Complete overview of the Wheelhouse Pricing Engine

A detailed exploration of our industry's only transparent, published & auditable pricing engine.

Andreas B.
By Andreas Buschermöhle, Head of Product & Engineering

Updated: May 01, 2023

21 minute read

Pricing engine: components

The image at the top of the page illustrates the essential components of the Wheelhouse pricing engine. The three most foundational models included in the illustration above are:

  • The Base Price Model
  • The Predictive Demand Model
  • The Reactive Demand Model

As you explore this write-up, you will learn how these high-level components either include, or are amplified by, multiple additional models and statistical approaches, including:

  • Location Impact
  • Occupancy Impact
  • Impact of Prior Bookings
  • Booking Curves
  • Gamma Warping
  • Price Response Function
  • Model Blending
  • Calendar Control
  • Vacancy Gaps
  • Last Minute Discounting
  • Dynamic Pacing Model

While complex, we believe that the 22% increase in revenue these models have driven for our users has made our efforts worthwhile!

Each day, our platform ingests, cleans, and processes ~20 billion new data points, analyzing 21MM listings across every major OTA in the short-term rental space, in order to inform a continuously relevant and accurate set of recommendations.

All of the models & approaches we list above inform how each listing should respond to booking patterns we see at the listing, neighborhood, market and regional level.

Let's step through these models, starting with our pricing engine’s foundation, the Base Price Model.

Part 1: Base price model

How our model determines an accurate price for your unit at ‘normal’ demand

As stated above, the Base Price Model is the foundation of each unit’s unique pricing recommendation. The goal of the Base Price Model is to discern an accurate median nightly price for each unit by analyzing the attributes of the property.

For example, we all know that a pool, a porch, parking and other attributes can impact the desirability of a given property.

And, while the value of these individuals attributes varies greatly over the course of a year (i.e. your pool is ‘worth’ more on July 4th than on January 4th), the Base Price Model is designed to determine the value of your unit for a day with average local demand.

To do this, the Base Price model analyzes:

  • Attributes (e.g. bedrooms, bathrooms, parking, sleeps, unit type, etc.)
  • Fees (e.g. cleaning fee, security deposit, extra guest fee, etc.)
  • Location
  • Booking performance (i.e. every booking, for your and nearby units)

And a range of additional factors.

Getting technically correct

To train our Base Price Model, we use a supervised machine learning model that incorporates all active units in each market, leveraging their unit details and the median nightly price over the last year. By using the median, we can reduce the signal from events or accidental outliers in the data to make sure we primarily capture pricing for ‘normal’ days.

Our model leverages gradient boosting to produce an ensemble of decision trees, which map a unit’s features to the median price. For our customers, this approach enables us to balance model complexity with interpretability — or the ability to show you how your unit’s attributes impact your Base Price recommendation.

Let us explore an example to learn more.

Detailed in the chart below are the five largest drivers of the Base Price in the San Francisco market (Note: real data is used throughout all examples in this write-up)

Base price feature importance chart

Perhaps unsurprisingly, bedrooms and sleeps (the number of people that can ‘sleep’ in a unit) have the largest impact on a given night’s price. In most markets, these two attributes are key drivers of the Base Price, as they are tightly correlated with the size (and hence the price) of a unit.

We can also see that the unit type (e.g. private room, entire apartment, full house, etc.) plays a significant role in determining an accurate Base Price in San Francisco, as do the extra fees (both cleaning and guest fees) associated with each stay.

While this graph offered us a high-level understanding of the value of the attributes, let us dive in more deeply to the most impactful attribute — bedrooms. To do this, we will examine a series of sample units that have:

  • a variable number of bedrooms (From 0BR, i.e. a studio, to 4BR)
  • But, all have one bathroom and ‘sleep’ four guests
blog image

In fact, we can see that going from a studio (0BR) to a 1 BR barely impacts your recommended Base Price. Similarly, the impact of a 4th bedroom is de minimis, at least in San Francisco for units with 1 bathroom.

