During COVID-19 pandemic, nearly 1 Billion rooms have gone unsold every week in the US only. With so much unsold space, hotels had to become creative with their offers and packages. Out-of-the-box thinking is the only way to survive this "Black Swan," but how can hotels get the best out of their spaces? What new ways of selling rooms and ancillary products should the industry implement to be successful in 2021-22?

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

The last time many companies were designing hotels, meeting space was looked at very differently. Times were good, but most hotel designs still included some meeting space, mostly as a hedge in the event of a downturn, allowing them turn to the MICE segments if their core transient segments stopped producing sufficient volume.  

Now, following the mother of all downturns, things are not going as planned. Domestic leisure business is driving the recovery while meeting space sits dark. Most experts agree it will be a while before this segment returns to pre-COVID levels, while others question if it ever will. With this in mind, some hotels are finding new and unique ways to re-purpose this valuable real estate.

One of the most obvious is co-working spaces. But it is important to not stop there. They should be aligned with the needs of business and be incorporated into the hotel's promotional storytelling. Resort hotels can appeal to digital nomads, by giving them the type of office infrastructure they need to be successful and attract longer length of stay business in the process.  Any hotel can generate some revenue with it, while giving their guests more opportunity to interact with the local community, but it must be done well. Remember that one of the impacts of COVID was a huge upgrade in many people's home offices. The hotel's set up needs to be at least as good, especially when it comes to connectivity, compatibility and ease of use.

Children's play areas. Set up some soft seating, a few tables and some classic board games or a bucket of Legos. Perhaps even a TV and a few video games. Viola. Parents will love you for it. Maybe even turn it into a poker room once the kids go to bed.

Pop-up stores. Many smaller retailers closed their doors during the pandemic, some never to re-open, but in many cases, they still have inventory to liquidate. Consider creating a calendar and promoting it routinely and perhaps collecting a percent of sales versus a straight rental fee. Choose the right types of stores and it could attract a little restaurant or lounge business too.

Bring in the local community.  Sponsor a “mother's morning out” play group or volunteer to host the local Girl Scout troop meetings. Although not likely to generate any direct revenue, the goodwill it would create can't hurt.

View all 11 views in this viewpoint