Foundry Talks: The Hospitality Podcast

From Airbnb to Boutique Hotel in an Arizona Hidden Gem | Adam Walz & Micah Thomas

55 min · I går
episode From Airbnb to Boutique Hotel in an Arizona Hidden Gem | Adam Walz & Micah Thomas cover

Description

What happens when two short-term rental investors decide to go all in on a 50-key hotel in the Arizona desert? We sit down with Adam Walz [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamwalz1/?skipRedirect=true] and Micah Thomas [https://www.linkedin.com/in/micah-t-35837b24a/] of Comeback Hospitality to hear how they made the leap from Airbnb operators to owners of The Wesley [https://www.thewesleyaz.com/], Page's first boutique hotel. In this episode, we talk about how they found the property off-market for well below the area's average price per key, how Page, Arizona sits within two hours of seven national parks and monuments, and what it really costs to bring a historic roadside motel back to life (spoiler: it involves a lot of plumbing, $50,000 in internet upgrades, and a third shipping container). They also open up about their approach to affordable luxury, the role AI is playing in their operations, and what it means to build in public from day one. If you're a hotelier thinking about what it takes to raise the bar in an underserved destination, join us for this one. Find The Wesley at thewesleyaz.com [https://www.thewesleyaz.com/] and follow Adam and Micah on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thewesleyhotel/]. Listen to Foundry Talks on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Foundry Talks: The Hospitality Podcast community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

37 episodes

episode From Airbnb to Boutique Hotel in an Arizona Hidden Gem | Adam Walz & Micah Thomas artwork

From Airbnb to Boutique Hotel in an Arizona Hidden Gem | Adam Walz & Micah Thomas

What happens when two short-term rental investors decide to go all in on a 50-key hotel in the Arizona desert? We sit down with Adam Walz [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamwalz1/?skipRedirect=true] and Micah Thomas [https://www.linkedin.com/in/micah-t-35837b24a/] of Comeback Hospitality to hear how they made the leap from Airbnb operators to owners of The Wesley [https://www.thewesleyaz.com/], Page's first boutique hotel. In this episode, we talk about how they found the property off-market for well below the area's average price per key, how Page, Arizona sits within two hours of seven national parks and monuments, and what it really costs to bring a historic roadside motel back to life (spoiler: it involves a lot of plumbing, $50,000 in internet upgrades, and a third shipping container). They also open up about their approach to affordable luxury, the role AI is playing in their operations, and what it means to build in public from day one. If you're a hotelier thinking about what it takes to raise the bar in an underserved destination, join us for this one. Find The Wesley at thewesleyaz.com [https://www.thewesleyaz.com/] and follow Adam and Micah on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/thewesleyhotel/]. Listen to Foundry Talks on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Yesterday55 min
episode The Magic of Redfish Lake Lodge artwork

The Magic of Redfish Lake Lodge

We are revisiting our conversation with Jeff and Austin Clegg of Redfish Lake Lodge in Stanley, Idaho because summer there is simply too special not to talk about again. Crystal-clear glacial water, a natural sandy beach, canyon views that open up to what locals call the Gates of Heaven, and a family-run lodge that has been welcoming guests since 1929 -- this place is genuinely unlike anywhere else. But beyond the setting, Jeff and Austin share what it really takes to steward a legacy property on US Forest Service land. From managing multi-generational guest loyalty to building a seasonal team culture that keeps 60-plus employees returning year after year, there is a lot here for hospitality operators to take notes on. If you have been on the fence about visiting, consider this your sign. Summer at Redfish does not last forever.