However, what you might have realized is that this example is constrained in the sense that all these hypothetical units are restricted to having 1BA and ‘sleeping’ 4. In reality, most 4BR units will both have more than one bathroom, and sleep more than 4 people.

Therefore, examining this constrained example illustrates a core aspect of our Base Price Model though, as it is intended to illustrate that an accurate Base Price must consider the value of attributes both individually and collectively.

Location impact

How our model infers demand signals around each unit’s location

The location of a unit can dramatically impact the perceived and actual value of that unit.

To determine this impact, our model leverages our Base Price Model, by applying spatial kriging to our Base Price Model’s residuals. In our model, the ‘residuals’ refer to percentage differences between our predicted and the actual median prices for each unit, as illustrated below.

In the visual below, we can see that our model has identified a set of clustered units (yellow dots) that mostly have a median nightly price above our ‘predicted’ median price (‘predicted’ based on the unit’s attributes).

Location impact evaluation to sample

This collective pricing signal indicates that we are likely observing a high-value neighborhood, which in turn informs our location adjustment. In this case, a unit at the location of the purple dot would get a 10% increase in our Base Price recommendation.

Occupancy impact

How we leverage occupancy to verify our training data

One challenge in the short-term rental space is that many units are unintentionally (or intentionally!) ‘incorrectly’ priced.

Therefore, it is critical to leverage occupancy data (occupancy achieved over the prior year) to better understand how much our model should ‘weigh’ each unit’s pricing strategy. In combination with prices, the occupancy rate achieved by a unit can help us better understand whether a unit is overpriced or underpriced, relative to the market. Hence, we provide the occupancy as an input to our Base Price Model during training to tease out this relationship.

Of interest, despite units in the STR space being very unique, among the millions of units we have analyzed, the aggregate booking patterns reveal that the STR market is actually very efficient.

To explore this more, let us examine the chart below, which illustrates the relationship between a unit’s Base Price, and occupancy rates. As you can see, as the achieved occupancy increases, the Base Price associated with these units decreases.

Base price to occupancy chart

Accuracy evaluation

How we analyze the accuracy of our recommendations

For our model to be effective, we need to avoid overfitting and ensure that the out-of-sample error is minimized. For this, our model uses cross validation during the training process.

In our example of San Francisco, we train the Base Price Model using data from more than 5,000 units through the steps laid out above. A majority of units will have prices close to the right Base Price, while some will be priced too high or too low.

The below image is a histogram chart of a unit’s recommended prices relative to their current median price.

As you can see, most recommendations are pretty similar to the median price, i.e. have a value close to 1.0 (or 100%). However, a few units are currently underpriced and would get a recommendation as high as twice their current price, i.e. 2.0, while others are currently overpriced and would get a recommendation as low as 30% of their current price, i.e. 0.3.

The histogram shows that our Base Price Model

  • Reflects the market accurately, i.e. most units are close to 1.0
  • Is not biased, i.e. there is a similar amount of outliers to both sides
  • Does not overfit to the training data, i.e. the spread of the distribution is not too narrow.
Base price model histogram depicting recommended price to median price frequency

The final output of this model is our “Attributes-Only” Base Price Model.

Now, let’s read about how bookings impact & modify our Base Price Recommendation.

Part 2: Analyzing bookings

Booking Curves

How our model determines supply and demand

With a Base Price established, we can move on to our next challenge — adjusting nightly prices based on local demand.

Unlike hotels, in the short-term rental space, the vast majority of STR supply is comprised of individual units. These individual units can only be either 100% booked or 100% vacant for a given night. Said differently, for any given night, your unit will either earn some or no money! Adding another degree of complexity to pricing the STR space is that once an individual unit is booked, you can never sell that night again.

Therefore, our model needs to be exceptional at maximizing the expected revenue from your unit, based on a series of ‘binary’ outcomes.

When we started Wheelhouse 6 years ago, our team spent 12+ months testing different statistical approaches to determine which approach could best maximize revenue outcomes, over time.

Today, those early learnings still drive our use of Survival Analysis , specifically the Kaplan–Meier estimator , to create booking curves that power our pricing predictions.

