1. Best Practices in Hotel
Revenue Management
Combining the use of traditional hotel
management practices with a new wave
of technology for optimum results
The Only Real-Time Revenue Management Software
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2. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Combining the use of traditional hotel management
practices with a new wave of technology for optimum
results
The hotel industry, like many businesses is full of uncertainty. Sales can depend on a complex
combination of factors that can be affected by anything from customer service to bad weather.
Because of this, it is crucial to the success of a property that its owner and managers remain
completely attentive—not to mention, strategic—when it comes to hotel revenue
management practices.
Revenue management, also called yield management, in hotels is a practice that has evolved
significantly in its rather short history. The practice was first implemented by hotels in the late
1980s, after the airline industry demonstrated great success using inventory, capacity and
pricing to ‘manage’ revenue. Since then, revenue management has become one of the most
essential and identifiable aspects of the hotel operating strategy. However, it is apparent that
today’s brand of hotel revenue management differs considerably from that of 20, or even 10
years ago.
While strategies such as detailed historical analysis and emphasizing occupancy and ADR may
have dominated revenue managers’ focus two decades ago, stock market-influenced
algorithms and changes in the general approach to pricing strategy, channel management,
inventory allocation and the use of information as pertains to revenue management have all
greatly evolved.
With the advancement of technology, the best methods for optimizing hotel revenue
management now include much more than the traditional practices of hotels in the past. In
fact, in a recent industry survey undertaken by REVPAR GURU, just over 30 % of hoteliers
indicated most of their business came from direct/phone reservations and just over 27%
reported most of their business came from OTAs and online channels. This shows how the
Internet is becoming an increasingly important channel when it comes to hotel bookings,
which was not the case several decades ago. Because of this, using a combination of traditional
hotel revenue strategies combined with practices that involve sophisticated automated
software, allows hoteliers to strategically use up-to-the-minute information to give their
property a competitive edge among other hotels and resorts. Additionally, adopting many stock
market- based principles allows hoteliers to execute more effective revenue management.
Strategic pricing, rate discipline, automation and smart computing are also integral parts of a
successful hotel revenue management strategy.
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3. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
RevPAR
Best Practice #1
In early revenue management practices, occupancy was key. The idea of more “heads in beds”
was the main focus of hotel owners because it was believed that higher occupancy inevitably
led to more revenue. Like many approaches in revenue management, this idea has changed
significantly and continues to evolve.
With new metrics of the moment coming up every day—in fact, various analysts and experts
are hyping ADR and even exotic constructions like GOPPAR (gross operating profit per available
room) as the best yardstick for determining revenue management—RevPAR ultimately remains
the best measure. RevPAR remains the only revenue management metric that a hotel can
literally “take to the bank”- and as such keeping RevPAR at the forefront of any revenue
management strategy is a best practice in the industry.
Strategic Pricing
Best Practice #2
There is no doubt that pricing has always played a significant role in driving both occupancy
and RevPAR. But in today’s economic climate, mainly because of unprecedented price
transparency, rates have assumed an even greater role. Coming up with the most favorable rate
to offer a potential customer—one that will stimulate enough demand to stimulate occupancy
while not leaving a too-low ADR—has arguably become the single most important aspect of
revenue management.
So, how does a hotelier determine what an optimal rate should be at any given time? Years ago,
the answer would have been relatively simple. A hotel would merely look at historical pricing
and from there, apply any rate discounts or increases to a predetermined rack rate. Today,
particularly because of technology and the ever-growing number of online channels, it has
become increasingly difficult for a hotel revenue manager to manually keep up with all sales
channels. How can a hotel revenue manager solve this problem? Currently, the most effective
revenue management systems actually rely on stock market principles to formulate complex
algorithms that can generate with accuracy the optimal rate. These systems work in real time,
fine-tuning rates at concise periods to sustain the best rate over time.
