While attribute based shopping has been discussed for over 10 years, the level of noise about its application for the hotel industry has significantly increased in the last 18 months. After significant investment in new systems and technology, companies like IHG are tipping their toes in the ABS waters. While some tout the great benefits (and revenues) expected by offering customers more choice, others take a more cautious approach, questioning the expected benefits and ROI. What is your take on ABS, will it do what it did for the Airline industry - boost ancillary revenues, or will it be the "3D TV" of Hotel Technology.

Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Founder | CEO | Futurist

First of all, let's start by explaining what attribute-based selling is not: I recently came across an article by a colleague, and I realized that there's still a huge misconception on how an ABS' industry would look like. Some people believe that, by overloading travelers with choices, the booking journey's complexity will increase (and conversion drop), when quite the opposite is likely to happen. 


Attributes have the potential of making the act of choosing obsolete and unnecessary: if virtual travel assistants could access more data than just ARI, they'd be able to filter the noise out on behalf of the traveler. Today's filter-bubble frustration will be a thing of the past, ergo, conversion WILL increase. 

ABS is not about humans swimming in an ocean of choices, rather the other way around: in an attribute-based industry, in fact, my GoogleHome could (based on my travel preferences and habits), pick the most suitable accommodation for me. 

I always use the Netflix's comparison to explain ABS: as you don't browse hours to pick a show to watch (instead you let machine learning do the dirty job for you), thanks to ABS, travelers could finally get rid of the most frustrating part of the travel journey: its preparation. 

So my answer is: pretty much any other industry out there is already using attributes with great success, why should we always be the laggards? 

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