Why improving hotel website conversion rates is a top priority in 2024
16 experts shared their view
The average hotel website conversion rate (bookings divided by unique monthly visitors) is typically below 2%. Out of 100 people who visit the average hotel website, two or less will book, and 98 or more will abandon your website and make a booking elsewhere - either with your competitors or with the OTAs.
The situation is even worse with independent hotels, where conversion rates are even lower and range between 0.5% -1.5%. Most hoteliers do not even know what the conversion rates are on their property websites.
What are the reasons for these exceptionally low conversion rates?
Mobile-last property websites, poor user experience (UX), sub-standard CMS and CRS technologies, poor visual and textual content, lack of merchandising strategy and technology, lack of reward or guest appreciation program in place, market and rate disparity, lack of enticing offers and compelling reasons to even enter the booking engine process - less than 1/3 of website visitors do so, etc. are only some of the reasons for these poor results.
Hoteliers are spending their limited marketing dollars on SEO, paid search, metasearch, online media, PR, and social media in order to bring users to the hotel website, and allowing 98%-99.5% of them not to book. Complete waste of precious resources!
So, the question is, how can hoteliers increase conversion rates on their websites and boost direct bookings in 2024?
When platform companies dominate the hotel distribution businesses, hoteliers must leverage platforms as their showrooms and differentiate with unique value propositions. Assuming the hotel is more attractive than competitors, potential customers may visit the hotel website. At this moment, hotels compete against platforms for bookings. Hoteliers need to offer something that is only available on their websites to drive purchase intention. Platforms have a rigid template and limit their ability to provide information that resonates with travelers. Knowing platforms' restrictions, hoteliers should leverage their local knowledge to serve as the one-stop-shop local concierge and help travelers enjoy their precious vacation time. Instead of traditional packages, design packages centered on local experiences. These local experience packages make target customers' lives easier and are only available on hotel websites. That's how customers may decide to buy from hotels instead of platforms.
Sadly, many hotel chains also behave like platforms, and their corporate websites have limited opportunities for participating hotels to communicate unique value propositions. Consequently, customers can't differentiate between platforms and hotel chain websites. To compete against platforms, hoteliers must have a strong value proposition to convince customers to buy directly and offer something only available on their websites.