A recently published large-scale survey points out that the vast majority of travelers are keen on staying at hotel properties that engage in sustainability (1). Willingness-to-stay (WTS) is important to the extent in which hotels can capitalize on their sustainability endeavors through transparent communication. However, the same travelers seem to have difficulty in finding hotels committed to sustainability or simply are not aware that those hotels even exist (2); a topic discussed by the World Panel on Sustainability in Hospitality earlier this year (3). Beyond WTS, hoteliers are particularly interested in the willingness-to-pay (WTP). Findings from academic research are mixed, but recent studies point out that the willingness to pay a price premium to stay in hotels that have implemented sustainability practices is linked to the level of environmental concerns showed by individuals (4). Because ultimately, the price guests pay to stay at the property remains a major driver or barrier for travel decisions.

How should the industry communicate the added value of sustainability (rather than added cost) that resonates with guests that espouse similar values? How should the industry communicate to other segments which do not share the same values? How do we transform the perception that sustainability measures are simply a cost-reduction strategy rather than valuable and essential practices in this day and age?

Maurice Bergin
Maurice Bergin
Managing Director at GreenHospitality.ie

How should the industry communicate the added value of sustainability (rather than added cost) that resonates with guests that espouse similar values?

There should be no added cost – in 2 decades of working with hotels on environmental sustainability I have never found a hotel that spent more than they saved – even with large capital investment projects as the savings paid for the investment. We need to constantly highlight that Being Green does not mean higher costs, nor does it mean being mean. In fact, Being Green could mean lower costs!

We need to ask the industry businesses that conduct these surveys to stop asking this as a question as it is not a valid one and only reinforces the perception that going green means added cost to the traveler. I do not know of any hotel that charges a supplement solely because they are environmentally sustainable – Do You?

The only real additional environmental cost that does not have a balancing reduction in operating costs is if a hotel decides to purchase Carbon Offsets. At this point it is the hotels decision to either treat this as a Marketing Expense (which they should) and build it into the other business costs, or give guests the opportunity to purchase offsets for their stay (Having used the HCMI tool to calculate their emissions)

Start telling stories that resonate with travelers needs as opposed to hotels blowing their own trumpets with lists of actions they have done and talking about kWh's, litres, tonnes, etc. – These messages are not focused on travelers needs, they are focused on internal image enhancement and generally written by green practitioners, not marketers.

Customers are interested in carbon footprints and reductions, food waste reduction initiatives, local food stories, how we have eliminated single use plastics, how they can be good recyclers, what are we doing to protect and promote biodiversity on-site and locally, how they can experience local culture and history far from the madding crowds, etc. Talk about these, engage your copywriters, don't let your Green Leaders/Champions write your marketing messages – that is not their skill.

Hotels also need to showcase their sustainability story on their websites and stop hiding it away – if it is more than 2 clicks to access a hotels home green page then it is hidden. Start engaging properly and communicate clearly how your customers will have a very light environmental footprint when they stay with you, and what added value they can experience locally – and within this messaging let them know how committed you are to being a better corporate business and your focus on continual improvement.

How do we transform the perception that sustainability measures are simply a cost-reduction strategy rather than valuable and essential practices in this day and age?

Travelers only see or perceive this when hoteliers make weak environmental claims or ask them to alter their behaviour through poorly worded initiatives – the worst example being the “Help save the Environment by hanging up your towels” and nothing else, cherry picking initiatives = green washing.

This perception is actually held more by hoteliers than by customers as management are driven by cost control and also only see this as the real benefit – mainly because the majority have not been trained or educated in sustainability and are failing to read the research and understand the changing environment – the travel & tourism sector needs to embed environmental sustainability into every facet of our operation, from education through to boardrooms and through all national state agencies

Until environmental sustainability is adopted as a basic business principle it will always be seen as an add-on – and customers will go to the smart hoteliers who understand their needs and desires and communicate their story well.  

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