Getting technical

The Kaplan-Meier estimator inherently handles ‘right censoring’. This is because for any unbooked future date, we do not yet know when, or even if, that night will be booked or otherwise taken off the market. Therefore, it is crucial to be able to include this data in order to fully understand supply and demand in a dynamically changing market.

The output of Survival Analysis is a survival curve S(t). It reflects the probability of a unit not being booked by time t ≤ 0 which counts the number of days before the stay date. For Wheelhouse, we can think of this survival curve as the inverse of a booking curve.

Note: Our survival curve counts the number of stay dates before the stay date, hence why the output is negative. For example, S(-30) = 0.7 means that on average 70% of the units survived (or, are still available) 30 days before the stay date. Consequently, the complement of the survival curve 1-S(t) represents the booking curve and its final value, 1- S(t=0), is the occupancy.

The following graph shows an example of a booking curve created on the entire population of available units in San Francisco, using stay dates between 2015 and 2021. It illustrates how likely an average unit on a normal demand day would be expected to ‘book’.

Booking probability to lead time chart

By creating an overall market curve for a normal day, we have an effective benchmark to compare survival curves for any subset of units or stay dates.

This is where our modeling approach becomes particularly powerful, as it enables us to create and compare booking curves for:

  • A subset of local units (e.g. a neighborhood, a zip code, any other area)
  • A single ‘unit type’, (e.g. tree houses or single family homes)
  • A single ‘size’ of units (e.g. 4 bedroom places)
  • A single ‘amenity’ (e.g. units with pools, parking, patios, etc.)
  • Any single day (e.g. July 7th, New Years Eve, etc.)
  • Or… any combination of the above

Comparing these different curves allows us to see, even far in the future, differences in booking patterns.

The next challenge is to translate the differences between two booking curves into a more fine-grained understanding of how these booking patterns will impact expected demand.

To create these projections, our team developed a technique we call Gamma Warping.

Gamma warping

How our model determines demand differences in Booking Curves

Gamma warping is a technique we created to accurately predict future demand based on differences in booking curves.

Getting technical

Technically speaking, gamma warping is a non-linear transformation that ‘warps’ one booking curve into the other.

For example, let us compare the booking curve Sₐ(t) in San Francisco for August in relation to the annual booking curve S₀(t) in San Francisco.

For this, we find γ (gamma) such that S₀(0) = f(Sₐ(0), γ). The warping function f is constructed such that it ensures that all adjusted survival curves stay within [0,1] and are monotonously decreasing, and vice versa the booking curves are monotonously increasing.

In the example below, we can see that even 200+ days out, August is booking faster than an average stay date.

Booking probability to lead time in August

Hence, in general, each stay date in August has a higher booking probability than the rest of the year.

Getting technical

In this case, the difference in survival probability between August and our baseline market survival curve results in γ=0.3164. This positive gamma value indicates that the booking probability is higher than the baseline.

The impact of gamma on the booking probability is non-linear, and thus depends on the baseline booking probability. To visualize the non-linear impact of these estimates on different baseline booking probabilities p₀, the following graph shows the booking probability resulting from an adjustment by γ=0.7.

As you can see in the illustration below, our model translates a strong demand signal (or, ‘positive gamma’) into a higher booking probability (y axis) above the baseline booking probability (x axis). However, as the curve additionally illustrates, our model does this in a non-linear fashion (hence why the purple line arches above the dotted line).

Adjusted probability to baseline booking probability graph

The second example below also illustrates how an initial baseline probability of booking (40%, represented by the dashed line) is transformed by different gamma values.

Getting technical

This chart shows that as gamma increases (x-axis), the booking probability increases as well (y-axis). At negative and positive infinity, the adjusted probability converges to 0% and 100% respectively. In between these points, the relationship increases monotonically, but non-linearly, crossing the baseline at gamma = 0.0.

Adjusted probability to gamma graph

In illustrating this, we are attempting to show that Wheelhouse’s Pricing Engine responds to differing levels of demand in a very dynamic fashion.

