When Alexander Limpert co-founded GuestReady a decade ago, the short-term rental industry was still finding its footing. Airbnb had proven that travelers wanted authentic, home-like experiences, but what happened after the booking was made remained largely uncharted territory. For property owners who weren't physically present or didn't have the time to manage their listings, there was a clear gap in the market.
Today, GuestReady operates thousands of units globally, and Alexander has also built RentalReady, a comprehensive AI-powered property management system (PMS) born from the operational realities of scaling a hospitality business.
In this conversation, Alexander shares the journey from initial concept to global operation, the decision to build proprietary technology, and how AI is reshaping the guest experience without losing the human touch that makes hospitality special.
Whether you're managing a handful of properties or scaling across borders, this is a masterclass in operational thinking, strategic technology investment, and staying focused on what truly matters: the guest and owner experience.
Alexander’s background in food delivery taught him a crucial lesson: platforms that only connect supply and demand often miss the operational complexity that determines success or failure.
"I was in food delivery before," he explains. "We initially just had a platform connecting restaurants with people that wanted to order food. Turns out restaurants are good at cooking the food, but not very good at delivering the food."
The parallel to short-term rentals was obvious. Taking bookings became easy, but everything that happened after the booking — the cleaning, maintenance, guest communication, check-in coordination — remained fragmented and challenging, especially for owners who weren't physically present.
GuestReady's evolution reflects this insight. The company started as a lightweight marketplace where Airbnb hosts could book cleaning and linen services, but Alexander quickly realized that property owners didn't want to manage multiple service providers. They wanted someone to handle everything end-to-end.
"Most owners actually prefer that somebody takes care of their property end to end of the whole booking process," he notes. "They don't want to have such a fracture in the process where they're dealing with the guest on one side and then with us on the other side."
This realization led to the second iteration: a comprehensive property management service.
The decision to build RentalReady, a proprietary PMS, wasn't part of the original plan. Like many tech-forward startups, GuestReady initially viewed its technology as a competitive advantage, something to keep in-house, not share with potential competitors.
But operational necessity drove innovation. As GuestReady scaled, the limitations of existing property management systems became impossible to ignore.
"What we found is that traditional PMSs probably don't have the operational insights that we had as a property manager," Alexander explains. "They're much more focused on maybe listing management, calendar management, and so on. But what we found as operating the business is that it's actually easy to get a booking. The hard part comes afterwards."
The challenges that emerged at scale included:
Traditional PMSs, often "dreamed up in a lab from software engineers that never managed a property themselves," simply didn't address these operational realities.
The turning point came when other property managers started asking for access to GuestReady's technology. Initially, they resisted. Why would you give your competitive advantage to others?
But the short-term rental industry proved fundamentally different from ride-hailing or food delivery. "There's like hundreds of property managers, hundreds of hospitality companies in each single market. It's very, very fragmented," Alexander observes. "In the end, I believe we're competing more against ourselves than against others in this space."
This realization unlocked a new opportunity: RentalReady could empower property managers globally while generating revenue to invest even more heavily in technology development.
Every stage of growth brings new challenges. What works for 10 properties breaks at 50. What works at 50 becomes impossible at 500. Alexander breaks down the evolution into distinct phases:
In the early days, the focus is foundational:
At this stage, founders can keep most property details in their heads. Documentation feels optional.
As the portfolio grows, memory fails. This is when structured information becomes essential.
"The more the portfolio grows, maybe the less it's easy to keep all the information about every single property top of mind, and it's an important moment to document everything," Alexander explains.
But spreadsheets won't cut it. Property information needs to live in the PMS where it can be leveraged across multiple systems:
GuestReady built this structured approach into RentalReady from the ground up. Every detail about a property lives in one place, accessible to both team members and AI agents.
With hundreds of properties and dozens of team members, the challenge shifts to coordination and accountability:
Alexander describes the breaking point: "We found ourselves with dozens of team members in lengthy Slack conversations about some, 'Hey, we have to update this in this listing,' and then it's like 20 people and a hundred messages in a Slack thread, and nobody knows actually has it been updated now or not."
The solution? A proper ticketing system integrated directly into the PMS, with locks on properties when changes are being made, complete audit logs, and clear ownership of every task.
GuestReady was one of the first property management companies to integrate with OpenAI, back in 2023. The journey from that initial integration to today's Maia AI reveals both the promise and the pitfalls of artificial intelligence in hospitality.
The first iteration was clunky: an "AI button" that could generate replies, but slowly and at high cost. Today, Maia AI resolves over 50% of guest messages on average without any human intervention. The best-performing client has got that number to 82%.
