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A little over a year ago this author published the article "Brand Erosion or
How Not to Market Your Hotel on the Web", which created a lot of
commentaries and, we hope, made at least some hoteliers re-examine their
online distribution strategies.
Since 9/11, in times of unprecedented crisis and continued economic
downturn, the Web allowed Internet-savvy and proactive suppliers and
intermediaries to establish rewarding interactive relationships with their
customers, move inventory and stay ahead of the competition. At the same
time it punished those suppliers who had no clear Internet strategy and
understanding how the Web and online distribution work. What has changed
since May of 2002?
Direct Online Distribution Has Become a Top Priority
This has been another difficult year for hoteliers. What has changed since
May of 2002? To begin with, there is a new realization among hoteliers that
something has to be done to change the status quo in online distribution.
Hoteliers are becoming more and more frustrated with the fact that they are
consistently losing leisure and business customers alike to the online
discounters. For many hoteliers Direct Online Distribution has become a top
priority.
Last year we concluded that travel suppliers in the other travel sectors
were well ahead of hoteliers in aggressively adopting direct-to-consumer
online distribution. This continues to be the case a year later. Since 9/11
all major airlines and car rental companies aggressively adopted the "Direct
Web Distribution Model" i.e. direct-to-consumer sales via the Internet as
the centerpiece of their online distribution strategy. If we include
Southwest Airlines, which has a very unique direct-to-consumer online
business model, the direct-to-consumer share of U.S. airline online
distribution will exceed 62% this year. JetBlue generates over 65% of its
revenues through its website.
In the offline world hoteliers enjoy more direct sales (75%) than
intermediary sales (25%). In the online world hotels are less aggressive
than the airlines about bypassing the intermediary channel. This year for
example only 52%-53% of online hotel bookings will be direct sales. Unlike
the airlines, hoteliers have difficulty maintaining market share and finding
the right formula to deal with online intermediaries. The lack of
comprehensive Internet strategies, ineffective online distribution efforts
and the explosion of the "merchant model" are partly to blame for the
current situation.
Very few hospitality companies were able to take full advantage of the
Internet as the most efficient distribution medium over the past year. Many
hoteliers continued to suffer from their lack of understanding of the
dynamics of Internet distribution. The online discounters took advantage of
the situation and increased market share at the expense of hotels' direct
and traditional distribution.
Hoteliers’ online market share fell from 54% in 2001 to 52% in 2002 and it
will take extra efforts to increase this share in the future.
2001 2002 2003
Hotel Branded Websites: 54% 52% 53%
Intermediary Websites: 46% 48% 47%
(2002 PhoCusWright)
Hoteliers are vulnerable due to the changing dynamics in online distribution
and the proliferation of the merchant model. Hoteliers’ direct share will
depend to a great extent on how aggressive their direct-to-consumer sales
efforts will be in 2003 and beyond.
Hotel Branding on the Web
Anytime an Internet user lands on a website, a branding interaction occurs.
This branding interaction can be positive (brand-building) or negative
(brand-eroding). The question is, who is the Internet user interacting with
and who benefits from the branding interaction?
On the Hotel Website:
On hotel websites, the branding interaction is between the Internet user and
the hotel, its product and offerings. Over the past two years hotel websites
have become the main “point of contact” with potential customers. A well
functioning, fully optimized hotel website is a real branding asset that
serves as the chief instrument to capture new markets, entice potential
customers to stay at the hotel and facilitate transactions. Surveys show
that overwhelming majority of customers will not stay at a hotel with a
poorly done website that does not reflect well the hotel product and the
destination. It is becoming a common belief now that if your hotel website
is not up to par there is something wrong with the hotel itself.
On the Search Engines
Search engines are considered major brand builders on the Web. Hotel
listings or paid advertising on Search Engines, Directories and Portals
(e.g. Google, Yahoo, MSN) contribute directly to the brand building of the
hotel itself. Due to the nature of these services and their perceived
impartiality, the branding interaction is exclusively between the Internet
visitor and the hotel. A natural (algorithmic) listing of the hotel website,
paid hotel banner ad or pay-per-click sponsored listing directly contributes
to the brand building of the hotel, not of the search engines.
