Pay for Vacation by Going on Vacation – What a Concept

Roomorama has short term rentals in Paris right now.

There’s an old saying stating that if it sounds to good to be true, it probably is. However, there is an exception that every traveler should know about. A New York based company has a way for travelers to fund their vacations and trips buy renting out their apartments when they head out of town.

The concept is simple, you do the traveling and Roomorama can actually work out a short-term rental for your apartment when you are gone. Or if you are traveling to one their listed cities, you will be able to find a short-term rental of your own.

This is a safe and sensible service you can use time and time again. There’s nothing wrong with letting your home earn money for when you’re on the road. This is a stress fee alternative to the confines of the dreaded hotel room that seem get a little smaller every time you check in.

Payments are handled online, so you won’t get stuck carrying large amounts of cash. Hosts will be at ease knowing that their guest has paid up front. Guests will know that their money is secure until they check-in and deliver the payment code. Roomorama makes the entire transaction as easy as a hotel check-in without getting stuck in a long line at the front desk.

Roomorama is known for their superior customer service and accessibility to make sure each process is handled smoothly and efficiently.

The area of influence for this company continues to grow reaching out to seven cities in United States, two in Canada and four in Europe. Here’s a listing of their ever-expanding base of cities or click here and check it out for yourself.

North America

  1. Boston
  2. Chicago
  3. L.A.
  4. Miami
  5. New York
  6. San Fran
  7. Washington DC
  8. Toronto
  9. Vancouver

Europe

  1. Barcelona
  2. London
  3. Paris
  4. Rome

Ultra Light Startups to Spotlight PR, Branding, and Buzz

January 2010 Entrepreneur's Forum

January 2010 Entrepreneur's Forum

On January 7, 2010, Ultra Light Startups is hosting an expert panel on PR, Branding, and Buzz. After six months of covering and blogging about the various events put on by Ultra Light Startups, I’m now pleased to actively participate and moderate the first Entrepreneur’s Forum of the upcoming new year.

Our panel of experts will include:
Todd Barrish, Managing Director, LaunchSquad
Rachel Honig, Managing Direct, G.S. Schwartz & Co.
Karl Schmieder, Founder, MessagingLab
Lloyd Trufelman, Founder of Trylon SMR, publisher of NYConvergence

PR, Branding, and Buzz are terms that have various and ever changing meanings as the “new media” technology evolves around each one of us. Social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, WordPress and LinkedIn seem to launch a new application or sharing tool almost every week.

My company, Bizbriefs, has used many of these tools in conjunction with one another to help various businesses boost their SEO rankings and divert more attention to their websites.

What I’ve found is that it’s not how you use one of these social media tools by themselves, but how you can link them together and start a viral campaign with a targeted audience.

Every business owner seems to have a favorite social media site, just one that they feel most comfortable using. However, not using other site options to support their efforts, means losing out on potential prospects and future customers.

In conducting several social media campaigns during the past three years, I’ve learned that there are certain steps you should take before just diving in.

  1. You have to identify the true audience your customers are trying to reach first.
  2. Once that’s done, you must craft the message or the image that each company wants to portray to the online community.

Too many times, companies want you to just get started, without knowing the message they want to deliver or what audience they hope to reach.

To learn more about branding, buzz and PR strategies, join us at for the first Entrepreneur’s Forum in 2010 sponsored by Ultra Light Startups.

Lodging Industry’s 6 Year Growth Streak in Jeopardy

The numbers were encouraging for the Lodging Industry in 2008, but 2009 promises to be a much different story. Total industry revenue rose for the sixth straight year in 2008, according to The 2009 Lodging Industry Profile recently released by the American Hotel & Lodging Association (AH&LA). Lodging statistics for 2009 won’t be available until mid-2010.

Total industry revenue rose in 2008 to $140.6 billion, up from $139.4 billion in 2007. More than 58-million international travelers came to the United States in 2008 smashing the 2007 mark by 2-million. Overseas travel alone jumped 6% totaling more than 25 million visitors.

