Travel suppliers - hotels and airlines - have experimented for years with a supplier-owned online travel agency (OTA) to combat their over-dependency on the mega OTAs like Booking Holdings and Expedia Group. Orbitz started in 2001 as a joint venture of five major U.S. air carriers. The hospitality industry answer to the OTAs was RoomKey — a joint venture among Choice Hotels, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG, Marriott, and Wyndham — launched in January 2012 as "an innovative new online hotel search engine that will provide the simplicity, transparency and breadth of choice consumers expect from a search engine." Both of these attempts to establish a fairer marketplace, a conduit between suppliers/owners of inventory on one side and travel consumers on the other end - failed to gain traction: Orbitz was acquired by Expedia Group in 2015 and RoomKey folded operations in June 2020. Recently, some hotel owners and operators forums - including a prominent one with thousands of hoteliers - have again started discussions about creating a hotel-owned OTA to battle the dominance of Booking and Expedia.

The question here is: In the distribution landscape, is there a place for a hotel-owned OTA, and how viable would be such an initiative?

Scott Dahl
Scott Dahl
SVP Sales, Marketing, & Revenue Management at The Wurzak Hotel Group

Roomkey failed because it didn't sell rooms. The major decline in global travel in 2001 created the perfect storm that allowed the Online Travel Agencies to grow from virtually unknown to the giant presence they have in hospitality today. 

 

By the time Roomkey was launched in 2012, hotels were going gangbusters and the OTAs had secured a gigantic share of the B2C market. The OTAs were already implementing emerging technology to improve their customer experience online and had shown a willingness to reinvest all their excess margin in marketing to acquire new customers for the future. Roomkey's model of lower costs by spending less meant few consumers ever laid eyes on their inventory despite it probably being the best value for the few who did, so it failed.

 

Today could be different. Like the rest of the industry, the OTAs are struggling right now. Even before COVID, they were acknowledging that they had extended themselves too far. And like all major crisis, there will be a period of innovation that follows. The question is: What will it be?

 

With a well-designed, disruptive approach, a hotel owned OTA could work today.  Here are a few thoughts:

 

Focus on strengths.  Surely, a group of hotels must be able to secure inventory and organize it to be efficiently sold better than a third party. By eliminating most of the massive marketing and infrastructure expenditures, plus one set of shareholders from the transaction, they should be able to offer very attractive net rates, to then be marketed by someone else.

 

Democratize the innovation portion.  It cannot be ignored that if the major brands could “out-market” the OTAs, they would have already done so. Eventually, someone is going to figure out a way to sell rooms than doesn't also mean making Google rich. By efficiently distributing the best affiliate rates, this marketplace would ensure that the upcoming customer-facing innovation has an attractive way to connect to supply and give existing OTA affiliate marketers something to consider as well.

 

Take a leadership role in the next normal.  Now is the time to step up, before something less desirable fills the void. The return of travel and a healthy hospitality industry is obviously in everyone's collective best interest. Much of the world's hotel inventory does not have the benefit of brand distribution and standards, and without an alternative, has only been rendered more beholden to the OTAs.

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