Hotel listings and paid banner ads on the Online Intermediaries:
Some hoteliers claim that by positioning their hotels on the online
discounters like Hotels.com, Travelocity or Expedia.com they are “branding”
their hotels. We believe that this is a very naïve justification for a very
unhealthy Internet distribution strategy. And here is why.
When the Internet user lands on an Expedia.com page, due to the nature of
this service as an online intermediary, the branding interaction is
exclusively between the Internet visitor and Expedia, and not with the
hotel-advertiser on Expedia. In this sense if an Internet user sees a
merchant hotel listing or a paid hotel advertising banner on Expedia, the
visitor considers this as a positive branding experience benefiting Expedia
(“Wow, these guys even have the Waldorf Astoria! Good for them! I made the
right choice to visit Expedia!”). Website users tend to view hotel listings
and banners in the same manner as pop-up ads and promotional features such
as “Featured Hotels” or “Hotel of the Week” and treat them as yet another
marketing gimmick employed by the online intermediary to sell them more
stuff.
Online Advertising as a Direct Response Tool
Online advertising plays a dual role: as branding and direct response tool.
The Web offers hoteliers not only great branding opportunities, but also
unlimited opportunities to create interactive relationships with their
customers. Email marketing and pay-per-click marketing are only two of the
very potent direct-response tools at the disposal of smart hoteliers.
Our experience shows that banner advertising works for hotels only on CVB
and other non-transactional destination portals (e.g. Reno.com). Banner ads
in general are losing their share as an online advertising format
(percentage of total online advertising spending):
1999 2000 2001 2002
56% 48% 36% >32%
(IAB)
Click-through banner rates have dropped from 2%-3% in 1997-1998 to less than
0.3% in 2002, which makes banner ads less and less logical choice as a
direct-response vehicle.
Unlike the above scenario, pay-per-click marketing on the search engines,
and consumer email marketing are ideal direct-response vehicles and powerful
tools in the hotelier’s direct-to-consumer online distribution strategy.
Pay-per-click marketing is also a great branding tool. At an average 1.5%-3%
CTR (click-through-rate) for every 1000 clicks a hotel listing will generate
33,000 - 66,000 pageviews, which are completely free of charge, due to the
nature of this advertising format.
The Stockholm Syndrome
Here comes another interesting phenomenon we have observed over the past
year: paid hotel advertising on online intermediary sites such as Expedia,
Travelocity and Orbitz.
Does it make good business sense to pay online discounters (who already make
hefty profit margins from your net rates) to profit even further from your
own inability to properly utilize the Internet and to damage even further
your brand and price integrity? This is yet another proof of the existence
of a new kind of disparity in the hospitality vertical: between smart,
Internet-savvy intermediaries on one hand and Web-illiterate hoteliers on
the other.
The merchant model has greatly hurt the hospitality industry and has done
long term damages to the hotels’ brand and price integrity. You don’t need a
bigger proof than that, just look at the diminishing ADRs. The so called
“rate parity” is in fact acceptance of the merchant discounted rates as your
rack rates. Your hotel’s discounted rates on Hotels.com and Expedia are de
facto your hotel’s published rates. Though claiming to be “free of charge”,
these merchant services cost hoteliers dearly. They cause long term damage
and downward pricing pressures (both online and offline) beyond repair.
But paying to advertise on the online discounters, on top of these long-term
damages, simply doesn’t make much sense. We consider hotel-advertisers on
the online intermediaries and discounters as being the Web reincarnation of
the “Stockholm Syndrome” where the kidnapped victims (hoteliers) fall in
love with their kidnapper (online discounters).
Here are few additional thoughts in this respect.
