Brian Chesky, the CEO of Airbnb tells "CNN This Morning" why he is putting a room in his home up for rent and how his company continues to progress despite the troubled economy. #CNN #News
Thanks for the insight, but I'm still confused why Bitcoin and crypto prices keep dropping? This drop follows a number of other significant drops in recent weeks. I still hold enormous value of cryptos and it scares me. Whats your take on this?
There are many reasons for this drop in value. One of the main reasons is that there is an ongoing debate about whether or not Bitcoin should be regulated as a security or as a currency.
@@harunarandy1423 If you are not conversant with the markets, I'd advise you to get some kind of advise or assistance from a financial/investing coach. It might sound basic or generic, but getting in touch with an investment broker was how I was able to outperform the market and raise a profit of $2.5M For me, its the most ideal way to jump into the market these days
Air-bnb's have had a extraordinary negative impact on Rent prices across the US/and globe - Everyone wants to be a mini-hotel making income at the cost of citizens in their local community being made homeless because the property owners want to make x4 the rental income on PT visitors - kicking them out just to rent a HOTEL ROOM - greedy bastards !
Do you really think the CEO of Airbnb is just gonna accept any Joe off Airbnb to live with him? He’s not gonna allow anyone to book his house. He’s going to handpick peopel
Depends on the market/country. All of us in Russia's shadow see apartments and hotels and Airbnbs filled up and expensive. Like $400/mo is now $1000/mon for rent.
Decided I’d much rather stay at hotels. Trying to rent on AirBnB was a HUGE hassle. Gave up after several days and several layers of BS run-around when they wanted FB info, as a credit card isn’t enough for them. NO THANKS!
This guy has common sense. He also understands his employees and his market. He has some empathy for people. He analyzes what is happening around him well. He doesn't sound like an egotistical jerk either. I do think that prices for places on AirB&B are too expensive for many people.
Depends on the job. If your job is mainly autonomous with no team based creativity and no client based interaction work from home is entirely sustainable. Spent a decade working in an office that occupied 5 floors for a multinational company located in 100 different countries. Regularly communicated with and knew the names of coworkers in other cities and countries but not all the people in my own office. I have managed a portfolio for my own city and another city for years! Never met a single person in that other city. My work interaction with them had always been phone, back in the day Skype and email. Instead of sitting on a conference call in a board room or a Skype (now Teams) call in my office. I now do it at home. We still get together for office parties or lunches, but literally my work hasn't changed at all except location... and less interruption from people popping in to talk about the game or last night's Game of Thrones episodes or office gossip. Which honestly used to drive me nuts!!! And more work life balance now that my 3 hr commute is gone. I see no point in returning to an office just so I can work remotely.
How about some positive comments here - for variety? ▪︎Is it wrong for Richard Branson to book tickets on Virgin Atlantic? No. It's how he checks on customer service. If the Airbnb products are evolving then it will help for top execs to be hands-on - and also learn if the world has changed significantly. ▪︎ This was seemingly a real discussion and conversation - not just a scripted set of talking points. It got very interesting and philosophical about office vs. remote working. We could do with a lot more of this informed *discussion* on this topic. I wanted to see more here.
I think work should be 7 days a week, rather than 4. Days. Employees should take two days off in a week, everyone is working five days. In this way, traffic will be less on the roads and all the work like driver’s license, insurance and doctor’s availability will be there all the time. My opinion.
While I do think it would help build a work ethic in people, you’ll also see even less people using state safety nets to not work. The business that I’m a part of forces me to work everyday, so I understand where you’re coming from.
Sounds like you're about your work. If they had 7 day work weeks there would be alot more hours and less results. At first the results may be astounding but eventually people get weary with no days to rest. The purpose of the 4 day work week is to allow employees to produce their best work before they start winding down mentally.
Stick to being flexible and tailor each employee contract to their individual situation. Happy employees, productive employees, profitable company. Besides that's what you have an HR department for.
The vacation rental market is over saturated so let's give this contributor to sky high housing rent some free pr and advertising. What an insipid segment.
That doesn't Alleviate costs. How about the billionaires with mansions that literally can be apartment complexes rent it out. Or people move the feck out these hige cities. Packing all together like sardines don't help.
Or the government to use imminent domain and take all these properties that no one is renting and open them up for rent or sale to anyone wanting to own two property but must rent it to tenants that must live in there for atleats 1 full year.
Law enforcement take money and property from people, prior to them being convicted of any crime. They sell items for law enforcement needs: retirement, paid administration leave. The public is not informed of where money and/or where money from the sale of property is being used. People who are innocent and/or charges dropped; might never get the money or property returned. And the time and energy the victim looses; is time and energy that could have been used for work/projects and such. The law enforcement knows 98% of the population in America cannot afford a lawyer. Nor have the time, energy or money to hold law enforcements accountable for crimes committed against civilians.
Mind Begs the Question: NATO,Corporates capable to Boycott Russia over Ukraine/Petro Dollar NATO,Corporates not capable to Boycott China over Concentration Camps?
"It's like we're in a night club and all the lights just came on" This response has been used multiple times as of late, particularly in regard to tech companies and social media elite, and it begs the question; do we judge who we are surrounded by on that dancefloor or those that created the parameters of said dancefloor, knowing full well the parameters of what they created?.... :)
I agree with much of what he says, but, I can't get over the fact that his product is essentially contributing to my city being unaffordable to live in, so I still have to give this video a thumbs down.
I like Elon but i disagree with living to work. That mindset had me ill for many years. I agree with this guy re working flexibly, remotely or hybrid. Im healthier, more productive & have better work/life balance
When republicans think CNN is "far left" when they have millionaire and billionaire CEOs talking about renting out their million dollars home on air bnb...
For what? He’s worth 8 billion. He’s doing this for good publicity. And do you think he’s gonna accept any Joe Schmo off Airbnb to live with him in his house? Cmon
@@peaceistheanswer275 How long do you think he has been a billionaire? Most millionaire and billionaires, no matter how fortunate they are, work their way to their current economic status, creating jobs for you and me in process. I wish they would at least pay all their employees a bit more, but you have to respect the grind. It's not easy being where they are.
No, you don't! The Corp rich are driving the inflation! Keeping prices inflated for profits. Others are trying to make back what they lost in profits during the pandemic by scalping you.