Want to outperform the market? Freewyld Foundry’s Revenue & Pricing Management service is driving an 18% performance lift for $1M+ STR operators, even in down markets. If you’re managing 15+ listings and want a free pricing audit, apply here
In this episode of Get Paid For Your Pad, Eric Moeller (CEO of Freewyld and Freewyld Foundry) breaks down how Riverside County’s new short-term rental regulation forced Freewyld to rethink growth, from reducing guest capacity from 17 to 10, to reimagining how they scale, design, and operate.
You’ll learn how to pivot when local laws change, protect profitability, and future-proof your brand against shifting occupancy caps and zoning updates.
You’ll hear:
We also talk about:
🎯 Mentioned in the Episode:
🔥 Favorite Takeaway: “When regulation hits, it’s not the end, it’s the moment to think bigger, build smarter, and play the long game.”
📍 Want help turning market setbacks into growth opportunities? Apply for a free pricing and portfolio audit at freewyldfoundry.com/report
Jasper Ribbers demonstrates how to build an automated revenue projection system for short-term rentals using Claude AI in under 60 minutes (zero coding required). Learn the three-method framework that creates accurate forecasts, why net rental revenue is the only clean metric to track, and how projections function as early warning systems for unit problems.
Three revenue management experts reveal why growing from 10 to 50+ properties breaks traditional pricing strategies and how to shift from listing-level to portfolio-level optimization without sacrificing individual property performance or owner satisfaction.
Jasper Ribbers reveals why most STR operators lose thousands launching new units by chasing ADR instead of review velocity. Drawing from 500+ launches across Freewyld Foundry's portfolio, he shares the exact 60-day strategy to build momentum that lasts for years.
Kaye Putnam: Welcome back to another episode of Get Paid For Your Pad. I’m Kaye Putnam, Head of Marketing at Freewyld and Freewyld Foundry. I’m joined today by Eric Moeller, CEO of both companies.
Eric Moeller: Hey, Kaye. This one’s a big one. Riverside County just passed new STR regulations, and our guest capacity at Freewyld dropped from 17 people to 10 overnight. It hit hard, but we’re turning it into a catalyst for growth.
**Kaye:**That’s such a massive change. When you first got the notice, what was your initial reaction?
**Eric:**Honestly, frustration. We’d built everything, design, pricing, operations, around that 17-guest capacity. Suddenly, it was gone. But after the initial shock, I realized this wasn’t a problem to fight, it was a challenge to evolve around.
**Kaye:**I love that perspective. You’ve always said regulation can be a sign that an area’s becoming desirable. How did you start reframing it?
**Eric:**Exactly. When regulation arrives, it means demand is strong enough that local governments need to control it. That’s validation. Our focus shifted from “how do we fight this” to “how do we build smarter inside the new rules.”
**Kaye:**What were the first steps you took?
**Eric:**We started by meeting with our architect and county officials to understand the ordinance in detail. Then we explored converting Freewyld Idyllwild from a short-term rental property into a fully zoned hospitality asset. Essentially, moving from STR status toward a boutique hotel license.
**Kaye:**So instead of seeing the limit as a wall, you’re treating it like a doorway.
**Eric:**Exactly. It’s about adaptability. Instead of shrinking, we’re repositioning. Regulation forces innovation. It made us think bigger, about how we can scale Freewyld as a brand, not just a collection of cabins.
**Kaye:**There’s something powerful about turning a government limitation into a brand expansion strategy.
**Eric:**Totally. We also realized that most operators panic in these moments. They start cutting rates or hiding listings. But professional operators pivot. We’ve seen this pattern in other markets, Sedona, Tahoe, even parts of Texas. Those who adapt early end up stronger.
**Kaye:**What does this shift mean for the Freewyld guest experience?
**Eric:**It pushes us to go deeper into hospitality. Fewer guests mean more personalization. We’re elevating everything, from amenities to design flow. We want each stay to feel curated and intimate. That’s where Freewyld 2.0 begins.
**Kaye:**I know you’ve been talking about rezoning and even expanding into hotel licensing. How does that play into the long-term vision?
**Eric:**This is the next frontier for us. We want to own the land, operate the brand, and control the entire guest experience. Hotels give us that flexibility. STRs are great, but with a hospitality license, you unlock an entirely new business model, retreats, brand partnerships, corporate events. It’s scalable and sustainable.
**Kaye:**That’s such a shift in mindset, from frustration to freedom.
**Eric:**Exactly. It’s not about fighting regulation; it’s about building within it. This experience forced us to mature as a company. We’re no longer just short-term rental hosts, we’re hospitality builders.
**Kaye:**For listeners facing new rules in their own markets, what would you tell them?
**Eric:**Don’t react emotionally. Sit down with your architect, planner, or legal advisor and understand your options. Sometimes the path forward isn’t fighting City Hall, it’s evolving your model. Use regulation as a mirror to refine your business.
**Kaye:**That’s such a grounded takeaway.
**Eric:**Yeah, and to be honest, I’m grateful. Without this regulation, we might’ve stayed comfortable. Now, we’re innovating again, new systems, new designs, and a clearer vision for what Freewyld can become.
**Kaye:**If someone listening wants to stay ahead of regulation or needs help recalibrating their pricing and operations, what’s the next step?
**Eric:**Go to freewyldfoundry.com. We offer free audits for operators managing 15 or more listings. Whether it’s revenue management, pricing, or strategy, we can help you stay profitable through any regulation.
**Kaye:**Perfect. Eric, thanks for sharing this story. I think it’s a great example of leadership under pressure.
**Eric:**Thanks, Kaye. I appreciate it. And to anyone listening, if your market just dropped new rules, don’t panic. Build better. That’s where the opportunity lives.
**Kaye:**We’ll see you next week.