According to Bloomberg, over 300 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have already been administered; President Biden said the U.S. expects to vaccinate every adult by mid-May, and 53.7% of Israelis has received the first dose of the coronavirus vaccine. We are still not out of the woods, but things look brighter than they did just a few months ago. It is likely, therefore, that travel demand will slowly return in 2021, and we're already seeing some destinations with a decent pickup for the summer. With these first signs of hope, it's quite predictable that hotels will fight hard for market share, especially during this unstable year. In this particular situation, how can your hotel stand out from the crowd and stay ahead of the curve?

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

One of the best parts about having “snuck off to academia” a few years ago is that right now, while many of my hotel friends are fighting daily to do more with less, our shift to online learning has given me a little more time for research. And thanks in large part to the STR Share Center, by far the most rewarding for me has been to dig into previous downturn/recovery cycles, looking for lessons we can apply today. Here are my three favourites:

Constantly evaluate your future bookings using a Days Before Arrival (DBA) perspective.

Most markets have hit the post-COVID bottom but have not yet started to recover. In order to see the recovery on the horizon, when you can still react to it, versus when its upon you, it is important to reflect on future booking pace compared to the new normal, not pre-COVID historical patterns.

Fall in love with length of stay restrictions.

When demand is robust and rooms are scarce, we can drive rate. Travellers even change their patterns to fit out strategies. But in a buyer's market, it's not that way. In the previous three downturns, ADR continued growing even while occupancies plummeted, but eventually ADRs decline too, and they stay low until demand has rebounded substantially. This means that until rooms become scarce, people won't pay more. The key to taking advantage of opportunities now is filtering potential customers by their arrival/departure pattern and not their willingness to pay.

Capitalise on the shift in consumer behaviour.

There is currently an unprecedented low level of booking activity and an unprecedented high level of dreaming about travel. Most of us used to begin the travel planning process with vacation dates and a budget. Now we dream about the experience without any idea of when we will be able to go. The massive increase in social media traffic around travel is a huge opportunity for hoteliers to connect with their future guests NOW, while they are dreaming about travel. The key is to promote a unique memory, not a bed and a toilet.

Finally, while it might not be a great time to own hotels, it is about to become a glorious time for those who specialise in filling them. The strong correlations between the best parts of my LinkedIn profile and the recovery periods following the last three downturns, although freaky, make sense. For those of you who are in the process of weathering by far the toughest storm the industry has ever known, rest assured, equally epic tailwinds are just around the corner.

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