Home California Airbnb Says it Will Launch Neighbor Hotline, Guest Guarantee

Airbnb Says it Will Launch Neighbor Hotline, Guest Guarantee

by ECT

Airbnb Co-Founder, CEO and Head of Community Brian Chesky continued to tweet out steps they are taking to ensure safety and rebuild trust which includes launching a 24/7 neighbor hotline.

On Wednesday, Chesky issued email to employees while issuing a series of tweets which included:

  • I want to be clear — we are not infallible. We are a platform built on a foundation of trust. We need to continue innovating on trust to make it harder for the bad actors. The trust of our community is our top priority.
  • We are expanding manual screening of high-risk reservations flagged by our risk detection models first to North America and then globally next year. This will help stop unauthorized parties before they start.
  • We are launching a 24/7 neighbor hotline so anyone can call us anytime, anywhere in the world and reach a real person. This hotline will be led by our rapid response team.
  • We are introducing the Airbnb Guest Guarantee. Starting on 12/15/19, if a guest checks into a listing and it doesn’t meet our accuracy standards, we will rebook them into a listing that is just as nice — and if we can’t, they will get 100% of their money back.
  • By 12/15/20, every home and every host on Airbnb will have been reviewed, with the objective to verify 100% of listings. Trust on the Internet begins with verifying the accuracy of the information on Internet platforms — this is an important step for our industry.
  • Airbnb is in the business of trust. We are making the most significant steps in designing trust on our platform since our original design in 2008.

 

Earlier today, Airbnb Co-Founder, CEO and Head of Community, Brian Chesky, shared the following email with global employees.

Subject: In the business of trust

Hey team, 

Airbnb is a business fueled by trust. When we started Airbnb in 2008, people said it would never work. “Strangers will never trust one another,” they said. But we believed that people are fundamentally good, and that we could design a system for strangers to trust one another. Our real innovation is not allowing people to book a home; it’s designing a framework to allow millions of people to trust one another. Trust is the real energy source that drives Airbnb and has enabled us to scale our platform to 191 countries and to more than 600 million members. 

But recently, events by bad actors on our platform took advantage of that trust, including at a home in Orinda, California. We intend to do everything possible to learn from these incidents when they occur. 

People need to feel like they can trust our community, and that they can trust Airbnb when something does go wrong. Today, we are making the most significant steps in designing trust on our platform since our original design in 2008. Our update entails four solutions. 

100% Verified: 

Starting now, verification of all seven million listings on Airbnb will commence.  Homes will be verified for accuracy of the listing (including accuracy of photos, addresses, and listing details) and quality standards (including cleanliness, safety, and basic home amenities) and those that meet our high expectations will be clearly labeled. By December 15, 2020,  every home and every host on Airbnb will be reviewed with the objective of 100% verification. We believe that trust on the Internet begins with verifying the accuracy of the information on Internet platforms, and we believe that this is an important step for our industry.

Guest Guarantee: 

Beginning on December 15, 2019, if upon checking into a listing it does not meet our accuracy standards, Airbnb will rebook the guest a new listing of equal or greater value, or they will get 100% of their money back. Most hosts do a great job, but guests need to feel like Airbnb has their back, and we believe this commitment is a necessary step in giving guests peace of mind. 

Airbnb Neighbor Hotline: 

We are launching a new 24/7 Neighbor Hotline so that anyone can call us anytime, anywhere in the world and reach a real person at Airbnb. We will staff this hotline with a rapid response team so that neighbors can reach us directly with their concerns, and our phone number will be placed prominently on our homepage, in our app, and easily searchable on Google. We are developing a training program and protocols for our rapid response team, and we have asked Charles Ramsey, former Chief of both the Philadelphia and Washington D.C. Police Departments, and Ronald Davis, the former Chief of East Palo Alto Police Department and President Obama’s Executive Director of Community Oriented Policing Services, to advise us. This will launch in the United States by December 31, 2019, and will roll out globally over the course of 2020. 

High Risk Human Review: 

To address unauthorized house parties, beginning on December 15, and informed by previous pilots, we are expanding manual screening of high-risk reservations flagged by our risk detection models to all of North America, with global rollout through 2020. This will help identify suspicious reservations and stop unauthorized parties before they start. For example, we look at the duration of the stay and listing attributes such as the size of the listing, amongst hundreds of other factors. Risk scoring helps us focus our attention and find the needle in the haystack.

With these additional protections, we will work together with our community of guests and hosts to reinforce the trust platform that we have built with our community. The world moves at the speed of trust, and the more trust that exists, the more access we can all have. Airbnb is founded on trust, and our vision depends on us continuing to increase this in our community. 

More than eleven years after Joe, Nate, and I started Airbnb, I have been asked what has surprised me most about the world. My answer is two things: that people are, in fact, fundamentally good, and that we are 99% the same. We still believe this, and with these changes, we hope to continue to demonstrate this to the world. 

Brian  

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4 comments

Robert C Nov 7, 2019 - 3:23 pm

Mr. Chesky can tweet all he wants. These Airbnb “initiatives” are more about PR than reality – he wants the spin to show that they APPEAR to be taking effective actions. Their whole business model is defective and the communities/neighbors where these properties are located pay the price.

Local communities need to severely restrict the practice of short term rentals in residential areas and aggressively go after the stupid property owners when problems occur.

Lauren Nov 7, 2019 - 3:27 pm

If I wanted to live next door to a HOTEL, I’d buy a house right by it. I don’t want ANY short term people in MY neighborhood! This is dangerous for our communities and neighborhoods. The cities should take this whole thing seriously and stop businesses like AirBNB from operating their their cities. STOP THEM COLD!

Bearman Nov 8, 2019 - 10:53 pm

Get rid of AirBNB altogether! They are just causing problems in neighborhoods.

RJW Nov 9, 2019 - 3:28 pm

AirBNB’s Brian Chesky needs to get a nose job! His nose is growing and growing.

Comments are closed.