Posted Pre-January 25, 2019
Learn how you can increase bookings & directly appeal to your ideal guest by positioning your brand as a way to achieve a desirable lifestyle through branding and social media.

Social media can be an excellent tool for marketing vacation rentals and showcasing your brand. A recent study has shown social media's real and increasing impact on accommodation websites. But nowadays, our newsfeeds are saturated with low-quality, sales-driven content, so it’s easy to get phased out.
The trick is offering content that doesn’t seem like another advert for your properties. Social Media allows you to adopt a long-term approach – to identify your key demographic and learn their social media habits – and then to create content that resonates with them. One way to do this is by establishing a lifestyle-oriented brand identity. Social Media allows you to adopt a long-term approach – to identify your essential demographic and learn their social media habits – and then to create content that resonates with them.
People use social media platforms to create and commodify aspirational lifestyle models. By identifying your core demographic and working out how your brand can fit into their lifestyle, you will create sustained customer engagement and shape your ideal customer base and market directly to them. A good example of a holiday rental lifestyle brand is Airbnb and its relatively new marketing campaign: “Airbnb aims to be a lifestyle brand, and the website’s new look is a place where people can share their travel experiences and show the community their idea of belonging with a custom Bélo” – Stefano.
By creating and sharing content that doesn’t seem sales-driven, you can earn your brand’s place on social media users' feeds, walls and timelines. Successful social media marketing campaigns share low-pressure content, such as vlogs, Top 10 lists, event guides, and reviews.
Essentially, you’re not just selling your holiday rental. You’re using social media to build up a profile of the lifestyle supported by your rentals. Frequently sharing interesting, low-pressure content across several social media platforms can associate your brand with your consumer base’s aspirational lifestyle – creating a long-lasting relationship. Aspirational vs Inspirational Marketing Inspirational and Aspirational Marketing Campaigns

Social media platforms can benefit both long and short-term marketing. However, by using social media to establish a lifestyle-based brand identity, you should start to see long-term gains that a short-term marketing campaign can’t match.
Ultimately, the difference boils down to two different types of social media marketing:
Inspiration (Short-term) – Inspirational marketing temporarily stimulates people to do something. This marketing results in one-off sales, usually in small amounts, and targets the customer’s impulsiveness.
Aspiration (Long-term) – Aspirational marketing creates a sustained and long-lasting urge in the customer to strive towards achieving or becoming something in particular.
Creating a Lifestyle Brand

Positioning your brand in the social media marketplace The first step in any aspirational marketing campaign is creating a lifestyle brand. You need to figure out how you want your brand to come across, what you want it to represent and how you want to market your services.
Step One: Identifying your USP Begin by identifying your USP. What sets your brand apart from the competition? This could be any number of things, such as:
Distinguished Customer Service
Extensive and Specialised Knowledge
Bespoke or Luxury Service
Affordable Prices and Attractive Deals
Step Two: Identifying Your Clientele The next step is to identify your clientele. Your brand needs to be effectively geared towards your customers, so a detailed profile of the people using your service is invaluable. Your social media campaign offers an opportunity better know your customers through sustained engagement and to shape and mould your customer base to attract the sort of client you want.
Step Three: Creating Your Brand You’ve found your USP, and you’ve identified your customer base – now you need to figure out how the two fit together. By doing so, you establish how your brand is uniquely positioned to cater to the needs of a particular customer base – and you’ve taken the first step to create your lifestyle brand. Now you need to create content that projects the brand image you’re cultivating and will connect with your target audience. Social Media and Lifestyle Brands Lifestyle marketing and social media Social media platforms combine various interests to form a coherent lifestyle identity – and you can directly appeal to your ideal consumer base by positioning your brand as an integral part of and means to achieve this desirable lifestyle.

Rather than single actions such as clicks or likes (inspirational marketing), aim to create sustained brand engagement by marketing your brand as a whole rather than your holiday lets. You can do this by gearing your social media presence towards your target market by creating content that emphasises your brand’s USP.
Are your holiday rentals perfect for families? Then why not write up a Top 10 list of local family attractions to share on social media? Is your brand geared towards outdoorsy types? Then try sharing a video of some local wildlife, or vlog a short walk or hike. This content doesn’t feel like an advert or listing and encourages user engagement.
Top Tip: Always offer an opinion If you’re writing a Top 10 list of restaurants in your town, highlight your favourite. People may agree with you or prefer another place you’ve left off your list. The important thing is that they’ll be more likely to let you know – which gives you a chance to establish a dialogue.
The aim of mounting an aspirational marketing campaign on several social media platforms is to create a long-lasting image of your brand and to use your content to implant this image in the minds of your potential customers as inseparably linked to the aspirational lifestyle that they’re striving towards.
Successful Aspirational Marketing Campaigns

