.880


But if anybody wants to get in touch with you and learn more about Furnish Finder or put their property on the site, what's the best way for them to reach out?00:48:43.119 --> 00:48:53.199


Yeah, uh, anyone who, you know, if you're uh working in the software space or doing connectivity or a property manager who wants to connect directly, uh, partnerships at furnishfinder.com.00:48:53.199 --> 00:48:55.840


If you want to get a hold of me, LinkedIn is usually the best.00:48:55.840 --> 00:48:59.119


I pay attention, I'll get back to you, and would love to hear from people.00:48:59.119 --> 00:49:05.119


And then, you know, sign up on the site, um, you know, like any other site except um a subscription.00:49:05.119 --> 00:49:09.519


You know, we've got an list your property link in the top right, and you just go give us your information and get started.00:49:09.519 --> 00:49:13.840


You know, if you've got a listing anywhere else, it's cut and paste, very straightforward.00:49:13.840 --> 00:49:15.440


You know, the hardest part's the photos.00:49:15.440 --> 00:49:35.760


And the um, you know, what I'd encourage people to check out is the air DNA report that's on our site, but also we've got a tab called Market Insights that'll help you understand what type of tenants are in your city and you know how many people are searching versus how much inventory is there, how much rent do people get by bedroom type, just to get a feel so you don't come in with the wrong expectations.00:49:35.760 --> 00:49:41.920


I think the um people from short term that have had bad experience with Furnish Finder are usually that they have the wrong expectations.00:49:41.920 --> 00:49:47.920


It's like, well, I made $110,000 as a short term, so if I can do that as a midterm and only have three turnovers, that'd be great.00:49:48.000 --> 00:49:49.920


It's like not realistic.00:49:50.239 --> 00:49:52.880


How about $72,000 in four turnovers?00:49:52.880 --> 00:49:54.079


You know, whatever it looks like.00:49:54.400 --> 00:49:59.679


Yeah, the the math behind the equations is always interesting, but awesome.00:49:59.679 --> 00:50:01.360


Well, thank you for coming on, Jeff.00:50:01.360 --> 00:50:06.000


Uh, if anybody wants to get in touch with Annie and I, you can go to alexandanipodcast.com.00:50:06.000 --> 00:50:08.559


And until next time, thanks everybody.

Jeff Hurst Profile Photo

Jeff Hurst is the CEO of Furnished Finder, a platform focused on connecting property owners with tenants looking for 30+ day furnished stays. Before Furnished Finder, Jeff held leadership roles at HomeAway/VRBO and Expedia Group, giving him deep experience across the vacation rental and travel marketplace landscape. Today, he’s focused on the growth of midterm rentals and the demand drivers behind longer stays. He’s especially interested in the operational realities that help operators succeed as the STR market matures.