Hospitality Revenue Management Concepts and Practices
Hospitality Revenue Management Concepts and Practices
Hospitality Revenue Management Concepts and Practices
MANAGEMENT
Concepts and Practices
HOSPITALITY REVENUE
MANAGEMENT
Concepts and Practices
Edited by
Peter Szende
First edition published 2021
Apple Academic Press Inc. CRC Press
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Dr. Szende received a Fulbright U.S. Scholar Grant in 2014. He was pre-
sented with the Chef Herman Breithaupt Award from International CHRIE
in 2017.
Marianna B. Accomando
As both Vice President of Sales & Marketing and Assistant General Manager for
the Four Diamond Seaport Hotel and World Trade Center in Boston, Marianna
holds multiple responsibilities. She is responsible for leading all sales and market-
ing efforts to all key customer-facing business segments. Her role includes leading
several teams, such as group, exhibition, transient, revenue management, reserva-
tions, catering, and weddings for the property. In addition, she manages the guest
service experience for one of Boston’s leading and consistently in the top 5 Trip
Advisor Boston rated hotels.
A graduate of the University of New Hampshire, Ms. Accomando brings over
35 years of hospitality experience to this position.
Calvin Anderson
Calvin serves as Chief Commercial Officer at Domio, a luxury apartment-hotels
company that offers the amenities of a hotel, with the footprint and features of fully
equipped apartments in every room. Prior to Domio, Anderson led all commer-
cial verticals for OYO North America including data science, brand and revenue
channels as the company scaled from zero to more than 300 hotels in its first year.
Additionally, Calvin served as CRO of RLHC overseeing top line of a 1,400-hotel
portfolio and carried senior revenue strategy rolls at Duetto, Hilton and Highgate
before that. Anderson also taught grad school courses at the NYU Tisch Center for
Hospitality and Tourism, serves on the HSMAI Americas Board, was named 20
Next-Gen Leaders by Hotel Magin 2018 and was also named one of 10 Technology
Rock Stars by Hospitality Upgrade in 2020.
Nicholas Catalfamo
Nicholas is the Director of Revenue Management at the Courtyard by Marriott
Boston Cambridge with Highgate. He previously served as the Revenue Analyst
at the Boston Park Plaza, where he began his vocation in revenue management.
A graduate of Boston University’s School of Hospitality Administration, Nicholas
co-authored a study published in the Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Education
in 2018.
x Meet the Contributing Authors
Bob Chamberlin
A graduate of Boston University with a BS in Hotel and Food Administration and
an MBA with a concentration in Marketing from Bentley College, Bob has 25 years
of hospitality experience with Sheraton, Westin, Starwood, Hilton, and Vista Inter-
national. Bob is a Senior Business Analyst with Liberty Mutual, working with the
Meeting and Event Strategy team, and Opening Revenue Manager for the Encore
Boston Harbor, the first urban resort casino in the United States. As Manager of
Strategic Analysis and Business Optimization at the Seaport Hotel & World Trade
Center Boston, he developed the space optimization principles for the 200,000 sq.
ft. of meeting space, boosting banquet revenue by 41% over a 10-year period.
Theresa Doherty
Theresa Doherty is a graduate of the Cornell University School of Hotel Admin-
istration. She has served as an Adjunct Professor at Boston University’s School of
Hospitality Administration, teaching several courses in revenue management. The-
resa has spent the majority of her revenue management career with Marriott where
she is currently an Area Director of Revenue Management.
Elyana Falk
Elyana Falk has a passion for hospitality and currently leads the Expedia lodging
team in the Pacific Northwest as Area Manager. Elyana and her team work closely
with more than 1,000 properties throughout the Pacific Northwest US, helping
partners to build their visibility, increase guest interest, and drive bookings through
the many brands of Expedia, Inc. Elyana has worked in three varying territories
with Expedia, including Newport, Rhode Island; New York City; and currently
Seattle, Washington. Prior to Expedia, Elyana worked at a variety of hotels with
roles ranging from housekeeping to revenue, giving her a unique perspective of
combining operations with the online travel market. Elyana is an active member of
HSMAI and is a board member of the Cornell Hotel Society.
Gabor Fenyves
Gabor Fenyves is currently the Vice President of Revenue Management for Cres-
cent Hotels and Resorts, based in Toronto, Canada. Prior to joining Crescent, he
worked at the Westmont Hospitality Group as Corporate Director of Revenue Man-
agement. Gabor graduated from Cornell University with a Master’s of Management
in Hospitality. He holds a BA from École Hôtelière de Lausanne in Switzerland and
has traveled the world extensively, working for multiple hotel brands, including
IHG, Marriott, Fairmont, and Hilton. His expertise lies with independent proper-
ties and incorporating out-of-the-box revenue management strategies in the day-
to-day hotel operations.
Meet the Contributing Authors xi
Carolyn Fredey
Carolyn Fredey is a hospitality revenue management professional and adjunct pro-
fessor based in New York, New York. She holds a MMH degree from the School of
Hotel Administration at Cornell University, as well a BA from Florida State Uni-
versity. She enjoys teaching her students and employees the importance of pric-
ing and having a revenue management strategy that considers brand integrity and
profitability.
Jonathan Jaeger
Jonathan Jaeger currently serves as a Senior Managing Director with LW Hospital-
ity Advisors, based in New York City. During his tenure at LWHA, Mr. Jaeger has
been responsible for the management and execution of over 1000 lodging/gam-
ing consulting and valuation assignments throughout the United States, Canada,
Mexico, and the Caribbean on an annual basis. From February of 2014 through
August of 2019, Jonathan was a Managing Director with the firm. Prior to joining
LWHA, Mr. Jaeger had been with Pinnacle Advisory Group from January of 2008
through January of 2014. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science from the Boston
University School of Hospitality Administration in addition to earning a minor in
Business Administration from the Boston University School of Management. Mr.
Jaeger also serves as a member of the Adjunct Faculty at New York University and
at Boston University.
Leslie Lew
Leslie Lew is an entrepreneur, hotel executive and Founder of Public Boardroom
Inc. Lew has over 20 years of experience in the hospitality industry starting his
career at a five-diamond resort gift shop to leading the revenue management, dis-
tribution and e-commerce organization as Vice President of Revenue at Provenance
Hotels. He graduated with honors from Boston University School of Hospitality
Administration, guest lectured at New York University Tisch Center for Hospitality
and served on the board of National Society of Minorities in Hospitality. Lew cre-
ates economic opportunity and mobility through education.
Roy Madhok
Roy Madhok is the Vice President of Revenue Management for Real Hospitality
Group, Roy Madhok, CRME, CHIA, where he oversees revenue management and
distribution for the RHG portfolio of over 100 hotels. Prior to joining the Real
Hospitality Group, Roy was a Regional Director of Revenue for Highgate and also
served as an Adjunct Professor at Boston University’s School of Hospitality Admin-
istration, teaching both introductory and advanced revenue management courses.
Roy has been a speaker at various panels and conferences such as the HSMAI Rev-
enue Optimization Conference, the Expedia Partner Conference, Cornell Hotel
xii Meet the Contributing Authors
Raul Moronta
Raul Moronta is a passionate hotel revenue management leader responsible for
overseeing revenue strategy for Crescent Hotels & Resorts. Prior to this role, he
was responsible for franchise revenue management operations for the full-service
portfolio at Starwood Hotels & Resorts. He holds a BS from the Pontificia Univer-
sidad Catolica Madre & Maestra in the Dominican Republic and an MBA from the
University of New Haven, Connecticut. He has a Certificate in Hotel Real Estate
Investment and Asset Management from Cornell University and is a past board
member of the HSMAI Boston Chapter.
Lambis Pahiyiannakis
Lambis Pahiyiannakis is responsible for underwriting acquisition opportuni-
ties and assisting Asset Management with quarterly and yearly reporting at Cor-
nerstone Real Estate Advisers. He also plays a critical role in underwriting and
reviewing lending opportunities for the core mortgage and alternative investments
group. Prior to joining Cornerstone in 2013, Mr. Pahiyiannakis was a Business
Development and Acquisitions Analyst for Pyramid Hotel Group in Boston for
over two years. There, he was actively engaged with business development efforts
and assisted with adding and retaining more than 20 management contracts to
the existing portfolio of approximately 50 hotels. Mr. Pahiyiannakis earned a BS
degree from Boston University with a double major in Economics and Hospitality
Administration.
Kristin V. Rohlfs
Kristin V. Rohlfs is an independent consultant and researcher based in Rochester,
New York. She holds a PhD in Revenue Management and an MMH degree from
the School of Hotel Administration at Cornell University, as well as a BBA degree
from The University of Texas at Austin. Her research interests focus on small-busi-
ness application of operations management and revenue management and cus-
tomer reactions to revenue management practices. Her authored works include a
dissertation, “The Role of Space in Revenue Management” (2009), and an article,
“Best Available Rate Pricing,” published in the Cornell Quarterly (2005). A 2011
article co-authored with Breffni Noone and Kelly McGuire, “Social Media Meets
Hotel Revenue Management: Opportunities, Issues, and Unanswered Questions,” can
be found in the Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management.
Meet the Contributing Authors xiii
Adam Snitzer
Adam Snitzer is President of Peak Revenue Performance, Inc., an international
pricing and revenue strategy consulting firm with expertise in consumer products,
financial services, and travel, particularly cruise lines, riverboat companies, and
tour operators. For sixteen years, he occupied senior revenue management posi-
tions at cruise lines such as Royal Caribbean, NCL, Cunard, Costa, and Seabourn.
He lectures on cruise line revenue management and writes frequently on pricing
and revenue management topics.
FOREWORD
It is hard to believe that both Dr. Peter Szende and I got our starts in the
hotel and restaurant business before revenue management was “invented”
in the industry and certainly before the term was coined. As the notion of
yield management has given way to the larger concept of revenue manage-
ment and as terms such as “opaque rates,” “rate parity,” “dynamic pricing,”
“BAR,” and “LRA” have entered the hospitality lexicon, it has become more
and more important for students, professionals, and academics to become
experts in this still-emerging feld.
When I joined the Boston University faculty in 2011, Dr. Szende was
working hard on developing a series of hospitality management learning
modules centered around food and beverage management. He and I com-
muted to home from work together nearly every night; the one-mile walk
and conversation was interrupted only by a stop at the grocery store for
the daily samples, and we would remark on how and why they could price
bananas at only 19 cents each (29 cents for organic)—an interesting revenue
management question!
He described for me, many times, what ultimately became this textbook,
which brilliantly combines, as the title indicates, both concepts and practices,
making this a single-source resource for practitioners, faculty members, and
students. He has identifed, hounded, and, in some cases, harassed many
leading experts in their respective subject areas to deliver their expertise
in a manner that expands their reach far beyond their current roles. Tese
experts include seasoned industry professionals as well as relative newcom-
ers to the revenue management feld, including many of whom were Dr.
Szende’s students, others who are adjunct faculty members at a number of
leading institutions, and others who are bringing to light, for the frst time
formally, revenue management insight from additional allied hospitality
segments.
forecasting and budgeting. Chapter 7, which provides the tools for both pre-
hoc and post-hoc performance analysis, contains novel material that can be
readily applied to real-life scenarios. Chapter 8 then concludes the hotel rev-
enue management portion of the text with practical ideas on how to bench-
mark performance.
Finally, Chapter 15 brings everything full circle and provides the hotel
owner’s perspective on the revenue management process. Afer all, what use
is maximizing revenue if it does not ultimately improve proft?
When I made the decision to return to the industry in 2013 afer a six-
year absence, one of the areas where I knew my skills had fallen behind
was understanding the dramatic evolution that was occurring in the revenue
xviii Foreword
management area. Quite frankly, it’s been a challenge to keep up with it,
and I had never identifed quite the right resource to learn from and use to
teach within my own organization. Fortunately, Dr. Szende has recruited
outstanding industry leaders as authors and gathered the information nec-
essary to prepare and produce this exemplary textbook on the topic that
will undoubtedly be utilized by students of all varieties in universities and
companies throughout our great industry.
Key Terms: Key terms are emphasized in bold when frst used in the text and
listed at the end of each chapter in the glossary.
Boxed Features: Each chapter includes fve standard, boxed pedagogical fea-
tures. Tese boxes are intended to briefy depart from the fow of the chapter
in order to expand upon the concepts presented and enliven the discussion.
• Seeing Further—A theme that refect the latest hot topics or profes-
sional concerns related to the topics discussed.
Applications: Short case studies allow students to analyze and dissect chap-
ter concepts through real-life scenarios.
Team Activity: Each chapter includes an experiential activity that will assist
learners in the practical application of the chapter’s concepts.
Internet Activity: Designated internet activities link the chapter and the
Internet to create a dynamic learning environment.
We must frst thank each of the contributing authors, who graciously agreed
to share their knowledge.
OVERVIEW
Revenue management is the art of selling the right inventory to the right
customer at the right price at the right time to yield optimal proÿt. The
practice of revenue management can be applied to a multitude of industries
that share similar characteristics, including high ÿxed costs, ÿxed capacity,
perishable inventory, variable demand, price sensitivity, and segmentation.
In this chapter, we will speciÿcally discuss the management of hotel room
inventory, but the same principles can be applied to other hospitality
sectors such as airlines, cruise lines, rental cars, catering, and restaurants.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this module, you should be able to:
Underline the fundamental concepts of revenue management in order to
optimize hotel revenues and proÿt
Identify the components of the revenue cycle in order to recall the eco-
nomic relationships at play
Deÿne segmentation, channel mix, and the di°erences in buying behav-
ior
Calculate basic room statistics, market share, and proÿt measurements
Demonstrate a clear understanding of organizational structure as it
relates to revenue management
Articulate revenue management strategy with various industry
stakeholders
1
2 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Qualifcations for Applying Revenue Management
Segmentation
• Buying Behavior
• Optimal Mix of Sales
• Channel Management
Performance Metrics
• Room Statistics
• Occupancy
• Average Daily Rate (ADR)
• Proÿtability
• Market Share
• Forecasting and Budgeting
Inventory Management
Communication
Daily Interaction with Property Operations and Sales
Discussion Questions and Applications
INTRODUCTION
HRM optimizes demand by selling the right room to the right customer
at the right price at the right time to yield optimal proÿt.
°ere are several characteristics that exist in hotels and other industries that
make it necessary to apply revenue management in its operations:
Fixed Capacity
Perishable Inventory
• If a hotel room goes empty on any given night, the hotel has lost
the sale. Given the relatively low variable cost, it is very compelling
Hotel Revenue Management: An Introduction 5
Variable Demand
Chart 1
6 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
THINK HISTORICALLY
°is ad for the Hotel Boswell appeared in the Tulsa Daily World news-
paper in 1917.
Questions to Consider:
How would you compare this listing to current hotel price listings?
SEGMENTATION
Since di˙erent guests are willing to pay a di˙erent price for the same prod-
uct, hotels have to create ways to provide their rooms at di˙erent prices. °is
practice, known as segmentation, is where revenue managers classify and
Hotel Revenue Management: An Introduction 7
SO WHAT?
What are some other businesses that could use revenue management
that currently do not?
What characteristics exist that would make revenue management ÿt
those business models?
Hotels track and target three major segments in order to fully capture
demand: Transient, Group, and Contract.
• Group: Rooms sold in minimum blocks of ten or more
• Contract: Rooms guaranteed as deemed by a signed contract such as
airlines
• Transient guests however, are considered to be anything not a part
of group or contract sale (Hayes & Miller, 2011) and are those guests
that are traveling independently and their decision for which hotel
to book are ultimately up to them.
Group and contracted rooms are, however, decided in bulk, for the most
part not taking the unanimous decision of all people staying within the
negotiated blocks.
Hotels as a whole are tasked with achieving the optimal amount of each
segment at the right price, known as the optimal mix. For example, in an
8 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
airport area, hotels will likely have signiÿcant airline contract volume; in a
suburban area where there is little transient demand, there will likely be sig-
niÿcant group volume; and in high-demand areas for individual travel, there
is likely mostly transient occupancy.
Revenue managers work with sales and marketing to shape the segmen-
tation of the hotel, where revenue management sets prices and guides the
sales team on how much of each segment would be best for the hotel.
Every segment of customers behaves di˙erently, and all have varying levels
of price sensitivity. °erefore, revenue managers need to understand buy-
ing behavior within segments to make sure they are not discounting those
guests willing to pay the most. °e ability to charge di˙erent customers dif-
ferent rates comes through being able to create rate fences or segmentation
hedges. Rate fences take ÿve basic forms: physical, controlled availability,
Hotel Revenue Management: An Introduction 9
For example, hotels understand that corporate guests are not as price
sensitive as other guests, given that their company o˛en pays for their stay.
Hotel teams are therefore tasked with ÿnding a way to make corporate guests
pay more than others for the same inventory. Revenue management and
sales therefore work together to price corporate guests higher by o˙ering
business travelers free internet, turndown service, and breakfast.
