Why Hyatt Is Checking Out of Expedia. Will Other Hotels Follow Suit?steemCreated with Sketch.

in #marketing7 years ago

Recently, online travel agencies (OTAs) like Expedia have been increasing their market share and charging hotel partners increased booking fees. By July 31, Hyatt Hotels could be leaving the Expedia platform because of the fee increase.

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In a recent report from the New York Post, analyst Kevin Kopelman claimed that “over the past 18 months, the OTAs have increased their market share significantly.” He added that “Hoteliers like Hyatt pay fees of 15 percent to 20 percent of a room rate to OTAs like Expedia.”

If Hyatt goes through with the threat, its listings would be removed from not only Expedia.com but Orbitz, Hotels.com, Hotwire, and Travelocity.

The feud between OTAs and hotels isn’t new. It has been brewing for years. Priceline and Expedia’s value has been increasing in recent years due to travel reliance on technology-enabled booking. Hotels have also been feeling the pressure to increase booking rates and sales as vacation rentals become more popular among travelers.

According to a recent Bloomberg report, the American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA), an industry group whose members include Hyatt, as well as Marriott and Hilton, intends to lobby the Federal Trade Commission. Their campaign argues that online travel companies are becoming monopolistic, since Expedia and Priceline own a significant market share with rental sites like Booking.com, Kayak.com, Travelocity and more under their belt.

The problem is that many people rely on OTAs to find and book lodgings. Unless there is an incredible incentive, fewer people are going to go directly to a hotel or other accommodations website to book directly. This is why Hyatt and others are launching and developing their own loyalty programs, which offer lower room rates and perks for guests that book directly. They are also increasing their marketing efforts in hopes to increase the number of direct bookings.

Whether or not more hotels will leave Expedia is unknown. However, it does raise the question as to what property managers and owners can do to control more of the market share in their own business. Loyalty programs could be one tactic. It is even more critical to create one-of-a-kind guest experiences that distinguish your properties from the competition. It is also important not to rely on one specific OTA for listings.

BookingTeam.com takes a more holistic approach and shares rental listings to all the most popular sites while taking care of everything for the host and guests of the property.

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Here is a crazy idea why doesn't the Hotel pass that 15-20% saving on to the customer in the form of lower room price on their own website. This would not only take back market share but ensures they can out price hotels still paying the fees to the OTA 'monopolies'. Every time I check the hotels website and compare the rate with the OTA website it is still cheaper on the latter even with the surcharge fee included.

This travel sector including; airfare, lodging, and rental cars is extremely price sensitive and consumers flock to the lowest price like moths to flame. Until hotels ensure that they offer a lower price than a 3rd party re-seller they will continue to lose share.

Great idea. In fact, we have a similar option. On our site, guests can book direct and pay about 10% less than on the booking sites. It's a common practice and becoming more common each day. :)

Ya ofcourse. Great info. Shared thnx alot

It'll be interesting to see what the other hotels do! Hyatt has always been a great leader, but with these recent changes, who knows what will happen

What no one ever really addresses wholistically is how technology is changing everything: how we work, where we work, how we play (go on vacation), how we communicate, even how we learn (our brains are being rewired with the heavy reliance on technology). Of course technology is transforming how businesses operate. But the government is not going to be able to regulate us out of this technology revolution, nor should we want them to. It is up to us as individuals, communities, companies, societies to flow with the changes and figure it out day by day.

Decentralisation is the next huge thing :)

capitalism... Expedia should be careful though, there are a lot of alternatives. e.: youre homepage looks very inviting!

That means there's a opportunity for someone else! I respect Hyatt's decisions, they have to draw the line somewhere.

Thanks for sharing.

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Hyatt buying everything, smh.

Hotels should market their offers to join these new loyalty programs directly to potential customer's smartphones. And if the customer signs up via this method they should get a few extra rewards than from just signing up online. This type of relationship building would keep their customers off the OTA websites as long as the hotel has a facility in the town the customer is visiting and there are good rooms available.

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