“The positive numbers illustrate that interest from both U.S. and international travelers translated into real dollars supporting a strong tourism product in 2008,” says AH&LA CEO Joseph A. McInerney.

However, the sunny outlook appears to dim quickly in 2009 with an expected 8% decline in the number of foreign visitors due to an unstable global economy and fluctuating exchange rates.

Another lodging option (instead of hotels) is also emerging in the form of short term furnished apartments. An organization called Roomorama is renting out apartments in several major metropolitan areas including several cities in Europe. This gives travelers the option of getting away from the strips and finding a little piece of home even when they are on the road.

Moderate growth is expected to return to the lodging industry in 2010 and 2011, but nothing close to the record numbers reached in 2008.

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See the Rock Center Tree Light Up the Night

Planning a trip to New York City to see the lighting of the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree? The tree lighting ceremony is traditionally held on the first Wednesday after Thanksgiving. This year’s 2009 ceremony is scheduled for Wednesday, December 2, 2009.

There is so much to see in the city during the month of December even if you can’t make the actual lighting ceremony the tree is up throughout the month of December, the Rockefeller Ice Rink is always a hit and shop owners across the city have pulled out all the stops for their storefront displays.

Hotel rooms are hard to come by, but there is another and more comfortable option sure to be a hit whether you are traveling with the family or are on your own. Roomorama is the new travel option where instead of a hotel – you can book short-term rentals in furnished apartments.

FUN ROCKEFELLER TREE FACTS:

Type of Tree: Norway Spruce

Height: At least 65 feet tall

Width: At least 35 wide

More than 5 miles of lights will adorn the tree

Trees don’t normally grow that big in the forest, they usually come from someone’s yard.

The city doesn’t pay for the tree – the tree comes from a proud donor each year

The tree gets recycled by the Boy Scouts producing 6,000 pounds of mulch


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Ultra Light Startups Takes on the Bootstrapping vs. Venture Funding Debate

Girlsrock.com presentation at Ultra Light Startups

Ultra Light Startups enjoyed its greatest turnout ever on Thursday night for the Bootstrapping vs. Venture Funding Forum at Sun Microsystems in New York City. The event kicked of with multiple entrepreneurs pitching their business models and concepts to a packed house.

Each company founder had 60 seconds to present to the audience with businesses ranging anywhere from dating sites to female gaming sites.

One company called siftsort.com helps people gather all of their critical personal information into one place electronically. The company rep says the idea came from seeing the desperate people who had no documents to prove who they were in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

Next up was the Bootstrapping and Venture Funding debate.

The moderator:
Owen Davis, the Managing Director at NYC Seed.

The panelists:
Art Chang – CEO of Tipping Point Partners
Brian Cohen – President of iFluence PR and Board Member at New York Angels
Mark Davis – IT Venture Capitalist at DFJ Gotham Ventures
Dennis Mortensen - Director of Data Insights at Yahoo!

There were definitely opposing ideologies on the panel that made for a spirited debate at times this evening.

Mark Davis with DJF Gotham Ventures began the discussion by saying, “If you need a lot of money to start a small business, you probably shouldn’t do it.”

Davis has written multiple articles about when people should and should not start a business.

As to the bootstrapping versus venture funding question, Brian Cohen pointed out that many companies bootstrap at first and then seek venture funding once they really get the company rolling and gaining strength.

Mark Davis cautioned that it’s very important for new company owners to be careful and save more money than you think you need. “It’s important to plan ahead and save a little bit of capital. Then raise the money you need when you need it.”

Art Chang says most new company owners have to go through a learning process when starting a company and that the majority of angel investors want nothing more than to see them and their new ventures succeed.

Dennis Mortensen from Yahoo made it clear that he believes in Bootstrapping over Venture Funding. He says that venture funding is not always the smartest the thing to do with your new business.

One person in the audience asked Art Chang about the risk of angel investors stealing company ideas during presentations. Chang indicated that he thought the risk was very low saying, “Ideas are a dime a dozen – it’s all about execution and follow through of the person putting the company together.”

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