World-class distribution was once one of the key value-adds of signing up with a hotel chain or brand. Today, however, this advantage has been severely eroded to the point where independent properties can access better and more cost-effective distribution channels.

From a distribution perspective, is the era of the hotel chain coming to an end?

IDeaS - A SAS Company

This viewpoint is co-created with IDeaS a SAS company
More information

Michael Levie
Michael Levie
Hospitality Changemaker and Co-Founder of citizenM

Let me start by answering the question first; “yes from a distribution perspective, the era of hotel chains is coming to an end”. Still today there are reasons why an independent owner might still work with a brand, even if it were only for distribution purposes. The distribution landscape is changing fast and there are few structured ways to educate yourself. The brands do have specific distribution knowledge and systems in place to guide independents.

Is there today a fair playing field and can independent's get to the same customer reach, the answer is also yes.

The bigger question is what is your distribution strategy and as important what is your target spend.

Gross revenue minus distribution cost leads to net revenue, which is the real marker / starting point for every hotel P&L. And equally important what is the breakdown of the distribution / channel cost and net contribution. Every reservation needs to have its channel cost and “ADR” contribution analysed and cumulated fit in the distribution strategy.

The correlation of channels and strategic use lead to the best optimisation.

Obviously, there are many systems and independent companies that can assist, but without a solid basic knowledge the results will not necessarily cumulated into the desired outcome automatically.

And then there are those major shifts in the distribution landscape that need almost like “daily stock trading” detailed and consistent monitoring and reacting to.

Where Ota's first took a slice of cheese from our hotel sandwich, they are being upset and challenged themselves by players like Airbnb and Google. Oh, and what about a real entrance of World dominant players like Amazon or the impact of Chinese / Asian sites like Alibaba and C-Trip…the speed of change is only going to increase. It will undoubtably have a positive distribution cost reduction effect for the hotels and provide more options…

This conversation is extremely useful and should take place, but there is another that sometimes doesn't get enough daylight; does our brand and product sufficiently “differentiate” our hotel from the rest of the pack.

The answer often or better almost always is “NO”.

Brand often means the following formula; “name + logo + frequent guest program = brand”. And as long as we can take a name and logo down one day and continue the hotels operation uninterrupted the next day with a new logo and name our industry misuses and doesn't understand what “brand” truly is.

How many hotel chains do you know that by walking into the door tells you who they are…2 possibly 3… or reversely, how many times do you walk back out of the lobby and look at the façade to know with which chain you are staying.

The brand choice is often frequent points related right. Well that will wear thin quickly if with Amazon (Plus) or Alibaba you get frequent points or discounts. And if Google truly enters the hotel distribution landscape “predictive” selling will also lead to a huge consumer shift.

So “brand” and “distribution(cost)” go best hand in hand with a truly differentiated product, or alternatively with good systems and specific brand and distribution knowledge.

View all 8 views in this viewpoint