"The difference is also really in the data," Alexander notes. "The more data AI has, the more it can respond to."
This is where RentalReady's structured property information pays dividends. When a guest asks about the WiFi password or how to work the heating, Maia AI can simply pull the exact answer from the property's profile without requiring human confirmation.
One of Alexander’s most counterintuitive insights is that AI can actually be more empathetic than humans in certain situations.
"If you have dozens of check-ins or hundreds of check-ins on a Friday night and the team is already stretched and a guest asks you a question and you have dozens of other questions waiting, what I found is that as humans, we can be very brief and maybe not as empathetic."
AI, by contrast, is always patient, always courteous, and always follows best practices, even at 2 a.m. on a holiday weekend. And guests have noticed. Reviews specifically mention Maia by name, with some RentalReady customers affectionately calling her "good old Maia."
The next frontier goes beyond responding to messages and into taking action. RentalReady is building agentic workflows that can:
"There's a lot that can be done here," Alexander says. "Anything that helps us to be more efficient, to improve the margins, but also to actually improve the customer service... is just super good."
With all this talk of AI and automation, a critical question emerges: Are we losing the warmth and authenticity that makes hospitality special?
Alexander’s answer is nuanced. Yes, there are pitfalls: impersonal automated messages, chatbots that repeat themselves endlessly, forms that create friction instead of removing it. But he sees AI as the solution to these problems, not the cause.
The real issue isn't automation itself, but bad automation. Examples of this would include generic messages sent at arbitrary times, chatbots with no real intelligence, and systems that don't adapt to context.
Discussing an automated message that gets sent at 10 a.m., Alexander replies: "Maybe it's 10 a.m., but at 9:50 the guest wrote a message that is completely unrelated to that automated message that is about to go out at 10 a.m. That's definitely not something that we want to see."
The goal should be dynamic, context-aware communication that gives guests exactly the information they need, when they need it, in a tone that feels personal and helpful. AI, when done right, can deliver this at scale in ways that exhausted human teams simply can't.
One of the most challenging aspects of scaling globally is adapting to different regulatory environments. What works in London doesn't work in Paris. What's legal in Barcelona might be prohibited in New York.
"On one side, I find this industry is incredibly global, and on the other side, it's so local, and you really have to adjust to the local realities," Alexander observes.
For GuestReady, this means being "as standardized as possible to leverage global best practices, but then also as localized as needed to actually reflect that local reality."
The trend he sees is toward more regulation, particularly in urban markets. This is driving operators toward aparthotel-style inventory, managing entire small buildings rather than scattered individual units.
Another regulatory response is the rise of mid-term rentals (one month or longer). This segment requires different capabilities:
RentalReady has invested heavily in supporting this segment, recognizing that many property managers now operate across the full spectrum from weekend getaways to six-month stays, sometimes in the same property depending on the season.
Start with the problem, not the solution: GuestReady evolved from marketplace to full-service provider because that's what property owners actually needed, not because it was the original plan.
Operational insight drives technology advantage: Building your own tools makes sense when existing solutions don't reflect operational reality. RentalReady exists because traditional PMSs missed critical workflows.
Data structure unlocks AI potential: The more structured property information you have, the more AI can do. Spreadsheets won't cut it at scale.
AI can enhance humanity, not replace it: When implemented thoughtfully, AI delivers more consistent, empathetic service than stretched human teams, but only if it's context-aware and well-designed.
Flexibility is non-negotiable at scale: Whether it's regulations, property types, or operational setups, systems must adapt to local realities while maintaining global standards.
Collaboration over competition: In a fragmented industry, empowering others can create more value than hoarding competitive advantages.
Focus inward, not outward: Obsessing over competitors is a distraction. The path to success is relentless focus on guest and owner experience.
Looking back over 10 years, Alexander admits he couldn't have predicted how dramatically the industry, and GuestReady, would evolve. The competitive landscape has shifted. Former rivals have become partners. The technology that seemed cutting-edge in 2015 is now table stakes.
But one thing remains constant: the importance of the customer experience. Whether it's the property owner trusting you with their asset or the guest choosing where to spend their vacation, everything comes back to delivering value to real people with real needs.
As AI continues to advance and regulations continue to evolve, the property managers who will thrive are those who stay focused on operational excellence, invest in the right technology, and never lose sight of why hospitality matters in the first place.
💡 Want to learn more about how technology can support safety and operational efficiency in property management? Discover Minut’s privacy-first sensor.