Extended Stay Equals Extended Stability - podcast episode cover

Extended Stay Equals Extended Stability

Jun 03, 20229 minEp. 55
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Summary

Discover the advantages of extended stay RV parks, which offer consistent cash flow by catering to long-term residents. The episode identifies key customer segments, including retirees, remote-working millennials, and seasonal visitors. Learn practical strategies like introducing park models, fostering community, and ensuring professional management to build a stable extended stay base.

Episode description

One of the big concerns of RV park buyers and owners is the lack of control over revenues as you never know who will be coming and going on any given day. However, extended stay customers offer you a steady cash flow that can really ease those concerns. In this RV Park Mastery podcast we’re going to review what extended stay customers are, how to attract them, and how they can give you greater peace of mind.

Transcript

Intro / Opening

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Welcome to the RV Park Mastery Podcast, where you will learn the correct way to identify, evaluate, negotiate, perform due diligence on, renegotiate, find. Turn around and operate RV parks. And now, here is your host, the fifth largest owner of RV and mobile home parks in the U.S., Frank Raw.

Benefits of Extended Stay RV Parks

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Revenue is great. Cash flow is terrific, but many RV parks focus on just an overnight experience where a customer comes in for maybe just a day and then leaves. But there's another style of RV park out there called extended stay. An extended stay equals extended stability. And you can introduce extended stay into almost any RV park subject to your permit. So what is an extended stay RV park? This is an RV park that people live in for months.

sometimes years, sometimes for a lifetime. It's the alternative to the overnighter RV park. It's also the alternative to the destination RV park, although you can have a destination which also has an extended stay component.

Profiles of Extended Stay Customers

So what is extended day state customers? What are they after and how do you attract them? Well, you probably noticed that America has a very strong baby boomer population at this point. So what you have is you've got a whole bunch of folks, I am one of them, born between the years of nineteen forty-six and nineteen sixty-four. And for the longest time this was considered the backbone of the RV industry.

That was the group that was buying up most of the RVs. That was the group that was driving them around and parking them in RV parks. But now you have a second subset, which are the millennials. And the millennials have started to become larger RV users than the baby boomers. But the baby boomers have one attribute the millennials do not, that's age.

Right now in America, there are roughly 10,000 baby boomers retiring per day. That's a whole lot of people. And they have found that many of these retirees, a very large group, Part of the retirement plan is to n buy an RV and travel America. And many of them after they've done that for a while, they want to just stop in one spot. They want to keep the R V experience going. They like living small. They like nature. They like being around other people.

But they don't want to keep traveling. They're happy just to stop in whatever the most convenient and pleasant spot is that they've been going so far. And that is one group of the extended stay. But yet there's another group. Another group of extended stay RV customers can also revolve around millennials, which are people who are just officing out of their home and some electing to go to locations they like to live in, scenic areas.

and living in an RV park for months on end, although still being a part of an active workforce. And then you have other extended stay folks who are not fully retired yet, maybe, but they like to spend part of the year seasonally in certain locations. Let's just say they get a month off every year. Or let's say they want to go down to a RV park. Every weekend, maybe at an area lake.

So this another group that's still in the workforce. They don't work remotely, but they still can use their RV seemingly year round. Maybe they head down every Friday afternoon and don't return until every Sunday night. These customers, what they're typically seeking is an opportunity to have some degree of stability to themselves.

And also they're looking for price efficiency in what they're doing. Let me give the example of the RV park, the two RV parks we own down on the Texas-Mexican border. When we bought these RV parks, it was pretty much No stability in revenue. What you had is you had some small amount of overnight or traffic, and then you had other folks who were there kind of on a destination, even an extended stay basis.

But it was very, very seasonal. It gets very hot in southern Texas, so most everyone was a snowbird coming out of the north.

Attracting and Retaining Extended Stays

who would start to arrive as winter approached, but then would leave sometime in the spring. And we didn't like that. We wanted to have year-round revenue. So we started importing park models. which are small structures designed for RV parks, typically three to four hundred square feet in size. And we started selling these to the same people who were bringing their RVs down every year.

And the argument was why haul that giant RV down from the north, from Ohio or Pennsylvania? Why do that instead of just selling it? And buying this, which you can buy for cash off selling almost any motorhome, fifth-wheel or travel trailer. And then you can drive down or fly down here and stay here as long as you like.

And not have the burden of gasoline cost of hauling that giant R V or driving it if it's a motorhome down. And thus the the general unpleasantness and insecurity of driving a big thing on the road, particularly as you get older. And it was a huge hit. As fast as we would bring them in, we got them sold.

Today, about half of our occupancy is year round. People who pay for that RV year round, they may not use it year round. They may leave the property for several months at a time and then return. But it gives us a consistent and steady income. And that's the entire point. So if you have any RV park, it is possible to expand that extended stay component. To me, if you could build your extended stay to cover your mortgage, that would be idyllic.

Now you don't have to worry on any certain day. Well, I wonder how many RV customers will come in today, or I wonder how many RV park customers will have this month, because you already have that built in. So what are the groups and what are the things you can do for extended stay? Well, number one, offer it. Let people know that you're open and welcome in all of your social media, your website, everywhere, that Extended Stay is more than welcome.

Many people they just don't know where to go. And they're waiting for someone to say, well, you could just park here and stay for a lifetime if you like. Also create environments that people want to live in full time year round. Have events, create a sense of community, offer really good common areas in aesthetics and streetscaping. Don't just rely on putting up volleyball and basketball. That isn't what the extended state is really looking for.

They're looking more for a regular kind of living environment. What are some things that they like? Oh well, they like things that include some kind of community events on weekends. They like the idea of such attributes as what we call blessing boxes, which are boxes where people can exchange books for free, read a book, put a book back in.

These kinds of things which give people that more of that residential feel of long term customers, that's what they desire. We've also found that the extended stay customer really wants to see professional management. They don't want to stay in a place where they don't feel their property is secured and they don't want to stay in a place where they feel like they're not respected and appreciated. It's very hard to build an extended stay base if you do not have a strong manager.

You need a strong manager. I would even give that manager a uniform. I know we did that on a podcast recently. Give customers the impression that where they're staying is a smart choice and affirm that in them every time they look out the window or go for a walk. Bottom line to extended stay is that it's a terrific idea. It's something that many RV park owners fail to grasp the importance of or even give it a try.

Now it doesn't work in every location, that's for sure, but I've seen people morph that into other attributes.

Alternative Extended Stay Revenue Models

There's a thing called glamping, which stands for glamour camping, where you give people the ability to stay in older Kind of nostalgic RVs, typically a hundred dollars plus a night. That might be a manner of giving you more steady revenue, perhaps. This way you're not only part RV park, but you're also maybe part Extended State Hotel to some degree. We've also had great success and seen many RV park owners who succeed in the area of tiny homes.

There's really no place you can place those creations you see on HGTV. They don't have the proper HUD seal and they can't be placed into any subdivision or mobile home park. I was in a RV park recently in Indiana where probably a third of the entire park is nothing but tiny homes. The bottom line is you've got to figure out what your customers want.

and what you can offer. But anything you can do to take that RV park and make that more into an extended stay environment is definitely going to give you extended stable revenue and and that brings you a peace of mind. Like no other. This is Frank Roth with the RV Park Mastery Podcast. Hope you enjoyed this. Talk to you again soon.

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Thank you for listening to the RV Park Mastery Podcast. Be sure to visit us at www.rvparkmastery.com, where you can learn the correct way to identify, evaluate, negotiate, perform due diligence on, renegotiate. Turn around and operate in RV parks.

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