Picture this. A young woman in Shanghai is planning her first trip to Malaysia. She doesn't open Google. She doesn't go straight to Booking.com. She opens an app called Xiao Hong Shu and types "马来西亚酒店" (Malaysia hotel). Within seconds she's scrolling through real photos, honest reviews, and room tours posted by people like her. By the time she books, she has already decided where she's staying.
If your hotel isn't in those search results, you don't exist to her. And there are millions of her.
Chinese travellers are flooding back into Malaysia. Between January and May 2025, Malaysia welcomed about 1.81 million visitors from China — up 38.8% year-on-year, the fastest growth of any key market, according to Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing's written parliamentary reply. China is now Malaysia's second-largest source market after Singapore, and these guests tend to stay longer and spend more — Hong Leong Investment Bank put average spend at around RM4,300 per visitor in Q1 2025. The Edge Malaysia + 3
Here's the part most hoteliers miss: before they fly, these travellers plan their entire trip on Xiao Hong Shu (小红书), known internationally as RED or REDnote. The platform has over 300 million monthly active users. Its audience skews heavily female (around 70%) and young (most are aged 18–35), concentrated in China's wealthier first- and second-tier cities. And it's not only big in China — with over 3 million monthly active users, Malaysia is now Xiao Hong Shu's second-largest market outside the mainland. Statista + 3
This isn't hype. On 28 May 2025, Tourism Malaysia signed a Memorandum of Collaboration with Xiao Hong Shu (REDBOOK Holdings) to promote Visit Malaysia 2026 to Chinese travellers. As Director-General Datuk Manoharan Periasamy put it, "Malaysia has been consistently trending on Xiaohongshu as one of the most searched and talked-about destinations among Chinese users." The national tourism body is betting on this platform. The question is whether you are. LinkedIn
Xiao Hong Shu is not "another Instagram." Treating it like one is exactly why most hotels fail on it.
Two things make it fundamentally different:
1. It's a search engine, not a scroll feed. Users go to the search bar with intent. They search "槟城亲子酒店" (Penang family hotel) or "吉隆坡 出片 酒店" (KL photogenic hotel) the same way you'd Google something. The platform handles enormous search volume — reportedly around 600 million searches a day. This means a good post you publish today can keep bringing you guests for months — unlike a Facebook post that dies in a day.
2. It runs on trust, not ads. Users come for honest, detailed reviews from real people. The community is very good at spotting polished marketing — and the algorithm quietly buries content that feels like an advertisement or makes exaggerated claims. Hashmeta
For a small or independent hotel, this is genuinely good news. The algorithm rewards helpful content over big budgets, so a 30-room boutique hotel in Ipoh can out-rank a chain if its content is more useful. Hashmeta
You have two options:
Get the business account. The credibility badge and the location tag matter — when a guest reads a great post about your hotel, they should be able to tap the location and land on your verified profile.
Getting a business account will remove interaction restrictions. You're allowed to share links and interact with your followers for business transactions (e.g. bookings). Busines account will be indicated with the "blue tick".
2026-Jun: Rednote has rolled out the international version of their content dashboard for content creators. It features an English user interface.
Forget glossy hero shots of your lobby. On Xiao Hong Shu, the content that performs is useful and real.
Photo "notes" (笔记) are the backbone. These are image posts — best shot in a tall 3:4 frame — paired with a detailed written caption. Unlike a one-line Instagram caption, good Xiao Hong Shu captions are long and genuinely informative: room sizes in real terms, what's nearby, whether breakfast suits Chinese tastes, how easy check-in is, and honest prices. Hashmeta
Lean into "出片" (chū piān) — photogenic spots. Chinese travel culture revolves around 打卡 (dǎ kǎ), or "checking in" at a place and posting the proof. Travellers actively search for backdrops that photograph beautifully. If your hotel has a stunning pool, a sunrise-facing balcony, a pretty café corner, or a great view — that's your hook. Show the exact spot and the best time of day to shoot it.
Content ideas that consistently work for hotels:
Posting rhythm: consistency beats volume. Aim for around 3–5 posts a week, every week. The algorithm rewards steady activity and loses interest in stop-start accounts. GMA
Use location tags and keywords properly. Tag your hotel's location on every post, and write the way users actually search — specific phrases like "Langkawi beachfront hotel" in Chinese, not vague slogans. Use a handful of relevant hashtags (five to ten is plenty).
The most powerful content isn't from your account — it's from guests and creators.
Encourage guest UGC. Make a spot in your hotel so photogenic that guests want to post it. A small in-room card inviting them to tag your location, or a little welcome gift, goes a long way. Real guest posts are the social proof that converts. Deep Digital China
Work with KOCs, not just famous KOLs. A KOL (Key Opinion Leader) is a big influencer; a KOC (Key Opinion Consumer) is a regular user with a smaller but trusted following. For most hotels under 150 rooms, KOCs are the smart play. They're affordable — often a free stay or roughly a few hundred to a few thousand RMB per post — and their recommendations feel like a friend's tip, not an ad. Host a few, give them a genuinely good stay, and let them post honestly. Several smaller, authentic collaborations beat one expensive celebrity post.
Here's where most hotels go wrong, and it's the most important point in this whole article.
Getting discovered on Xiao Hong Shu is Traffic — the top of the funnel. But traffic alone doesn't pay your bills. At Softinn we think about direct bookings as a simple path: Traffic → Offer → Convert. Xiao Hong Shu is a brilliant traffic source. But if you have no clear offer and no way to convert, that attention just leaks away.
And here's the trap specific to this platform: Xiao Hong Shu is a closed garden. You cannot drop a booking link into your posts — external links and contact details get your content suppressed or removed. So what do most hotels do? They let that hard-won attention drift to an OTA listing. Think about what that means: you did the marketing, you created the content, you earned the guest's trust — and then you hand them to Booking.com or Agoda and pay commission on a guest you sourced yourself. That's paying a toll on your own road. Halo Tech Media
The smarter play is to turn that attention into direct bookings. When a guest discovers you on RED and then searches your hotel name, what they find next decides everything. They should land on your own website with a proper booking engine — not just an OTA page.
That's the Convert step, and it's exactly the gap Softinn is built to close. A clean hotel website (Website CMS) plus a commission-free Booking Engine means the demand you create on Xiao Hong Shu turns into bookings you own — with the guest's details, no middleman, and no commission. RED brings them to your door; your booking engine lets them in. Software Advice
Don't think of Xiao Hong Shu as "a social media account someone should manage." Think of it as the front of a path that ends in a direct booking. Here's where to start:
Chinese travellers are coming to Malaysia in record numbers, and they're choosing their hotels on Xiao Hong Shu. You can absolutely earn that attention. Just make sure you've built the path to capture it — because traffic you can't convert is a guest you paid for and then gave away.
If you're not sure your "convert" step is ready, that's the place to start. Map your own Traffic → Offer → Convert path before you post — your future guests are already searching.