* From a branding perspective, as mentioned above, the hotel presence on an
online discounter website (via a merchant listing or a paid banner ad)
benefits only the discounter itself, not the hotel. What about hotel banner
ads as a direct response vehicle? In most cases the hotel banner on
intermediary websites does not link back to the hotel website itself, but
opens a page within the intermediary website i.e. this type of advertising
is not an effective direct response tool either.
* Experience of some of our clients show that banner advertising on online
intermediaries achieves extremely low ROI and benefit primarily the
intermediaries themselves, in addition to the total lack of branding effect
as discussed above.
What can hoteliers do to avoid brand erosion?
The answer is very simple. Hoteliers must adopt a comprehensive Total Online
Distribution Channel Strategy, a comprehensive online channel strategy,
which turns the direct-to-consumer
distribution model into the centerpiece of the hotel’s Internet strategy and
optimizes the balance between the Direct and Indirect Web Distribution
Channel.
Online distribution is a very complex undertaking that involves a variety of
online channels, services, marketing approaches and sales techniques.
Therefore we call the Internet strength of a particular hotel "Sphere of Web
Distribution Influence", which we define as the percentage of Direct vs.
Indirect online distribution influence, presence and exposure of the
particular brand. The higher the Direct Sphere of Web Distribution
Influence, the less dependence on online intermediaries. The goal of every
hotel company is to exceed the industry national average of 53:47.
The direct-to-consumer distribution model should become the foundation, the
centerpiece of any hotel company’s online distribution strategy. Why? First
of all, The Internet is the ultimate “Direct Distribution Medium”. Why
direct distribution is so important? It provides the hotel with long-term
competitive advantages and lessens dependence on intermediaries, discounters
or traditional channels that are about to become obsolete.
Direct-to-consumer online distribution has the following benefits:
* Puts the hotel in control of its Internet presence and exposure
* Prevents brand and price erosion
* Lessens dependence on online discounters and intermediaries
* Is the shortest path to establishing interactive relationships with
customers
* Provides long-term opportunities to benefit from the lifetime customer
value
* Is the least expensive way to distribute hotel inventory--direct to
consumer!
Direct online distribution is not just a theoretical, “ideal scenario”
approach. Many surveys show that online customers prefer dealing directly
with the travel suppliers, including hotels, when purchasing travel online.
Here is how online US leisure travelers respond to the question "If you knew
that the price of travel would be the same, who would you prefer to buy
travel from?"
Travel Supplier: 69%
Travel Agency: 27%
Other: 4%
(2002, Forrester Research)
Direct Online Distribution Channel
Also called “Direct Sphere of Web Distribution Influence”, direct online
distribution includes Internet distribution channels, business models,
marketing programs, and Internet online media techniques that all share the
same collective goal-to draw in the Internet user to end up transacting on
the hotel website:
The Sphere of Direct Web Distribution Influence is all about benefiting from
the Internet as the greatest direct-to-consumer distribution medium. Here
are some of the direct channels, models, programs and techniques that share
the same commonality: the Internet user transacts directly on the hotel
website:
* Hotel website
* Search engine strategy
* Destination-focused Web strategy and initiatives
* Pay-per-click marketing
* Email marketing
* Link popularity creation initiatives
* Non-transactional travel and hotel directories and portals
* Online Event and Meeting Planner Services
* CVB initiatives
* Affiliate programs
* Lowest price guarantees
* Loyalty programs
The Internet is all about positioning your hotel website at all "touch
points" of interaction with the potential online customer. When looking at
the Direct vs. Indirect market share in hospitality, it becomes obvious that
in at least 53% of the cases, the Online Bookers should end up and transact
on your hotel website in order for your hotel to be in par with the national
averages.
Branded hotels without stand-alone websites represent a very interesting
case. We firmly believe that all branded hotels should have their own
website strategy, in addition to the corporate global website strategy. Why?
The Internet does not care so much about global positioning, as it cares
about location-specific website positioning. This is even more valid in
hospitality. A proactive Hilton property can take full advantage of the
popularity of the destination and position itself on local portals,
directories, and search engines, DMOs, CVBs and incoming online services
that are beyond the reach of the corporate website.
