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Case studies

A boutique hotel reclaims its margins

A typical six-month arc for a 24-room boutique hotel that doubles its Instagram following without a single pro shoot. Here is what shifts.

ReadyToPost3 min read
A boutique hotel reclaims its margins

Most independent hotels and restaurants do not have an Instagram problem. They have a rhythm problem. The case below traces a typical six-month arc for a 24-room boutique property after this kind of shift. The change is not creative. It is structural.

Before: communication in fits and starts

The pattern is familiar to anyone running a small place. You post when you have time. Time tends to arrive in January, when occupancy drops and someone in the office decides it is time to catch up. Five posts in a week, then nothing until April. The photos are taken on a phone, between two services, in whatever light the kitchen pass happens to throw that day. Captions are written in three minutes. Filters are inconsistent because nobody has the bandwidth to decide on a visual line.

Before the shift, a property of this size has typically been on Instagram for three years. The account holds around 800 followers. Roughly 70 percent are locals, family, friends of staff. The grid has no visual through-line. Direct bookings via the website have not moved in 24 months. The OTAs take roughly 78 percent of total volume, and the commission has become a fixed cost of doing business.

The team is not lazy. They do what most independents do: produce content as a residual activity, fitted into the gaps of an operating week that has no gaps.

The shift: using what already exists

The turning point is not a pro shoot. It is not an agency brief, a moodboard, or a content calendar drawn up on a Sunday afternoon. The raw material already exists and is being thrown away every day. The dressed table at 11.45 before service. The plate leaving the pass under that one strip of north light. The room turned over at 2pm, sheets crisp, curtain half drawn. The courtyard in the soft hour before dinner.

What changes is the treatment. A phone photo now goes through a process that crops it to the right ratio for each platform, applies a visual style that was decided once and is now applied automatically, generates the variants for Instagram, Facebook and Pinterest in one pass, and proposes a caption in the voice of the house. Three minutes of work, four published assets.

The pro shoot every six months becomes unnecessary. The bottleneck that used to be phrased as we need proper photos quietly disappears. Content production starts running at the same cadence as the business itself, which is the only cadence that is actually sustainable.

Six months later, the numbers

Followers move from 800 to 1,940. The geographic mix flips: locals drop to 41 percent, the rest come from cities the property had never targeted directly. The grid finally reads as one place, which is something a guest notices in three swipes.

Direct bookings via the website move from 22 percent of volume to 34 percent. That is a margin shift, not a vanity metric. Google reviews start mentioning Instagram as the discovery source, which they almost never did before. DMs asking about availability for specific weekends go from two a month to roughly fifteen, and a portion of those convert directly without ever touching Booking.

The quieter number is the internal one. Total time spent on content drops from six scattered hours a month to two focused ones. More importantly, content keeps being produced during full weeks, because the photos are already being taken. The system stops depending on a quiet afternoon that, in this business, never reliably comes.

The blog

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