Today's typical online travel consumer - your past, current and future hotel guest - is exposed to more than 250,000 digital micro-moments a year: from social media interactions to messaging and quick read of the headlines on their smartphones (Google Research). This year travel consumers will spend more time on digital media - 6:58 hours/day - than all other media (TV, Radio, Newspapers, Magazines) combined - 4:41 hours/day (eMarketer).
With the explosion of the "digital way of life," the customer journey has turned into a digital customer journey that is becoming increasingly complex, forcing hoteliers to adjust their revenue management tactics, overhaul their technology stack, corporate and marketing strategies in order to engage, acquire, service and retain these digitally-savvy travel consumers across multiple digital touch points and across all digital channels and devices.
Google defines this digital customer journey as a fluid series of interconnected stages: Dreaming, Planning, Booking, Experiencing and Sharing/Retention Phases, in which every phase both influences and is being influenced by the other steps of the journey.
Traditionally, revenue managers have been involved in only one of these five phases: The Booking Phase. In my view, revenue managers should be able to understand the full digital customer journey and its five phases, and, together with the marketing and CRM teams/specialists, get proactively involved in all five phases to engage, acquire and retain the customer.
Commercial directors/managers, overseeing all of the hotel teams/staff tasked to engage, acquire and retain the customer - revenue management, sales, marketing and CRM - play an increasingly important role in synchronizing the efforts, tactics and strategies of these diverse functions.
One of these very important tasks is to educate the commercial teams that the digital customer journey requires three distinct, but interconnected and interdependent categories: Guest Engagement Marketing, Guest Acquisition Marketing and Guest Retention Marketing and that the hotel must "play" in all of these three categories: Not in one or two, but in all three categories.
Let's review the three marketing categories:
Guest Engagement Marketing:
This category includes brand marketing, social media, PR, influencer marketing, content marketing, etc. These marketing initiatives help hoteliers connect with the online traveler in the Dreaming and Planning Phases and steer them "in the right direction" in the next phase – the Booking Phase.
Guest Acquisition Marketing:
This category includes all Performance Marketing i.e. ROI-focused direct-response marketing formats, including: SEO, paid search/SEM, display advertising, retargeting, metasearch, email marketing, affiliate marketing, omni-marketing campaigns, etc., as well as all of the hotel website related marketing initiatives: promotional slides, special offers banners and promo tiles, limited time offers, personalization marketing offers, etc. These initiatives build upon the successful customer engagements in the Dreaming and Planning Phases and help hoteliers "close the deal" i.e. convince the online traveler to choose the hotel and a direct booking at the hotel in the Booking Phase.
These performance marketing initiatives are ROI-centric, focusing on seasonal and ad hoc occupancy needs and acquiring first-time guests.
Guest Retention Marketing:
This category includes all CRM marketing initiatives in the pre-, in- and post-stay marketing, loyalty marketing, drip campaigns and marketing automation initiatives aimed to turn the guest into a repeat guest and loyal customer. Building upon the customer relationship established in the previous Dreaming, Planning and Booking phases, and utilizing CRM and loyalty marketing initiatives, hoteliers can win the guest loyalty in the Experiencing and Sharing Phases.
Only through coordinated team efforts of the Commercial Team and only through investing adequately in all three marketing categories above would the hotel be able to establish relationship with the digitally-savvy customer in all phases of the customer journey: Dreaming, Planning, Booking, Experiencing and Sharing/Retention and win the direct booking, resulting in increased RevPAR and occupancy, decreased OTA dependency and lower distribution costs.