AAHOA LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE
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Transcript AAHOA LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE
Introductions
Goals
Revenue Management (RM) Review
Questions and discussion
History of Electronic Distribution
Questions and discussion
Self-Assessment Activity
Break
Every act of management is an act of
marketing.
Selling the right product to the right
customer at the right time for the right price
through the right channel….to optimize the
inventory and maximize revenue.
•
GDS Originates in Airline Industry
• SABRE created by American Airlines 1960/70s
– CAB sets US airline rates
– Hotel, Rental Cars added
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Airline Deregulation
• Airline Deregulation Act of 1978
• Increase in competition - Price wars
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Legacy of GDS
• Delivers travel products to 780K travel agents
• Powers many OTAs, higher ADRs despite little growth
•
1980s:
– Hotel industry responds to 1982 and SBLA crisis
•
1990s
– Hotel industry responds to first Gulf War and
economy
•
2000s
– Hotel industry responds to 9/11 and post millennial
economic slow down
•
2010 and beyond
– Hotel industry faces convergence of distribution and
marketing: Demand Management
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Revenue Management is NOT:
•
A secret formula
•
A technology or computer system
•
A specialist sitting in front of a computer, in the
basement, of your hotel
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An isolated team at “central command”
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It’s about Revenue Management.
AND
It’s about Expense Management.
•
Revenue Management today must focus equally
on driving revenue and controlling expenses.
•
Periodic capital investments in technology are a
permanent reality.
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Disparate devices and new platforms proliferate.
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Search engines changed the field/Review sites
changed the field
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Online Travel Agency (OTA) balance of
distribution power with branded sites
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Hotel chain distribution mix growth in both GDS
and branded supplier sites projected*
*PhoCusWright, Inc.
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Conversation economy – social media
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Growth in mobile globally – still being figured
out domestically, technology yet to catch up
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IT and brand management culture of
communication
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•
Revenue Management (RM) =
– Demand Analysis + Pricing + Restrictions
•
Past Web 2.0 Marketing =
• Distribution + Channel/Internet Marketing
•
Demand Management* =
– RM + Demand Creation + Distribution Management +
CRM + Internet Marketing
*Adapted from Anderson and Carroll, Journal of Pricing and Revenue Management, 2007
Demand creation
Sales force; single-image inventory management
Traditional brand and marketing:
▪ Advertising, Sales Promotion, PR
GDS placement, agency relations
CRM, keeping past guests coming back
Internet marketing
▪ Distribution channels AND marketing channels
▪ They ARE BOTH simultaneously
Demand Forecasting
• Involves the historical patterns and current
trends to determine revenue decisions.
• Separate forecasts must be created for group
and transient travel.
• Unconstrained demand: the request for rooms
for given nights by prospective guests that are
not affiliated with a group event or seasonality.
• Must be calculated by market segments to
determine proper demand.
Inventory Control Strategies
Stay Controls
• Leverage high
demand periods by
closing shorter stay
patterns and
eliminating low
rates
Overselling
• The practice of
accepting more
reservations than
actual rooms.
• Key terms: wash
factor and walk cost
Stay Pattern
Management
• Stay Pattern is the
combination of
arrival date and
length of stay
Channel
Management
• An understanding of
the complicity of
channel
management and
the dangers
associated with it
Channel Management
Both marketing to and acquisition of customers
Search engines are windows to channel
Group sales and small group sales websites
Customer acquisition by channel
▪ Pay attention to the many costs
▪ Transaction fees, GDS, switch
▪ Marketing/placement fees
▪ Production and competitor analysis by channel
Customer Relationship Management
It costs less to keep a customer than acquire
or create a new customer.
Beyond email
Social media meets frequent traveler: Reviews
Groople.com/other group travel platforms
Mobile technologies, “App me”
Measuring success of loyalty promotions
Reducing cost of customer acquisition
•
Channel/Internet Marketing
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–
–
–
–
Every distribution channel is a media channel
Search engines and the cost of finding you
Chain websites and vanity URLs
Media sharing sites
DMOs, Chambers of Commerce, Business
Improvement Districts
– ROI on all of them – monitor the cost as well as the
revenue production
– But is this the channel where my customer shops?
SUMMARY
Morphing and merging of many disciplines
Revenue management and demand
management
Channel explosion = proliferation
Revenue is only half of the equation,
managing expenses and understanding the
ROI of every RM effort is essential to decision
making.
All of these trends can make an impact in the
face of slowing travel demand.
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Today’s evolution of Revenue Management
into Demand Management demonstrates the
power of this statement:
Every Act of Management is an Act of
Marketing or Demand Management