Our model does not simply assume, “Since demand is up 10%, booking probabilities increase 10%, as well”. Instead, on a market by market basis, or for any subset of units, we can create demand curves that help us understand “when demand increases by X% in your market, your unit’s expected booking probability increases by Y%”.

While complicated, it is a very powerful means to generically estimate demand in a dynamic market under a variety of circumstances.

Price response function

How our model translates demand signals into adjusted prices

Our Price Response Function is designed to translate predicted booking probabilities (which we outlined above) into a specific price recommendation for your unique unit.

For example, once we have determined that August is likely to have higher demand, we need to determine how much to increase prices, without dramatically lowering your probability of booking.

Getting technical

To develop a price response function for a market, our model looks at each unit and each stay date offered in the market, to calculate its relative price difference δ to our base price model.

We then bucket the observations with similar price differences and apply our booking curve analysis to determine (via Gamma Warping) whether this bucket books more (γ > 0) or less (γ < 0) than the market average.

This analysis tells us how much a change in price impacts the booking probability which in term reflects the sensitivity of guests to different prices.

Using these estimates, we fit a smooth price response function:

γ = fᵣ(δ) = a + b ⋅ (δ − d)² ⋅ (δ > d)

to the data, which allows us to generalize the observed market behavior.

Adjusted probability to gamma graph

From the following graph, we see that as prices increase above our base price recommendation (δ > 0), booking probabilities decrease.

And, no surprise, if prices are below our base price recommendation, we can see that the booking probability increases, at least initially. Importantly though, at a certain point, lowering your prices no longer increases your likelihood to book.

Gamma to price delta in estimates and price response

Deriving this price response curve lets us know how to increase prices given a particular ‘expected occupancy’ or demand. We call this value the price multiplier.

In the following graph, you can again see that our price multiplier is not simply linear. In fact, it changes quite dynamically for projected occupancies above or below the baseline (in this example the baseline is still 40% — represented by the dashed line).

Getting technical

We derive the gamma value that equilibrates the expected occupancy of a booking curve with that of the baseline booking curve. We then pass this gamma value to the inverted price response fᵣ⁻¹(γ) to translate it to a price multiplier δ, which we use to adjust prices.

Price factor to expected occupancy graph

In this chart, we can see that on a day with ‘normal’ demand (i.e. the market occupancy will reach 40%), the price multiplier is 1.0 (or, unchanged). This means that on a normal demand day, the price we would recommend for this day is the same as our Base Price.

However, if the expected demand/occupancy is above the market baseline (i.e. anything more than 40%) our price recommendations would initially increase in a roughly linear fashion, before increasing exponentially during periods of ‘extreme demand’, to better capture market compression. Alternatively, you can see that during periods of low demand, our model will lower prices… but only slightly, and not past a certain point.

Now, with a deep understanding of how our recommendation engine analyzes individual units, their booking probabilities, and the elasticity of their prices, let us dive into how our model begins to understand and predict demand drivers for units, for a particular stay date.

Part 3: Predictive demand model

How we leverage pricing data to price your unit accurately in the ‘far-future’

In the pages above, we detailed how Wheelhouse determines the Base Price for each unit, and also how we more deeply analyze and understand both markets and subsets of units.

Now, let’s dive more into how we isolate drivers of local demand, and how we leverage those signals to create far-future price recommendations before booking patterns emerge (e.g. how should we price a unit 365 days from now, when only <1% of a market has booked?).

The first local demand model we employ is our ‘predictive’ model, which is intended to predict accurate prices before a market begins to book. While this model has a number of goals, its most important job is to ensure that we do not underprice units for far future stay dates.

This model is particularly important for the role it plays in pricing local events and holidays that start booking many months (or years!) ahead of a stay date, and offer the best times to capture revenue.

For our Predictive Demand Model, we analyze prices in markets, including future and historical pricing data from hotels and short-term rentals. These pricing signals contain local and historical insights that we can leverage to better ensure the far-future is accurately priced.

Additionally, to aid interpretability and effectiveness, our model can parse these pricing signals, to determine the ‘why’ behind future price increases, so we can better understand factors, including:

  • Seasonality
  • Day of Week
  • Local Events

Let us explore each of these factors in a bit more depth.