CHANNEL MANAGEMENT
In Table 1.4, both Hotels A and B earn the same amount of revenue,
but Hotel B produced more through the OTA channels. With higher costs
compared to the retail segment, the OTA segment and channel makes an
immediate impact on the proÿtability of Hotel B.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
PERFORMANCE METRICS
Hotels as a business have metrics that are important to the overall business
performance. Revenue managers must identify, track, and improve those
metrics that matter most in terms of revenue management, including room
statistics, house proÿt, market share, and forecast accuracy.
Room Statistics
°e hotel typically will benchmark against itself and its competitive set
in terms of overall numbers and segment. Market share is best described by
how the hotel’s room statistics stack up against the competitive set.
Occupancy
Example:
200 sold rooms / 250 available rooms = 80 percent occupancy
Occupancy levels also dictate various room statistics that impact cost.
Average daily rate (ADR) is the average price that rooms are sold for during
any time period. °e importance of ADR is the theoretical absence of a ceil-
ing on how high this metric can climb. In some cases, it is the only way a
hotel can improve revenue, especially a˛er reaching stabilized occupancy
levels. In simpler terms, if a hotel ran 100 percent occupancy on a full year
basis, there would be only one way to increase its room revenue: by increas-
ing ADR.
Example:
$45,000 Room Revenue / 200 Rooms Sold = $225 Average Daily Rate
14 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Example:
$220 ADR × 86% Occupancy Percentage = $189.20 RevPAR
Example:
$37,840 Revenue / 200 Available Rooms = $189.20 RevPAR
Proftability
House proÿt is deÿned as the di˙erence in the amount earned and the
amount spent, or revenue minus operating cost. °e costs used to calcu-
late house proÿt only consider the variable costs mentioned earlier and any
other costs that are managed by the hotel operators.
Example:
$100,000 revenue – $60,000 cost = $40,000 proÿt
Example:
$40,000 proÿt/$100,000 revenue = 40% Proÿt Margin
Refer to Table 1.5 below, which revenue manager was more effec-
tive? Both Revenue Managers generated the same amount of revenue.
However, a hotel that sells fewer rooms at a higher ADR likely can drive
extra profit because there are more variable costs with selling additional
rooms.
Review the proft and loss statement for the hotel. Ask the questions:
MARKET SHARE
success or failure is better or worse than the competitive set and better illus-
trates whether the revenue strategies employed were successful.
In the sample market share report in Table 1.7, you will ÿnd the key
statistics that most market share reports show. In the occupancy section, the
property had an occupancy percentage of 87.1 percent this year compared
to the competitive set occupancy of 91.8 percent.
°e hotel had no change year over year (0.0 percent) while the compet-
itive set gained 2 percent year over year. °is then means that the hotel lost
-2 percent in share, as they did 2 percent worse versus the competitive set in
occupancy compared to last year.
Rate (ADR) and RevPAR read the same way. °e property posted an
ADR of $306.87 and the competitive set posted $260.62. °e property was
able to grow 2 percent while the competitive set was ˝at year over year.
18 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
• ADR Index (Average Rate Index or ARI) = Hotel ADR / Competitive Set ADR
Example: $306.87 / $260.62 = 117.7 percent
• RevPAR Index (Revenue Generation Index or RGI) = Hotel RevPAR / Competitive
Set RevPAR
Example: 117.7 percent Hotel ARI in current year / 115.3 percent Hotel
ARI prior year = 2.0 percent
% Change
Occupancy Property 88.00% -2.22%
Comp Set w% 0.00%
Index 97.78% -2.22%
A hotel’s pricing, strategy, and marketing all dictate the occupancy, ADR,
and RevPAR share they garner. Pricing too high will turn away guests, lead-
ing to low market penetration. Selling too few rooms instead forfeits mar-
ket traction, potentially ruining investor expectations on ÿnancial return
(Smith, 2012).
A hotel that artiÿcially prices itself too low will likely gain market pen-
etration and lose ADR index; this can result in a low RevPAR index and
can also perpetuate the image of a low quality product and tarnish brand
integrity.
REAL PEOPLE
Michael Lopez*, revenue manager in a high occupancy
market, shared instances where the market share report
was deceiving and required either understanding of real
success/failure and how market share data can be misleading.
My hotel has sometimes lost share in occupancy as my occupancy has no room
for growth; how can I use the market share report to understand my successes
and failures given my inability to grow occupancy share?
Sometimes, my competitive set shows signiÿcant gains in occupancy, therefore
creating a large loss in my occupancy index over last year and ultimately a
large loss in RevPAR index share. What could have happened in the competi-
tive set that the occupancy could gain by so much year over year?
On occasion my competitive set will show an unusually low ADR, causing my
RevPAR index to look signiÿcantly better than usual. What could have hap-
pened out of the norm amongst my competitors?
My results on particular days are o°en questioned despite strong weekly and
monthly performance. Is there credence to the questioning I receive and what
should my response be to these questions?
*Name has been concealed
20 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Forecasts and budgets are used as benchmarks for how well the hotel
performed. Revenue managers are responsible for critiquing performance
against the forecast and the budget. Declines in key metrics versus forecast
and budget need to be explained, and strategies are put into place to rectify
results going forward.
INVENTORY MANAGEMENT
SEEING FURTHER
With the importance of forecasting, given the direct rela-
tionship of the unconstrained demand projection with the
revenue strategy, accuracy is critical. Both the system fore-
cast error and the revenue manager’s forecast should be measured to track progress.
If the forecast error increases, there may be a change in the trend, incorrect data, or
human error. As the system forecast plays such an important role and relies on user
inputs and overrides, it is recommended that goals be established and managers held
accountable.
Mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) expresses accuracy as the average percent-
age of error across a number of instances. It can be easier to understand than other
statistics. For example, if the MAPE is 7 percent, on average, the forecast is o° by 7
percent.
˜ 1 | Actual − Forecast |°
˙ˇ n ˝ | Actual | ˆ˘ *100
Example:
It is important to note that in this example that the combined rooms forecast error is
2 percent but the MAPE calculation measures the average error for each instance (n),
which is 7 percent.
22 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
for family travel and therefore make it important to maximize ADR oppor-
tunity for double bedded rooms or suites.
Revenue managers are tasked with creating a strategy that will set the
hotel up for success in the short and long term. Granular details such as room
type availability and macro concepts like contractual inventory restraints can
have a signiÿcant impact on the long-term success of a property. A hotel that
allows each account the ability to book the last room available will su˙er
as last minute high rated demand will repeatedly be lost. In the short term,
revenue management also has to understand when to overbook the hotel
and by how many rooms. Cancellations, no-shows, and early departures all
take away from what would have been an occupied room and therefore need
to be tracked to determine the overbooking limit.
COMMUNICATION
It the responsibility of revenue management to articulate the hotel’s strat-
egies and results to all stakeholders, including the sales team, front oˆce,
Hotel Revenue Management: An Introduction 23
Ownership Meetings
Revenue management over time has become the function of the hotel
responsible for communicating strategies to improve RevPAR and proÿt for
the hotel. Industry professionals and educators collectively agree that com-
munication skills are the most important skill a recent hotel school graduate
can have followed by the ability to improve revenue (Mayo, 2013).
As with ownership, the hotel operations and sales team have a varying level
of revenue management understanding and have their incentives laid out in
24 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: How does the reality of perishability impact pricing?
Question 5: What would be the process you would go through to forecast a hotel’s
revenue for the next month? What data would you need and what would you be
looking to ÿnd out?
Question 6: Given various costs of distribution, would you as the leader of a company
decide to eliminate any distribution channels? If not, how would you reduce cost
using revenue management?
Hotel Revenue Management: An Introduction 25
APPLICATIONS
Case #1:
Please generate room statistics and a market share report
based on the following information showing full year
results compared to prior year full year:
Property Size: 200 rooms
Comp Set Size – 800 rooms
°is Year Data:
Property Rooms Sold – 64,240
Comp Set Rooms Sold – 262,800
Property Rooms Revenue °is Year – $16,124,240
Comp Set Rooms Revenue Last Year – $59,130,000
Last Year Data:
Property Rooms Sold – 65,700
Comp Set Rooms Sold – 262,800
Property Rooms Revenue °is Year – $15,768,000
Comp Set Rooms Revenue Last Year – $59,130,000
Please answer the following questions:
1. Is the hotel getting its fair share of occupancy?
2. Did the property gain or lose RevPAR index ?
3. What room statistic drove the results?
4. Would you expect the property to be more or less proÿtable than last
year?
5. What strategies should be employed to grow RevPAR index the fol-
lowing year?
Case #2:
°e revenue manager of Hotel Calhawk, a hotel in the downtown area of a
major market, has noticed that each year the Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday
prior to °anksgiving have the following problems:
• Guests cancel last minute
• Rooms with multiple beds sell out ahead of time
• Prices for single beds erode as the day of arrival approaches
Please answer the following questions:
1. What 3 di˙erent segments would you target to achieve success in occu-
pancy and ADR over these dates?
2. What rate fences would you put in place to avoid the 3 problems that the
revenue manager has faced?
26 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
INTERNET ACTIVITY
You are getting married and you are planning your honeymoon.
Please shop for rates for a 1-bedroom suite with an ocean view
for one resort.
Select one week (Saturday arrival for 7 nights) and compare rates on at
least 5 websites and/or search engines, including the resort’s website and
TripAdvisor.com.
Please answer the following questions:
1. Is the resort’s pricing and content consistent across all sources?
2. Were the reviews at TripAdvisor.com and various other sites similar?
3. Which provided the most information for the honeymoon couple?
4. What site would you prefer to book?
5. As a revenue manager, what did you learn and what did you take
away from this assignment?
TEAM ACTIVITY
As a team, identify the high and low seasons for a hotel in your
area. Contact local hotels, research when conventions are, and do a
general search to see when hotel rates are highest and when they are lowest.
1. Pick two seasons as a team.
2. Identify your pricing, inventory, and segmentation strategy for each
season. Tie in what you forecast the occupancy to be for that season
and what the ADR would be for that time period.
3. Present to another team or the class your strategy as though they are
the ownership group.
• What are you doing to take advantage of the di˙erent room types in
each season?
• Why did you not choose to target particular segments and choose to
target other segments?
GLOSSARY
Arrivals – amount of rooms set to arrive.
Brand.com – main reservation booking website for the hotel or chain.
Bundling – inclusion of additional services to a room o˙ering.
Channel/source – platform or engine responsible for delivering a
booking transaction. °is could range from the hotel/brand call cen-
ter, the hotel website, an online travel agency (OTA), a global distri-
bution service (GDS), or the internal hotel sales team.
Channel management – where the sources of reservations are controlled
for purposes of revenue and proÿt enhancement.
Citywide – event in the market that results in lodging demand adequate to
ÿll the vast majority of all hotels
Commission – cost associated with booking a room where a percentage of
revenue is due to the OTA or travel agent
Competitive benchmarking – Conducting an analysis to understand the
position of a hotel against that of its competitors.
Competitive set (comp set) – a group of similar and directly competing
lodging properties to which an individual hotel’s operating perfor-
mance is comparable and compete for the same business.
Cost of acquisition – fees, commissions, and expenses attributed to each
booking from third party distributors or internal payroll including
GDS commissions, OTA commissions, direct marketing expenses
and all customer acquisition payroll.
Departures – amount of rooms that will or have checked out.
Early departures – rooms that are scheduled to depart on a later date but
have checked out earlier than expected.
Fixed costs – costs maintained even if the hotel was empty.
House proÿt – the di˙erence in the amount earned and the amount spent,
or revenue minus operating cost.
28 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Bodea, T. & Ferguson, M. (2014). Segmentation, Revenue Management, and Pricing
Analytics. New York, NY: Routledge.
Cullen, K & Helsel, C. (2010). ˛e Evolving Dynamics of Revenue Management: A
Comprehensive Revenue Optimization Road Map for Hotel Owners, Operators
and Practitioners. Maclean, VA: HSMAI Foundation.
Dolan, R. J. & Simon, H. (1997). Power Pricing: How Managing Price Transforms the
Bottom Line. New York, NY: °e Free Press.
Hayes, D. K. & Miller, A. (2011). Revenue Management for Hospitality Industry.
Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Hormby, S., Morrison, J., Dave, P., Meyers, M. & Tenca, T. (2010, January-Feb-
ruary). Marriott International Increases Revenue by Implementing a Group
Pricing Optimizer. Interfaces, 40(1), 47-57.
30 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OVERVIEW
Hotel room pricing is one of the most complex areas of revenue management.
At its core, the role of a revenue manager is to maximize a hotel’s performance
by selling rooms, proÿtably, better than the competitive set. These factors
may include available inventory, projected hotel occupancy, competitors’
pricing, and much more. Total hotel revenue maximization includes other
revenue streams such as meeting space, food and beverage outlets, golf,
spa, and gaming in some locations. In most cases the room revenue is the
most proÿtable segment for the hotel; hence it tends to be one of the main
focuses when determining the price of a room.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this module, you should be able to:
Describe the fundamentals that make it imperative to practice strategic
hotel revenue management (HRM) and dynamic hotel rooms pricing
(HRP)
Evaluate a hotel’s segmentation, or mix of customers, and assess each
segment’s desired experience and willingness to pay for each room’s
product
Practice strategies to elevate a customer’s perceived value
Interpret price positioning for a hotel against a competitive set with
similar brand, location, service, and product o°erings
31
32 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Rooms Pricing Fundamentals
Value Creation
Retail Pricing Evaluation
Pricing Tactics
Discussion Questions and Applications
SO WHAT?
Hotel room pricing and positioning are some of the most complex
areas of the hospitality industry, which involve numerous factors.
How is the pricing of hotel rooms di°erent from other industries?
Why do hotel room rates change (often daily) versus other prod-
ucts that have more price stability?
From a customer perspective, when do you think pricing volatility
is helpful or hurtful? Has this changed over time and why?
INTRODUCTION
Hotel rooms pricing (HRP) requires detailed rate analysis, and the “art of
pricing” has become far more sophisticated in recent years with increased
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 33
technology and higher expectations from all stakeholders to “get the pric-
ing right.” Furthermore, in today’s digital marketplace, with the advent of
smartphones, mobile apps, and social media, pricing is more transparent
to both the customer and the competitor. A pricing adjustment to a hotel’s
retail rate is only a piece in the pricing puzzle. O˜en, there does not seem to
be a deÿnitive solution, only a better and easier ÿt. Let us get busy in putting
this together!
THINK HISTORICALLY
PRICING FUNDAMENTALS
Perishable products and services, such as hotels that utilize revenue manage-
ment, will most likely have more dynamic pricing strategies than consumer
products that can be stored and be sold at a later time. ˛e hotel aims to
34 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
sell every room, every night, at the maximum price possible, based on mar-
ket conditions and property demand. Revenue managers must use di˝erent
tactics based on some core pricing concepts, outlined below, to manage the
rooms inventory as each individual stay date approaches.
Segmentation
In most cases, a hotel has ˙uctuating demand by day of week, time of year,
and dates of holidays and special events, resulting in the need for variable
pricing throughout the year. ˛is can be forecasted with the hotel’s his-
torical booking data, and daily pricing and mix strategies can be set one
year out. Most hotels utilize a demand forecasting system and validation
process managed by the revenue manager to accurately predict the remain-
ing unconstrained demand and determine when there is a surplus of
rooms that warrant a price increase or need to ÿlter out discounts. ˛e
pricing power for a hotel escalates when there is more remaining demand
than remaining supply (rooms). For example, pricing over Tuesdays and
Wednesdays is typically set higher than weekends for a hotel near a cor-
porate oˆce park. A family ski resort will o˝er higher rates during peak
school vacations.
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 35
Booking Pace
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Revenue managers rely on the system’s forecasted unconstrained tran-
sient demand to be accurate as calculations that compare remaining
demand with remaining capacity drive its pricing recommendations.
The system does require user input to identify outliers such as unusual
weather or special events.
• What other outliers do you think would be di˛cult for a system to
detect?
• What strategies, outside of price, could be utilized in very high or
very low demand?
• In unusually high demand, do you think it is fair to price a product
more than twice the average price? Why or why not? When can a
high rate be considered price gouging?
VALUE CREATION
Economic Value
˛e expected price of a hotel room will vary greatly based on the property and
market demand of the speciÿc time frame requested by the customer, combined
with the perceived experience that will be delivered. ˛e concept of economic
value can useful to illustrate the customer’s willingness to pay for a hotel room.
˛e total economic value is the reference price (best alternative o˝er) plus the
net di˝erential value of the speciÿc product or service as illustrated in Figure 2.2.
Simply put, economic value is the sum of all the beneÿts and features that
a product or service o˝ers a customer. If a product o˝ers a beneÿt or feature
that is unique, the economic value is higher. In the case of a hotel room, the
rate a prospective guest is willing to pay is based on the price of similar hotels
and the perceived experience premium (or deÿcit) o˝ered at a speciÿc hotel.