If in 2003 your hotel is not generating at least 53% of its online bookings
directly from the hotel website, and your online distribution is skewed
toward the intermediaries, then you are not competitive on the Web and run
the risk of long term price and brand erosion.
There is another reason why hoteliers should boost their own Internet
presence. As a result of aggressive email marketing and Web-only promotions
over the past several years, leisure and business travelers alike realized
that all of the very good travel deals were to be found not through a travel
agent, or calling a toll-free number, but on the Web. Will online travelers
find these travel deals on your hotel website or on the intermediary sites?
The Hotel Website- Your 24/7 Sales Force
Direct online distribution starts and ends with the hotel website. But is
your website user-friendly, search-engine-friendly and online
booker-friendly? Performing a comprehensive evaluation and website
optimization of your hotel website should become a top priority this year if
you want to stay competitive and take full advantage of the Direct Online
Channel.
What is website optimization? To begin with, a hotel website is not an
online brochure. A hotel website is the hotel’s only chance to achieve any
growth and competitive advantage in these difficult times. It is the hotel’s
incremental revenue producing "virtual" 24/7 sales office. It is a "living
organism" and should constantly evolve to better respond to the dynamics of
online distribution and changing patterns of consumer purchasing behavior.
Website optimization deals mainly with three key issues:
* Making the website user-friendly (tiered navigation, relevant and credible
copy, easy to use booking technology, customer support, eCRM features, etc)
* Making the website search engine-friendly (relevant, web-friendly copy
with embedded keywords, destination-focused website optimization, domain
name strategy, target keywords, meta tags, description tags, etc).
* Making the website travel booker-friendly (boosting the bookability
features of the website, increasing the comfort level, website credibility,
building trust issues, etc)
In other words, your website should be optimized to become robust money
making “machine”. Partnering with a hospitality eBusiness consultancy
specializing in Direct Online Distribution and proficient in website
optimization can help turn your hotel website into a 24/7 sales force and
achieve much needed growth in revenues and conversion rates through best
practices and website optimization strategies.
Positioning of Your Website on the Web
Many surveys show that up to 85% of Internet users rely on search engines to
locate relevant information on the Web (e.g. Google, Yahoo, MSN, etc).
Lodging companies that do not have the marketing budget of the major
intermediaries must rely even more on search engine referrals.
Therefore positioning of your hotel website on the major search engines is
of critical importance otherwise no one will find your hotel.
Surveys confirm the existence of the so called “50% Factor” - roughly 50% of
people that view the first results page of search engine listings go to the
2nd results page, and only 50% of them go to the third results page, and so
on. Here's what Bear Stearns analysts say about Internet positioning on
major distribution channels: "Our research uncovered that being listed in
the top five assures the highest level of bookings, and that after the fifth
slot, bookings drop dramatically”. In summary, positioning is equal if not
more important than pricing for the hotelier to make sound revenue
management decisions.
Though some of the major brands have done a good job with their global
websites, none of them fares particularly well on the local search engine
level. For example, in order to be picked up by the search engines, a local
Hilton property has to implement relevant copy and destination content with
specific target keywords, description tags and meta tags that are completely
different from the global Hilton.com website. It has to achieve link
popularity on its own. Hence, the need a local branded hotel to pursue its
own website and search engine strategy.
Online Lookers vs. Online Bookers
Another interesting phenomenon is the purchasing habits of online travelers.
Jupiter Media Metrix estimates that nearly 60% of the online population in
North America (192 million in 2002) uses the Internet to research travel.
50% of those researching travel information online (online lookers) actually
make their purchases online (i.e. become online bookers). The other 50% look
online, but book offline, due to privacy issues, security concerns,
purchasing habits, or need to speak with a live agent to finalize the travel
booking, etc.
PhoCusWright also reports that 50% of US Online Travelers looked online, but
booked offline in 2001 (52% in 2000).
