▲ 5 r/u_YogurtclosetHot1083+4 crossposts

Looking for property managers who want a passive revenue stream — STR tool partnership

I’m a founder building a tool for STR hosts (cleaning coordination, job scheduling, photo proof, payments) and I’m looking to partner with a small number of property managers who work with 20+ short-term rental clients.

The idea is simple: you introduce StayReady to your clients as a tool that makes turnovers easier to manage, help them get set up, and earn 30% of their subscription revenue every month for as long as they’re a customer.

At $39/month per client that’s roughly $12/client/month recurring — 10 clients using it is $120/month just for referring and onboarding people you already work with.

My ask from you: refer it to clients you think would benefit, and help them get started (I’ll handle everything after that). Client pays through the platform, I pay your cut directly.

Still early and looking for the right people to grow with, not just anyone — ideally PMs who genuinely see the communication/coordination problem in their portfolio and want to be part of solving it.

If that sounds interesting, drop a comment or DM me. Happy to walk you through the product first so you can decide if it’s actually worth recommending to your clients.

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u/YogurtclosetHot1083 — 13 hours ago
▲ 4 r/ShortTermRentals+1 crossposts

nightly vs monthly rental, and why the obvious choice isn't always right

This doesn't come up enough. People buy a place planning to put it on airbnb, when renting it monthly might actually make more. And sometimes it's the reverse. You don't know which one wins until you check both.

The two options, basically:

Nightly is your normal airbnb or vrbo. Looks like more money, but it's more work and more cost too. Cleaning after every guest, restocking, messages whenever, dead months, and you're never fully booked.

Monthly (people call it mid term) is renting it furnished to someone for 30 days or longer. Travel nurses, people moving for a job, folks whose house is getting repaired, corporate stays. Less per night but it sits booked, you clean once a month instead of constantly, and the costs are way lower.

What people miss is that the better option changes depending on the place. Something near a hospital or a bunch of offices might do better monthly even though airbnb sounds more fun. A beach town with a big summer season is probably the opposite. Same house, different answer.

So it's worth running it both ways before you decide. You can look up furnished monthly rents in the area pretty easily, and the travel nurse housing sites show what people pay. Then compare that to what you'd realistically clear nightly after cleaning and empty nights, not the perfect scenario.

Point is a lot of people just assume airbnb is the only way and leave money sitting there, or they grind through constant turnovers when monthly would've made more for way less hassle. Neither's always better. Just check both first.

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u/YogurtclosetHot1083 — 11 days ago
▲ 2 r/u_YogurtclosetHot1083+1 crossposts

At what point do you switch from texting cleaners to an actual system?

For a long time it was just texting each cleaner separately — different threads, different photos, no way to see at a glance what’s done and what’s not.

Got tired of opening 4 different text threads just to check if Tuesday’s turnover happened what do you guys suggest?

reddit.com
u/YogurtclosetHot1083 — 12 days ago