For example, in the case of a family resort, a pool with slides and other water
features is worth more to a customer than a resort that does not o˝er this fea-
ture. ˛e prospective guest searches for the best option based on the desired
beneÿts and features that are o˝ered for each similar hotel option. ˛en she
or he will compare prices. At times, the price may be less or more than the
perceived economic value. ˛e traveler will choose the hotel that o˝ers him
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 37
personally the most economic value or utility for the price paid. Value can
also be described as the relationship between total price and total experience.
Segmentation
˛e revenue manager must not only determine the price of the retail
rate (sometimes referred to as the BAR (best available rate) but also evalu-
ate the additional transient rates that are o˝ered to attract other segments.
Some of the rates o˝ered are heavily discounted and may be yielded out
during busy times. In addition, some of the segments may ˙ex in price or
discount and must be carefully maintained.
Segments
Group
˛ere are also negotiated rates for a group of rooms for a speciÿc date and
o˜en non-repeating. ˛ese groups have di˝erent proÿles, such as a corpo-
rate meeting, an association, family reunion, or a tour. O˜en these rooms
also include meetings and events at the hotel with meals. Given that the
client is spending additional dollars on other areas of the hotel and may
require meeting rooms and audiovisual services, the price of the rooms tend
to be negotiated based on the entire value of the event, day of the week, sea-
son, etc. Generally, pricing for group rooms is done through a combination
of a set discount o˝ the retail rate with consideration of transient displace-
ment and the ancillary revenues and proÿts generated. Over the past few
years some hotels have also transitioned to dynamic pricing, where the rate
is set as a percentage o˝ the rate of the day.
Contract
times of the crew and the amount of transient displacement that will occur by
taking the business. In addition, the segment is generally price sensitive and
highly competitive as it provides occupancy throughout the year, including
so˜ time frames. In most markets, there is a reciprocal agreement that either
party can exit a contract with a 60-day notice period.
Transient
Transient Sub-Segments
Retail
Special Corporate
˛ese are negotiated rates between a business (such as banks, law ÿrms,
consulting ÿrms, retailers, etc.) and hotels in order to accommodate the
business’s out-of-town employees and clients. ˛ese rates tend to be nego-
tiated for a ÿxed priced for one year or for a seasonal period, though other
contracting terms might also be negotiated, such as set percent discount o˝
retail rate, number of blackout dates, provisions for upgraded rooms, and
guaranteed inventory in case of tight availability in the market. Generally,
the revenue manager will set thresholds for the amount of discount based on
the volume commitment and stay pattern of the account. In most cases, the
discounts range from 10 to 25 percent o˝ retail.
Government
Wholesaler
˛ese are contracts similar to special corporate but are instead between a
hotel and a travel merchandiser, commonly referred to as a wholesaler, and
o˜en the source is international arrival. While corporate rates are negotiated
for the company’s internal use, the wholesaler would resell these rooms to
travelers and include other services, such as air, car rental, tours, etc. ˛ese
wholesalers will o˜en have a block or allotment of rooms guaranteed at the
hotel for a period of time, and rates tend to be much lower than other con-
tracted rates. In recent years, some of this business has been shi˜ed to online
travel agencies (OTAs), and the segment has declined with an increase in
bookings on the Internet.
Packages
Similar to wholesalers, hotels also utilize the room inventory and add other
services to it in order to entice customers to book. In general hotel packages
include other services o˝ered by the hotel, such as meals, spa, and golf, but
these packages can also include services outside of the hotel, such as theater
tickets, museums, etc. Generally the most e˝ective packages are priced less
than all the components priced individually while still providing the hotel
incremental sales and proÿt. For example, a resort may o˝er a spa package
with the intent of driving sales into the spa. To increase conversion of a spa
package, the hotel must price it as a value to the prospective guest. If the spa
was busy all the time, it still may make sense to o˝er the spa package at a dis-
count, but only if the resort was struggling with occupancy. In this scenario,
the resort’s strategy is to increase room sales, rather than spa sales.
Qualiÿed Rates
˛ere are other public or private rates that are o˝ered to guests based on
speciÿc memberships. ˛e most common ones are AAA and AARP rates,
in which the guest needs to be a member and o˝er proof of membership at
time of check in. Other qualifying rates may include employee and friends &
family rates, where the company o˝ers to its associates a deep discount price
and o˜en o˝ers “distressed inventory” when the hotel is not expected to sell
every room for a particular date.
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 41
Value Creation
˛e expected price of a hotel room will vary greatly based on the property
and market demand of the speciÿc time frame requested by the customer,
combined with the perceived experience that will be delivered. ˛e concept
of economic value can be useful to illustrate the customer’s willingness to
pay for a hotel room. ˛e total economic value is the reference price (best
alternative o˝er) plus the net di˝erential value of the speciÿc product or
service as illustrated in Figure 2.2.
Value creation occurs when services and products are combined and
priced in a manner that increases the perceived economic value for a unique
set of customers. In this process a business develops the mix of products and
services that will drive the economic value. By satisfying AND communicat-
ing the value drivers better than the competition, a corporation can increase
its price as it elevates the economic value.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Does the comp set seem reasonable? Are there any hotels that do
not seem to belong with the group? Why or why not?
Is the subject hotel priced appropriately? Are there any hotels that
o°er more value?
How can you increase the value for price paid based on the chart
data?
What hotel investments do you recommend if ÿnancially feasible?
Which hotel seems to be a threat to capturing more guests based
on current positioning?
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 43
If the Hyatt is formidable and competes head on with the subject hotel, the
subject hotel should consider positioning its price point lower or adding
services or enhanced product o˝erings. ˛is process can be completed by
following the steps in Figure 2.4.
Pricing Level
While a hotel’s published rack rate (a ÿxed price for the year or per season)
is the highest rate the hotel can legally charge for a room to a guest (and
in some states, it is required to be posted on the back of the door of each
room), in practice the pricing strategy is far more ˙uid. ˛e BAR rate is ini-
tially set based on competitive positioning and season but then is increased
or decreased on an individual date basis depending on the demand.
Rooms Mix
In this manner, the revenue manager can adjust the benchmark rate
(BAR), and then the other room types can be automatically adjusted. In
today’s environment, with the capability of complex data analysis, the ÿxed
or percent di˝erentials can be tweaked based on demand and seasonal
patterns. In addition, the revenue manager can utilize room mix to yield
out less proÿtable business when demand warrants pushing for premium
room sales. O˜en, special corporate accounts will have last room availabil-
ity (LRA) only for the lower/standard rooms. When the revenue manager
46 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
restricts the sale of standard rooms, the special corporate accounts will be
forced to purchase a premium room either at a higher negotiated rate or at
retail rate (See Figure 2.6).
Segmentation - Rooms
Transient: Rooms Transient Mix
Premium Retail 6,205 5%
Standard Retail 24,820 20%
eChannel Retail 12,410 10%
Special Corporate 18,615 15%
Government 12,410 10%
Wholesaler 6,205 5%
Other Discount 43,435 35%
Total Transient Rooms 124,100 100%
Segmentation - Rooms
Transient: Rate Revenue
Premium Retail $650 $4,033,250
Standard Retail $500 $12,410,000
eChannel Retail $440 $5,460,400
Special Corporate $375 $6,980,625
Government $212 $2,630,920
Wholesaler $300 $1,861,500
Other Discount $200 $8,687,000
Total Transient Rate $339 $42,063,695
PRICING TACTICS
Static versus Dynamic Pricing
Hotels can implement static pricing, or “ÿxed” pricing, for any segment for
consistency and ease of operation. For example, the retail room rate may
be set at one price point and changed infrequently. Or in another segment,
such as special corporate, a static rate may be contracted and the business
travelers would obtain the same rate every night of the year, regardless of
the BAR rate. ˛e trend, however, is increasingly moving towards dynamic
pricing for all segments. In this case, the retail rate of a hotel generally would
change more frequently with a large standard deviation across all dates of
any given year. Another dimension of dynamic pricing is “˙oating” pricing.
In this scenario, a room rate such as a qualiÿed discount or special corporate
account is set up as a percent discount o˝ the BAR rate. Figure 2.7 shows an
example of ˙oating pricing.
Static rates: While room rates may change from time to time and
by season, there are some rates that are guaranteed for a period of
time, known as static rates. ˛is means that regardless of when the
48 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
• Dynamic pricing: More o˜en than not, hotel rates vary by season,
day of week, or even by the hour, depending on multiple factors,
known as dynamic pricing, in which the hotel establishes the best
available rate for the day. ˛is BAR serves as a benchmark on which
other rates are based. For example AAA rates are usually set up as 10
percent o˝ the rate of the day, which means AAA members are guar-
anteed a speciÿc discount on the rate rather than a ÿxed price. ˛is
dynamic pricing model has gained more popularity for both hotels
and corporate partners so that some corporate accounts are now also
based on a percentage basis of the rate of the day. In this scenario,
the client is able to take advantage of discounted rates when the hotel
prices the rooms below the negotiated agreement.
SEEING FURTHER
Dynamic pricing is a concept that has become
a more common practice in recent years, espe-
cially in some markets where high demand has
pushed revenue managers to think creatively.
How do you think this practice will a°ect a hotel in low demand
with a highly price competitive environment?
Who beneÿts the most on high versus low demand?
With increased price transparency in all channels, does decreasing
the rate often lead to an increase in sales and proÿts for a single
hotel? Why or why not?
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 49
Advanced sales are a pricing modality that has been around for a long
time and is very common in the hospitality industry. O˜en hotels use addi-
tional discounted pricing in order to attract early bookers at traditionally
higher rates than what they would otherwise sell rooms for to other con-
tracted business, corporate accounts, and wholesalers. In this case, the hotels
would o˝er a discount on their current public retail pricing (i.e., 10 to 30
percent o˝) for early bookings outside of the traditional booking window,
for example, more than 21 or 30 days in advance. ˛e tradeo˝, however,
is that the customer o˜en would have to pay for the room in advance and
may not be able to make any changes to the reservation a˜er completing the
booking process.
Unlike the prior modality to sell rooms early as a discount on the public
pricing, this concept is designed to sell rooms at a much lower pricing,
however, through channels that allow for the rate not to be publicly displayed
as such. ˛e reason for this is because hotels would want to preserve their
public pricing but still have unused inventory that they would want to sell.
˛ere are various ways the hotels can do this. Websites such as Hotwire
are perfect examples of this practice, wherein the name of hotel is only
disclosed a˜er the guest has completed the booking process; therefore, the
hotel is opaque and allows the hotel to maintain pricing integrity among
other channels. ˛is practice is also geared toward the shorter booking
window, traditionally less than 3 days to arrival. Hotel rooms are perishable
in that each room that is not sold on a particular day represents lost revenue
50 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
opportunities. So, our goal is to sell each room at the highest revenue before
the end of the day (See Figure 2.8).
Pricing the retail rate at the right price point is not 100 percent scientiÿc, and
therefore, measuring the pricing e˝ectiveness can also sometimes be some-
what nebulous. However, there are some industry norms that can direction-
ally infer if the pricing strategy is sound and proÿtable. Certainly, healthy
market share, with a premium in both occupancy and rate, can be indicative
of proper price positioning. In addition, as the retail rate is the foundation of
many segments in a hotel’s transient mix, success also can be inferred with a
strong non-qualiÿed mix. What percentage of transient rooms did the hotel
sell at retail/BAR? If a hotel is overpriced, it is assumed that the conversion
will be low and the hotel will have to sell more discounts to ÿll the hotel.
Related to that is the rate eˆciency metric that compares the overall
transient average daily rate (ADR) with the retail ADR. If a hotel sells a lot
of discounts, it can be assumed that the rate eˆciency would be lower than
optimal. Certainly, as the primary objective is to drive room sales, evaluat-
ing overall retail revenue can be relevant. All of these are more meaningful
when expressed in comparison to prior year, budget, or last month. As size
of hotel, type of hotel, and location of hotel can all yield di˝erent optimal
metrics, o˜en the trend of its own performance and goals is the only rel-
evant indication. ˛e important lesson is that to drive RevPAR, a revenue
manager must balance both occupancy and ADR. Raising retail rates across
the board is not the method to drive ADR. In fact, in some cases, lowering
the retail rate can grow the non-qualiÿed mix and, thus, overall transient
ADR, given that generally the retail rate is the highest rated segment.
Individual Exercise:
Please refer to the segmentation (Table 2.1) and calculate each Pricing Metric.
• Do you think the hotel is priced e°ectively? Why?
• What additional analysis may be required? What data is missing for evaluation?
Price Sensitivity
Similar to the examples above, each guest, market segment, and time
frame has a di˝erent tolerance for price increases. In general, the higher the
rate, the more likelihood that the guest would not book the room. Revenue
managers o˜en test these reactions to rate changes through price testing in
that the rates are increased or decreased at di˝erent times of the booking
cycle in order to ÿgure out customer behavior. ˛e percentage of customers
booking versus not is o˜en referred to as the conversion ratio, or the num-
ber of guests that were converted to sales as opposed to no sales.
dynamic between supply and demand chain changes, which means there
are more guests who want to stay in the area than there are hotel rooms
available. In this case increase in demand would cause hotel room rates to
temporarily increase for this time period. ˛is also means that guests would
be competing with each other for the available rooms. ˛ose willing to pay
more and book early would be able to reserve the rooms.
As you can see, the explosion of big data and the proliferation of di˝erent
channels of distribution make these computer-generated models more
and more common each day. Over the past few years the modern revenue
manager has evolved and is quickly transitioning into a strategic statistician.
However, at the same time, it becomes more important to place more
emphasis on interpreting the information and acting upon the demand of
their market, rather than only gathering facts and reporting against them.
Given the complexity of the retail pricing, over the past few years there
has been a proliferation of computer-generated pricing models that have
been created to assist a revenue manager in determining the optimal pricing
for the hotel. Most of these pricing models are built into more elaborate rev-
enue management systems since they integrate hotel demand, historical per-
formance, available inventory, etc. One of the most commonly used systems
is Duetto, which is an independent revenue strategy system that focuses on
independent and small brands and which connects to the central reservation
system (CRS) or property management system (PMS). Major hotel brands
also utilize these pricing models that have been developed speciÿcally to
work with their systems and have been embedded to other existing tools.
REAL PEOPLE
Question 1:
Question 2:
Describe how an unexpected increase in the conÿrmed group forecast
may impact the total hotel rooms forecast. What processes should be
evaluated to minimize the frequency or large variances?.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: How is value created? Think of a speciÿc hotel or
restaurant that you have experienced. How could it add more
value for you? Do you think your list of enhancements would be
the same for your mother or father? Why?
Question 2: Describe two distinct market segments and describe any di°erences in
buying behavior.
Question 3: Assume you are the opening revenue manager for a new resort. List the
steps that you would take to deÿne a comp set and determine its benchmark rate.
Question 4: If a hotel has more demand than supply for a given time frame, what
pricing strategies can be considered to increase proÿts?
56 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
TEAM ACTIVITY
Brainstorm on the di˝erent attributes (or features) that may increase the
preference of the product or service, understanding that it is likely that you
cannot include all of them.
Without research, ask each other the following questions:
1. What features are most important for the students? Does this match
up with your hypothesis prior to research?
2. Is there price sensitivity for any of the features?
The Fundamentals of Pricing Hotel Guest Rooms 57
3. Are you certain that you have identiÿed the correct proÿles? Why not?
4. What will your product or service include and what price will you
charge?
INTERNET ACTIVITY
APPLICATIONS
Case 1
Case 2
GLOSSARY
Brand.com – ˛e main reservation booking website for the hotel
or chain.
Channel/source – Platform or engine responsible for delivering a
booking transaction. ˛is could range from the hotel/brand
call center, the hotel website, an online travel agency (OTA),
a global distribution service (GDS), or the internal hotel sales team.
Competitive set (comp set) – A group of similar and directly competing
lodging properties to which an individual hotel’s operating perfor-
mance is comparable and compete for the same business.
Last room availability (LRA) – A condition granted to special corporate
accounts in which their negotiated rate is automatically available if
the hotel is selling standard inventory.
Rate parity – ˛e identical retail rate is quoted across all channels.
Remaining demand – Number of rooms the hotel can expect to sell with
unlimited physical capacity.
Remaining supply – Number of rooms available for sale.
Retail rate/best available rate (BAR) – ˛e rate a customer pays “o˝ the
shelf,” o˜en referred to as “best available.”
Unconstrained demand – Total demand in a segment or overall in the
absence of any constraints.
REFERENCES
Belobaba, P.P. (1987, May). Airline yield management: An overview of seat inven-
tory control. Transportation Science, 21 (2), 63-73.
Cross, R.G. (1997). Revenue Management: Hard-Core Tactics for Market Domina-
tion. New York, NY: Broadway Books.
Cross, R.G., Higbie, J.A., & Cross, D.Q. (2009, February). Revenue management’s
renaissance: A rebirth of the art and science of proÿtable revenue generation.
Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 50 (1), 56-81.
Haley, M. & Inge, J. (2004, Fall) Revenue Management: It really should be called
proÿt management. Hospitality Upgrade. Retrieved from https://ishc.com/
wp-content/uploads/art_rm04.pdf
Hayes, D.K. & Miller, A.A. (2011). Revenue Management for the Hospitality Indus-
try. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Kimes, S.E. & Chase, R.B. (1998). ˛e strategic levers of yield management. Journal
of Service Research, 1 (2), 156-166.
