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European Vacation Rentals: Room At the Top

Key findings from PhoCusWright, presented by Tnooz, reveal the strength of Europe’s holiday rental segment. Despite the complexities of the European holiday rental market, the potential for revenue there is undeniable, PCW estimates the current in the report titled: PhoCusWright’s European Vacation Rental Marketplace: 2011-2013.

€20 billion euro is one powerful incentive for studying rentals, to say nothing for interjecting a decent booking model. (Not the one below, I might add)

Form fill, on an otherwise decent vacation rental site, leads with no traffic? Hmm.

Vacation rentals, at least for the American student of family holidays, is no new concept for Summer holidays. I can remember since way back when our family opting for the beach house week versus the Holiday Inn at twice the price and half the utility. What the reader may not know though, is that in Europe holiday rentals are far more common than in the states even. The Tnooz article by Linda Fox, referred to, sheds light on this aspect. And too, key aspects where online booking of vacation rentals go.

For anyone looking at trends, revenue growth, even a business to get into, booking villas and homes in Europe could be the next online bonanza. For proof of this, let’s take a look at what Tnooz dug up, and I quote:

  • holiday rental accounts for 21% of the total market
  • of the Euro 19.6 billion, 61% is accounted for by vacation rental management companies and 39% by homeowner direct business
  • the total rental guest population is 24 million with German, French and UK consumers making up three-quarters of the volume
  • holiday rental segment is more mature that the US equivalent with one-in-four travellers across Europe having booked a rental trip in 2011 compared with one-in-1o

The end of this tale leads to three tangibles. First, the millions of home or property owners across the European property landscape (suppliers). Secondly, the tens of millions of travelers to Europe looking for the best experience. Now, interject upon this vibrant dynamic the fact that no one has so far even dented the online booking potential of this market. Even thinking about new customers to the continent, customers who might not even be aware there is something better for their vacation plans out there.

The top image is of a form fill tied to a not so horrible website with a really nice domain name; http://www.europeanvacationrental.com. What a waste of money that was, Alexa 2.9 million basically means no one has ever seen this site.

As the rental market in Europe matures over the coming month’s and years, it’s clear players online who engage and provide the needed booking excellence suggested, will have a profit potential of proportions. And as the Tnooz article pointed out, user reviews and sites like TripAdvisor, which at one time created a trend, may give way to new innovation and ideas.

HomeAway to EuropeHomeRentals.com, it is interesting to note that no one has really seemed to have grasped yet, the potential of building and then marketing a refined vacation rental portal. HomeAway’s massive inventory is still tied to an aging interface, to say nothing about the aging monetization model.

Movement in this sector is apparent, as indicated by headlines and press releases, and a shopping bag full of property rental sites popping up; @Leisure-Group – acquires pureholidayhomes.com Ltd, European Vacation Rentals By Owner, and dozens more indicate investment at least, but only companies like Jetsetter seem to have the slightest idea what they are doing. That closed community for discerning travelers (image below of their interface) being what amounts to a template for “how to” show off rentals (or hotels for that matter).

I signed in with Facebook and went to Europe homes in seconds - Jetsetter rocks.

For an indication of the need here, looking at most of the sites now offering European vacation properties should reveal a window of opportunity for some. The screen shot below shows clearly the  Web 1.0 offerings out there so far. Not exactly the most appealing stay for Cologne, Germany, is it now?

Not to pick on VacationRentals.com alone, the FlipKey offerings (image above) in the same city are not exactly awe inspiring either, even though the site is a bit better laid out. Even the most complete businesses, like the aforementioned HomeAway, have only done a cursory adaptation for the needs of the European rental customer (and client). There are not many exceptions, in fact, I could not find one via search in the top 10.

Casamundo, Greatrentals, Rentvillas, Solmarvillas.com, WhiteKeyVillas, Europeanescapes.com, RentaVilla, VillasOfDistinction, eurvilla.com (flash idiocy), the list is endless of clueless and almost valueless web portals out there. Talk about room at the top!

We leave you with PhoCusWright’s senior director, research, Douglas Quinby, talking about Europe’s changing vacation rental landscape. For more information this market, the reader may also want to Google vacation rentals to validate my suggestions here.

Feature image courtesy Jakob Radlgruber – Fotolia.com

Categories: Travel Technology
Phil Butler: Phil is a prolific technology, travel, and news journalist and editor. A former public relations executive, he is an analyst and contributor to key hospitality and travel media, as well as a geopolitical expert for more than a dozen international media outlets.

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