Simply put, if 100 people book on your website, at least another 100 will be
influenced by your
website to book your hotel, but will make the booking offline (via phone,
walk-ins, etc). This underlines further the critical importance of your
hotel Direct Online Distribution Strategy and your hotel website visibility
to the bottom line.
Indirect Online Distribution Channel
The Indirect Online Distribution Channel consists of intermediary
(third-party) online services, where the Internet user has access to hotel
inventory and information, but transacts on the intermediary’s website.
There are three types of online intermediaries:
* Agency (Commission-based) Model Services
* Opaque Rate Model Services
* Merchant Model Services
There is nothing wrong with using online intermediaries to upload your
distressed inventory. But it is very wrong to turn these online services
into your primary and, in many cases, only Web distribution channel. Why? If
your hotel has not implemented all aspects of the Direct Online Distribution
Strategy as discussed above, and your hotel signs up with online merchants
like Hotels.com, your hotel will appear on the Web only through your
discounted rates offered by these online intermediaries and their affiliates
(e.g. Hotels.com has over 34,000 affiliated websites). Which means that
Internet users will always "bump" into your discounted rates and nothing
else.
Therefore, as far as the online traveler is concerned, these discounted
rates are de facto your published hotel rates. Period. The result is major
brand erosion and price dilution with serious repercussions. If consumers
consistently find on the Web only your discounted rates in the $129-$139
price range, how can your hotel convince anybody to pay the $159-$179 rack
rates -- online or offline?
Once hoteliers have exhausted all opportunities in the Direct Online
Channel, then and only then, they should join a selected number of Indirect
Online Services, giving preference (in that order) to the agency model, the
opaque rate services and at the end and only if they still need help – the
merchant model services. Why in that particular order? The answer is very
simple. You, the hotelier, control your retail rates on the agency services.
Your discounted rates are “hidden” on the opaque rate services and do not
damage your price integrity. On the merchants your rates are “naked” and
directly compete with your direct customers and existing business. Even
among the merchants some services are preferable to others.
Business travel is another major consideration when using the Indirect
Online Channel. A major trend over the past years is the blending of leisure
and unmanaged business travel on the Web. Are your business travelers
booking your hotel via Expedia or Travelocity? These mega online
intermediaries claim that 30% of their bookings are business-related.
Hoteliers' business travel strategy should become an integral part of their
overall Direct Online Distribution Strategy to avoid losing their best
paying customers to the online discounters.
Hoteliers should also be mindful of the fact that in 2003 less than 47% of
their online revenues should be coming from online intermediaries, while 53%
have to be from direct-to-consumer sales (i.e. via the hotel-owned website).
If you do not fare better than the national averages, you are already behind
your pro-active competitors and your brand and price integrity are in
serious trouble.
Unfortunately we still observe many cases where the hotel website
contributes 5%-10%, while the online discounters bring 90%-95% of the hotel
Internet revenues. These are the “classic” examples of brand and price
integrity erosion. On the brighter side, a number of our proactive hotel
clients report 25%-35% of their overall revenues coming from the Direct
Online Distribution Channel.
Conclusion
Online distribution is here to stay. The Internet has changed the way travel
is being negotiated, managed and purchased. By 2005 over 20% of all hotel
bookings will be completed on the Internet. This year alone 13%-14% of all
hotel bookings will come from the Web and 53% of them will be
direct-to-consumer. How does your hotel company compare to these national
averages and where are your competitors? If you do not fare better than the
national average, you are already behind your proactive competitors.
It’s not just about selling over the Internet at any cost. You have to know
that the Web can be either your best ally or your worst enemy. If your
online distribution is skewed toward the online discounters, this can
permanently damage your brand and price integrity. The direct-to-consumer
model should become the foundation, the centerpiece of any hotel company's
online distribution strategy. It provides the hotel with long-term
competitive advantages and lessens dependence on intermediaries, discounters
and traditional channels about to become obsolete.
There has never been a better time to embrace the Internet and Direct Online
Distribution in particular. An experienced eBusiness hospitality consultancy
can help you navigate and utilize the Internet to its fullest potential.
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