Positioning your brand Take, for example, a TV advert for a high-end car. No one goes out and makes such a significant purchase solely based on the merit of the one advert – no matter how scenic the landscapes it drives through or how exceptionally well-groomed the person driving is. Instead, the idea is to establish the brand as an essential component of a high-end lifestyle. You’re not just marketing the car to the people with the money to buy it – you’re also marketing the brand towards those who don’t yet have money to purchase it but aspire towards such a lifestyle. Should this person eventually make enough money to purchase an expensive car, they would associate your particular brand with the lifestyle they’re striving towards – and identify the car as the missing piece of the puzzle. By using these principles in your social media marketing, you target customers currently planning a holiday and put your brand in the minds of social media users who will come to plan a holiday in the coming months or years. Social media marketing strategies
Luxury fashion brands are some of the highest-profile advocates of aspirational marketing campaigns. Studies note that the brands that most successfully navigated the transition to Web 2.0 had the strongest social media presence and the highest levels of user engagement.
Case Study Burberry

Chief among these is Burberry. Burberry was the first high-end fashion retailer to invest in social media marketing significantly, the first to broadcast live and in 3D its catwalk shows, and the first to place significant value in Web 2.0’s folksonomy – encouraging and commodifying user-generated content and incorporating this content into social media marketing campaigns.
As a result, Burberry enjoys comparatively higher levels of social media engagement than its competitors.
By creating and sharing interesting, low-pressure content, Burberry found a place on social media users’ walls and feeds. By mounting a sustained campaign that offered not only an aspirational goal (the extravagant lifestyle associated with the brand in all its promotional materials) but also a means of attaining it (by purchasing the brand's products, which have been inseparably linked with this lifestyle through the brand’s social media output), Burberry has been able to convert its social media presence into sales in a way that its competitors have yet to match.
These principles can easily be applied to your vacation rental social media marketing.
Customer Journey

Planning your dream holiday… The customer journey can be broken into three parts and begins even before they actively start researching vacation rentals. By sharing low-pressure content on social media, you can target users at a similarly early stage:
Dreaming – The customer thinks it’s time for a holiday. The search for inspiration begins here, and if you’ve been reaching your targeted social media users over the last few months, then your brand should be the first they think of.
Planning – This is where your content comes into play – If you’ve built your lifestyle brand an attractive enough identity, then the merits of booking with your company should be inseparably linked with your location in the minds of your consumer base.
Booking – Make sure the journey from your social media content to your booking site is an easy one – there’s no point mounting a successful social media marketing campaign if you can’t convert it into bookings
Which Platform to Use? There are seemingly endless platforms to choose from, all with their benefits and drawbacks, but the short answer is – more than one! Facebook
Facebook allows you to publish various content types in a single location – photos, links, videos, anecdotes, statuses etc.
You can link in from tweets and link out to other blogs and content – all good for SEO purposes.
Connect with past guests – This is perhaps Facebook’s biggest appeal. About ten years ago, my parents rented a holiday home in the Rocky Mountains from a man named Robbie. I still remember his name because he connected with my parents on Facebook, and they’ll frequently show me videos of wildlife at the rental, photos of snow at the rental, or stories of renovations at the rental as shared by Robbie – who they still speak of like an old friend. Needless to say, whenever they return, they stay at Robbie’s holiday rental, and when friends or family members are looking to for somewhere to stay in the area, Robbie’s rental is the first place they recommend. This is an example of social media marketing done right – positioning the rental as part of a broader lifestyle and creating sustained engagement with past customers.
Find potential guests and promote your brand.
Connect with other owners and related businesses – There’s strength in numbers. A little cross-promotion is a great way to increase traffic for both of you.
Finding potential travellers
Connecting with local businesses and media – Twitter is a quick and easy way to connect with other users in your area: an invaluable way to build up a profile of your location as a desirable destination.
Frequent, sustained engagement
Micro-blogging
Youtube
Showcase videos
Establish a brand for your location.
Post video guides of your locations/properties – these create a strong brand identity and help cultivate an air of familiarity.
Google+
Google+ is hugely influential for SEO purposes
Allows you to publish a range of content
Google Circles are a great way of networking with other professionals
Use Google+ listings to hit target keywords
Use ‘What’s On to build a picture of the local community
Next Steps You can use social media to manage your brand image and curate your customer base – and by earning your brand a place on social media users’ feeds and timelines, you can integrate your brand identity into aspirational lifestyle models. By mounting a long-term aspirational marketing campaign across several social media platforms, you should see sustained brand engagement from your customers – creating a new and long-lasting relationship.