I know there is a difference by definition but what about public perception? I will have 4 guest rooms and no restaurant so technically a b&b...but somehow inn seems more hip/elegant. I'm finalizing my logo and have to make a decision. Thoughts?
I will say that 90% of the B&B's here in town call themselves inns.Yes that perception thing
Inn seems to be preferred by innkeepers. Bed and breakfast seems to have lingering 1990s wallpaper associations.
We started as "________Bed and Breakfast" in 2007 and added "Inn" officially to the name last year.
we are licensed for - and do serve dinners by request.
We may drop "Bed and breakfast" off of the name next year..
We inherited a "Bed & Breakfast Inn" and decided to keep the name. The inn next-door is so desperate for business they call themselves a "Boutique Bed and Breakfast Inn and Hotel" which helps prove there's a reason "kill" is in the word "overkill."
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I don't LOL often, but that one almost did it!PhineasSwann said:...a "Boutique Bed and Breakfast Inn and Hotel"...
Yes, similar names will sometimes catch you, there is a motel in Canada that has our name, you'd think folks would notice that they were booking a room in the wrong country, but have had a few mix ups in the last couple of years, I've learned to ask if they are from that area.What is the price range?
And where will you be located?
Did you google to see what is around you?
If everyone else is B&B I would go for Inn. You can be an inn with four guest rooms. or a guesthouse. Is there another B&B/Inn with the same name in another state that comes up in google? You will battle for placement on the internet with them. There is a B&B with our name in Texas and we get calls and even people booking the wrong place about once every couple years. Call and are angry when they can't find us! Yes, and we have our state name EVERYWHERE for SEO and other purposes.
Hope these comments help..
Our sign says both 'inn' and 'bed and breakfast'. I have taken to adding 'bed and breakfast' to all online and print info. Hoping it helps.In Europe "Inn" is not very common, I know that because I'm Dutch, so I guess your potential customers from outside the US will not find you quickly enough when you only use "Inn" and no BNB..
I haven't had people assume dinner is served though I've had a few ask if breakfast was open to the public.Inn generally connotes a place with dining options. (I know as my B&B has 'inn' in the name and people assume we serve dinner, even tho they think we DON'T serve breakfast. Whole other thread...) Then again, Holiday Inn here doesn't serve dinner. Hampton Inn doesn't either. But people know those brands.
How about 'boutique B&B'? That way you get the vibe you want without the confusion.
"Magnolia Inn ~ A Boutique B&B". Something like that..
Our name is The Forsyth. I am leaning toward B&B, sort of warms it up..
I agree. Softens it a bit.Tamelon said:Our name is The Forsyth. I am leaning toward B&B, sort of warms it up.
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