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?

Marloes Knippenberg
Marloes Knippenberg
CEO of Kerten Hospitality

The sustainability debate has reached critical mass with our industry playing a key role in addressing the topic for real tangible outcome. Hospitality represents a wholistic Ecosystem involving a long list of stakeholders such as airlines, technology, automobiles, construction, waste management etc, who share responsibility for the current environment and the values needed to commit to action for the benefit of all. If a guest/traveller replaces a van tour for an electric option, prefers to order a meal prepared in an electric oven, has the option to choose wind-powered water heater in his/her long-stay residence and seeks to run his laptop and connectivity gadgets on a solar generated power, then we need to ensure those choices are prevalent, attractive, cheaper and easily accessible. Education on our joint efforts to make that happen is primary – ranging from the adoption of farm-to-fork approaches, alternative power generation, the use of smart utilities and technology that connects it all and delivers to all.

Creating self-sustaining products and services that are connected to locality across the whole value chain is vital in choosing sustainable experiences. Only by supporting each other to jointly deliver cost-effective business models and smart solutions across all verticals engaged in hospitality – the most human industry of all – we will devise our common ground and address the “cost” of the sustainability agenda.

The only way to truly make a change and not add a hefty price tag to the end user's experience, is by shifting the mindset from cost-driven to self-sustainable lifecycle of all offerings. How could that be achieved? Engagement, transparent communication and setting standards beyond the single-business bottom line. Equally important for the success of this new era is embracing an authentic sustainability thinking: from the first brick being laid, to the logistics of all constriction supplies and smart building installations, and with the provision of choices. That is a small step in this lifelong learning that will accelerate the education curve and will drive the Purpose behind it all. Green goods, ESG investments, the young generation's proactive engagement side by side with the industry's decision-makers can re-focus the environmental agenda for generations to come. Now, seems to be the ripe moment to push the RESTART.

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