Determining Seasonality

How we extract seasonal patterns from market pricing data

When analyzing a market, our first goal is to accurately determine the ‘seasonality’ of a market. In most markets, this seasonality curve changes slowly from day to day, and has traditionally been pretty stable from year-to-year.

Let us examine a chart that shows the average prices in San Francisco by day of year. In this chart, the dots represent the average price by day of the year. The line shows the output of our custom-designed low-pass filter  that extracts the seasonality curve.

Via this method, it is clear that the high season in San Francisco is from July through October, while the rest of the year is relatively flat, in terms of seasonal demand.

Note: Pre-Covid, essentially all markets had a unique, but identifiable seasonality curve, which has been quite stable across multiple years. Post-Covid, it is too early to tell if and when traditional seasonal travel patterns, in the US and other markets, will return.

As of October 2024, we introduced a much more precise listing-specific, Local Seasonality model. Find our published research here.

Price to day of year and the impact of seasonality graph

Day of week

How weekday prices differ by market

With a seasonality curve in place, we next want to analyze pricing patterns to discern a regular, repeating pattern around ‘day of week’ pricing. This analysis is particularly important in urban markets that have meaningful business traveler demand, and for leisure markets where we often see bookings for Fridays and Saturdays increase.

To better understand this, let us examine a ‘weekend effect’ as shown in the following bar chart of ‘day of the week’ pricing for San Francisco and Austin. To better compare the two markets, we show the daily prices relative to the lowest price and how much more other days increase above that minimum.

As you can see, San Francisco’s isolated day of week pricing is mostly flat with a very modest weekend increase of 3%. However, Austin clearly shows regular high demand for weekends, with most units increasing prices more than 50% on an average weekend.

By knowing this pattern for each market, we can again more accurately interpret future pricing patterns, and accurately name these factors for our customers.

Day of the week comparisons between Austin and San Francisco

Local events

How we localize the impact of events

Lastly, our Predictive Demand Model leverages prices to detect local events, in the far future.

While similar to our other two demand ‘filters’, this model additionally considers the location of each event when understanding how particular price signals should be translated to the broader market.

Unsurprisingly, most events only impact pricing for units proximal to the event. However, in most markets there are multiple annual events (e.g. a huge conference, event, or holiday) that are so large they drive price changes across an entire market. Due to this, our model needs to be able to both (a) identify hyper-localized pricing signals and (b) translate those signals into an estimate of the scale and breadth of each event.

We achieve this by analyzing local pricing signals, removing the Seasonality and Day of Week impact, before extracting ‘short’ price increases. These results are achieved via a custom designed high-pass filter. The result of this filter is a highly readable chart that allows both our team (and you!) to examine any market for event-driven demand.

As an example, let us examine what our model determined to be the ‘event impact’ for two different areas in San Francisco, Union Square (near downtown) and Golden Gate Park (4 miles from downtown, a popular concert area). (Note that these are projections only from our Predictive Demand Model, as of January 2020. More on this soon!)

Price factor to day of the year in Union Square

In the first chart (above), we see event-driven demand in the Union Square neighborhood, which is very close to the Moscone Convention Center. Therefore, we see our Predictive Model reacting very dynamically over the year, and ultimately dwarfing the relatively small seasonality impact in this area.

However, in the second chart (below), we examine units near Golden Gate Park, 4 miles from downtown. In this chart, we can clearly see that the biggest events were projected to be the two music festivals — Outside Lands and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass. These events do not impact the downtown area. And, only Dreamforce, the largest of conferences, can be definitively tied to a specific price spike in the Golden Gate Park area.

Price factor on day of the year in Golden Gate Park

Importantly, our model is also able to leverage this signal to predict when significant demand is going to spill over into other neighborhoods, albeit at a smaller price multiplier.

Part 4: Reactive demand model

How we leverage booking signals to price your unit accurately for actual demand

As we all know, market conditions change daily, and sometimes dramatically.

