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Segment playbooks
If you host one to three high-end rentals yourself, you are the front desk. Here is a practical method for handing off the repetitive questions — and keeping the ones that actually need you.
"The owner-operator does not need a call centre. She needs the boring 80% of the inbox handled in her own voice — so the 20% that actually builds the brand gets her attention." — Source: mybrigitte.com/insights, May 2026
Hosts of one to three high-end short-term rentals — the villas with curated partners, the city pied-à-terre with the design pedigree, the seaside apartment with the regulars. You answer messages yourself. You picked the partners yourself. The property has a voice, and that voice is yours. This playbook is for protecting that.
You knew it would be hospitality work; you did not always know the message volume. WhatsApp at 11 p.m. asking whether the dishwasher is the one with the half-open door. Booking.com chat at 6 a.m. asking which beach club is open Monday. Three rentals, three peak seasons, one inbox — yours. The repetitive questions arrive at every hour the property has guests in it, which is most of them.
Pull thirty days of guest messages. Sort each one into two columns: repetitive and high-touch. The split, in our experience with owner-operators, looks like this:
| Guest message | Hand to concierge | Keep human |
|---|---|---|
| What's the Wi-Fi? | Yes | |
| When is check-in? | Yes | |
| Where do we park? | Yes | |
| Best beach club Tuesday? | Yes | |
| Restaurant nearby tonight? | Yes | |
| The shower's broken. | Yes | |
| Can we have a late checkout? | Yes | |
| We had a bad experience… | Yes | |
| Can we book again next summer? | Yes |
The first column is what the concierge runs. The second is what stays on your phone — and gets your full attention because it isn't competing with the first.
The single source of truth a per-property AI concierge runs on — a structured document covering arrival, the house, the neighbourhood, and the host's curated partners. Usually 4–8 pages, written in the host's voice.
This is the part nobody warns you about. The concierge is only as good as the manual it runs on. Block one evening — really, one — and write it once, well. Four sections: arrival (codes, parking, the door that sticks), the house (Wi-Fi, appliances, what the noisy fan in the bathroom is for), the neighbourhood (the bakery, the pharmacy, the market days), and the partners (your beach club, your restaurant, your taxi). Write it the way you would tell it to a friend.
Hospitality is not the place to make people install an app. Channels, in priority order:
The voice is what your guests came for. A generic vendor chatbot has a generic vendor voice. A per-property concierge speaks in yours — because the house manual is in yours, and because the prompt was tuned on the messages you actually send. Block thirty minutes to read the first week of conversations. Where it doesn't sound like you, say so. The voice gets sharper.
For one to three properties, you are looking at a per-property monthly fee in the low hundreds of euros — typically less than one missed booking, less than one bad review's compounded cost. The line item that disappears is harder to put a price on: the evenings you stop spending on Wi-Fi codes.
A 20-minute conversation. We show you how the playbook lands on a property like yours.