Fabrice Grinda

  • Playing with
    Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • AI
    • Pitch me your startup!
    • Fabrice AI
  • PL
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Menu

  • PL
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Przejdź do treści
Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

Miesiąc: wrzesień 2015

The problem with rental marketplaces

The problem with rental marketplaces

By Guimar Vaca Sittic

Most of the successful peer-to-peer marketplaces are purchase-oriented. The graph below categorizes some of the most successful peer-to-peer marketplaces and divides them by transaction type: rental versus purchase.

Sans titre

There are two fundamental problems with rental marketplaces:

  1. The average order value for most of them is too low
  2. Frequency from demand-side renters is too low

Incentivizing supply in any marketplace is really important to get liquidity. In most of the examples in the purchase category, the supplier of the products or services can make a living out of his or her activities in the marketplace.

Consequently, suppliers care about the existence of the marketplace and become dependent on it. The only companies where people are not making a living on them are Beepi or Opendoor, but in those cases, sellers are selling goods that represent a high percentage of their net worth: cars and houses.

The ratio between supply and demand for rental marketplaces is typically one-to-many. The owner of a house can rent it to multiple consumers. The relationship between demand and supply is also not monogamous. Renting is cheaper than buying, and consumers have the ability to use a good even if their own frequency of usage is very low.

However, the very fact that renting is cheaper than buying generates a problem for supply-side renters. There are very few categories where the average order value for renting something is high enough to warrant renting it out.

Airbnb and HomeAway work because people actually make a living using them. Renting your home for $100 per night is more than the annual income of a lot of people. If you rented it every night, it would put you in the top 0.75 percent of income earners worldwide. When suppliers can make a living using your platform, it makes a huge difference in their engagement, and increases fill rates.

Suppliers in a rental marketplace typically do double the work as suppliers in purchase-based models. Suppliers in rental marketplaces need to coordinate delivery and logistics both ways, which typically leads to more friction. The combination of more work and low average order values are not great incentives for suppliers.

Rental marketplaces are typically demand-pick, which means they have a big variance in fill rates (the number of requests from users that are actually fulfilled by the marketplace). People on Airbnb who do the best take great pictures, write nice descriptions, put the right price, keep their calendars up to date and respond quickly. All of these things are so important that there are even services like Pillow that help people do this. It’s already common for people to spend a lot more time creating their online profile on Airbnb. Airbnb renters know that even though demand is very strong, there will always be unmet capacity. The occupancy rate in the hotel industry is typically 65-70 percent of rooms every day. Assuming Airbnb has a similar utilization rate, suppliers know they need to “fight” against other renters and appear in the top results to be able to rent out their place.

People who really care reply within a few minutes and try to be nice to potential guests. This behavior increases the fill rate of a marketplace and, thus, the liquidity. On other rental marketplaces, where there are lower average order values, suppliers are less engaged and the outcomes are worse overall.

Going horizontal is also not a great choice for rental marketplace with low average order values. We’ve seen many try to do that before, like Zilok. They always struggle to build liquidity. Horizontal rental marketplaces have too many specific SKUs, and it is also very unlikely to make the supply work so much to upload all their available inventory before providing value first. The sooner any marketplace proves to their suppliers that they can make a living out of it, the sooner it will hit an inflection point.

The second big problem rental-based marketplaces have is low-frequency of usage from demand-side renters. Somebody renting a DSLR camera for a wedding doesn’t shoot a wedding every month. This doesn’t affect the supply-side renters, because the relationship between supply and demand is one-to-many.

Such behavior, however, creates a big problem for the marketplace itself. If the marketplace has low average order values, it will only net small dollar amounts for each demand-side renter.

A growth strategy in such cases is not sustainable because the marketplace needs to acquire new demand-side renters via paid channels, and the economics may prove challenging if there is no recurrence on the demand side.

Rental marketplaces are probably best suited for goods for which the suppliers don’t care at all and for which there’s little to no friction. A good example is a new startup called Yeloha where people rent their roofs for solar panel installation. Such an approach makes sense, because the cost for the supplier is zero, and it doesn’t need interactions with the renter. Another example is Breather where people rent a room for a few hours. Breather is a verticalized model that tries to avoid any human interactions. If you rent have a place and want to rent it via Breather, you never need to interact with customers. They install a smart lock so the experience is as smooth as possible. In this case, again, suppliers can make a living out of renting their place.

To be successful, rental marketplaces need to allow suppliers to make a living out of them, but also make sure that the incentives for suppliers are the right ones on a per-transaction basis. Going after categories with higher order values and higher frequency is optimal, but there are very few categories that fill those requirements.

