Column: industry Tag: Hotel marketing,hotel marketer,marketing Published: 2017-05-24 16:00 Source: Author:
Every week it seems as if there is something new and important competing for your attention and causing FOMO (fear of missing out) stress.
With all this marketing overload, it’s easy to forget what is really important and which marketing assets actually have the biggest impact on results.
We’re here to help…
Of course every property has unique demands and market conditions, but we want to try and free your mind from all the nonsense, hype and clutter and review the 10 things that should TRULY matter (in our humble opinion) to the majority of hotel marketers right now:
1. Having a Remarkable Product
Boundless creativity, clever marketing concepts and even a robust marketing budget are essentially?useless?if your hotel is crap.?Great marketing can only begin with a great product.If your hotel is showing its frayed edges and providing lackluster experiences (or no real experience at all), no amount of brilliant marketing will save you from a downward spiral. Scour your hotel reviews and find out what guests complain about the most. Then, present this to your owners and champion the improvements your hotel needs to turn the tide and rise above the comp set.
2. Telling a Compelling Story
There is a reason why “storytelling” has become a hotel marketing buzzword over the last several years. Storytelling captivates your audience, draws them in emotionally and entices them to want more.
Travelers – both leisure and business – don’t need to be sold on your thread count, the hours of your fitness center or the square footage of your ballroom. When they research hotel options, they are really looking for how your hotel will impact their lives during and after their stay. Follow these steps to use?storytelling to win over the hearts and wallets of your target hotel audience.
3. Integrating Systems and Technology
Using different providers for each of your critical marketing technology needs (i.e. CRS, website, hotel booking engine, PMS, and CRM) is a recipe for disaster.?Many hotels are missing out on countless reservations because of one simple reason: they don’t have integrated technology.
The key is to work with as few providers as possible to make sure each component of your marketing can seamlessly speak to each other and simplify reporting for stressed-out hotel revenue, marketing and sales execs who are tired of system incompatibility and reporting nightmares.
4. Measuring Cost-per-Booking
Think you’re impressing your hotel owners with news about your social media followers, your cool new marketing videos or your rebranding initiatives?
Think again.
Today, hotel owners expect their hotel marketing departments to contribute to the hotel’s revenue targets in ways that can be?measured. Without tracking and showing numerical evaluation of your marketing efforts, you’re going to face a difficult time later in the year when you need to request next year’s marketing dollars.
To prove how your marketing efforts are adding to the hotel’s revenue, you’ll need to calculate your marketing cost-per-booking (MCPB). Use this number to show your marketing team’s value and to ensure you’re given the proper amount of marketing dollars to continue bringing in business for the hotel. Be especially vigilant to know your cost-per-booking from OTAs as well. Avoid the trap of viewing OTA bookings as purely revenue with no cost of acquisition.
5. Consolidating Vendors
The more hotel marketing vendors you work with, the more chaos and confusion you should expect.? Hiring multiple, disconnected vendors to handle separate hotel marketing tasks, like hotel website design, hotel email marketing, hotel social media and hotel PPC campaigns, will halt your property’s success in so many ways. First, you’re paying way too much for vendors handling only one function. Second, you’ll spend most of your day relaying messages from one vendor to the next. And, lastly, no one vendor can ever be held accountable for your marketing success or failure, since they can easily point fingers at each other.
Smart hotel marketers avoid juggling vendors… thereby reducing stress and gaining time to spend on proactive campaigns.
6. Sticking to a Plan
Marketing to everyone will get you nowhere fast.
Smart hotel marketers have a roadmap with a breakdown of exactly how much revenue they expect from each segment of the hotel’s business. This enables the firm to correlate its separate investments in marketing for leisure/transient, group, corporate and F&B.
The best hotel marketers understand that generic, aimless and ‘pretty’ marketing won’t cut it. Every marketing activity they create is built with the intention of drawing direct business from one or more of a hotel’s pre-defined guest segments.
This will allow you to delegate the proper amount of investments to market to group, corporate, leisure/transient or F&B business. Every marketing activity you craft should be built with the intention of pulling in direct business from one or more of your target guest segments.
7. Consistency Across All Channels
Sure, setting rates and keeping content consistent across the vast array of digital channels can get overwhelming. But maintaining rate, image and promo parity is vital to your hotel’s bottom line.
Smart hotel marketers also know that their USP (unique selling proposition) has to be consistent across all brand touchpoints and channels. If consumers see your property described as “urban chic” in one place and “a traditional business hotel” in another… dissonance occurs, causing erosion and attrition.
Consistency matters.
Whether it’s sending out email offers on a steady cadence, updating your hotel’s social media accounts or communicating with your group clients, it’s critical to set schedules and maintain consistency regardless of season or current results.
Your core marketing activities need to be sacred and deserve to be given the attention, resources and budget required.
8. Stunning Photography
Awe-inspiring photos are worth a thousand bookings.?Evocative images provoke an emotional response and directly contribute to booking decisions. Your images prepare potential guests for what’s to come.?Along with your?hotel’s website design, they convey your experience with a single glance.
So, be ruthless and replace all bland property images, including those that are old, grainy, dark or fail to convey a remarkable guest experience. Hire a hotel photographer trained in shooting real estate or architecture. Even better, complement those professional images with?authentic and?free?photos taken by your hotel’s best photographers?– your own guests.
9. Simultaneous Promotions Across All Channels
Filling periods of need is not easy… which is why smart hotel marketers launch promotions across all channels simultaneously. (See #7: Consistency, above.) Imagine you are the general of all your forces, you’d want them to coordinate operations and move in unison!
Launching the promo on every channel AT THE SAME TIME gives consumers comfort and avoids confusion. If guests see different special offers for your hotel on a 3rd?party channel than what is shown on your own direct hotel website, they will get uncomfortable with the inconsistency and find another hotel that gives them greater mental comfort.
10. Continuing to Boost Online Guest Sentiment
Guests will always trust other guests more than you. This is why past guest reviews are one of the most influential factors impacting your hotel’s future success.?Whether glowing or scathing, every review is an opportunity to stumble or shine.?Get rid of the canned corporate responses and strive to always answer genuinely and authentically. Graciously own up to any mistakes and correct mistaken guests with grace. Even offer solutions for problems you can’t control, like the noisy nightclub across the street or the construction next door.
Keep all of your responses thoughtful and they’ll have a greater chance of turning negative reviews into shining moments that make your hotel even more likable and worthy of a visit.
About Tambourine
Tambourine uses technology and creativity to increase revenue for hotels and destinations worldwide. The firm, now in its 33rd year, is located in New York City and Fort Lauderdale.
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