Should hoteliers allow group bookings via the OTAs?
The OTAs have been trying to enter the leisure group booking market for decades now. Traditionally, hoteliers have been reluctant to allow the OTAs to enter the lucrative group market, limiting their OTA exposure to the transient leisure and unmanaged business market.
Lately, more and more hoteliers are receiving group bookings from the OTAs that are disguised as individual reservations under the same guest name and with the typical OTA 24h cancellation policy. Some hotels end up getting 10 and more rooms for the same stay period and for the same booker.
Obviously, these reservations constitute a group booking, split into separate reservations, without adhering to all the hotel group policies, such as deposits, restrictions and cancellations.
The question is, should hoteliers allow OTA customers to "trick the system" or should demand that the OTAs disallow multiple reservations for same stay period by the same customer. Should hoteliers demand the OTAs insert in the booking path a policy that "For group reservations of xx and more rooms, different group policies, deposits and restrictions apply?"
*This viewpoint is co-authored by Max Starkov.