Stock Market Pricing
Best Practice #3
For many hotels, the principle of optimum pricing is an unfamiliar concept, but there is no
reason this should be so. Optimum pricing ideologies have been used by financial experts,
particularly those who work with commodities, for a long time. High-performing hotels have
more recently used these principles in developing strategies that mirror systems in place at
financial companies. These hotels utilize a comprehensive ...
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4. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
revenue management system that sets prices based on both historical considerations and
current market conditions, giving it a wider range than that of more traditional pricing
strategies.
Just as most financial price-setting formulas use two decision makers for the highest level of
effectiveness—with one system correcting and accounting for the other—sophisticated hotel
revenue management programs do the same thing by offering a main program and a
secondary program. The main program generates rates based on historical data, paying
attention to account page positioning on online sales channels, competitors’ rates, inventory
availability, as well as other variables, and then implements them across sales channels. The
second program, meanwhile, monitors the first program in terms of effectiveness, and makes
adjustments to its processes accordingly.
Because the two programs work off of one another, the entire system becomes adaptive,
enabling these types of revenue management systems to time and again surpass traditional
revenue management techniques, truly demonstrating the advantage of applying stock market
principles to hotel revenue management.
Automation
Best Practice #4
The innovative nature of algorithmic and computational systems would be wasted without a
significant measure of automation. Automation is the best practice that often makes or breaks
a pricing strategy or the pricing aspect of a revenue management system. It is also perhaps the
most visible advantage revenue management systems hold over the traditional approach to
revenue management, yet few systems leverage automation to its fullest potential.
Most RMSs leave such time consuming tasks, like rate adjustments, to be performed manually,
under the justification that they are too important not to be managed under the complete
control of a human being. This is flawed reasoning because it actually requires a great deal of
speed and response in order to achieve optimal results, an ability that any one person cannot
attain simply because of their inability to work 24/7/365 days a year without breaks.
Automation is imperative to making up-to-the-minute, demand-based adjustments in pricing.
An automated system can distinguish when demand for a room is too low for a particular price
and drop the rate to encourage more buyers. Automated systems can also raise prices at the
right time, recognizing high demand and therefore an acceptance for a higher rate. And the
best part is that it can happen overnight and on weekends, even when the revenue manager is
taking their well-deserved breaks. Automation allows a hotel to avoid leaving money on the
table in the form of a room sold at a rate lower than a guest would ultimately be willing to pay.
It can be that one factor that can take a hotel from 60% occupancy to 90% occupancy,
sometimes even overnight.
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5. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Determining which channel is selling inventory fastest is most often a minute-to-minute
judgment, and that decision is best left to an automated system, which can make those
decisions with less information than a human revenue manager. And although many systems
claim that they are automated, most RMS usually only adjust once a day. A truly automated
system will make many adjustments an hour, across multiple sales channels. An automated,
algorithm-based computer program system of the appropriate sophistication, can recognize, by
quickly combing data and by analyzing trends with a little less raw input, which channel is
performing best, assigning inventory there at the appropriate price to generate the most
bookings and the most money for each booking.
Rate Discipline
Best Practice #5
In today’s operating environment, one of the most visible aspects of revenue management is
rate discipline. Two decades ago, rate discipline and its effects on brand identity and future
room sales was barely considered, and still, the concept is subject to wide interpretation and
can sometimes be at odds with other revenue management aims. So what exactly is rate
discipline? This concept often comes up in reference to discounting or across-the-board rate
cuts; it includes the theory that implementing deep discounts to boost occupancy or stimulate
demand—a common practice during the recession—can actually depreciate the hotel’s brand
image.
While sometimes hotels will have to lower rates based on demand—or, shall we say lack
of—rate can run contrary to other important aims because sacrificing occupancy to maintain
strict rate discipline can be as financially irresponsible as deep discounting. In fact, a rate
discount negatively affects a hotel’s brand (unless, of course your hotel defines their brand by
bargain prices). So how does a hotelier practice strategic rate discipline? It is by dynamically
adjusting rates based on demand, without going too far in either direction.
