The people who are gonna rent your airbnb should be happy to have you as their host. BTW do customers come with their own food or should a person hire a cooking staff for their glamping business?
@@user-uq1ec5ql2i Thank you! Guests definitely bring their own food. Unless you’re charging $3,000+ per night, it’s not worth the extra work to provide a chef. I tried it and learned the hard way!
@@user-uq1ec5ql2i So, I wouldn’t provide an amenity that I could not guarantee would be available and would be high quality. If you can guarantee that, want to manage that process and are willing to support the cost, then, go for it. But I myself want to eliminate as many processes as possible.
It’s great seeing someone so passionate and caring about their Airbnb business! Thanks for sharing!
@@misteramsterdam8181 You’re welcome!
The people who are gonna rent your airbnb should be happy to have you as their host. BTW do customers come with their own food or should a person hire a cooking staff for their glamping business?
@@user-uq1ec5ql2i Thank you! Guests definitely bring their own food. Unless you’re charging $3,000+ per night, it’s not worth the extra work to provide a chef. I tried it and learned the hard way!
@airbnbgirllaura but what if most of the customers are international and not local for example I'm from tanzania and most tourists are international
@@airbnbgirllaura but what if most of the customers are international and not local for example I'm from tanzania and most tourists are international
@@user-uq1ec5ql2i So, I wouldn’t provide an amenity that I could not guarantee would be available and would be high quality. If you can guarantee that, want to manage that process and are willing to support the cost, then, go for it.
But I myself want to eliminate as many processes as possible.
@airbnbgirllaura for a person who can't afford such a processes, do you suggest that the tourists should bring their own food?