60 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Nagel, T.T., Hogan, J.E., & Zale, J. (2016). ˜e Strategy and Tactics of Pricing, A
Guide to Growing More Proÿtably (6th ed.). New York, NY: Routledge.
Smith, B.C., Leimkuhler, J.F. & Darrow, R.M. (1992, January/February). Yield Man-
agement at American Airlines. Interfaces, 22(1), 8-31.
Wind, J, Green, P.E., Shiˇet, D. & Scarbrough, M. (1989, February). Courtyard by
Marriott: Designing a Hotel Facility with Consumer- Based Marketing Mod-
els. Interfaces 19(1), 25-47.
CHAPTER 3
OVERVIEW
Establishing segmentation strategy allows revenue managers to deÿne
and optimize the composition of travelers coming to the hotel. Revenue
managers must understand their hotel’s mix of business as well as the
competition’s mix of business. They must also understand the role and
proÿtability of all distribution channels in the hotel’s revenue strategy.
This module also investigates the current and future trends in hotel
segmentation.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this module, you should be able to:
Deÿne major segments used by hotels
Outline the progression and future of segmentation
Explain the role of fencing discounts
Rank segments by their price sensitivity
Determine proÿtability of di°erent segments
Identify the importance of group, contract, and special corporate
evaluation
Analyze a hotel’s mix of business
61
62 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Evolving Hotel Segmentation
• Deÿning Segmentation
• Evolution of Segmentation
• Littlewood’s Rule
Fencing Segments
• Methods of Fencing Segmentation
• Ethical Issues with Fencing
• Varying Levels of Price Sensitivity
• Proÿtability within Segments
Contract Segment
• Special Corporate/Negotiated Segment
• Analyzing Mix of Sales
Discussion Questions and Applications
one price point is simple, but having multiple segments allows revenue
managers to o°er rates at di°ering levels, therefore increasing occupancy
because of lower paying guests, increasing ADR (average daily rate) because
of capturing guests that would pay more, and therefore increasing overall
revenue and proÿt.
SO WHAT?
What are the beneÿts of o°ering di°erent price points to di°erent
guests? Why would it be a bad idea to o°er one price point to all
guests?
EVOLUTION OF SEGMENTATION
THINK HISTORICALLY
Question:
• List other ways that segmentation has been put to use in various
industries.
LITTLEWOOD’S RULE
Accept a discount reservation if:
S2 ˛ S1 x Probability (D1 > x)
S1: High-rated segment
S2: Low-rated segment
D1: Demand for high-rated segment
X: Remaining inventory to sell
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 65
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
How would you measure the probability that the demand for a lower-
rated segment is greater than the amount of inventory remaining?
What are problems with this method?
SEEING FURTHER
It has recently been suggested that hotels
should move past segmenting via transactional
characteristics, such as lead time, but instead
move towards behavioral segmentation, where the consumer’s
behavior and lifestyle is categorized (Kimes, 2010). Hotel revenue
managers can price more accurately once they understand the value
proposition the guest is looking for. For example, understanding a
guest’s spending patterns can help a revenue manager ascertain how
to target that particular segment.
What are some behavioral and lifestyle characteristics that revenue
managers should track in order to understand, price, and target
their consumer?
In the same light, revenue managers identify times where discount res-
ervations will help grow occupancy and will therefore spend marketing dol-
lars on OTA Pay per Click (PPC) ads or o°er discounted rates to Frequent
Independent Traveler (FIT) partners. ˛erefore, the evolution of segmen-
tation has gone from identifying segments to developing and optimizing
those segments that will help hotels during both high-demand and low-de-
mand dates.
FENCING SEGMENTS
˛ere are ÿve basic forms of rate fences; these include physical, con-
trolled availability, customer characteristics, transaction characteristics, and
product line (Dolan & Simon, 1996).
Fence Description
Physical Offering varying room types, such as king-bedded rooms, suites,
two beds, etc.
Controlled Setting an advance purchase window of 90+ days with a 20 percent
Availability discount to entice early bookers looking for a discount
Customer Offering discounts to leisure guests through qualifed affliations or
Characteristics status
Transaction Making a reservation fully nonrefundable upon booking
Characteristics
Product Line Offering different versions of the same product, i.e. king room with
breakfast versus without
For a rate fence to be considered strong, there are four key requirements
(Smith, 2012):
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
• What are some rate fences that you have come by when purchas-
ing items, hotel rooms, ˝ight tickets, etc.?
• What are some risks that organizations face when using various rate
fences?
˛e four requirements for creating e°ective rate fences all can bring upon
ethics issues. During high-demand periods, such as nearby sporting events
or concerts, hotels oˆen will raise rates and keep a 100 percent nonrefund-
able policy. For example, Travel magazine highlights the 2015 Superbowl as
a period where “some hotels in the region are price-gouging even more as
the big game day approaches” (Kehrli, 2015). ˛e nonrefundable rate fence
tied to the higher rate alters the perceived fairness of rate fencing. Hotels and
airlines alike oˆen have customers who talk to each other about the price
they paid and can potentially disagree with the fence instituted. For exam-
ple, if a lower price point is relegated to bookings made on mobile devices
only, customers can complain about the price they paid because it is not fair
to those who booked via traditional means.
(Smith, 2012). Since hotel guests are all willing to pay di°erent prices, rev-
enue managers set fences to lower the rate of entry into the hotel for some
guests while raising the rate for others. ˛e economical idea is that by o°er-
ing one price point, there is only one proÿt margin involved, but o°ering
various price points allows a hotel to proÿt from the volume of lower-priced
rooms and from customers who purchased the higher-priced room.
Instead, demand for any given segment is seasonal and contains forecast
error. Revenue managers look historically and assess competitor mix of
sales to understand which of their segments are most price inelastic, or less
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 71
sensitive to rate changes. Figure 3.3 shows that in a price inelastic segment,
dramatic price drops will not result in signiÿcantly more volume but may
dilute price to the point where the rate drop only hurts overall revenue.
A dramatic price drop in the price-elastic segment, however, could yield
signiÿcantly more volume of rooms sold and therefore more revenue.
REAL PEOPLE
QUESTION
• Over what set of dates would you suggest that the discount seg-
ment price sensitivity is high? Why? How else could you mea-
sure price sensitivity within segments?
72 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
˛ere are two pieces to evaluating a piece of Group business: the proÿt
the group will deliver to the hotel and the displacement cost. ˛e displace-
ment cost is the value of other business that will be turned away if the group
is given the necessary inventory. ˛e role of revenue management in the
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 73
sales process is to ensure that the proÿt a group delivers is greater than the
displacement cost of the opportunity.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
• Under what circumstances would it make business sense to con-
ÿrm a Group booking where the proÿt from the group is less than
the displacement cost?
CONTRACT SEGMENT
˛ere are a number of terms used to describe the segment that includes
the Negotiated rates that companies receive in exchange for volume. ˛ese
include Special Corporate, Business Transient (BT), Corporate, and Nego-
tiated, to name a few. Careful analysis must be done within this segment
to ensure that companies are not given special discounts at the expense of
higher-rated segments.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
In what situation would you accept an account with last room avail-
ability?
In an ideal world, a hotel would ÿll with the most proÿtable segments pos-
sible to drive the most revenue potential available to the hotel. Hotels can
model the optimal mix of sales based upon demand trends by segment to
establish a strategy that pursues this optimal mix.
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 77
QUESTIONS
Goal is to achieve 6% revenue growth.
Outline the mix strategy changes the hotel should make in order to
achieve the 6% revenue growth goal.
Which market segments will be most important for the hotel’s suc-
cess?
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
What factors could have contributed to the decline in Retail mix
versus the prior year? Which segment saw the largest % growth in
room nights versus the prior year? What strategic decisions were
behind this change in mix? (Refer to Table 3.3.)
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: Of the ÿve varieties of rate fences, which do you
think are the easiest and hardest to enforce? Why? What kind of
problems may arise with a weak rate fence?
Question 2: Knowing that every minute there are reservations being made, how
would you measure price elasticity for each market segment? How would you
measure price sensitivity of guests who have not yet made a reservation? Are there
any challenges with your method?
Question 3: There are industry tools available to measure the segmentation in the
market or in the competitive set. What are other ways that you can identify potential
segments of business?
Question 4: How can you use the internet to help obtain your optimal mix of sales?
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 79
Question 5: What are the costs associated with various segments? Is it worth taking
in high-cost segments? What costs could be associated with low-cost segments that
are not apparent, such as Retail, AAA, Government, etc.?
Question 6: What are potential ways to make a Group opportunity more proÿtable if
the displacement cost exceeds the proÿt generated by the group?
APPLICATIONS
1. The Minneapolis City Center Hotel
Revenue Manager A
• Retail: 50 rooms, $12,500 revenue
• Business Transient: $200 ADR, $8,000 revenue
• Government: 25 rooms, $170 ADR
• OTA: 40 rooms, $6,400 revenue
• Group: 35 rooms, $180 ADR
• Contract: 20 rooms, $120
80 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Revenue Manager B
• Retail: 70 rooms, $240 ADR
• Business Transient: 50 rooms, $9,750 revenue
• Government: 5 rooms, $850 revenue
• OTA: $9,100 revenue, $130 ADR
• Group: 40 rooms, $160 ADR
• Contract: ˛e revenue manager decided not to pursue any contract
business
What could manager A have done better? What could manager B have done
better?
TEAM ACTIVITY
INTERNET ACTIVITY
GLOSSARY
Booking window – ˛e time horizon prior to arrival that a segment
typically makes reservations.
Bundled travel – Reservations in which multiple travel services are
combined, such as ˙ight and hotel.
Clustering – Where a homogenous consumer market is divided into homog-
enous groups based upon?
Cost per occupied room (CPOR) – ˛is cost represents the expenses asso-
ciated with occupying and servicing a room for one night. It includes
costs such as labor (front o˝ce and housekeeping), cleaning sup-
plies, linen, and utilities.
Displacement cost – ˛e value of the business that will be turned away
because the inventory has been committed to another segment
(group, contract, etc.).
Fencing/segmentation hedges – Methods of control used by revenue man-
agers to manage which reservations they are willing to accept based
upon the price being paid.
Frequent independent traveler or foreign independent tour (FIT) –
Prepaid packaged tours for individual travel.
82 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Dolan, R. J. & Simon, H. (1996). Power Pricing: How Managing Price Transforms the
Bottom Line. New York, NY: ˛e Free Press.
Elmaghraby, W. & Keskinocak, P. (2003). Dynamic Pricing in the Presence of
Inventory Considerations: Research Overview, Current Practices, and Future
Directions. Management Science, 49(10), 1287-1309.
Evolving Hotel Segmentation 83
Hormby, S., Morrison, J., Dave, P., Meyers, M. & Tenca, T. (2010, January-February).
Marriott International Increases Revenue by Implementing a Group Pricing
Optimizer. Interfaces, 40(1), 47-57.
Kehrli, K. (2015, January 26). Phoenix Hotel Rates Soar for Super Bowl 2015.
Travelmag.com. Retrieved from https://www.travelmag.com/articles/hotels-
super-bowl-2015/
Kimes, S. E. (2010). Strategic Pricing through Revenue Management. Retrieved from
Cornell University, School of Hospitality Administration site: http://scholarship.
sha.cornell.edu/articles/346.
Kotler, P., Bowen, J.T. & Makens, J. C. (2010). Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism
(6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson, 2010.
McDonald, M. & Dunbar, I. (2012). Market Segmentation: How to Do It and How to
Proÿt from It (4th ed.). Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Son Ltd.
Mcgill, J. I & van Ryzin, G.J. (1999, May). Revenue Management: Research Overview
and Prospects. Transportation Science 33(2), 233-256.
Pigou, A. C. (1932). °e Economics of Welfare (4th ed.). London: Macmillan and Co.
Smith, T. J. (2012). Pricing Strategy: Setting Price Levels, Managing Price Discounts, &
Establishing Price Structures. Mason, OH: South-Western Cengage Learning.
Smith, W. R. (1956, July). Product Di°erentiation and Market Segmentation as
Alternative Marketing Strategies. Journal of Marketing, 21(1), 3-8.
Talluri, Kalyan T., and Garrett Van Ryzin. ˛e ˛eory and Practice of Revenue
Management. New York, NY: Springer, 2005.
CHAPTER 4
OVERVIEW
Channel distribution is one of the fastest changing segments in the
hotel industry, with no stagnation in sight. This chapter will discuss
channel distributions at length, but in short, channel distributions are
the methods and/or platforms to book a hotel room.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this module, you should be able to:
Recognize the key hotel distribution channels
Di˜erentiate the beneÿts and detriments for the various distribution chan-
nels
Formulate the booking process
Explain what drives the evolving changes in distribution channels
OUTLINE
Introduction
Closing
Discussion Questions and Applications
INTRODUCTION
˜ere are many ways to book hotel rooms, and the landscape has changed
dramatically in the past 20 years. For example, the ÿrst online travel web-
site with real-time reservations launched in 1994 (Warner, Quadri-Felitti,
Chandnani, 2010), and by 2014 the average customer visits 6.5 websites
through various devices before booking their hotel room (Vivion, 2014).
Revenue managers must understand the distribution channel network and
create a distribution strategy based on their hotel’s needs.
SO WHAT?
Understanding distribution channels is a foundational element
of hotel revenue management. A hotel can have one distribution
channel or over twenty. Knowing and understanding the various
distribution channels leads a revenue manager to optimize their
mix and make the most revenue.
What do you think are the primary distribution channels? How
do they vary? Do you think a hotel should use every possible
distribution channel? Why or why not?
As noted at the start of the chapter, distribution channels have changed dra-
matically in the past 20 years. However, for the longest time, hotel distribu-
tion was rather simple: the majority of bookings came directly from guests
either walking through the front door or calling the hotel. From the 1950s to
1990, the foundation for technology was being created that enabled the dis-
tribution boom that started in the mid-1990s. Below are highlights of what
changed from 1950 to 1990 (Warner et al., 2010):
1995 was the start of the “dot-com” boom—or the rapid growth the
internet sector (Cassidy, 2002). During this time there was also immediate
acceleration of distribution channels. Choice Hotels International led the
way to be the ÿrst company to o˝er “real-time” access to its CRS (Warner
et al., 2010). ˜e ÿrst OTA, Travelocity.com, was introduced in 1996, which
was quickly followed by Expedia, a Microsoˆ brainchild. By 1997, 42 per-
cent of all hotel reservations were booked by travel agents or corporate travel
departments (Use Our Lodging, 2010).
90 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
THINK HISTORICALLY
QUESTIONS
• Do you think newspapers could be an e˝ective distribution
channel today? Why or why not?
• ˜ere are many distribution channels that have come and gone.
Why do you think that is?
• What are potential future distribution channels you can inva-
sion?
• What do you think the role of travel agencies will be in the
future?
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 91
With the historical background known, let’s review the key distribution
channels again. ˜ere are many di˝erent ways hoteliers can further catego-
rize distribution channels. For example, online versus oˇine, direct (voice,
brand.com, property direct) versus indirect (OTA, GDS). It is also helpful to
categorize distribution channels by their cost and beneÿts.
Let’s review the associated costs of each distribution channel. ˜ese costs
estimates are from a TravelClick®’s data launched in May 2015 (Mahmoud,
2015). Some of the costs are easier to identify, such as, for example, a fee per
booking, while others are not as easy to track, such as the associated cost of
a sales team. It is very important to understand all costs of channels because
although shiˆing share to increase occupancy is positive, it may not yield
to higher proÿts. It is paramount to focus channel mix to maximize proÿts,
rather than revenue.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Can you think of an additional distribution channel cost that was
not listed in the above chart?
Categorize each of the distribution channels as direct versus non-di-
rect and online versus o˛ine.
94 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
˜ere are various methods hotels can use to drive direct business, includ-
ing (but not limited to) targeted discounts, television advertising, targeted
o˝ers, upgrades, mobile investments, responding to online reviews, and
even general guest encouragement to join the loyalty program.
As seen, there is a wide diversity of travel ‘parts’ that work together to appear
to be one experience for the customer. One constant problem hoteliers face
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 95
is that if one of the parts fail (i.e. the CRS is down for 2 hours), the customer
experience fails. Another theme you may have noticed in Table 4.1 are the
multiple costs a hotel can incur for one reservation. For example, when a
reservation is booked on an OTA, a hotel can pay 20 percent of the total rate,
plus $10 to the CRS system.
• Big data: All of these online distribution systems and channels are
able to provide an enormous amount of data. However, big data is
not helpful. It is important to change big data to smart data. Smart
data is digestible and actionable.
• Proliferation: ˜e rapid growth of distribution channels leads to
some negative implications. First, hotels need to decipher which
channels they should use, and there is not always not a clear choice.
