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?
Adults spend only 12% of their online time on websites (source: eMarketer). Why? Because the first website ('91) and today's fancy hotel sites share the same fundamental flaws. Sure, there's been some (not much, TBH) UX improvement, but it's mostly lipstick on a pig. Every hotel website forces users to navigate a new interface just to book a room. It's not just annoying; it's a conversion killer. UX uniformity is the only way to save conversions. Open the Booking.com app or a Custom GPT, and you know exactly what to do, whether getting a cheap apartment or a palace. One learning curve, finito!
Now, here's a crazy thought: Imagine if all 700K hotels worldwide used the exact same web template. No frills, no BS about
our website should be unique, as our hotel is unique!Just a straightforward, user-friendly, same-for-all design. This would drastically reduce the cognitive load on users, who wouldn't have to relearn a new interface every time. Amazon dominates because it offers a consistent, to the point of being boring, experience. So, when creating a website, remember what Tyler Durden used to say:You're not a beautiful and unique snowflake.
'cause none of us is.