Brands have immense value. Indeed, according to a 2002 Interbrand study, brand value
accounts for approximately 38% of the value of the companies that own them. If discounting is
damaging to a hotel’s brand, and maintaining one static rate is equally detrimental to RevPAR
and occupancy, then the solution lies in variable rate, modified in real-time to best match
demand conditions. Variable rates eliminate the predicament of whether or not to engage in
across-the board discounting. Instead, the highest rate likely to generate a sale is presented to
the right customer at the right time. This is feasible through the use of a sophisticated revenue
management system, one that also manages multiple sales channels, administers room
inventory, and optimizes page position on OTAs. To maximize occupancy and rate, however,
we must go back to the practice of automation, where rates are modified subtly, in real-time, to
avoid the pitfalls of wide-scale discounting.
In the end, just because a hotel offers a particular rate doesn’t necessarily mean a consumer will
take that rate. Rate discipline through dynamic pricing provides a workable solution to this
truism, and helps a hotel increase occupancy and RevPAR even in tough times.
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6. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Using Real-Time Information
Best Practice #6
As previously mentioned, the hotel industry has vastly changed over the course of a short time.
And like everything else, it has entered the information age. Decades ago, a hotelier trusted a
few dedicated individuals to keep track of competitors’ rates (call around), demand levels and
booking pace. Certainly things have changed since then. The reason this valuable information is
now widely available is due to the arrival of internet sales. Now, every hotel posts rates online
through various sales portals and those rates can be monitored. Now, because of the staggering
percentage of room sales made through the online channels, demand levels can be assessed
minute to minute. And because hotels have unfettered access to this information through the
Web, they can act on it in a quick and decisive manner. Unfortunately though, most hotels fail
to adequately access this information, or if they do, they fail to leverage it effectively.
To keep track of this information effectively, especially as it is constantly changing, hotels need
the right tools, which are most often found in a comprehensive, automated revenue
management systems that can, among other things, accurately predict movements in hotel
room price. Advanced revenue management system are not only capable of constantly
consulting demand levels and monitoring competing hotels’ rates, they can also make
adjustments to the rate being offered based on this real-time information.
Price Prediction
Best Practice #7
Any hotelier can tell you that revenue management involves a certain measure of prediction.
For this simple reason, it follows that any revenue management system will draw from other
industries where prediction is at the core of their business. For instance, some revenue
management systems use financial instruments to make predictions, or leverage emerging
techniques like crowdsourcing or artificial markets. Meanwhile, others integrate option pricing
principles to help generate optimal room rates. At any rate, the backwards-looking techniques
currently in place at many hotels is fast becoming obsolete.
Predicting the direction of future prices may be a bit foreign to hotels, which often take a
supply-side approach to rate setting. However, the most strategic approach to price prediction
goes back to borrowing basic stock market concepts principles, which focus almost entirely on
predicting what price the market will bear for a particular good in the near future. The hotel
room, as a (relatively) uniform, highly perishable product, is as much a commodity as a barrel of
apples. But as financial markets have methods to determine the optimal price of a particular
good or service (futures markets, etc.), hotels tend to subjectively assign a rack rate, and modify
the rate from there. A comprehensive revenue management system for hotels can set prices
based on both historical considerations and current market conditions, giving it twice the range
of more traditional pricing strategies.
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7. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Channel Management
Best Practice #8
Channel management is an increasingly important practice as OTAs and third-party booking
sites continue to thrive. In a sales environment that features more online channels than ever,
the ability to manage rates across all OTAs is vital. When it comes to the hotel industry, there is
currently a wide array of channel management systems available on the market and these are
great tools to save time for revenue managers. However, each one of these systems lacks on key
function—none are automated or integrated into a property’s pricing; they still require manual
input, manual intervention and manual pricing decision to operate.