Autor FabriceData publikacji 28 września, 20158 września, 2023Kategorie Przemyślenia biznesowe, Rynki zbytu7 komentarzy do The problem with rental marketplaces

Fun Interview on The Twenty Minute VC

Fun Interview on The Twenty Minute VC

image1-31-470x470

I had the pleasure of being interviewed by Harry Stebbings of The Twenty Minute VC.

You can find the interviews on iTunes at http://bitly/thetwentyminutevc and on the Web at: http://www.thetwentyminutevc.com/fabricegrinda/.

I also recreated it below for your reading pleasure.

20 VC 072: SUPER ANGEL, FABRICE GRINDA: THE FUTURE OF STARTUP INVESTING

Fabrice Grinda is among the world’s leading Internet entrepreneurs and investors with over $300 million in exits and 200 angel investments including the likes of Alibaba, LendingClub and BrightRoll. Fabrice is currently investing in startups and building companies through FJ Labs, which he cofounded with business partner Jose Marin. Fabrice is also co-founder and executive chairman of Beepi, a next generation used car marketplace which recently raised $60 million in series B funding.

Prior to FJ Labs and Beepi, Fabrice was co-founder and co-CEO of OLX, one of the largest websites in the world with over 200 million unique visitors per month.


Click To Play

In Today’s Episode You Will Learn:

  1. How did Fabrice make his entry into the world of investing?
  2. How important is it for investors to have entrepreneurial experience?
  3. What are the most common problems Fabrice’s portfolio companies face?
  4. What is Fabrice’s selection criteria for startups when investing and what determines the valuation of a startup?
  5. How does Fabrice respond to the allegation that he is a clone collector?
  6. With Fabrice’s $1m syndicate, does he believe syndicates have the potential to replace VC?

Items Mentioned In Today’s Show:

Fabrice’s Fave Book: What If by Randall Munroe, Think Like A Freak by Stephen Dubner

Fabrice’s Fave Newsletter: TechCrunch

Fabrice’s Most Recent Investment: Flexport

As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Fabrice on Twitter here!

If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow Harry on Instagram here!

Autor FabriceData publikacji 21 września, 201524 sierpnia, 2023Kategorie PrzedsiębiorczośćDodaj komentarz do Fun Interview on The Twenty Minute VC

Search

Recent Posts

  • Sens życia
  • Aktualizacja FJ Labs Q2 2025
  • Rozmowa z Aurenem Hoffmanem na temat świata DaaS: zdywersyfikowane portfele, sprzedaż wtórna i przyjęcia obiadowe
  • Odcinek 50: Trendy na rynku venture
  • Dekodowanie przyszłości: AI, rynek venture i rynki zbytu

