Airbnb did not become a billion-dollar company overnight. They started scrappy, testing early and often — imagining the entire experience end to end, not just building a landing page.
A decade ago, travelers relied almost exclusively on hotels when planning trips. Booking meant calling or visiting a hotel website and reserving a room. That model left a gap: hotels were often expensive, fully booked during events, and lacked local flavor.
Airbnb changed this. It created a community marketplace connecting travelers with local hosts offering unique accommodations. This unlocked millions of underutilized residential spaces worldwide — a new kind of lodging that saved travelers money and gave them a chance to experience local culture.
The stakes are high. Airbnb operates in over 100,000 cities across more than 220 countries, with over 5.6 million listings and a host community exceeding 4 million. Hosts earn income by renting out spaces, while guests seek affordable, authentic stays. Airbnb’s platform handles booking and payments, taking commissions from both sides.
Understanding the guest and host pain points is critical to designing product solutions that create value and drive growth.
Airbnb’s founding insight and MVP approach
The Airbnb story begins in 2007 in San Francisco, where co-founders Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia faced high rent and a city full of visitors attending conferences. Hotels were expensive and often fully booked. They realized they had spare space and could offer affordable lodging to travelers willing to stay with strangers.
They tested this idea with a simple MVP: a few air mattresses, free Wi-Fi, breakfast, and a basic website to advertise their space. This was not a full product — no interactive maps or online payments — but it was enough to validate demand and earn their first paying customers.
This scrappy approach — imagining the entire experience end to end and testing early — is a classic product management lesson. Airbnb’s MVP was not just a landing page; it was a minimal but complete experience of booking and staying.
Airbnb’s business model and value proposition
Airbnb enables property owners to list spaces for free, while travelers browse and book accommodations that fit their needs. The company earns revenue by charging a commission on each booking — typically 3% to 10% from hosts and around 3% transaction fees from guests.
The key value Airbnb offers travelers is often a lower cost than hotels plus a chance to experience the local culture through interactions with hosts. The main risk for guests is that the property might not match its listing. For hosts, the risk is property damage or misuse by guests.
Airbnb’s ranking algorithm helps guests find suitable properties efficiently. It considers factors like location, host experience, cleanliness, amenities, and overall guest ratings.
The growing importance of amenities and furniture
Consumer research shows that amenities are a top priority for travelers, often second only to accommodation itself. In markets like India, Brazil, and Mexico, amenities rank first in importance. Functionality and thoughtfulness in amenities significantly impact guest satisfaction.
For hosts, furnishing their Airbnb property with comfortable, durable, and cost-effective furniture is crucial. The right furniture improves guest experience, boosts rankings, and ultimately drives bookings.
Business travelers and long-stay guests increasingly demand furniture that supports work — like ergonomic chairs and laptop-friendly desks. The amenities section in listings has become a critical decision factor for guests.
Airbnb has responded by enabling guests to rate properties not only on overall experience but also on specific parameters such as location, cleanliness, and amenities, reflecting this growing emphasis.
The product challenge: Airbnb furniture
Given this trend, Airbnb is exploring offering furniture solutions to hosts. The question is whether to build an in-house furniture product line or to partner with existing furniture rental companies.
There are established players in this space. For example:
- Casona in the US rents designer furniture at a fraction of the purchase cost.
- Rental Centre in Australia provides affordable short-term furniture hire and white goods rentals tailored to budgets.
This presents a classic build-versus-buy decision with strategic implications.
Key guest and host pain points to prioritize
The actual job Airbnb furniture must solve is twofold:
- For guests: Ensure the rental is comfortable, functional, and supports their stay purpose (leisure, business, long-term).
- For hosts: Provide furniture that is cost-effective, durable, easy to maintain, and improves property desirability and ratings.
Comfort and utility come first. For example, guests expect clean, comfortable beds and towels — the absence of which causes irritation and negative reviews. Business travelers need furniture that supports productivity. Hosts want solutions that increase booking rates and reduce maintenance headaches.
Airbnb furniture must also adapt to diverse Indian contexts: urban apartments, tier-2/3 city homes, and varying guest profiles.
Designing furniture solutions for Airbnb hosts
The furniture offering should balance these priorities:
- Comfort and function: Ergonomic design, easy to clean, durable materials.
- Cost-effectiveness: Affordable rental or purchase options that fit host budgets.
- Flexibility: Modular furniture that suits different property types and guest needs.
- Aesthetic appeal: Attractive designs that enhance listing photos and guest perception.
- Ease of setup and maintenance: Simple delivery, installation, and replacement services.
Focusing on core pieces — beds, chairs, desks, storage — addresses the biggest pain points. Additional amenities can be added as upsells or optional packages.
Convincing hosts to procure furniture from Airbnb
Hosts are wary of upfront costs and logistical hassles. To overcome this, Airbnb’s strategy should include:
- Flexible rental plans with low monthly fees.
- Trial periods or satisfaction guarantees.
- Bundled packages tailored to property types and guest segments.
- Clear ROI communication: how furniture improves rankings and bookings.
- Seamless ordering and delivery integrated into the host dashboard.
- Support and maintenance services to reduce host effort.
Building trust through transparent pricing, quality assurance, and excellent service will drive adoption.
Build vs. buy: strategic considerations
Airbnb must weigh these factors:
| Factor | Build In-House | Partner with Vendors |
|---|---|---|
| Control over product | High — design and quality fully managed | Medium — dependent on partner capabilities |
| Speed to market | Slower — requires setting up supply chains | Faster — leverage existing infrastructure |
| Capital investment | High — manufacturing, inventory, logistics | Lower — partner handles inventory |
| Scalability | Potentially high with investment | Depends on partner network |
| Customer experience | End-to-end Airbnb-branded experience | Variable — integration challenges |
| Risk | Higher operational risk | Shared risk with partners |
Given Airbnb’s core competency in marketplace and platform management, partnering initially allows rapid experimentation with minimal capital. Building in-house can be considered once product-market fit and demand are validated.
Indian market conditions — such as fragmented furniture rental providers and price sensitivity — also influence this decision.
Measuring success for Airbnb furniture launch
Success metrics should include:
- Host adoption rate: Percentage of active hosts procuring furniture.
- Guest satisfaction: Ratings and reviews related to furniture and amenities.
- Booking conversion uplift: Increase in booking rates for furnished listings.
- Revenue impact: Incremental revenue from furniture rentals or sales.
- Operational metrics: Delivery times, return rates, maintenance tickets.
- Host retention: Repeat furniture rentals or upgrades.
Tracking these metrics over time will guide product iterations and inform the build-versus-buy strategy.
Test yourself: Airbnb furniture product design
Imagine you are a senior product manager at Airbnb tasked with conceptualizing and launching Airbnb furniture.
- What guest and host pain points would you prioritize and solve first? Why?
- How would you design furniture pieces to address those pain points?
- What strategy would convince hosts to procure furniture from Airbnb?
- Would you build this product line in-house or partner with vendors? What factors drive this decision?
- How would you measure the success of this launch?
Write your answers to the above questions, focusing on concrete, India-grounded considerations. Use the build-versus-buy table as a guide. Think about metrics that matter to hosts and guests in Indian cities like Bangalore, Pune, or Hyderabad.
Where to go next
- Understand product-market fit through user research: User Research Methods
- Develop product strategies for marketplace platforms: Marketplace Product Strategy
- Learn how to make build vs buy decisions: Build vs Buy Framework
- Explore product metrics and KPIs: Metrics and KPIs
PL alumni now work at Flipkart, Razorpay, Meesho, Swiggy, PhonePe, and dozens of other Indian startups.