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?

Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Founder | CEO | Futurist

I honestly think that, in 2020, we should let this "them vs. us" mentality go. The harsh truth is that, for most hotels, direct bookings have a cost-per-acquisition comparable (if not higher) than OTAs. Brand.com design, hosting costs, booking engine fees, CDN, SEO, SEA, metasearch/social ads, free upgrades, discounted rates, loyalty programs, etc. If the goal is to stay profitable, all these costs must be taken into consideration.

Yet, they rarely are. Ask a random hotelier what commission he pays to Booking.com, and he will reply in a heartbeat. Ask him about his direct CPA, and he won't be so sure. "Direct" investments tend to be way more cryptic than a straight-forward commission model, so it's easier to doubt Expedia's good faith than our marketing agencies'. I do understand that. And I am not implying Expedia is the good samaritan of the story, either.

But I am saying that, during these difficult times, we should accept all the help we can get, and not be too picky about the origin. Personally, I've been using Expedia Travel Ads for years, with solid results and an average ROAS of over 30x. This is what really matters to me, not Expedia's underlying intentions. Will it further deepen the hoteliers' dependency on this OTA? Maybe. But I am starting to wonder if this is a bad thing, after all.

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