FOR HOTELS

Your rates page and your booking engine haven't agreed since spring.

When seasonal rates flip, amenities change, or the local-area guide goes stale, fix it yourself in a chat — see the change before it goes live.

Sound familiar?

  • Peak season started six weeks ago and the rates page still shows winter pricing.
  • The "what's nearby" guide is recommending a restaurant that closed in October.
  • Guests keep asking the front desk about the pool. The pool reopened in March. The website still says it's under renovation.

Here's the simpler way.

Open a chat, type the update the way you'd brief the front-desk manager, and a preview shows the exact page guests will see. Nothing on the live site changes until you read it and approve. No CMS training, no tickets to a marketing agency.

You type

"Peak rates start May 1: standard $189, deluxe $239, suite $329. Add a note that the lobby renovation is finished."

Done in seconds

The rates table and the amenities blurb both update in the preview. You check the numbers, hit publish, and your website matches your booking engine again.

Flip seasonal rates the day they change

"Move to shoulder-season pricing — knock $20 off all room types starting October 15." The rates table updates, the homepage banner shifts, and your site stops quoting last quarter's prices.

Refresh amenities the week they actually change

"Pool's open again, gym got new equipment, breakfast is now 6:30 to 10." Three sentences, three pages updated, no back-and-forth with anyone.

Answer guest questions in their language, day or night

On the Professional plan, a small chat bubble on your site can answer common guest questions — check-in time, parking, pet policy — using the same content you've already kept current. Front desk handles fewer repeat calls.

The honest version

PRICING

Plans start at $59 a month. Most independent hotels use the $99 plan; multi-property groups use the $199 plan.

CANCEL

Cancel anytime from your dashboard. No annual contract.

OWNERSHIP

Your site stays yours. If you leave, you keep the files and the domain — no hostage situation.

See the loop before peak season starts.

Three short steps, two minutes of reading. Then decide whether it's worth $59 to never email a developer about a rate change again.