In the accommodations space, as stay dates approach, we are able to observe more bookings, and gain a more concrete understanding of demand. (While much of the accommodations space still leverages historical data to inform all pricing, we leverage actual bookings.)

Similar to our Predictive Demand Model, our Reactive Demand Model attempts to determine both how much and why demand is shifting. On a daily basis, our model re-analyzes your market, leveraging our prior referenced Booking Curves and Gamma Warping to re-forecast these three main demand drivers — seasonality, day of the week, and local events.

For a very visual example of this, let us look at our reactive demand model for downtown San Francisco, as calculated on January 1, 2020 (purple line) and March 15th, 2020 (yellow line).

As you can see, as of January 1st (purple line), our reactive demand model was projecting large demand spikes for many events in San Francisco, including Dreamforce, a huge annual event in October, in San Francisco.

However, by March 15th, you can see that event demand for Q2 (April — June) has essentially completely evaporated. Therefore the prior forecast price increases have either completely disappeared or become much more muted.

Demand by stay date covering January 1, 2020 vs March 15, 2020.

Of interest, we can also see that demand for events in Q3 had not yet fallen off a cliff. Market uncertainty is clearly visible, as we can see the demand around Dreamforce has dropped precipitously. Of course, in reality, it only got worse from here. But, this is an interesting snapshot that shows our model capturing near term changes, but not blanket-applying those patterns to a total market selloff, yet.

This output is exactly what we would expect from our Reactive Model. The model’s recommendations are entirely driven by market behavior, not speculation or historical assumptions.

Part 5: Blending demand models

How our models are blended so each day is more accurately priced over time

In illustrating our Predictive and Reactive Demand Models, we were attempting to show that our pricing engine creates and utilizes two estimates of future demand, daily. The reason we have these two models is that we need to both (a) infer projected demand before it emerges, and (b) respond to actual demand, as stay dates approach and booking patterns emerge.

We leverage these two models for each day’s recommendation by dynamically blending the demand models together.

On the chart below, we show stay dates on the x-axis, from today (far left) to 365 days out (far right). On the y-axis, we show the weighting (from 0% to 100%) that our Reactive model has for any future stay date. The reason the curve slopes up (from right to left) is that as a stay date approaches, our Reactive Model starts to have a much bigger impact on that day’s price recommendation.

Additionally, the spikes you see in the line show where a large number of bookings cause our Reactive Model to be more heavily weighted sooner than normal. Said differently, when we see a big demand spike and have high certainty that this is a clear market signal, our model very quickly responds to that demand.

Blending by stay date across the year 2020

Part 6: Calendar controls & response

How Wheelhouse adjusts pricing around bookings & approaching vacancies

The manner in which hosts and operators control their booking calendars can significantly impact a unit’s likelihood to book, and therefore one’s pricing strategy and expected revenue.

There are two key aspects of calendar control that impact revenue:

  • Vacancy gaps i.e. a single, or multiple nights, trapped between two bookings
  • Temporality i.e. how many days remain open, a certain number of days before a stay date

We are going to explore both of these, to help illustrate how the decisions you make around the bookings you accept can impact your expected revenue.

Vacancy gaps

How limited availability can impact your likelihood to book

Vacancy gaps are short spans of nights for a unit where the nights before and after the stay date(s) are booked or blocked. For many short-term rentals, these short vacancy gaps have a much lower likelihood to book. This is illustrated in the following analysis of vacancy gaps in the San Francisco market.

In San Francisco, single night gaps have a probability of only 7.3% of being booked, compared to a normal day in the market, which has a booking probability of 41.1%. As this ‘vacancy gap’ gets larger (i.e. two or three nights) the booking probability for these days increases.

Booking probability by lead time covering all, single, double and triple gaps

However, the probability of booking is also correlated to which day(s) of the week are available. For example, in San Francisco a double night gap on a weekend (i.e. Friday and Saturday night) has a 5.4% higher chance of getting booked, as opposed to two weekdays.

Thus, our pricing engine uses a combination of the vacancy gap length and the day of week to determine an appropriate discount for any vacancy gap that emerges on your calendar.