It is important for hotels to base their choice on the channel’s return
on investment (ROI). Second, the multiple distribution channels
lead to more overhead of managing the various channels. While
there are systems that can help with management, these come at a
cost. ˜ird, paradox of choice. As customers continue to have more
choices of where to book, it can cause more confusion and actually
interfere with a customer’s booking.
• Fragmented distribution network: ˜ere are many moving parts that
are not connected in distribution channels. While there are systems in
place to provide a connection to the various parts (at a cost to the hotel),
it does not always work smoothly. For example, a hotel’s CRS may con-
nect to two OTAs but not to a third. If a hotel works with all three
OTAs, they need to consider if they would want to manage the third
OTA by 1) additional connectivity system, 2) manage online directly
with the third OTA, or 3) decide to not work with the third OTA.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
• How would you research a new distribution channel? What are the
important aspects a hotelier would need to know before adding a
new distribution channel?
96 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OTAs have seen signiÿcant growth since their start in 1996, and their prom-
inence has exploded since the 2000s. For example, OTAs’ share of guest-paid
room revenue in economy and midscale hotels jumped 7.8 percent in 2011
to 15.8 percent in 2014; this means a 108 percent growth for OTAs in the
economy to midscale in less than four years (Mahmoud, 2015). When talking
with customers, we ÿnd that OTAs like Expedia and Priceline are considered
the primary ways to book their hotel rooms (Duetto Research, 2016).
˜ere are two major beneÿts of OTAs that many times are not heavily
considered. First is the access to the data that OTAs can provide. OTAs have
huge access to big data. For example, OTAs can easily see marketwide trends,
leisure compression, and booking trends, etc. OTAs can provide this data to
hotels to help suggest data-driven strategies and opportunities for the hotel.
˜e second beneÿt is access to customers. Not only do OTAs have a wide net
of customers who likely would not ÿnd the hotel otherwise, some OTAs are
very prominent in speciÿc areas or countries. For example, Wotif is the larg-
est online hotel website in Australia (Expedia Inc., 2015), and if a hotel wants
to target the Asia Paciÿc market, the hotel manager can work with Expedia
(who owns Wotif) to increase their share very quickly and relatively cheaply.
However, while these are two beneÿts, these beneÿts are not the same
among di˝erent OTAs, and OTAs are not created equal. ˜erefore, hoteliers
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 97
will ÿnd some OTAs work better for their hotel than others. For example,
a hotel may evaluate the four di˝erent OTAs they work with and realize
90 percent of their business comes from one of the OTAs, and therefore
the hotel may choose to only work with that one OTA for simplicity. Other
examples include if an OTA does not have a large hotel management team
and therefore a hotel may have an ongoing distribution challenge with the
speciÿc OTA that goes unÿxed – this could cause a hotel to no longer work
with an OTA. Conversely, a hotel may choose to focus strategy to a speciÿc
OTA due to date they can provide or that they are easy to work with.
For general grouping of OTAs, there are three basic models OTAs can
work with hotels, outlined below.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
• What are the impacts to a hotel when they record the net rate (mer-
chant model) or the gross rate (agency model)?
Labs found that this billboard e˝ect is also enjoyed by other channels as well,
not just OTAs (O’Neill, 2014). While many hoteliers may see the billboard
e˝ect at their property, there is the question if it is diminishing. Metasearch
websites clearly diminish the billboard e˝ect since customers are beginning
their booking process at a meta site rather than at the OTA. Additionally, the
rise of customers booking on mobile apps lends to a di˝erent booking trend.
Anderson at Cornell contemplates this:
“As phone/tablet usage grows, we may see a di˝erent story. Let’s say
consumers switch to having higher conversion ratios on mobile devices.
˜en they probably won’t shop in an app and then call the hotel directly.
˜ey will instead shop and purchase via the app. So the billboard e˝ect
may be reduced.” (O’Neill, 2014).
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Do you think the billboard e˜ect still exists?
As OTAs began to move into the discount space, wholesalers were forced
to evolve in order to sustain their business model and eventually created rate
and inventory direct-connections in order to source retail rates right into
wholesaler websites, much like an OTA. Today, FIT companies still bundle
and package deeply discounted rates using the merchant model, but they
have added additional hidden rate channels to their repertoire of bookings
streams, such as discounted o˝erings made to various fenced loyalty groups
and airline or credit card point redemption merchandise. Pre-sold allotments
have become rare in the industry, and instead hoteliers have been given the
ability to restrict and loosen inventory and discount levels more dynamically
through direct internet connections. One of the challenges with many
wholesalers that exist today is the ability to regulate public pricing parity. Most
FIT contracts state that the wholesaler cannot underprice the hotel, but as the
same block of hotel rooms can oˆen be sold from one wholesaler to the next
with small commissions taken o˝ the top with each trade, the origin of the
initial contractor can become di˙cult to track down should a public rate be
found at a lower price than the brand o˝ering. Oˆen times, a hotelier will have
to book the miscellaneous rate themselves in order to track the rate code on
the reservation back to the primary FIT company in order to prove a breach
100 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
has occurred. In many ways, today’s traditional FIT companies have had to
expand beyond their initial business models and beyond traditional wholesale
methods and have grown to emulate modern OTAs more than anything else.
Rate parity faced legal challenges in the United States in 2014 and Europe in
2014 and 2015 (Freed, 2016). Rate parity came into legal scrutiny because of
alleged violation of antitrust laws and consumer protection statuses.
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 101
While rate parity has survived in the United States so far, Europe has
stricter antitrust laws. On July 9, 2015, the French National Assembly came
to a ÿnal vote to remove rate parity clauses from contracts between hoteliers
and OTAs. ˜is law had been named the “Macron Law” aˆer France’s then
Minister of Economy, Industry, and Digital A˝airs, Emmanuel Macron.
˜e Macron Law was designed to eliminate barriers to free competition in
the hotel industry (Freed 2016). ˜e results of rate parity removal are still
unknown, but it will foster a more collaborative relationship between OTAs
and hoteliers as rate parity is no longer a given in Europe.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
How do you think the removal of rate parity will a˜ect hotels and
their success in Europe? How do you think it will a˜ect the OTAs?
REAL PEOPLE
Director of Revenue Re°ection of Rate Parity
Rachel Cole,* a self-taught director of revenue,
has worked in hospitality since 2004 and found
her place in revenue in 2008. She has worked for
multiple hotels, ranging from a 170–room hotel in New York City to
a Starwood hotel in Long Beach, California. Her view on rate parity
might surprise you and make you consider less obvious pros and cons.
What are your thoughts of rate parity among distribution channels?
Rate parity is a great idea in theory. But there are some channels and
some customers you can pretty much predict their behavior. A brand
loyal customer will always go to westin.com (or whatever brand.com
website they are a member of). ˜e same can be said on OTAs. ˜e
reason why they are booking on those channels is because they are
that type of customer, they do not care about a hotel’s brand; they are
looking for the best price.
Because people shopping on Expedia (or any OTA) are not going to
buy me on my website and they are shopping on Expedia because they
are not loyal, and they want a good price. I need to be competitive
102 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Consider the time that Rachel was not hitting her monthly budget, for
the second month in a row. She was feeling a lot of pressure to hit her
budget, as she was getting nervous about hitting her annual budget
with her current gap.
Her general manager wants her to maintain rate parity, although her
asset manager continues to pressure her about the budget. What should
Rachel do? How would you convince the general manager that doing a
special sale might help the hotel?
*Name changed
With the proliferation of distribution channels and rate parity still in play
(at least in the United States and most other countries), hotels are faced with
how to easily send their rates and availability to distribution channels. ˜e
most basic simple/basic method a hotel can deploy to send their rates and
inventory to a distribution channel is managing it directly via an extranet.
Connectivity via an extranet is very manual and means the hotelier is
logging into each distribution channel’s extranet, loading their availability
and rates. When the hotel receives a reservation, the distribution channels
send over the reservation (typically via fax or email) and the hotel must
manually input into their CRS. ˜is works well for some hotels, especially
if they are smaller and/or do not work with many distribution channels.
But even with a smaller hotel this can be a very manual process that can
lead to human error. Let’s consider an eight-room bed and breakfast for
example. ˜e bed and breakfast likely has a di˝erent room type for each of
their rooms. Managing so many room types can be very time consuming
and leave too much room for error (double booking, for example).
˜ere are two overarching types of how systems are connected: push
versus pull. Push is when a hotel reservation system pushes their availabil-
ity, rates, and inventory (ARI) data out to their distribution channels. Pull
is when the distribution channel requests (or pulls) the ARI from the hotel
reservation system as consumers are shopping. A good analogy of the push
versus pull comparison is the di˝erence between a text message and a phone
call. A text message is a push transaction, where someone is pushing a mes-
sage (or data) to a recipient. In contrast, a phone call is a pull transaction,
the caller (recipient of data, or distribution channel) is requesting the call (or
data) (Barnby et al., 2011). Pull systems are typically employed by large hotel
portfolios (or brands) with substantial volumes of data to maintain.
PROS: Push: Data workload with search requests is reduced many
times, alleviating the need for further IT investment.
Pull: ARI data is accurate at the time of booking and allows
for more granular control over factors that include last room
availability and yield management restrictions.
CONS: Push: Data may not be as accurate.
Pull: Hotel reservation system must account for high volumes of
shopping messages; typically can be more expensive.
Deciding between push versus pull is just the ÿrst step in connectivity.
˜ere are many of these third-party connection systems that all account for
other variables. ˜ird-party connectivity systems have di˝erent mapping
requirements and ability of pricing strategies (i.e., if a hotel prices by length
of stay, they will want a connectivity system that allows for that). ˜ese are
both things hoteliers need to consider when choosing a connectivity system
(also referred to as channel manager). Other considerations for mapping
are extra person fees, tax calculations, currency di˝erences, etc. Once all of
these items are considered, a hotelier can ÿnd the right connectivity system
and/or channel manager for their hotel. With the ever-growing distribution
landscape, the right connectivity system for a hotel is vital.
2015 was the year of merger frenzy in the hotel industry. In 2015, the
industry saw huge mergers among hotel brands. ˜ere are a few causes of
these mergers. First the hotel industry has had strong performance since
the recession; growth in revenue per available room has been positive since
March 2010 (STR, 2017). But as growth continues, hotels are considering
ways to continue the growth, especially as new players such as the Airbnb
sharing economy enters the game. A clear method of saving costs and
therefore growing revenue is via economies of scale. Second, the mergers
lend to greater brand recognition. As noted previously, the cost of customer
acquisition continues to increase, and expanded loyalty programs and larger
marketing budgets created by mergers help counteract this. ˜ird, the hotel
brand mergers help hoteliers negotiate contracts with other distribution
channels, such as OTAs. Barry Sternlicht, founder and former CEO of
Starwood Hotels & Resorts and current CEO of Starwood Capital, believes
that huge hotel mergers are the best o˝ense against Expedia and Airbnb
because they creates scale (Weissmann, 2016).
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Are there other beneÿts of merging hotel brands?
Group. ˜roughout 2014 and 2015 Expedia Inc. acquired Wotif, Travelocity,
Orbitz, Trivago, and Homeaway (Expedia Inc. 2015). ˜e Priceline Group
includes Booking.com, Priceline.com, Agoda.com, Kayak.com, and OpenT-
able (Priceline Group). A beneÿt of the mergers among OTAs is easier dis-
tribution to multiple sites when contracting with an OTA. However, as they
merge, hoteliers are faced with individual OTAs harnessing more market
share and therefore in°uence.
While social media is an important factor for hotels, there is also the future
potential of social media actually entering the distribution game. George
Corbin, VP eCommerce Strategy & eMarketing at Marriott International,
contemplates the potential of Google, Apple, Facebook or “non-travel-play-
ers leveraging their platforms to drive into travel and hotel space” (Green &
Lomanno, 2015). ˜ese websites already have a huge consumer base, and if we
look at Facebook, for example, they are doing more to adapt their site to keep
consumers there. ˜erefore, it becomes a natural extension when a Facebook
users posts they just booked their °ight for Facebook to recommend hotels.
“When asked if hotels should do social media, my answer usually isn’t just
‘yes,’ it’s ‘Hell, yes!’ says Tim Peter, of Tim Peter Associates (T. Peter, March
2016). Tim acknowledges that social media may work better for certain types
of hotels than others; for boutique properties and resorts versus economy
chain properties, for instance, “social [media] plays an integral role in helping
hotels connect directly with their customers early in their purchase funnel,
during their stay, and post stay. Plenty of hotels see solid and consistent tra˙c
growth and improving conversion rates from content posted on social sites
such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram.” (T. Peter, March 2016)
Webtrends found that the average customer visits 6.5 devices and/or web-
sites before booking their room (Vivion, 2014). ˜e internet and ability
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 107
to research and book hotels is everywhere. ˜ere are about 13.4 billion
internet-connected devices in the word. ˜is means 2 internet-connected
devices for every person on the planet (Hoisington, 2014). As consumers
continue to visit multiple sites before booking and the number of devices
increase, hoteliers need to consider where they want to be shown and how.
˜e highest level for a hotel reservation system to be cross-channel, plat-
form, and functional.
Marketing consultant Tim Peter notes that mobile is not a trend, it is here
to stay; in fact, Peter states, “It’s almost impossible to overstate the impacts
we will continue to see from mobile over the next several years . . . guests
never ‘go online;’ they are online. Everywhere. All the time” (T. Peter, March
2016). A TripAdvisor study in 2015 revealed that 42 percent of travelers use
a smartphone to plan or book their trip (Tripadvisor, 2015). Additionally,
Annalect conducted a six-month study to examine the impact of technology
on millennials’ relationship with brands. Most notable for distribution chan-
nels, smartphone-owning millennials (ages 19–33) are more likely to expect
brands to have mobile-friendly website or app (55 percent) than a social
media presence (39 percent).
SEEING FURTHER
Consider you are a director of revenue manage-
ment (DORM) at a hotel. Your general manager
(GM) does not want to pay to create a mobile-
friendly website.
How would you convince him that it makes sense to invest in
mobile? What would your mobile speciÿc strategy be?
SHARING ECONOMY
˜e sharing economy is another trend of the 21st century with the rise of
companies like Uber, Lyˆ, Airbnb, HomeAway, Couch Surfers, etc. Airbnb
is a very hot topic among hoteliers. Niki Leodakis, CEO of Commune Hotels
+ Resorts said, “I think we better be eyes wide open about Airbnb … It’s
reminiscent of 2001, 2002, 2003 when we were all watching the OTAs and
going ‘holy crap these guys are going to chew up our business’” (Peter, 2015).
While it is unseen if Airbnb will chew up hotel business, there is nothing to
say that it will not.
CLOSING
As we look into the future, we can only expect that distribution channels
will continue to grow and morph. ˜e hotelier’s goal is to increase share in
their least expensive channels and partner with channels that provide bene-
ÿts they cannot create on their own.
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 109
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: You are the general manager of a 20-room
independent hotel in the remote Rocky Mountains. Right now
you only accept walk-ins and reservations via the phone. What
other distribution channels would make sense for your hotel and why?
Question 2: Why do you think the customer cost of acquisition has increased?
Question 3: You are a hotel located about 5 miles from downtown Hartford, CT. You
are currently independent and are considering ˝agging with a brand. What would be
the distribution beneÿts of using a brand?
APPLICATIONS
Application 1
Application 2
TEAM ACTIVITY
Split up the class into pairs. Each pair will conduct a negotiation—one stu-
dent pitching Geo-Trip and one student representing the hotel.
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Go to http://www.expediaquickconnect.com/content/eqc-pre-
ferred-program.
• Do you think it makes sense to use a preferred connectivity
vendor? Why or why not?
GLOSSARY
Average daily rate (ADR) – Rooms revenue divided by rooms sold,
displayed as the average rental rate for a single room.
Availability, rates, and inventory (ARI) – Referred to by connec-
tivity systems.
Billboard e˜ect – In the Cornell study, the billboard e˝ect is the marketing
and advertising beneÿts experienced by hotels when they’re listed on
online travel agent websites.
Brand.com – ˜e main reservation booking website for the hotel or chain.
Channel manager – A connectivity third-party system that pushes a hotel’s
ARI to a distribution channel.
Central reservation system (CRS) – A computerized backend system of a
hotel’s booking engine.
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 111
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Aggarwal, S. (2013, May). ˜e Uncovered Interest Rate Parity Puzzle in the For-
eign Exchange Market [Scholarly project]. NYU Stern School of Business.
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workingpapers/2013/Aggarwal_ParityPuzzle_May2013.pdf
American Airlines Inc. (n/d). History of American Airlines. Retrieved from https://
www.aa.com/i18n/customer-service/about-us/history-of-american-airlines.jsp
Anderson, C. (2009, October 2). ˜e Billboard E˝ect: Online Travel Agent Impact
on Non-OTA Reservation Volume. Center for Hospitality Research Publi-
cations. Retrieved from https://scholarship.sha.cornell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.
cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1001&context=chrpubs
Barnby, C., Bruno, T., Harasymiw, Kiker, C., Neal, R., Noble, T., Revelle, D., Troudi,
N & Unwin, T. (2011) Push and Pull Connectivity Models for Hotel Distribu-
tion. [White Paper] Retrieved from https://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.hedna.
org/resource/resmgr/HEDNA_Push_Pull_White_Paper.pdf
Cassidy, J. (2002). Dot.con: the greatest story ever sold. Allen Lane: ˜e Penguin Press.
