In property management, the old “no news is good news” philosophy is dangerous. Waiting until checkout to ask how a stay went is a gamble; by then, small annoyances have likely festered into permanent grudges.
At Casiola, we flip the script. We don’t wait for the review to find out something was wrong.
Instead, we trigger an automated “Day 1 Pulse Check” 12 to 18 hours after arrival. We ask one specific question: “Is anything in the home broken, tricky to operate, or missing?”
This isn’t just a generic “Welcome!” text. It is a strategic tripwire designed to catch friction points—like a confusing TV remote or a slow drain—before they ruin the guest’s mood.
Why this works ( Data) (scroll to page 6 for the data) Communication is the single biggest lever for reviews. Research shows that while 69% of guests say communication determines their rating, 66% report receiving almost zero proactive outreach from their host. That is a massive gap between what guests want and what they get.
By engaging on the first morning, we fill that gap, turning a potential 4-star “okay” stay into a 5-star “they really cared” experience.
The Insight
Most owners obsess over cleaning, assuming it’s the #1 review killer. But 2024 data from Breezeway proves otherwise: Maintenance issues are actually the top driver of negative reviews.
A spotless floor doesn’t matter if the toaster is broken or the Wi-Fi drags.
This is why the first 24 hours are critical. If we catch that faulty appliance or leaking faucet on Day 1, we fix it while the guest is out enjoying their vacation. If we wait, it becomes the thing they simmer about for their entire trip.







