Competition in the Lodging Business - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Competition in the Lodging Business

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... in the Lodging Business. DEFINITION OF ... LODGING BUSINESS ... Price, in the lodging industry, is much more flexible than in the food service industry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Competition in the Lodging Business


1
Chapter 12
  • Competition in the Lodging Business

2
DEFINITION OF MARKETING
  • Marketing is communicating to and
    givingcustomers what they want, when they want
    it, where they want it, at a price they are
    willing to pay (Lewis, 2000).

3
COMPETITION IN THE LODGING BUSINESS
  • Based upon what you have learned so far, how
    would you characterize the lodging industry in
    terms of competitiveness?
  • The industry can be characterized as being highly
    competitive as well as very fragmented
  • There are many different ownership companies,
    brands and types of properties each vying for
    their share of the market

4
LEADING BRANDS
  • Holiday Inn (InterContinental) 188,000 rooms
  • Best Western 187,000 rooms
  • Days Inns (Wyndham) 142,000 rooms
  • Marriott 130,000 rooms
  • Hampton Inns (Hilton) 127,000 rooms
  • Others Super 8, Comfort Inn, Holiday Inn
    Express,, Motel 6, Ramada, Hilton

5
COMPETITION IN THE LODGING BUSINESS
  • Despite the visibility of several large hotel
    companies, many hotels are still independently
    owned and operated
  • From year to year, the number of hotels that
    attain chain affiliation usually equals the
    number of hotels that become independent
  • There were 89,000 hotel new hotel rooms projected
    to be built in 2004 55,000 were actually built
  • 86,000 new rooms were projected for 2006
  • As the industry grows, it becomes more
    competitive and marketing becomes more important

6
COMPETITION IN THE LODGING BUSINESS
  • The marketing mix in lodging is much the same as
    we described it earlier and how it applies to the
    food service industry. How the 4 Ps are
    interpreted, however, is slightly different
  • Product includes both physical goods and
    services. It also includes services provided at
    the chain level
  • Price refers to what the guest actually pays
    which may differ quite a bit from the rack rate
    (posted rate)
  • Price, in the lodging industry, is much more
    flexible than in the food service industry

7
COMPETITION IN THE LODGING BUSINESS
  • Place refers not only to the physical location
    of the hotel but also to the place where the
    hotel room is sold (which is often different).
  • Promotion refers to marketing communication
    advertising, sales, etc. Sales plays a much
    greater role in hotels because of the importance
    of group sales

8
THE PRODUCT
  • The Product is made up of goods and services
  • The hotel product can sometimes be more goods and
    sometimes more services
  • This often depends on the type of guest being
    served the upstairs guest or the downstairs
    guest

9
THE PRODUCT
  • The Upstairs guest is interested in the upstairs,
    or primarily the room. They are not interested
    in additional services. They are willing to trade
    off for lower prices
  • The Downstairs guest is interested in services
    and offerings in addition to the room. They want
    lounges, food service, public space, etc. and are
    generally willing to pay more

10
THE PRODUCT
  • Guests may obviously be further segmented by the
    extent and sophistication of services that they
    desire
  • Services can include food service, concierge
    (and concierge floors), spas, fitness centers,
    and business centers, among others
  • There are also systemwide services which will
    include reservations, accounting, billing and
    quality assurance

11
THE PRODUCT
  • Food service was the most important service for a
    long time but hotels are changing the way that
    they manage it
  • Some hotels are choosing to limit foodservice
    (breakfast only)
  • Some are choosing to eliminate it
  • Others are choosing to outsource it

12
FOOD SERVICE
  • Hotels have been exploring ways to increase the
    profitability of various departments (including
    rooms) in recent years (e.g. telephone, catering,
    fitness facilities, retail space, etc.)
  • The food and beverage area is one department that
    has posed unique challenges to hotels in recent
    years

13
FOOD SERVICE
  • Reasons to outsource
  • Financial considerations
  • Ability to focus on core competencies
  • Strategic intents

14
PRICE
  • Hotel pricing is meant to be flexible depending
    upon the time of year, the time of day,
    occupancy, the customer, the amount of business a
    group provides each year, etc.
  • The cost of providing the hotel room generally
    sets the floor (the lowest)
  • The rack rate generally establishes the ceiling
    (the highest)

15
PRICE
  • Special rates will include
  • Corporate
  • AAA
  • Government
  • Preferred
  • Association

16
PLACE
  • Location is a major factor in hotel success
  • Location is decided based upon a feasibility
    study
  • A feasibility study considers proximity to
    transportation routes, a demand analysis, market
    characteristics and a competitive analysis
  • Hotel locations may change over time

17
PLACE DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS
  • Distribution channels refer to how and where
    hotel rooms are sold
  • Whereas guests used to make reservations through
    the hotel (directly), travel agents or through a
    central reservations system, now online booking
    has changed this
  • Representation companies Utell
  • Online booking through hotel companies lowers
    costs resulting in lower cost rooms to customers
  • Finally, on-line agencies such as Expedia and
    Travelocity are gaining market share

18
PROMOTION
  • Advertising much hotel advertising still
    focuses on print media (newspapers and
    magazines)
  • Some hotels favour television advertising such as
    Holiday Inn, Starwood and Hilton
  • Good ads entice customers to learn more
  • Some advertising is a joint effort with local
    tourist/promotion boards
  • Internet advertising continues to increase and is
    easier to track success rates than more
    mainstream media (Embassy Suites spent 35 of
    budget on on-line advertising)

19
PROMOTION
  • Sales Promotion provides an incentive for the
    consumer
  • Sales promotions often take the form of rewards
    programs, partnerships (generally with airlines)
    and special events (special rates)
  • Recent example is between Sheraton and Yahoo
  • Rewards programs reward regular guests for
    continued patronage
  • Special deals try to boost business during
    traditionally slow periods
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