Trust the temporary residents?

Latest collection of data for analysis and insights.
Post Reply
Bappy11
Posts: 351
Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 6:03 am

Trust the temporary residents?

Post by Bappy11 »

A private individual who has a chainsaw will not use it more than a few times a year. The rest of the time, the device pointlessly takes up a small part of someone's assets. A car is parked on average at least 90% of its time doing nothing, seizing, sometimes it costs parking money. Doing nothing and costing money, don't let the PVV find out. Then all cars should be removed from the country.

A second house is empty when the owner is in his first house, the first house is empty when he is in the second. The fact that this waste of capacity exists (unused saws, houses) has on the one hand to do with a choice of the owners (we do not like to lend), on the other hand there has to be a very good marketplace that brings demand to supply. Wherever the word marketplace is mentioned, the internet comes into the picture.

From couch to castle
An unused three-seater sofa, for example. That is a possible sleeping place for a traveling adventurer. Or a bedroom, an empty apartment. Why wouldn't I occasionally give that unused room or sofa to a passer-by? It quickly yields a few hundred euros per week. That is a bonus. Do I dare? Do I

Airbnb (airbed & breakfast) does this, worldwide. Bringing together the demand for sleeping places, from couch to castle, and the supply of it (backpackers, holiday people). All over the world. It started in india telegram data 2007 and now more than ten million nightly bookings have been rented. There are more than 200,000 addresses in more than 26,000 cities in 192 countries, it is a great success. The online network is used to send people on a trip offline. Social contact is an important motive, both for passers-by and for hosts or hostesses. No anonymous hotel room, but a warm couch with breakfast.
Post Reply