The ability to change rates and inventory allocation to various third-party booking sites
individually is crucial, as each sales channel may exhibit different demand levels. The problem
lies in the idea, which is still shared by many hoteliers, that a task such as channel management
is far too important to delegate to a system or software. But the truth is, the only way to
optimally manage the overwhelming number of sales channels is with the help of a
comprehensive revenue management system that is capable of identifying demand levels on
any one of hundreds of online portals where a hotel has inventory posted, then adjusting that
rate or inventory allocation to maximize the revenue earned. Without automated channel
management, this would be virtually impossible for even a talented team of personnel. Yet
surprisingly, REVPAR GURU’s recent industry survey found an astounding 74.5% of hoteliers still
rely solely on a human being to manage all aspects of their revenue management tasks, even in
today’s fast paced industry, where information is changing every second.
Adapting For a New Era
As changes in approach to revenue management have flourished in the past few years, those
approaches that work best have distinguished themselves as a special sort of best practices.
These strategies integrate in real-time the automated distribution, allocation, pricing and
yielding, while benchmarking against all competing hotels in a destination. These practices
become achievable by a real-time RMS system that has fully-integrated channel management
capabilities.
The best approaches to revenue management in general are those that use RevPAR as the
dominant metric, and those that emphasize the usage of revenue management systems to
enhance revenue managers’ efficacy, rather than making revenue managers take control of the
minutiae of the never-ending calculations and pricing updates. In hotels displaying revenue
management best practices, revenue managers think proactively, not reactively and focus more
on optimizing processes and working with internal sales/marketing teams to develop and
implement long-term pricing strategies that will complement the pricing updates handled by
the RMS.
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8. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Survey Sidebar
By conducting an industry survey over the past few months, REVPAR GURU set to find out how
hoteliers are handling their revenue management, how they are being affected by today’s
technological advances, and their thoughts on new generation automated hotel revenue
management systems. Here are some of the results.
1. Which business source(s) is most effective for your
property?
SALES
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9. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
2. How does your property handle revenue
management?
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
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10. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
3. If you don't use an external RMS company, what
concerns you most about implementing an
automated RMS?
EXTERNAL RMS CONCERNS
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11. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
4. Which metric do you feel is the most relevant to
measure your RM efficacy?
RM EFFICACY
According to the survey results, the majority of hoteliers - 67% to be exact - have expressed that
the most important factor of their revenue management efficacy, is maintaining RevPAR, yet
only 11% of hoteliers are even using external revenue management systems in their daily
operations. With Internet sales on the rise—34% reported the Internet as their most effective
sales channel—it is more vital than ever to have an effective revenue management strategy to
maintain business. Now is the time for hotels to become pioneers in the new age of the
industry by implementing the use of a sophisticated, automated system that can perform all the
best hotel revenue management strategies, leaving revenue managers time to do what they do
best – develop strategy and oversee the system's operations.
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12. Best Practices in
Hotel Revenue Management
Did you know that the REVPAR GURU system is the only
technology solution available in the market that fulfills all of these
very important best practices. So whether a bull or a bear market,
the REVPAR GURU software solution (and the stock market
principles upon which it was based) just makes good (dollars and)
sense.
About REVPAR GURU
REVPAR GURU provides hotels around the world with an alternative revenue management
software solution, designed to deliver maximum bookings and profits. As REVPAR GURU's
custom-designed Yield Dynamic Price Engine is the only real-time revenue management
software available on the market, it meets the rapidly changing needs of hotels in a very
demanding business environment. REVPAR GURU’s solution offers dynamic rate optimization,
real-time pricing, integrated internet and extranet yield channel management and GDS sales
distribution, to increase a hotel's RevPAR intelligently and effectively, while maintaining rate
integrity and automated rate parity. Since 2004, REVPAR GURU’s software solution has been
used by hotels worldwide to increase occupancy and RevPAR.
Headquartered in Miami, Florida, additional information can be found at
www.revparguru.com or by calling +1.786.478.3500.
Follow REVPAR GURU on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or YouTube.
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