Traditionally hotel brands largest added value has been distribution. A hotel got branded and was quite rapidly connected to a massive flow of reservations, on all the channels that existed. It helped guests search, travel agents book and hotels get filled. But that distribution function has largely been replaced by OTAs. So much so that, a few years ago the CEO of a large European Owning company publicly questioned why he should keep his hotels branded instead of going independent.

Today with brands adding new sub-brands every year it becomes unclear what a brand really is. But at the same time, the market is growing and they are making more revenue so it seems like the market accepts the new brands. Google has added a brand search functionality into their metasearch product and the conversation has shifted away from "are brands still needed". The millennial generation is supposedly not loyal to brands. Loyalty programs are getting revamped but costs are increasing. So have brands become relevant again? Are we entering a new golden age for the hotel brands?

Peter O’Connor
Peter O’Connor
Professor of Strategy at University of South Australia Business School

In the past hotels branded for several reasons.  Foremost was the reassurance the brand gave customers as to the quality of their potential experience, with gaining access to world-class distribution, technology, expertise and loyalty program membership also becoming key motivators as we moved into a more digitally enabled world.

However, most of these 'benefits' have now disappeared.  Thanks to online reviews, consumers no longer need such reassurances.  Furthermore, brand proliferation to the point where no one truly understands the difference between options, coupled with the inability of brands to enforce brand standards means that the power of most hotel brands has been severely compromised.   in addition, most of the side benefits have also being eroded.  Today most OTAs supply not just room bookings but also technical and information services.  And tech companies provide cost-effective access to systems, technologies and expertise, with the result that the advantages of brand membership are being eroded on all sides.

But such disruption does not mean that hotel brands will disappear.  Instead, it should prompt a radical change in how brands are compensated.  Instead of charging their traditional percentage of room revenue, most will be forced to move to a model where they only charge for business delivered through their network of controlled channels, in effect moving them firmly into the OTA space.  This development will change the rules of the hotel distribution game, clarifying roles, leveling the playing field and increasing competition.  

Hotel brands clearly have a future but on very different terms from today!

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