It is no longer news that the hotel industry has suffered the worst decline in history. The resulting business failures are starting to make the news and most industry experts agree that it will be several years until the industry returns to anywhere near the health it had in 2019. While the global picture is still very gloomy, we are starting to see isolated upticks in reservations. However, whether it is traveler's slowly adjusting to the "new normal", or just pent up leisure demand, the booking patterns are different than ever before. And just like the periods following previous disruptions, the most aggressive and innovative hotels will gobble up all of this trickle of new travelers, leaving most hotels still staring at the horizon, looking for signs of life. Although there will be few winners and mostly losers during the early stages of the recovery, most hoteliers are still working with the exact same set of tools they had, pre-pandemic, including over half of the industry that uses no dedicated revenue optimization technology whatsoever.

So, we ask our panel experts: 1) For a hotel just getting started implementing a revenue optimization process, what technology and services are most essential, and how should they be selected? or 2) For a hotel with an established revenue optimization culture, what new tools have emerged that could be game-changers?

JFK is quoted as saying that "a rising tide lifts all boats", and this has been true during the large year-on-year growth of the hospitality industry in the decade up to early 2020. But the falling tide? That leaves some boats stranded on the beach. And this is the situation we are in now.

While sophisticated revenue management was a nice-to-have for independent hotels during the boom years, we would suggest that is essential during times of more sporadic demand. The lower demand, added to consolidation and the rising power of chains, has meant that the situation for independent hotels is harder than ever.

At RoomPriceGenie, we focus on the hotels either getting started in revenue management or those looking for a more intuitive approach.

We would say that the most important factor in making a decision about what tools to use is: how comfortable with these tools is the person in charge of revenue? Remember, the tools work *for* you; they don't rule you! And this is more important than ever in these harder times, where strategic judgment needs to come in and it is important to implement the strategy alongside the number-crunching.

So certainly find a revenue management system that you are comfortable with, that follows your strategy but does the calculations for you, allowing you to react quickly to changes in demand.

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