Every space and setup is unique, and online tutorials often miss important factors like:
Perfect! You can simply tag an item and, instead of recording a video, upload your own video directly to Snaptually.
YouTube and Vimeo don’t connect a real-world object to a video by just snapping a picture. Snaptually bridges that gap. A random guest doesn’t want to search through 15 videos in a playlist titled “Coffee Machine” — they just want to snap a picture and boom, get the answer.
Airbnb listings often feature guides, with many homes providing laminated instructions. Since guests tend to skim through text, short object-level videos make guidance clear in seconds—no searching, no confusion.
Tagging and recording a video with Snaptually takes less time than writing the instructions. Most places only need 5–10 videos to cut down 90% of repeat questions. It’s a time-saver upfront, not a hassle.
Small frictions pile up (espresso machines, thermostats, remotes). A 20s clip removes guesswork and prevents damage/misuse.
Nowadays, people are increasingly familiar with QR codes and mindful of granting camera permissions. The QR code for your space is displayed within the property, requiring no app installation or login for guests. The process is simple, direct, and task-oriented.
Absolutely — we’ve seen consistent pain in: And users are already conditioned to scan QR codes — we’re just enhancing what happens after the scan.
Yes — and that’s precisely the point. The QR code is a simple access gateway to the property’s See & Snap view, which does far more: The QR code is just the key — the value lies in the frictionless, visual object-to-video experience it enables.