Duetto Research. (2016). ˜e Ultimate Guide to Hotel Revenue Strategy, 1-66.
Retrieved from http://go.duettocloud.com/revenue-strategy-guide
eMarketer. (2014, December 19). Travel Planners Migrate to Mobile. Retrieved from
https://www.emarketer.com/Article/Travel-Planners-Migrate-Mobile/1011734
Expedia Inc. (2015). 2014 Annual Report. Transcript.
Expedia Inc. (2016). 2015 Annual Report. Transcript.
112 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Freed, J. (2016, July 7). Rate Parity Issues Keep Hotel Lawyers Busy. Retrieved from
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busy
Green, C. E. & Lomanno, M. V. (2015). Distribution Channel Analysis: A Guide
for Hotels. An AH&LA and STR Special Report. Retrieved from https://www.
hotelnewsnow.com/media/File/PDFs/DCA%20Executive%20Summary.pdf
HAMA Study. (2014). Retail Commissions Only. Kalibri Labs.
Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (2017). Q4 2016 Earnings Call. Transcript.
Hoisington, A. (2014, December 22) 5 Hotel Marketing Trends for 2015. Hotel News
Now. Retrieved from http://www.hotelnewsnow.com/Articles/24707/5-ho-
tel-marketing-trends-for-2015
Kim, J & Bhutani, A. (2014, March 31). A Technical Look: How Expedia is Simplify-
ing Travel Planning. Retrieved from Expedia Blog https://viewÿnder.expedia.
com/a-technical-look-how-expedia-is-simplifying-travel-planning/
Mahmoud, A. (2015, June 12). Hotel ADR Rise vs. Distribution Channel Cost, What
Hoteliers Need to Calculate. Retrieved from https://www.hospitalitynet.org/
opinion/4070604.html
Marsh, P. (2015, January 28). #GenerationTech: Millennials & Technology.
Annalect. Research Study. Retrieved from http://www.annalect.com/genera-
tiontech-millennials-technology/
McGuire, K. A. (2016, August 11). Building a Smart Distribution Strategy. Cornell
Hotel Research. Retrieved from https://sha.cornell.edu/faculty-research/cen-
ters-institutes/chr/blog/building-a-smart-distribution-strategy/
O’Neill, S. (2014, May 22) Does the Expedia Billboard E˝ect Still Exist for Hotels?
[Originally published on tnooz]. Retrieved from https://www.phocuswire.
com/Does-the-Expedia-billboard-e˝ect-still-exist-for-hotels
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from https://www.timpeter.com/2015/06/09/how-safe-are-independent-ho-
tels-from-airbnb.
Priceline Group. (2016) 2015 Annual Report. Transcript.
STR AMER Lodging Data. (2017, January). Unpublished raw data.
Ting, D. (2016, May 16) Comes to Pushing Direct Bookings. Skiˆ. Retrieved from
https://skiˆ.com/2016/05/16/hotel-ceos-wont-back-down-when-it-comes-
to-pushing-direct-bookings/
TripAdvisor Study (2015, June 30). Retrieved from http://ir.tripadvisor.com/news-re-
leases/news-release-details/tripadvisor-study-reveals-42-travelers-world-
wide-use-smartphones
“Use Our Lodging/Hotel Industry Database of Internet Marketing Articles.” Hotel
Internet Marketing, Hotel Web Site Design by Milestone. Retrieved from
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asp>
Key Hotel Distribution Channels 113
Vivion, N. (2014, September 2). How Many Websites and Devices Does a Con-
sumer use to Research Travel? [Originally published on tnooz.] Retrieved
from https://www.phocuswire.com/How-many-websites-and-devices-does-
a-consumer-use-to-research-travel
Warner, M. & Qaudri-Felitti D. & Chandnani, P. (2010). A History of Travel
Distribution: 1915 – 2009. HEDNA. Retrieved from https://corsi.unibo.
it/magistrale/emt/bacheca/2013-05-seminario-in-revenue-manage-
ment-the-distribution-dilemma/5a3e53f2148447caa7b55cf3d80d1f2b
Webtrends Recommends Best Practices to Help Travel Sites Increase Bookings.
(2014, August 26). Webtrends. Retrieved from https://www.globenewswire.
com/news-release/2014/08/26/1130302/0/en/Webtrends-Recommends-
Best-Practices-to-Help-Travel-Sites-Increase-Bookings.html
Weissmann, A. (2016, January 16). OTAs Driver Hotel Mergers. Travel Weekly.
<http://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Hotel-News/Barry-Stern-
licht-power-OTAs-driving-hotel-mergers>
CHAPTER 5
Competitive Analysis in
Hotel Revenue Management
Theresa Doherty and Leslie Lew
OVERVIEW
Knowing and understanding competition is key to growing revenue and
market share. This chapter will present the processes used to determine
and evaluate the most appropriate competitive set. It will also cover
the tools available to monitor and analyze competitor performance in
order to improve a hotel’s revenue results.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this module, you should be able to:
Design a competitive set for an individual hotel
Create a SWOT analysis (strength, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) to
compare an individual hotel and its competitors
Prepare a competitive set value o˜ering analysis
Construct a rate value matrix to validate the hotel’s strategy
Identify business opportunities by understanding competitor
performance
Apply competitive assessment methodologies to hotel development
feasibility studies
115
116 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Defning Your Competition
• Validating the Set
• Determine Competitive Positioning within Competition
INTRODUCTION
Defning Segmentation
SO WHAT?
Hotel managers need to understand their customers and competitors
better to build competitive advantage. Understanding your competi-
tors is key to understanding your market and available opportunities.
• Why is it not enough to understand your own business? Why do
you need to understand your competitive landscape?
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 117
THINK HISTORICALLY
History of STR
Smith Travel Research is the leading global provider of competitive
benchmarking, information services, and research to the hotel indus-
try. Randy and Carolyn Smith founded STR from their kitchen table in
1985, and to this day the company remains a privately held family busi-
ness with a long-term vision. From its headquarters outside of Nashville,
Tennessee, the company currently gathers performance data from over
63,000 hotels located in more than 180 countries.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
The 2016 version of the STAR report includes running 3 month data.
Why do you think STR included running 3 month data? Why do you
think STR added Supply, Demand, and Pipeline data to the modern
version of the report?
Tab 3 - STAR Summary - My Property vs. Comp Set and Industry Segments
TS Hotel 200W 67h St Austin, TX 78704 Phone: (512) 565-1999
STR # 430 CheinID: None MgtCo: Major Hotel Group Owner TLCP Development
For the Month of March: 2016 Date Created: April 30, 2016 Monthly Competitive Set Data Excludes Subject Property
Occupancy (%) Supply
Current % Year % Running % Running % Chg Month VID Run 3 Run 12
Month Chg of Chg 3 Month Chg 12 % Chg % Mon % Mon %
Date Month Chg Chg Chg
TS Hotel 88.0 -1.5 87.0 31 87.0 3.1 83.0 2.4 0.0 1.1 1.1 0.3
Market Austin. 82.9 1.0 81.6 35 68.7 3.5 75.5 3.3 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.2
TX
Market Class 80.2 0.4 75.2 14 75.2 1.4 80.6 -0.8 11.8 11.8 11.8 9.8
Luxury Class
Tract: Austin. TX 79.1 0.4 74.7 29 74.7 2.9 80.7 0.1 3.1 3.6 3.6 1.4
Tract Scale: 70.0 -0.7 71.4 1.3 71.4 1.3 77.1 -0.3 10.9 10.9 10.9 6.4
Independents
Competitive Set 85.8 9.5 81.7 7.6 81.7 7.6 85.8 0.3 0.0 3.7 3.7 0.9
Competitors
Average Daily Rate Demand
Current % Year % Running % Running % Chg Month VID Run 3 Run 12
Month Chg of Chg 3 Month Chg 12 % Chg % Mon % Mon %
Date Month Chg Chg Chg
TS Hotel 310.98 4.0 300.84 5.1 300.84 5.1 237.68 17.2 -1.5 4.2 4.2 2.7
Market Austin, 256.45 4.1 252.45 5.4 117.79 5.4 127.58 9.2 2.0 4.6 4.6 4.6
TX
Market Class 187.91 -3.3 182.45 -1.6 182.68 -1.6 214.34 7.0 12.2 13.3 13.3 8.9
Luxury Class
Tract: Austin, TX 162.72 0.2 156.35 2.6 156.35 2.6 177.56 9.9 3.5 6.6 6.6 1.5
Tract Scale: 144.59 -0.6 139.97 2.1 139.97 2.1 163.50 10.3 10.1 12.3 12.3 6.0
Independents
Competitive Set 206.12 -3.3 200.04 -1.5 200.04 -1.5 230.08 7.8 9.5 11.6 11.6 1.2
Competitors
RevPAR Revenue
Current % Year % Running % Running % Chg Month VID Run 3 Run 12
Month Chg of Chg 3 Month Chg 12 % Chg % Mon % Mon %
Date Month Chg Chg Chg
TS Hotel 273.66 2.4 261.73 8.3 261.73 8.3 197.27 20.0 2.4 9.5 20.4
Market Austin, 88.00 5.1 80.90 9.0 80.90 9.0 96.26 12.9 6.2 10.2 14.2
TX
Market Class 150.70 -2.9 137.38 -0.2 137.38 -0.2 172.79 6.1 8.5 11.5 16.5
Luxury Class
Tract: Austin, TX 126.76 0.6 116.75 5.6 116.75 5.6 143.34 10.0 3.7 9.3 11.5
Tract Scale: 112.85 -1.4 99.91 3.4 99.91 3.4 126.10 9.9 9.4 14.7 16.9
Independents
Competitive Set 176.88 5.9 163.52 6.1 163.52 6.1 197.37 8.1 5.9 10.0 9.1
Competitors
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 121
Is there a change in business drivers that can increase demand for your
product or market?
Are there existing customers who are buying from the competition who can
be better served by your organization if these potential customers under-
stood your product?
˜reats are negative external factors that impact your organization and that
you have little ability to control or anticipate when these factors will materialize.
Are there transportation regulation changes that can reduce the number of
travelers to a destination?
Is there signiÿcant new supply anticipated for the market a˙er years of strong
performance above the national average growth?
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
If your hotel and its competitors share the same strength, then it is not
unique to your hotel.
How would you di˜erentiate your hotel if the shared strength is an
oceanview location?
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 123
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
The subject hotel’s guest room size is 25 percent larger than the average
competitor.
How can the hotel promote this compelling product feature?
124 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
If the index is greater than one, the hotel is priced at a premium over
the comp set. If the index is less than one, the hotel is priced at a
discount to the comp set. Over time, a hotel can determine what index
is appropriate during various demand times and use this measurement
to determine if retail pricing is appropriate.
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 125
In the Excel document, update the hotel’s pricing and comp set’s
pricing based upon the grid below. The weightings for each of the
competitors are also listed in the grid. Once this information has been
entered into the spreadsheet, answer the following questions:
What are two potential strategy changes the hotel could make
based upon the rate position index alone?
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
What are the signiÿcant variances when it comes to location and
why should location matter?
What product or services does your competitor o˜er that is a com-
petitive disadvantage to you and how can you overcome?
SEGMENT PERFORMANCE
˜ere are industry tools that allow revenue managers to evaluate their results
compared to the competition from a segment perspective. ˜is information
sheds valuable light on where there are opportunities relative to the compet-
itive set. It can help you validate the depth of demand in various segments
and aid in modifying segment strategies to improve performance versus the
competitive set.
Some segment information is more general and only goes as far as Group,
Transient, and Contract. ˜is can be beneÿcial in establishing strategies and
sales deployment, particularly in the Group and Contract segments. It can
also be beneÿcial in determining potential transient rate strategies, depend-
ing upon rate performance relative to that of the competitive set.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
How does the hotel perform overall in occupancy compared to the
comp set during the months of January through June?
In what segments does the hotel outperform the comp set? In what
segments does the hotel underperform the comp set?
What opportunities can you identify for this hotel to improve its
performance relative to the competitive set?
POSITIONING STATEMENT
“For [insert Target Market], the [insert Brand] is the [insert Point of Dif-
ferentiation] among all [insert Frame of Reference] because [insert Reason
to Believe].” (Stayman, 2015)
REAL PEOPLE
QUESTIONS
• How do you project the occupancy and ADR performance for a
unique hotel concept that is incomparable to the existing hotel
performance metrics in the market?
• How do competitive analysis tools and methodology incorpo-
rate into underwriting a future hotel’s performance?
Step 3: Review the results on the resulting chart. Hotels that fall within the
two diagonal lines are properly positioned based upon price di˛erential
and the relative quality rating. Hotels that fall above the upper diagonal line
are not of concern because they are considered lesser quality but are priced
higher than the subject hotel. ˜e hotels to consider closely are those that
fall below the lower diagonal. ˜ese hotels are considered a greater value
than the subject hotel because they are higher in quality but are priced at or
below the subject hotel.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: How can you use the rate value matrix to design
your business strategy?
Question 3: How much in˝uence should the SWOT analysis factor into pricing strategy?
Question 4: Do you assume that all categories on the SWOT analysis are equally
important?
SEEING FURTHER
How do online guest reviews impact com-
petitive analysis?
Historically hotel star ratings and price have been used as an indicator
of hotel quality. The assumption is that a hotel with a 5-star designation
and a rate that is signiÿcantly higher than a 4-star hotel must equate to
the quality and service di˜erential in the experience.
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 133
APPLICATIONS
Case 1:
• Hotel A: 775-room 4-star hotel one block from your hotel. 60%
group hotel with 55,000 square feet of meeting space.
• Hotel B: 125-room 5-star boutique hotel across the street from your
hotel. Strong transient base. Retail rates average $100 to $125 above
your hotel.
• Hotel C: 300-room 3-star hotel 2 miles from your hotel. Similar type
of customer base but di˛erent corporate demand generators.
• Hotel D: 500-room 3-star branded hotel 4 blocks from your location.
Very strong brand loyalty program that gives them a signiÿcant dis-
tribution advantage over your hotel.
• Hotel E: 425-room 3.5-star historic hotel. ˜ree blocks from your
hotel 40% group mix. Also strong in leisure transient.
• Hotel F: 280-room 3-star hotel. One mile from your hotel. In a less
desirable neighborhood than your hotel, more remote from the
major demand generators in the market.
Which 3 hotels would you select for the competitive set? (And why?)
Case 2:
You recently joined a hotel development company and are tasked with creat-
ing a new hotel concept and positioning statement for a new-build hotel in a
secondary city market with an existing convention center that will double in
size from 60,000 sq ˙ to 120,000 sq ˙ in two years. City-wide group conven-
tions account for 125,000 annual room nights or 25% of annual hotel room
nights in this market. To complete this assignment, you are asked to evaluate
Competitive Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 135
the existing ÿve hotels in the market to identify a new hotel concept that ful-
ÿlls a market niche that is not being served today. What hotel concept would
you develop and what is the positioning statement of that hotel?
TEAM ACTIVITY
INTERNET ACTIVITY
GLOSSARY
Competitive grid analysis – A tactical tool that evaluates the prod-
uct and service o˛ering for the subject hotel and its com-
petitors.
136 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Mulligan, D. (2014). How online hotel reviews a˛ect booking decisions: ˜e
research, stats, viewpoints & strategies. Cvent. Retrieved from http://hospi-
tality.cvent.com/blog/cvb-internet-marketing-2.
Myburgh, S. (2004, March/April). Competitive Intelligence: Bridging Organization
Boundaries. Information Management Journal, 38(2), pp. 46-55.
Rushmore S. (2011, September 26.). How to Test Hotel Feasibility. HVS. Retrieved
from https://www.hvs.com/article/5456/how-to-test-hotel-feasibility/
Stayman, S. (2015, March 201). How to Write Market Positioning Statements.
Cornell Blog. Retrieved from https://blog.ecornell.com/how-to-write-mar-
ket-positioning-statements/
CHAPTER 6
OVERVIEW
139
140 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Explain the importance of the forecast and the impact it has on various
stakeholders
Describe the relationship between forecasting, price, and revenue maxi-
mization
Compare the various mechanics and models behind a system-generated
forecast
Identify the economic indicators and market level information that
impact hotel demand
Interpret the system forecast with available market data to create a user
forecast
Forecast a group block
Measure forecast accuracy
Discuss the annual budget process
OUTLINE
Introduction
Impact of the Forecast
• ˜e Reality of Seasonality and Impact On Operations
• Impact on the Revenue Strategy and Sales Deployment
• Impact on Hotel Valuation
Forecasting Fundamentals
• Di°erent Time Horizons and Frequency
• Unconstrained Forecast vs Constrained Forecast
• Sources of Data for Demand Forecasting
• Building Blocks of the Constrained Forecast
• Calculating Forecast Error
Budgeting
• Internal and External Expectations
• Execution
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 141
• Communication
• Impact on Goal Setting and Compensation
Discussion Questions and Applications
SO WHAT?
