pnutallergymom
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2007
- Messages
- 399
Do you ever negotiate price when dealing with pool-home owners? Is it common, or frowned upon?? If yuu do, how much lower do you offer?
Thanks
Thanks
I think it depends. The stronger case is when you see a home you like that is priced higher than comparable homes for the same dates. Or perhaps you are willing to fill in a gap neatly in the homeowner's calendar. Or maybe it is a larger home and you are a smaller quiet nonsmoking group. You can gently and nicely point these things out out and ask whether s/he is willing to come down.Do you ever negotiate price when dealing with pool-home owners? Is it common, or frowned upon?? If yuu do, how much lower do you offer?
Thanks
Thank you for your concern. The townhome I booked was priced significantly higher than the norm (as far as I could gather by looking at numerous townhomes for the same timeframe). If it had been priced closer to what seemed to be the median I probably would not have even asked. But...I liked it, I wanted to stay there, so I asked for a price that was within our budget. The condo seems to be booked pretty solidly well in advance so the owner probably could have said no and waited for a full price booking, but I'm grateful they accepted my offer and I'm really looking forward to staying there.
Not necessarily. Some owners are able to withstand cash flow problems, and are willing to invest more time to build a clientèle of repeat visitors willing to pay full price. Discounting begets discounting. If you book a guest with a discount, that guest will always expect that discount, even as market conditions improve for the homeowner. But, repeat guests have much lower marketing costs, because they already know you and your home.It is better to rent a home at a discount then to have no income for that time period.