How will AI solutions allow hotels to shift bookings away from the OTAs onto the direct channel?
12 experts shared their view
Year to date, 2023 has seen a gamut of innovative solutions for hotels built upon generative artificial intelligence learning models, foremost among them being ChatGPT. The promise of these technologies is immense, ranging from back-of-house operational efficiencies to heightened service, new experiential offerings and precision guest segmentation.
In the near-term, the most applicable of all these is perhaps the chatbot which can help to boost the user experience on a hotel's brand.com by offering an easy way for customers to learn whatever they want about a property or, with the appropriate integrations, complete transactions including room reservations and package purchases.
Concurrent to hotel organizations' investigations and deployment of AI solutions, both Booking Holdings and Expedia are testing and implementing ChatGPT-based travel planning toolkits with the goal of reinforcing the value of staying within their own platforms versus letting travelers go elsewhere to book.
This suggests a race to the finish line. Who will eventually win? That is, can hotels actually shift bookings from the OTAs onto their direct channels by using AI to improve both the website user experience as well as the onsite experience? Such a channel shift would be immensely valuable, helping companies increase net revenues by reducing the commissions paid to third parties on each customer acquisition.
Then if this is possible, how can hotels do this and what areas should they focus their AI efforts on? Or, conversely, is it all for naught, and the OTAs should forever be seen as an insurmountable 'necessary evil' for our businesses?
Generative AI technologies like ChatGPT are already democratizing the travel and hospitality industry, similar to what the the Internet, social media and mobile technology did.
Here the question is: who can and will take advantage of this democratization? The answer is simple: Only industry players who can invest in talent and technology. Guess who these are at the end of the day? The independent hotelier? The small tour operator? The traditional ravel agency? The vacation rental host? Nah, only the big kahunas like OTAs, specialized OTAs like Airbnb and Viator, and major hotel chains, cruise lines, airlines and car rental companies.
In hospitality, except for the major hotel chains, hotels do not have the financial, technology and talent resources to select, train, implement and maintain generative AI bots like ChatGPT on their own. The AI-powered hotel-specific chatbots like Asksuite and Quicktext are perfect for hotel websites of independents, midsize and smaller hotel brands, boutique and luxury brands. But what good can a chatbot do on a prehistoric, mobile-unfriendly property website, deprived of SEO and adequate digital marketing support and practically invisible to the traveling public?
I am afraid, the ultimate winners of generative AI will be, once again, the OTAs