To "four airlines," CarTrawler chief commercial officer Aileen McCormack said, ancillary revenue is already the "predominant revenue source." She calls this phenomenon the "ancillary revenue revolution." However, in our industry, up/cross-selling seems to be perceived as mainly a "vanity metric."

A friend of mine always says that "there's no such thing as ancillary sources of revenue. If you're selling a service or a product, that's revenue, period." However, with few exceptions (golf resorts, casinos, SPA hotels, ski resorts), our industry is traditionally room-centric.

The benefits of upselling, however, are numerous:

  • Increase in booking value;
  • Better guest experience and, consequentially, positive impact on reputation and guest retention;
  • A deeper understanding of guests' need to hyperpersonalize their stays;
  • Increased direct revenue, as most upsold services/products are sold directly at the hotel and not through intermediaries.

Thinking out of the box of the "usual suspects" (room upgrades, early check-ins/late check-out, stay extensions, F&B, wellness packages, tours and activities, events tickets), how can our industry exploit such a lucrative activity?

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Tomeu Fiol
Tomeu Fiol
Global Hotel Technologies Director, Meliá Hotels International

I personally do not expect an ancillary revolution. We have been hearing about the importance and the opportunity that ancillaries' services bring to our industry: increasing revenue and boosting the personalization. Some companies have acquired desiccated ancillaries' platforms others signed join ventures or integration with dedicated platforms, trying to add more value (and revenue) to the guest full journey, including curated local experiences, adding more service to the room... But in one way or the other, despite being an important part of every hospitality strategy, no one of them has really succeed.

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