On a daily basis, our model is reviewing each unit’s calendar, to try to maximize revenue while respecting minimum stay rules and the calendar blocks that customers control.

Last minute pricing

How we adjust prices to help you capture last minute bookings, at the right price

In the short-term rental market, there is a tendency of hosts and owners to apply last minute discounts as a stay date approaches. In many markets, we observe this discounting schedule to be much more aggressive than what we see for hotels.

For example, let us look at the graph of how operators discount prices over time, as a stay date approaches. As we can see here, about two weeks before the stay date, average booking prices start to drop until they have dropped by almost 30% for same-day bookings.

While this varies by market and unit, Wheelhouse incorporates discounting schedules into our price recommendations as a ‘temporality adjustment’, which dynamically reduces the price as the stay date approaches.

ANR change by lead time

We should note that many users choose not to discount their prices as stay dates approach. On Wheelhouse, much like with every other aspect of our model, you can either (a) choose an automated setting for your unit, or (b) fully customize your last-minute discounting strategy, in any way you please.

Part 7: Dynamic pacing model

How groups of units can be leveraged to perfect pricing over time

While the last-minute discounting strategy detailed above works well for individual STR units, we have learned that for multi-unit properties (hotels, or premium STR buildings), an effective pricing strategy requires a much different approach.

To handle increasingly professional portfolios in the STR space, the Wheelhouse Pricing Engine developed the concept of ‘unit types’. Unit types help properties with similar rooms (such as multiple studios, 1BR, 2BR, 2BR/2BA, etc.) to leverage a ‘portfolio’ approach to pricing. Similar to how hotel pricing works, this approach allows us to make pricing decisions based on the performance of a set of units.

In the graph below, we illustrate the risk-reward ratio changes as a set of rooms begins to book. In this scenario, let us analyze a boutique hotel that has 10 units in a particular unit type.

Before the first booking occurs, the risk of a low daily revenue figure is high. Consequently, increasing prices prior to a first booking also increases the risk of the ‘worst case scenario’ — $0 in daily revenue. Alternatively, if 9 of the 10 rooms for a stay date are already booked, the marginal risk of increasing the price for the last unit is much smaller. Therefore, as more of a property books up, the more aggressively we can potentially price the remaining available units

Revenue change by rooms sold as best case, expected and worst case

When we tested our pacing model on our portfolio through A/B tests, we observed an ability to drive revenue at a building level up by 0.9% to 1.5%. While seemingly small, impacts like this, in aggregate, are the foundation of our model’s success.

While one of our newer innovations, we are confident that Wheelhouse has developed the only dynamic pacing model in the STR category. We look forward to continuing to refine this, especially with our urban STR partners.

Conclusion

Thank you for reading more on the many unique components behind the Wheelhouse Pricing engine. In the above pages, we have detailed how our model can:

  • Understand each unique unit
  • Understand each local market or neighborhood
  • Maximize revenue outcomes for single units, or portfolios of units
  • Maximize revenue in urban, rural and vacation destinations
  • Maximize revenue in high density unit clusters, and highly spread out units
  • Adapt over time to the unique performance of each unit

With these insights in hand, we hope you feel well equipped to leverage or modify any aspect of Wheelhouse’s pricing strategy, to more perfectly drive your business’s needs and goals.

However, we recognize that despite all the effort we put into our pricing engine, the true success of Wheelhouse depends on you. No pricing engine is complete without a skilled operator (you!) modifying our recommendations to better capture your unique business goals.

Therefore, while we love improving our model, know that our team continues to invest just as much time and energy into designing a user-friendly interface, that gives you access to a wide degree of customizable settings and strategies. This effort ensures that you always have the final determination for how to price your unique portfolio.

blog image

And lastly, should you have any questions about Wheelhouse — either our product or our pricing engine — just know that our team, especially our best-in-class support team, are ready and eager to help!

Contributors

Andreas B.

Andreas Buschermöhle

Head of Product & Engineering

PhD Data Science & Engineering leader behind that most detailed and accurate pricing engine in the short-term rental industry.

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