At BookingsCloud, we spend a lot of time helping vacation rental managers answer one question:
“Why are guests still choosing Airbnb when they’re already on my website?”
Usually, the answer is not one major problem. It’s a collection of smaller moments that make a guest pause: a cancellation policy that's hard to find, reviews buried halfway down the page, a checkout flow that feels unfamiliar, or pricing that changes too late in the process.
Guests arrive on direct booking websites with expectations shaped by the platforms they already use. They are used to visible reviews, straightforward pricing, clear policies, and booking flows that feel familiar.
A direct booking site does not need to look like Airbnb or Vrbo, but it does need to build confidence at the moments when a guest is deciding whether to keep going.
A lot of the thinking behind this came from conversations on the Vacation Rental Success Podcast and STR Investing: The Podcast, where BookingsCloud’s General Manager Amber Knight discussed the gap between generating demand and converting it into direct bookings.
So instead of writing another article full of generic conversion advice, we built a set of prompts managers can use to review their websites the way a guest would.
The goal is simple: identify the trust gaps and friction points that matter most, then fix the two or three things most likely to improve the booking experience.
Here are some prompts to experiment with, and you can access the full guide below.
Most vacation rental websites are written by people who already know the company, the properties, and the process. Guests are seeing it for the first time.
On the Vacation Rental Success Podcast, Amber talked about how quickly guests decide whether a business feels trustworthy. Site speed, clear photos, visible phone number matter. Even small things like branded vehicles or team photos can reassure guests that there are real people behind the business.
This prompt is designed to force that outside perspective.
Example prompt:
"You are a traveler who has never heard of [property management company name]. You found their website through Google or a social media ad. Review this homepage copy and list every question, doubt, or concern a skeptical guest would have before trusting this company enough to search or book."
What makes this exercise useful is how quickly it exposes assumptions.
Many operators know their market so well that they stop noticing what still needs to be explained to guests. Sometimes the problem is as basic as not making the location clear enough. Sometimes it is harder to tell whether the company feels local, responsive, or genuinely professional.
Guests do not evaluate your website in isolation; they compare it to the booking experiences they already trust.
Airbnb and Vrbo have trained travelers to expect visible reviews, transparent pricing, clear cancellation terms, and reassurance around support if something goes wrong.
This prompt helps operators identify the places where their direct booking experience still feels uncertain by comparison.
Example prompt:
"A guest is deciding between booking on this website and finding the same or a similar property on Airbnb or Vrbo. Based on what this website currently shows, fails to show, or makes hard to find, list every reason a cautious traveler would choose the OTA instead."
The point is to understand where guests may still feel safer booking somewhere else, and not to copy Airbnb.
A direct booking website can absolutely compete on trust, but operators need to understand which questions guests are quietly asking themselves before they commit.
Most operators already have trust signals on their website; the issue is often that guests see them too late.
Reviews may be hidden too far down the property page, policies may only appear during checkout, or contact details may be difficult to find when a guest wants reassurance quickly.
On the VRMA Arrival Podcast, Amber described direct booking conversion as part of the guest experience itself. Guests are deciding whether they trust the company to handle their vacation properly if something goes wrong.
This prompt helps evaluate where trust is reinforced throughout the booking journey and where it breaks down.
Example prompt:
"Review this vacation rental website and identify every trust signal that is present, missing, buried, or shown too late in the booking path. Look for reviews, company history, local expertise, contact information, secure payment indicators, cancellation policy, and guest support expectations."
One of the more useful parts of this exercise is that it shifts the conversation from “do we have this information?” to “does the guest see it when they actually need it?”
Guests rarely judge pricing on the nightly rate alone, they are judging clarity, fairness, and whether the pricing experience feels predictable.
A cleaning fee shown upfront feels different from one that suddenly appears at checkout. A deposit explained properly feels different from one added without context in the final booking step.
This prompt walks through the pricing flow from the guest’s perspective.
Example prompt:
"Review the full pricing experience from the first displayed rate through checkout. List every fee, charge, deposit, tax, or cost in the order the guest discovers it. For each one, note whether it is disclosed upfront, disclosed late, unclear, or missing context."
For many operators, this is where the most obvious friction points appear. Internal teams already know how the pricing works, so they stop noticing the moments that feel confusing or abrupt to a first-time guest.
These exercises rarely uncover one dramatic issue.
More often, they reveal patterns that create hesitation over the course of the booking journey:
Each issue feels manageable on its own. Together, they can make a guest hesitate long enough to leave the website and continue searching elsewhere.
That is the part many operators underestimate. Direct booking conversion often hinges on small moments of uncertainty, not major failures.
Start with one real property.
If there is one useful takeaway from this exercise, it is this: You do not need to guess what is making guests hesitate.
Run these prompts using a real property page, a real booking scenario, and real pricing. Then look for patterns in the responses rather than trying to fix everything at once.
Usually, two or three changes will surface repeatedly. Those are the places to start.
Direct bookings are often won by answering the small questions guests would otherwise leave the site to verify somewhere else.