Drawing Tayo – Resort Finder

Feature · Resort Directory

Find the right resort for every kind of group trip.

The DrawingTayo Resort Directory helps you browse resorts by location, type, group need, and amenity so you can narrow options faster, compare what matters, and move from planning to booking with less friction.

Built for barkada outings Useful for family trips Ready for team building plans

Search by place, type, or group requirement.

The directory is designed to help users move from broad searching to a more relevant shortlist. Start with the location, then narrow by resort type, then confirm the details that matter to the group.

📍

Browse by location

Explore resort pages grouped by area so users can compare options in places that fit the trip plan, travel time, and local preference.

  • Batangas resort pages for beach and overnight trips
  • Laguna resort pages for convenient group stays
  • Rizal and Cavite pages for quick escapes near Manila
  • Near-Manila options for short travel times
🏝️

Browse by type

Use resort type pages to narrow the field when the group already knows the kind of stay they want.

  • Private pool resorts for more control and privacy
  • Beach resorts for outdoor and shore-based plans
  • Overnight resorts for longer celebrations and downtime
  • Day-tour resorts for shorter, simpler plans
👥

Browse by group need

Filter by the kind of group that is going on the trip so the directory reflects the actual planning problem.

  • Barkada trips with shared spaces and flexible timing
  • Family-friendly stays with easier logistics
  • Large-group resorts for bigger headcounts
  • Team-building and company outing planning

Start with the area your group can actually reach comfortably.

Location pages help users focus on destination first. That keeps the search practical, especially when travel time, budget, and availability are all part of the decision.

Filter by the kind of stay your group needs.

Resort type pages are useful when the group already knows what format works best. This makes the directory easier to scan and the shortlist faster to build.

Private pool resorts

Best for groups that want privacy, a clearer schedule, and a more controlled environment.

Beach resorts

Best for trips that center on shoreline time, swimming, and a more open destination feel.

Overnight resorts

Best for celebrations and multi-hour stays where the group needs more breathing room.

Day-tour resorts

Best for shorter plans when the group only needs a clean day trip option.

Family-friendly resorts

Best for trips with kids, mixed age groups, or users who want simpler logistics.

Large-group resorts

Best for bigger headcounts that need capacity, space, and organized booking details.

Match the listing to the planning scenario.

Group-need pages are structured around the real reason people are looking for a resort. That makes the directory more useful for decision-making and less generic for the user.

Barkada trips

For friend groups planning quick escapes, celebrations, and flexible shared stays.

Family outings

For households that need easier logistics and a smoother resort experience.

Team building

For work groups that need capacity, organization, and clear booking information.

Birthdays & reunions

For occasions that need room, privacy, and a stay built around the event.

Useful listing details keep the directory decision-ready.

A strong resort listing should answer the questions that matter before someone books. That includes location, the kind of stay it supports, and the practical details that help the group compare options clearly.

  • Resort name and exact location context
  • Photo and short description of the property
  • Resort type and best-for notes
  • Amenities, capacity, and booking notes
  • Pricing notes, day-tour or overnight details, and contact link
  • Verification and editorial notes when available
EEAT / trust standard

Help users book with more confidence.

The directory works best when each page is organized with clear context, practical comparisons, and editorial guidance that reflects the real booking process. Users should be able to scan a page, understand what the resort is for, and know what to confirm before paying a reservation fee.

  • Explain why the resort fits a certain group type
  • Keep resort-specific pages focused, not overloaded
  • Use plain-language planning advice instead of jargon
  • Encourage users to confirm rates, inclusions, and availability

A simple path from broad search to final shortlist.

This page is designed as the broad directory entry point. It should help users move from a general idea to a more precise selection without making the process feel heavy.

1

Choose a location

Start with the destination that fits the group's travel time, budget, and comfort level.

2

Narrow by type

Decide whether the group needs a private pool, beach access, an overnight stay, or a day trip option.

3

Check the group fit

Review the best-for notes, capacity hints, and amenity details before building a shortlist.

4

Create the trip

Move from browsing to trip planning once the group has a clear set of resort options to compare.

Directory pages are for users who know they need a resort, but not yet which one.

The page should do more than list properties. It should guide the search. That means helping users understand the difference between a location page, a type page, a group-need page, and the actual listing page before they start comparing specific resorts.

This approach keeps the experience organized, makes the page more useful for SEO, and gives users a clearer path to a decision.

Questions to confirm before paying a reservation fee.

A strong directory should teach users what to verify so they can compare listings with more confidence.

  • What is included in the rate
  • Whether the booking is for day tour or overnight use
  • Capacity, extra guest rules, and house policies
  • Exact location, access, and travel time
  • Contact details and availability status

Answers to the first things people ask.

It is the main browsing page for resort discovery. Users can start broad, then narrow by location, resort type, group need, and amenity until they have a manageable shortlist.

Use the directory as the starting point.

These pages can sit underneath the directory structure so users can continue narrowing their options without losing context.

Start with the directory, then build the trip.

Use the Resort Directory to narrow the search, confirm what matters, and move into a more organized planning flow when the group is ready.