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • lipiec 2025
    • czerwiec 2025
    • maj 2025
    • kwiecień 2025
    • marzec 2025
    • luty 2025
    • styczeń 2025
    • grudzień 2024
    • listopad 2024
    • październik 2024
    • wrzesień 2024
    • sierpień 2024
    • lipiec 2024
    • czerwiec 2024
    • maj 2024
    • kwiecień 2024
    • marzec 2024
    • luty 2024
    • styczeń 2024
    • grudzień 2023
    • listopad 2023
    • październik 2023
    • wrzesień 2023
    • sierpień 2023
    • czerwiec 2023
    • maj 2023
    • kwiecień 2023
    • marzec 2023
    • luty 2023
    • styczeń 2023
    • grudzień 2022
    • listopad 2022
    • październik 2022
    • wrzesień 2022
    • sierpień 2022
    • czerwiec 2022
    • maj 2022
    • kwiecień 2022
    • marzec 2022
    • luty 2022
    • styczeń 2022
    • listopad 2021
    • październik 2021
    • wrzesień 2021
    • sierpień 2021
    • lipiec 2021
    • czerwiec 2021
    • kwiecień 2021
    • marzec 2021
    • luty 2021
    • styczeń 2021
    • grudzień 2020
    • listopad 2020
    • październik 2020
    • wrzesień 2020
    • sierpień 2020
    • lipiec 2020
    • czerwiec 2020
    • maj 2020
    • kwiecień 2020
    • marzec 2020
    • luty 2020
    • styczeń 2020
    • listopad 2019
    • październik 2019
    • wrzesień 2019
    • sierpień 2019
    • lipiec 2019
    • czerwiec 2019
    • kwiecień 2019
    • marzec 2019
    • luty 2019
    • styczeń 2019
    • grudzień 2018
    • listopad 2018
    • październik 2018
    • sierpień 2018
    • czerwiec 2018
    • maj 2018
    • marzec 2018
    • luty 2018
    • styczeń 2018
    • grudzień 2017
    • listopad 2017
    • październik 2017
    • wrzesień 2017
    • sierpień 2017
    • lipiec 2017
    • czerwiec 2017
    • maj 2017
    • kwiecień 2017
    • marzec 2017
    • luty 2017
    • styczeń 2017
    • grudzień 2016
    • listopad 2016
    • październik 2016
    • wrzesień 2016
    • sierpień 2016
    • lipiec 2016
    • czerwiec 2016
    • maj 2016
    • kwiecień 2016
    • marzec 2016
    • luty 2016
    • styczeń 2016
    • grudzień 2015
    • listopad 2015
    • wrzesień 2015
    • sierpień 2015
    • lipiec 2015
    • czerwiec 2015
    • maj 2015
    • kwiecień 2015
    • marzec 2015
    • luty 2015
    • styczeń 2015
    • grudzień 2014
    • listopad 2014
    • październik 2014
    • wrzesień 2014
    • sierpień 2014
    • lipiec 2014
    • czerwiec 2014
    • maj 2014
    • kwiecień 2014
    • luty 2014
    • styczeń 2014
    • grudzień 2013
    • listopad 2013
    • październik 2013
    • wrzesień 2013
    • sierpień 2013
    • lipiec 2013
    • czerwiec 2013
    • maj 2013
    • kwiecień 2013
    • marzec 2013
    • luty 2013
    • styczeń 2013
    • grudzień 2012
    • listopad 2012
    • październik 2012
    • wrzesień 2012
    • sierpień 2012
    • lipiec 2012
    • czerwiec 2012
    • maj 2012
    • kwiecień 2012
    • marzec 2012
    • luty 2012
    • styczeń 2012
    • grudzień 2011
    • listopad 2011
    • październik 2011
    • wrzesień 2011
    • sierpień 2011
    • lipiec 2011
    • czerwiec 2011
    • maj 2011
    • kwiecień 2011
    • marzec 2011
    • luty 2011
    • styczeń 2011
    • grudzień 2010
    • listopad 2010
    • październik 2010
    • wrzesień 2010
    • sierpień 2010
    • lipiec 2010
    • czerwiec 2010
    • maj 2010
    • kwiecień 2010
    • marzec 2010
    • luty 2010
    • styczeń 2010
    • grudzień 2009
    • listopad 2009
    • październik 2009
    • wrzesień 2009
    • sierpień 2009
    • lipiec 2009
    • czerwiec 2009
    • maj 2009
    • kwiecień 2009
    • marzec 2009
    • luty 2009
    • styczeń 2009
    • grudzień 2008
    • listopad 2008
    • październik 2008
    • wrzesień 2008
    • sierpień 2008
    • lipiec 2008
    • czerwiec 2008
    • maj 2008
    • kwiecień 2008
    • marzec 2008
    • luty 2008
    • styczeń 2008
    • grudzień 2007
    • listopad 2007
    • październik 2007
    • wrzesień 2007
    • sierpień 2007
    • lipiec 2007
    • czerwiec 2007
    • maj 2007
    • kwiecień 2007
    • marzec 2007
    • luty 2007
    • styczeń 2007
    • grudzień 2006
    • listopad 2006
    • październik 2006
    • wrzesień 2006
    • sierpień 2006
    • lipiec 2006
    • czerwiec 2006
    • maj 2006
    • kwiecień 2006
    • marzec 2006
    • luty 2006
    • styczeń 2006
    • grudzień 2005
    • listopad 2005

    Categories

    • FJ Labs
    • Filmy i programy telewizyjne
    • Wywiady i rozmowy przy kominku
    • Osobiste przemyślenia
    • Książki
    • Przemyślenia biznesowe
    • Gry wideo
    • Crypto/Web3
    • Gospodarka
    • Rynki zbytu
    • Gadżety techniczne
    • Podróże
    • Polecane posty
    • Nowy Jork
    • Przegląd roku
    • Zabawy
    • Przedsiębiorczość
    • Szczęście
    • Przemówienia
    • OLX
    • Zabawa z jednorożcami
    • Przegląd roku
    • Optymalizacja życia
    • FJ Labs
    • Podejmowanie decyzji
    • Gospodarka
    • Asset Light Living
    • Przemyślenia
    • Optymizm i szczęście
    • Psy

    Meta

    • Zaloguj się
    • Kanał wpisów
    • Kanał komentarzy
    • WordPress.org
    Pitch me your startup!
    • Home
    • Playing with Unicorns
    • Featured
    • Categories
    • Portfolio
    • About Me
    • Newsletter
    • Privacy Policy
    × Image Description

    Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

    Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

    Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

    >
    This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.