A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing or Real Help? - Expedia just launched a partner recovery program, in which to participate, hotels need to provide Expedia with a.) their lowest retail rates and b.) competitive pricing on things like holiday packages and c.) member only deals. If a property opts-in,

* Expedia will turn 25% of the commission it earned from the property in 2019 into marketing credits, which then the property can use to promote itself on Expedia: Expedia travel listings, banner advertising, etc.

* Expedia will also reduce its commission by 10% for 3 months and extend payment terms for Hotel Collect bookings by 90 days.

* Wholesale rate distribution - Hotel partners can now more effectively add wholesale rates into Expedia Partner Solutions, designed to favorably position inventory across Expedia's network of airlines, loyalty & membership organizations, financial institutions, and offline travel agencies

* Market insights - Introducing data dashboard providing trends on website traffic, stay dates, and demand source markets. This is now live and complimentary to all partners using Expedia.

* Properties can also highlight hygiene measures such as contactless check-in, cleaning measures, social distancing plans.

The question is: Is the new Expedia Partner Recovery Program a good thing for hoteliers or will further deepen the hoteliers' dependency on this OTA?

Osvaldo Mauro
Osvaldo Mauro
Entrepreneur & Business Developer

In a nutshell: That's not a good deal and with these acquisition costs the hotel can do its own recovery programme.

My math teacher at school used to tell me that speaking about a percentage of another percentage is something unused and generally wrong. So when we ear about an Ota turning 25% of the percentage they get as a commission from the bookings, it probably means that someone is trying to throw dust in the hotelier's eyes. Let's do some math to prove it!

A hotel places a standard double room with a public b.a.r. (best available rate) for a certain date at 120€. On top of this Expedia asks for a discount for the initiative (let's say 10% discount) and an additional "members-only deal" (let's say +5% discount). The standard commission that this hotel pays to Expedia is 15%. So when the hotel will finalize one of these bookings it will pay: 15% standard commission + 10% initiative discount + 5% members-only grant = 30% overall booking acquisition cost. On 120€ booking, that is 36€ of CPS (Cost of Sale). On the standard commission of that (15% = 18€) Expedia will allocate 25% (percentage of percentage = dust in the eyes) to marketing credit. That is 18€ * 25% = 4,5€ of marketing credit. That's like to say that you spend 36€ and you get a 4,5€ of marketing coupon back.

Numbers speak by themself and tell us that:

  • 30% of combined commission (CPS) is pretty high
  • 4,5€ of money back in marketing credit is pretty low

I generally won't suggest this initiative and I encourage hoteliers in thinking about the CPS of every sale they perform.

When I do this, sometimes it happens that revenue managers or OTAs turn out to me saying that this is wrong because: "promotion and commission expenses paid to acquire a certain SEGMENT of potential customers shouldn't be considered costs, because without that expense the hotel wouldn't get that kind of customer, so it wouldn't get that revenue".

That's the way of thinking in silos. That's like to say that we should use discounts to generate demand or that a business consumer doesn't have a private leisure life.

This kind of thing was right (and partially still is ok) in the offline market. It was correct when we had different conditions for very different and strongly diversified markets. Closed silos.

Then came the global market of the internet and online sales. If you go online with a "best available rate" of 120€ and then you reduce it of 15% for the Expedia's members in a COVID-19 initiative, that's not a segment! That is your new best available rate, advertised by Expedia everywhere online and so 120€-15%= 102€ is your new adjusted base price!

With these costs, you can do your own COVID-19 recovery plan. Consider giving to YOUR members a 10% discount and spending 12% on YOUR direct digital marketing to get the bookings. That would be 22% CPS for your direct initiative to get direct bookings. You still get that feeling that you're using a discounted price to generate demand.

Plus if you really want to play smarter, beat the Ota at their own game!

Let's participate at the Expedia initiative, give them the requested discounts and get the exposure (good ranking) they'll give to the hotels part of the offer. Got that, play with demand forecast and inventory allocation in the deal, to reduce the volume of sales from this (and so the costs). The exposure got from the initiative will influence your own direct sales. That's trading of acquisition and this is the game we play. 

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