10. juni 202625 min
episode How to Turn One-Night Guests Into Three-Night Fans | Dylan Barahona artwork

How to Turn One-Night Guests Into Three-Night Fans | Dylan Barahona

Dylan Barahona is the new general manager at Riverside Colorado [https://riversidecolorado.com/], a glamping retreat nestled in Poudre Canyon about 30 minutes outside Fort Collins. Riverside is owned by the same team behind the Mishawaka Amphitheater, the historic 1,000-person outdoor venue that beat Red Rocks for the top spot in Denver Westword's ranking of Colorado outdoor music venues. Dylan brings over a decade of hospitality experience spanning luxury hotels in Florida, VIP music festival programming including Electric Forest, and outdoor hospitality. He joined Riverside just six weeks before this recording and is already rethinking how the property drives revenue, builds community, and earns repeat guests. In this conversation, Dylan talks about why he is pushing guests to extend single-night stays into two and three-night trips, how he is curating "pre-parties" before Mishawaka shows to create a festival-within-a-festival feel, and what a potential donkey hike experience called Donkey Delights says about his approach to programming. He also shares his take on where AI genuinely helps in hospitality operations and where it falls short, including why no algorithm is going to walk up to a guest struggling with a fire pit and make a real human connection. Dylan also reflects on a stay at Rancho Santana in Nicaragua that shaped how he thinks about the difference between programming and memory-making. Find Riverside Colorado at riversidecolorado.com and follow Dylan on LinkedIn at linkedin.com/in/dylan-barahona. If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Foundry Talks on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.

27. maj 202639 min
episode What's Actually Wrong With Your Pipeline | Amy Infante-Still artwork

What's Actually Wrong With Your Pipeline | Amy Infante-Still

If your hotel's sales plan is collecting dust on a shelf, Amy Infante-Still knows exactly why. Amy is the founder and CEO of GitGo, a hospitality B2B sales partner agency that has helped hotel owners, management companies, and brands build commercial engines that actually produce results. With over 20 years in the industry and more than two million buyer conversations under her belt, she brings a ground-level perspective that is hard to find anywhere else. In this episode, Amy breaks down the number one sales problem she sees across properties of every size: a pipeline that is reactive, unclear, and impossible to scale. She explains why sales, marketing, and revenue management so often operate in silos, what it actually takes to bring them together into one commercial operating system, and how to tell the difference between a leading indicator and a vanity metric. Amy also gets into the owner dynamic that shapes everything: how much to be involved, how to ask the right questions without meddling, and why transparency about an asset's goals can be the fastest path to better results. She shares what strong sales cultures actually look like from the inside, why on-site strategy sessions changed the way GitGo works with clients, and why building a commercial team is always an evolution, never a revolution. You can connect with Amy on LinkedIn at Amy Infante-Still [https://www.linkedin.com/in/amyinfante/] and learn more about GitGo at gitgogroup.com. [https://gitgogroup.com/] Foundry Talks is available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

12. maj 202648 min
episode Brand Therapy | Carly DeFilippo artwork

Brand Therapy | Carly DeFilippo

What does it actually take to build a hotel brand that holds up over time? This week Rachel sits down with Carly DeFilippo, co-founder of Cognoscenti Creative [https://www.cognoscenticreative.com/], a branding studio run by two sisters out of Colorado. Carly and her sister Lauren got their start working in-house at major restaurant groups before launching an agency built specifically for independent and boutique hospitality properties. Carly shares how their intake process, what she jokingly calls brand therapy, goes way deeper than most operators expect. The goal is to surface what a property is truly about before a single logo or color palette ever gets made. She walks us through how they approach hotel naming (meaning comes last, energy comes first), what luxury actually means in 2025, and why having a clear and specific point of view might be the most underrated branding asset a hotel can have. We also dig into the New Orleans property they named after a Walt Whitman connection, the Outrider Hotel in Manitou Springs, and why the Surf Hotel in Buena Vista keeps coming up as a gold standard for cohesive brand storytelling. And Carly gets refreshingly honest about what Cognoscenti does not do, and why that clarity is what makes their client relationships work. Whether you are just starting to think about your brand or wondering if it is time for a refresh, this episode is full of practical perspective from someone who has lived on both sides of the business. You can find Cognoscenti Creative on Instagram at @cognoscenticreative [https://www.instagram.com/cognoscenticreative/]. Carly [https://www.linkedin.com/in/carlydefilippo/] and Lauren [https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurendefilippo/] are also both on LinkedIn and worth a follow.

28. apr. 202649 min