Imagine you just graduated from school and are named hotel man-
ager for a busy hotel. You arrive to work on your ÿrst day and realize
you are the only manager on duty and you cannot ÿnd a forecast of
any kind.
As hotel manager, how would you answer these questions without a
forecast?
How much sta° will you require? How much food will you pur-
chase?
How many rooms will need to be cleaned?
How is your sales team’s performance?
A forecast is generated to assist in operational planning and to set
baseline of performance.
INTRODUCTION
Hotel forecasting and budgeting generally falls under the combined respon-
sibility of ÿnance and revenue management. It is necessary for the RM to
prepare the revenue forecast in order for the ÿnance department to complete
the expense and proÿt forecast.
In nearly all cases, the RM may prepare the rooms revenue forecast for
the hotel.
˜ere are several external factors that are nearly impossible for any sys-
tem to completely understand.
For example: severe weather, competitor renovations, special events,
and any shi˝s in holiday placement.
Questions to Consider:
How would you ÿnd out this information easily and how would you
track?
Conversely, what data would be easier and faster for a system to man-
age?
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER:
Should the revenue manager adjust the forecast?
What rate and restrictions changes should be made?
What other strategies can be explored and implemented?
FORECASTING FUNDAMENTALS
In this section, we will review the critical processes, the mechanics, and
the art of forecasting a hotel’s rooms demand. While a RM will heavily rely
on the modeling of a computer generated system, he or she must apply
expertise and make adjustments when necessary. Behind the scenes, there
are a lot of numbers and calculations that a general manager would not
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 145
˜ere are various types of forecasts to satisfy both short-term and long-term
needs for multiple stakeholders. Usually, the following schedule is followed:
1) Weekly Forecast: Each week the RM will update the current month
(at least 2 weeks) for sta˙ng updates. ˜is is completed based on
current data on the books and expected transient pick up (the addi-
tion number of rooms and revenue). Generally, assumes no group
pick up.
2) Long Range Projections: Each month the RM will update the next
3–6 months for planning purposes and to communicate with various
stakeholders, including ownership. Prior to submission, it is recom-
mended that the projections are reviewed with the general manager
and director of sales to ensure alignment. ˜e long range projections
will include an unconstrained forecast for all three major segments:
contract, group, and transient.
3) Annual Budget: Each year the RM will plan for the following year to
assist in goal setting and resource planning.
146 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Both groups of data can be divided into three buckets that are easy to
understand. All are critical pieces of information to compile and consider in
the development of the forecast.
Average Daily Rate (ADR) The number of transient Economic indicators that
statistics of hotel rooms booked and ADR may increase or decrease
travel and rooms demand
˜e ˆow chart below describes the process of the integration of the sys-
tem and the available market data that enable the revenue forecast and strat-
egy recommendations.
THINK HISTORICALLY
A century ago only mail and phone enquiries (see article) existed for
rooms reservations. However, in the 1960s, technology began to accel-
erate, ÿrst with the airlines’ development of electronic distribution and
eventual migration of the technology to travel agencies via the Global
Distribution System (GDS) in the 1970s. ˜e next step was the devel-
opment of the Centralized Reservation System (CRS) in 1980 that
improved e˙ciencies for hotel chains (Warner, M.; Quadri-Felitti, D.;
Chandnani, P. V.—A History of Travel Distribution: 1915–2009, 2010).
Source: New-York Tribune, June 11, 1922, Graphic Section, Part Seven.
150 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
However, it was the 1990s and the advent of the Internet that expo-
nentially changed distribution and subsequently made forecasting
demand a real problem to solve. ˜ink about it. In 1924, rate com-
parison shopping was cumbersome for the consumer. Sales enquiries
tended to be more qualiÿed and buyers more apt to purchase. Today,
there are numerous travel sites and rate comparison shopping is wide-
spread. Consumers are likely to shop several sites before making a pur-
chase. It is more complex to validate how much demand exists and data
assumptions must be made by systems and forecasters.
Questions to Consider:
A cuto° date, the time the reservation details are due to the hotel, is
agreed at the time of booking between the sales manager and the meeting
planner. While there are variances based on type of booking and lead time,
3 weeks prior to arrival is fairly typical and provides the hotel enough notice
of any rooms not ÿlled by the group to sell to transient. However, due to the
knowledge that most groups do not utilize all rooms requested, it is prudent
for the RM to forecast each individual group block with some slippage or fall
o°. Di°erent types of groups will behave di°erently based upon the nature
of the segment (Figure 6.8).
Calculate a group room block forecast for the following group. Assume that cutoff
date is already passed and you expect a 10 percent slippage of what is already
booked. In other words, rather than additional pickup, the bookings will actually
decrease.
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 153
• Do you expect your overall rooms forecast to grow or decline since the group
was frst contracted?
• What stipulations would you demand for the group to book again for next
year?
A˝er the existing groups are forecast, the next step is to predict the remain-
ing group rooms to be picked up by sales. ˜is is not a scientiÿc process typ-
ically as historical trends are not as consistent as transient. Whiles systems
may attempt to forecast, most o˝en the RM is responsible for the majority
of the heavy li˝ing of this task. ˜e information used to estimate the to-be’s
is based partially on past history of pick up and the remainder on any group
leads, or prospects that may be in the sales System.
A˝er the contract and group forecast is complete, the last step is to vali-
date the transient system forecast and make any adjustments. ˜e system
will calculate the transient forecast based on the remaining unconstrained
demand and supply. However, due to market data that may not be inherited
in the system forecast, the RM will adjust. Ideally, this should be done in the
unconstrained transient forecast phase so this task is not necessary. Today it
is more common to override the forecast in the ÿnal phase.
A˝er Steps 1 through 3, the RM must validate the total hotel forecast to
ensure that it makes sense. O˝en when you forecast the individual parts,
154 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
it is easy to overlook the ÿnal result and check for errors in areas of pat-
tern, holiday placement, or unusual booking activity. In addition, the RM
must consider the impact on the stakeholders and ensure that too much
risk or too little risk is in the forecast. Generally, a good strategy to man-
age expectations is to be slightly conservative in the forecast. ˜is allows
the RM to increase the projection at a later date with a positive response
from stakeholders. Compare and report the forecast to budget, last year,
and last projection. Finally, ensure you communicate the forecast to all rele-
vant stakeholders and include notes for any time periods that have changed
dramatically. Explain why the forecast has changed and include any action
items that may be helpful in improving the results.
SEEING FURTHER
Assume you are the revenue manager of a large resort in the Paciÿc.
Due to a sharp slowing of the economy in East Asia, booking pace for the hotel is
signiÿcantly down. Prudently, you decide to bring down the revenue projections for
the remainder of the year.
$2,390 6% $13,589,194
156 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
While the revenue di°erence added together for the week is only o° by
2percent, from an absolute error perspective, there is a variance of 5 percent.
˜e negatives do not o°set the positive variances.
BUDGETING
REAL PEOPLE
Sloan Dean is the Vice President of Revenue Optimization
for Ashford.
He has provided insight into the impact of budgeting and forecasting from an
owner’s perspective:
Budgets & Forecasts are paramount for public companies like Ashford, especially for
REITs and C Corps that provide forward guidance to the investor community. Rev-
enue Budgets have wide ranging implications such as CAPEX investment, dispo-
sition & hold strategies and management company performance incentive clauses
that impact an owner’s EBITDA.
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 157
Regarding CAPEX, budgets in˜uence how much CAPEX owners can allocate for
future years. Most public owners allocate future CAPEX as a percentage of total
revenue; thus, if the Revenue Budget is not accurate, then an owner cannot prop-
erly plan for major renovations, etc. Because large capital spending requires 12–18
months of planning, the spend is typically based on budgets. Currently, most public
lodging REITs are spending 8–11% of their Budgeted Revenues as owner funded
CAPEX to improve their hotels. With less revenue comes less reinvestment.
Regarding disposition strategy, if a hotel’s budget & forecast is bleak, the owner is
going to be more apt to sell the asset than hold it in the interim albeit debt alloca-
tions and where we are in the lodging cycle also play a large in˜uence in the selling
of hotels.
Lastly, and maybe most importantly, many companies provide forward RevPAR
growth performance for future quarters, which is based on Budgets & Forecasts. If
these guidance’s are missed, a company’s stock can get pummeled.
QUESTIONS
Given the issues outlined above, if you were an owner, would you prefer to see an
aggressive budget or a conservative budget? List at least three factors that support
your position.
Execution
Creating a budget starts with the same fundamentals as a long range fore-
cast. ˜e forecasted sales for each month or period are estimated based upon
anticipated market conditions and group booking pace information. Tran-
sient segmentation is modeled based upon expected market demand applied
to historical trends along with any strategic changes the hotel plans to make.
˜e end result is a projection that reˆects occupancy and rate expectations
for the following year that will be used as the basis for the total hotel budget.
Revenue management will also typically outline the budget for catering sales
based upon booking pace in group and local catering as well as trends in
pickup within the year of arrival.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
How does the hotel expect to increase revenue during the ÿrst quarter
based upon how they have budgeted these months?
List strategy changes that the hotel potentially made versus the prior
year that would lead them to budget the numbers above.
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 159
Communication
˜e budget is ÿrst reviewed by the property team to ensure the RM, gen-
eral manager, sales leader, and director of ÿnance are in agreement. ˜e
subsequent review process for the budget will depend upon the company
approach as well as the engagement level of the ownership group in the
budget process. O˝entimes there is a formal meeting with the management
organization and ownership organization to review the assumptions used
to develop the budget to ensure that target is appropriate to achieve market
expectations as well as the expectations of the organizations involved.
Budgeted sales are typically used as the basis for compensation for sales, rev-
enue management, and the executive leadership in the hotel. ˜e goal could
be top-line sales, or it could also be the bottom line house proÿt driven from
budgeted sales. Sales manager goals are typically derived from the budgeted
sales for the segment targeted by the sales person (group, business transient,
etc.). Establishing unrealistic targets can have a signiÿcant impact on the
compensation of a number of managers within the hotel.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
How does the budgeted target impact the behavior of revenue manag-
ers and sales executives?
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: While the system-generated forecast is sophisticated,
are there any instances that may require user intervention? What
market or property data may be hard for the system to recognize?
Question 3: Assume you are the RM of a relatively new hotel and rely heavily on
the system-generated forecast due to lack of history and expertise. You have noticed
that in recent weeks that the system-generated forecast accuracy is declining. The
occupancy is coming in much stronger than the forecast.
160 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
As a result, you have set up an appointment with the programmers that are responsible
for the system forecast. What questions would you have for the programmer and what
could be negatively impacting the accuracy?
Question 5: Describe how a sharp reduction in the forecast impacts the overall value
of the asset?
APPLICATIONS
Case 1: Forecast Accuracy
You have been asked to see if there was a trend to the forecast accuracy
shortfalls.
Rooms Forecast Rooms Actual
Sunday 1,050 1,008
Monday 1,400 1,372
Tuesday 1,400 1,372
Wednesday 1,400 1,386
Thursday 1,250 1,138
Friday 1,150 1,047
Saturday 1,350 1,323
Sunday 1,075 1,032
Monday 1,350 1,323
Tuesday 1,350 1,323
Wednesday 1,350 1,337
Thursday 1,200 1,092
Friday 1,175 1,070
Saturday 1,300 1,274
Sunday 975 936
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 161
Questions:
Case 2: Budgeting
You are the new RM for a hotel in a major city. ˜e hotel team has been
working on their budget for the upcoming year. You have done your research
and found out the following facts about the market conditions for next year:
• Several new hotels will open in the market. One of the new hotels is a
400 room hotel located 2 blocks from your hotel. It is slated to open
in February.
• Two large annual conventions that are held during the shoulder sea-
son are not going to be held next year due to budget constraints.
• An international airline will start new direct service from a major
gateway city to your city starting in April.
• Your hotel’s group booking pace is behind by 3 percent compared to
the same time last year.
• Your hotel had a signiÿcant renovation last year and the owners are
expecting strong returns on their investment.
Questions:
• ˜e owners expect the budget to reˆect occupancy performance
equal to the current year. Do you agree with their assertion? Why or
why not?
• How does the impending new supply impact expectations for rate
and occupancy for the hotel?
162 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
TEAM ACTIVITY
Work with at least two other students in this team activity. Research
a Citywide event in your local area or a nearby city center. Select one
hotel to analyze and choose four other hotels of similar experience
level. Compare pricing and availability for the peak event dates against a
time period of low demand.
Does pricing ˆuctuate similarly between the two di°erent time frames
for all the hotels or are there exceptions?
When forecasting occupancy and rate for the dates over the Citywide,
what property data would you analyze?
INTERNET ACTIVITIES
GLOSSARY
Citywide – event in the market that results in lodging demand ade-
quate to ÿll the vast majority of all hotels.
Demand generator – any event, sports area, hospital, military base,
or business that creates lodging demand for a market.
Remaining demand – number of rooms the hotel can expect to sell
with unlimited physical capacity.
Hotel Revenue Management: Forecasting and Budgeting 163
REFERENCES
Belobaba, P. P. (1987, May). Airline Yield Management: An Overview of Seat Inven-
tory Control. Transportation Science, 21 (2), 63–73.
Cross, R. G. (1997). Revenue Management: Hard Core Tactics for Market Domina-
tion. New York, NY: Broadway Books. 1997.
Cross, R. G., Higbie, J. A., & Cross, D. Q. (2009). Revenue Management’s Renais-
sance: A Rebirth of the Art and Science of Proÿtable Revenue Generation.
Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 50 (1), 56–81.
Haley, M. & Inge, J. (2004, Fall) Revenue Management: It Really Should Be Called
Proÿt Management. Hospitality Upgrade Magazine. Retrieved from https://
ishc.com/wp-content/uploads/art_rm04.pdf
Hayes, D. K. & Miller, A. (2011). Revenue Management for Hospitality Industry.
Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Legohérel,P., Poutier,E. & Fyall, A. (Eds.). (2013). Revenue Management for Hospi-
tality and Tourism. Woodeaton, Oxford. Good Fellow Publishers Ltd.
Minitab.com (n/d). Retrieved from https://support.minitab.com/en-us/minitab/18/
help-and-how-to/modeling-statistics/time-series/how-to/trend-analysis/
methods-and-formulas/methods-and-formulas/
Warner, M., Qaudri-Felitti D. & Chandnani, P. (2010). A History of Travel Dis-
tribution: 1915–2009. HEDNA. Retrieved from https://corsi.unibo.
it/magistrale/emt/bacheca/2013-05-seminario-in-revenue-manage-
ment-the-distribution-dilemma/5a3e53f2148447caa7b55cf3d80d1f2b
Weatherford, L. R. & Kimes, S. E. (2003/9). A Comparison of Forecasting Methods
for Hotel Revenue Management. ˜e Scholarly Commons. Cornell University
School of Hotel Administration.
CHAPTER 7
Performance Analysis in
Hotel Revenue Management
Roy Madhok and Leslie Lew
OVERVIEW
Hotel revenue management (HRM) has grown over time as a function of
front o˜ce operations to a highly analytical practice based upon dynamic
data-driven decisions. Hotels operate around the clock, and reservations are
made and cancelled at all times of the day for di°erent days often multiple
years into the future. This wide net of data continues to grow and as it grows
revenue management has had to learn how to appropriately record data,
gain new metrics, establish goals, and ultimately critique performance in
order to grow the business
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Analyze the depth of key performance indicators for revenue management
Apply performance metrics to create and measure the e°ectiveness of a
strategy
Identify opportunities in pace statistics in order to drive market share results
Practice inventory utilization and common yielding strategies
Examine the impact of customer perception on HRM performance
Recognize the emerging metrics for the hospitality industry (cost of
acquisition, digital marketing, and e-commerce)
Evaluate performance utilizing a strategy critique and establish
measurable goals that can be monitored over time
165
166 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Key Performance Indicators
• Industry Metrics
• Market Share
• Pace Reports Available within Hotel Revenue Management
• Inventory Management
• Emerging Proÿtability Metrics
• Digital Marketing and e-Commerce
or
RevPAR is the relationship between occupancy and ADR, where alone occu-
pancy and ADR both have signiÿcant limitations. A hotel that runs 100 per-
cent occupancy could be giving away its rooms for very little whereas a hotel
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 167
with an extremely high ADR could likely be missing out on the opportunity
to sell more inventory.
SO WHAT?
What is the point of introducing new metrics? Why should revenue
management professionals expand their data sets?
RevPAR itself measures room revenue alone; hotels encompass much more
than room revenue and expand into areas such as banquets, conferences,
food and beverage, and so on. Scholars have argued that since RevPAR is
an incomplete picture, hotels should instead focus on Total Revenue per
Available Room, or TrevPAR (Dickens, 2006; Lado-Sestayo et al., 2017).
TrevPOR or Total Revenue per Occupied Room came into existence to
understand how much revenue a hotel makes in total. For example, hotels
evaluate groups and take into consideration more than the room rate. A
group that requests sleeping rooms, meeting rooms, and food could poten-
tially bring in more revenue than a group requesting just sleeping rooms.
Despite the advent of TrevPAR, hotels have not widely adopted this metric
and have instead started to gravitate more toward proÿt-driven metrics.
Market Share
Despite the addition of new metrics, HRM still has a major focus on grow-
ing market share; the hotels performance against deÿned competitors. Mar-
ket share reports are provided by a variety of companies and are the report
card for revenue managers.
While the reports have started to incorporate new KPIs, they still tend to
center around Occupancy Index (Market Penetration Index or MPI), ADR
Index (Average Rate Index or ARI) and RevPAR Index (Revenue Genera-
tion Index). Revenue managers judge their performance against competi-
tors with these reports and then break into further detail in order to see how
they can further shi˝ market share their way.
Table 7.1: Shahawk Hotel Market Share Report March 6th 2016–March 12th
2016
Table 7.1 has a signiÿcant amount of data in the form of a market share
report. °e hotel had an occupancy percentage of 87.1 percent and was ˆat
year over year. Overall, the hotel underperformed in occupancy (87.1 per-
cent versus competitors at 91.8 percent) while also ranking near the bottom
of the competitive set at 3 of 4.
°e hotel in Table 7.1 achieved success in RevPAR Index, but lost occu-
pancy share and ultimately was ranked 3 of 4 in RevPAR. Revenue managers
look both backward and forward at market share to search for alternative
ways to grow occupancy, ADR, and RevPAR more than their competitors.
°e hotel in Table 7.1 should also understand recurring trends; if they are
consistently losing occupancy the revenue manager has to put strategies into
place and articulate to sales and operations the new points of emphasis in
order to gain back lost share.
THINK HISTORICALLY
Data on market share reports today provide signiÿcantly more detail by
segmentation and day of week compared to a sample market share report
from 2002 that only provided summary data. Without the segmentation
or day of week, hotels had to speculate on market share drivers instead of
analyzing data to prepare a strategy plan to improve results.
170
% % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg % Chg
Chg
Monthly Year To Date Performance
Performance
Hotel Anywhere 66.9 17.6 $138.52 1.2 $92.65 19.0 19.8 0.6 18.3 62.2 -13.7 $138.32 -7.0 $86.08 -19.7 -19.0 0.9 -12.9
Market: Oakland, Ca 59.5 -1.2 $89.42 -1.7 $53.20 -2.8 2.6 5.5 4.3 60.5 -12.9 $90.84 -7.9 $54.98 -19.8 -16.4 4.3 -9.2
Market Price Luxury 61.3 11.1 $125.44 -4.6 $76.87 5.8 11.9 5.7 17.3 61.7 -5.2 $127.25 -12.7 $78.47 -17.3 -14.4 3.4 -2.0
Tract: Oakland-Berkeley 62.5 7.8 $104.41 -1.5 $65.28 6.1 11.0 4.6 12.7 60.9 -11.2 $104.50 -7.6 $63.64 -18.0 -13.0 6.1 -5.9
Tract ScaleUpscale Chains 68.3 15.2 $122.23 -3.3 $83.45 11.4 28.8 15.7 33.2 65.3 -6.8 $123.20 -9.8 $80.47 -15.9 -3.4 14.9 7.1
Competitive Competitors 64.0 11.3 $123.75 -3.6 $79.18 7.2 7.2 0.0 11.2 63.0 -11.4 $125.01 -7.2 $78.71 -17.9 -17.9 0.0 -11.5
12 Month Performance Census/Sample - Properties & Rooms
Segment Census Sample Sample %
(Rooms)
Hotel Anywhere 62.4 -15.6 $139.63 -5.1 $87.10 -19.9 -19.1 1.0 -14.8 Properties Rooms Properties Rooms
Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Market: Oakland, Ca 59.9 -15.8 $90.71 -7.4 $54.37 -21.9 -18.5 4.4 -12.0 Market 213 22795 129 18479 81.1
Market Price Luxury 60.1 -10.2 $128.22 -12.3 $77.11 -21.2 -18.9 2.9 -7.5 Market Price 29 5778 26 5473 94.7
QUESTIONS:
How can a revenue manager use segmentation data to create a strategy
plan to improve results?
Why is it important to examine performance by day of week?
Aside from overall Occupancy, ADR, and RevPAR, the revenue manager
needs to look at the market share report along with other data to see where
there is room to gain back share and to improve performance. It is common
for a revenue manager to align their mix of sales or market segmentation
with their market share report to see what changes to segmentation could
have been made to improve results.
Table 7.2: Shahawk Hotel Segmentation March 6th 2016–March 12th 2016
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Refer to Tables 7.1 and 7.2 to understand the segmentation of the mar-
ket share week where the hotel was ranked 3 of 4 in RevPAR.
What days did the hotel perform well on? What helped the revenue
manager achieve their 117.7% ADR index? What segments could the
hotel have targeted in order to further build occupancy? Which seg-
ments were discounted too much?
Each revenue manager looks to perform better than last year, at least in mar-
ket share. In a simple scenario, a market growing 3 percent year over year
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 173
for a particular month likely means that a hotel’s competitors are growing
3 percent as well. °e hotel therefore must strategize to grow more than 3
percent in order to gain share. Outgrowing competitors or declining less
than competitors is called gaining share. Similarly, if a hotel has lost more
year-over-year than competitors, it would be referred to as having lost share.
Pace data are used in a variety of ways, but mostly via the overall rooms
occupied, ADR, and revenue over a deÿned period of time (OTB) and via seg-
ment pace to understand which segments are performing well and which ones
are underperforming. Each type of pace data can be dissected to a detailed
level of days versus same time last year to weeks, months, and yearly pace.
Daily pace is o˝en looked at to see how months are performing and
where areas of opportunity lie. In Table 7.4, a revenue manager would be
able to assess that Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday are all up in Occu-
pancy and ADR to STLY. However, Sunday, °ursday, Friday, and Saturday
are all areas of opportunity. Similarly, this report can be run for a particular
segment and can also be shown to illustrate a month’s performance by seg-
ment (Table 7.5).
174 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
While pace statistics have been a core of HRM, new business intelli-
gence so˝ware are pushing the boundaries of what revenue managers look
at. Hotels more and more are able to understand how airfare impacts travel,
whether prices will decline as the arrival date approaches, how long the
booking window is for each week, and more.
SEEING FURTHER
Hotel revenue managers use a conjunction of
reports to understand how e°ective pricing
and discounts are in terms of both occupancy
and ADR. A common combination of the evolving technology in HRM
is the surfacing of rate shops combined with forward looking seg-
ment penetration. In the example below rate shops are shown for
retail and qualiÿed segments, or travel associated with a member-
ship discount. The occupancy penetration is also shown for each of
those dates against the Comp Set. Hotels use these tools along with
others to understand how e°ective their retail pricing and discount-
ing has been.
Rate Shops
Date DOW Retail CS Retail Qualifed CS Qualifed
Rate Rate Rate Rate
3/6/2016 Sun $179.00 $169.00 $143.20 $101.40
3/7/2016 Mon $199.00 $189.00 $189.05 $170.10
3/8/2016 Tue $249.00 $229.00 $236.55 $206.10
3/9/2016 Wed $249.00 $229.00 $224.10 $206.10
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 175
How can this hotel adjust their retail pricing? Their qualiÿed pricing?
Why could it be ok that the hotel isn’t capturing their fair share in retail/
qualiÿed occupancy?
Where does it appear that the hotel is doing well? What other reports
would you want to see in addition to this?
Inventory Management
In order to increase market share and inˆuence future dates, hotels need to
be able to price and manage their inventory appropriately. Inventory man-
agement encompasses the total hotel inventory and managing inventory
on the segment level. Strong inventory management skills allow hotels to
limit low rated channels during periods of excess demand and the ability
to open the funnel when the hotel would be willing to take more types of
business.
°e hotel in Table 7.6 could have had a number of issues that resulted in
not materializing another 10 percent of occupancy on Monday and °ursday
along with the 20 percent occupancy lost for Friday. °e revenue manager
likely sold out too early for Tuesday, Wednesday, and Saturday, resulting in
the inability to sell more rooms on Monday, °ursday, and Friday.
176 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Also, looking back at market share, hotels sometimes cannot make swi˝
changes to their segmentation in order to increase their performance. It
requires creativity and an understanding of inventory management to cap-
ture all unconstrained demand and additional revenue opportunities.
Table 7.7: Inventory Control Methods
Maximum length of stay (MXLOS) Restricting the amount of time to a maximum amount
of dates. Mostly requiring the arriving reservation to
stay a maximum amount of nights
Each of these basic inventory controls comes into play when manag-
ing unconstrained demand, where the same hotel in Table 7.6 could have
more effectively captured occupancy on shoulder dates, or dates the fall
on the sides of peak demand dates. Take for example the following 7
Day Period (Table 7.8) with varying levels of unconstrained demand at
a hotel with the same number of rooms and same amount of uncon-
strained demand.
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 177
Despite these inventory controls, one can argue that the hotel is turning
away high rated business on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Saturday by not o˛er-
ing one night rates. Many hotels therefore o˛er discounts based upon length
of stay. For example, a hotel can o˛er a discounted rate for any set of nights
it desires in order to allow discounts over so˝ dates and then only o˛er pre-
mium rates touching peak demand dates Table 7.9.
178 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
As a revenue manager, how would you know how to forecast how
many rooms a group will utilize?
What are the implications of over-forecasting how much a group will
pick up?
What are the implications of under-forecasting how much a group will
pick up?
On a day where demand is high, leaving 1 room empty can be very costly
as the ability to sell a room at a high price is gone as a new date rolls in. Hote-
liers must gain a thorough understanding of cancellation, early departure,
and no show history to understand how much to oversell by, or how far to
set their overbooking limit (Phumchusri & Maneesophon, 2014). For exam-
ple, see Table 7.10, a hotel that averages a $300 ADR for all Tuesdays and
Wednesdays in the year and each Tuesday/Wednesday has more demand
than hotel capacity.
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 179
Table 7.10: A Case for Overbooking (Assuming no Show Reservations are at the ADR for
the Day)
Hotel Rooms available 200
Tuesdays and Wednesdays in 2016 104
Total rooms sold 20,800
Tuesday/Wednesday ADR 300
Total revenue with zero overbooking $6,240,000.00
Paid Occupied 145 190 200 200 180 140 200 1255
Rooms
200 200 200 200 200 200 200 1400
Available Rooms
72.5% 95.0% 100.0% 100.0% 90.0% 70.0% 100.0% 89.6%
Paid Occupancy %
$269.24 $285.84 $357.00 $356.78 $282.00 $283.14 $304.99 $308.8
ADR
$195.20 $271.55 $357.00 $356.78 $253.80 $198.20 $304.99 $276.8
REVPAR
$39,040 $54,310 $71,400 $71,355 $50,760 $39,640 $60,998 $387,503
Rooms Revenue
Paid Occupied 145 190 200 200 180 140 200 1255
Rooms
200 200 200 200 200 200 200 1400
Available Rooms
72.5% 95.0% 100.0% 100.0% 90.0% 70.0% 100.0% 89.6%
Paid Occupancy %
$269.24 $285.84 $357.00 $356.78 $282.00 $283.14 $304.99 $308.8
ADR
$195.20 $271.55 $357.00 $356.78 $253.80 $198.20 $304.99 $276.8
REVPAR
$39,040 $54,310 $71,400 $71,355 $50,760 $39,640 $60,998 $387,503
Rooms Revenue
°e cost of acquisition has quickly become a critical topic for the hospi-
tality industry as these costs on an industry average are growing faster than
revenue growth. Between 2009 and 2012, total customer acquisition costs
increased 23 percent, brand allocation fees increased 37 percent, and third-
party commission fees increased 34 percent (HTrends, 2013). Cost of acqui-
sition is changing how hotels are deploying their direct sales, marketing and
distribution strategies in order to yield maximize proÿt.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Hotel Saint Petersburg has an in-house reservation sta° of ÿve agents
that costs $250,000 per year in wages and beneÿts. The hotel averages
82,000 voice bookings a year. Hotel Saint Petersburg is considering
eliminating the in-house operations department and outsource call-in
reservations to a third-party company that charges $3.00 per reserva-
tion transaction.
Do you recommend Hotel Saint Petersburg to eliminate the in-house
reservation department and outsource to a third-party?
What is di°erence in annual cost to keep the reservation in-house
instead of a third-party company?
What is the impact on conversion rate and guest experience by mov-
ing reservation to a third-party company?
QUESTIONS
1. Does the highest ADR channel always yield the highest Net RevPAR?
2. What channel mix changes can the hotel execute to increase Net
RevPAR?
3. How does Net RevPAR change if the hotel decides to take zero
Property Direct reservations?
HRM has begun its transition from simple room and ADR calculations to
understanding how o˝en hotel websites are visited, how well a hotel con-
verts clicks to reservations, and overall how well the hotel does in the e-com-
merce landscape. Digital and e-commerce are integral to moving business
from less proÿtable channels to more proÿtable channels.
Aside from rank order and the page the hotel falls on, information about
the hotel such as the picture, price, hotel class, rating, and review count all
play a major role in a hotel that receives a click, or a conversion, where the
consumer has completed the payment in the online session (Ghose et al.,
2014).
A hotel with a low CTR means that very few consumers are clicking the
hotel despite the hotel accumulating impressions, or times that hotel has
been shown. Likewise, a hotel with a low conversion rate is a hotel that is
o˝en clicked but does not convert well. For luxury hotels, a drop from the
number one rank to the number ÿve rank leads has shown to lead to a 75
percent decline in CTR (Ghose et al., 2014).
REAL PEOPLE
• What are some reasons a hotel would have a low conversion rate?
Strategy Critique
Establishing Goals
In any organization strategic objectives are set in which goals are based
upon. Revenue management professionals must understand their hotels and
therefore understand realistic goals and expectations that the team can be
uniÿed around. Setting goals typically revolves around a budget; where a
hotel should be accurately assessed in terms of revenue potential, market
penetration capabilities, mix of business, and more.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: What are some issues with market share reports?
How can a hotel read a market share report and incorrectly claim
success or declare failure?
Question 2: What kind of reporting do you think would be useful to hotel revenue
managers in the future?
Question 3: How would you measure unconstrained demand using technology and
the Internet?
Question 4: If a hotel has more demand than supply for a given time frame, what
pricing strategies can be considered to increase proÿts?
APPLICATIONS
Case 1:
Case 2:
You are a member of a hotel development group that is underwriting °e
CDB Hotel, a new-build luxury ÿve-star hotel with 300 all-suite guest room
with 525 sq. ˝. average. °is hotel is the only all-suite hotel in the luxury
segment with the competitive set guest room 350 sq. ˝. average. As a result
of the new-build guest rooms with a signiÿcant size and ÿnish premium to
the competitive set, °e CDB Hotel is expected to yield a 130 ADR Index in
Year 1 compared to the ÿve existing luxury hotels in the market.
What is the projected ADR for °e CDB Hotel if the comp set is pro-
jected to grow ADR by 4.5 percent in Year 1?
Assume that Occupancy Index is 100, what is the RevPAR Index for °e
CDB Hotel if Occupancy for the comp set stays ˆat in Year 1?
Comp Set Actual ÿgures for previous year: 88.0 percent Occupancy,
$503.13 ADR, $442.75 RevPAR.
TEAM ACTIVITY
Using data to improve results is a critical skill for revenue managers.
Review the following Pace table that indicates Retail and Govern-
ment segment is behind same period last year that is resulting in
unfavorable pace by $31.5K.
Questions:
How can the hotel improve pace in Retail and Government segments?
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Questions:
1. Does the hotel allow one-night length of stay? If not, does the web-
site tell you the minimum length of stay or alternative dates you can
stay?
2. Is there a special cancellation, prepaid or nonrefundable policy?
3. If you project high unconstrained demand of 130 percent of the
hotel’s sellable inventory for New Year’s Eve, but project 80 percent
occupancy on the pre and post shoulder dates, what yielding tactics
can you implement to maximize RevPAR?
INTERNET ACTIVITY 2
Find ÿve di˛erent revenue management tools and services with di˛erent
purposes to help revenue managers understand past and future perfor-
mance. Which do you think are the best? What tools or services were you
unable to ÿnd and how would those new tools help revenue managers?
GLOSSARY
Click – when a consumer clicks on a link.
Click through rate (CTR) – percentage of clicks on a link or
advertisement out of the amount of times the link or
advertisement was shown.
Cost of acquisition – fees, commissions, and expenses attributed to each
booking from third party distributors or internal payroll including
190 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Dickens, M. (2006, June 15). Benchmarking Bugbears. Caterer & Hotelkeeper, 196
(4429), 22.
Ghose, A., Ipeirotis, P. G., & Li, B. (2014). Examining the Impact of Ranking on
Consumer Behavior and Search Engine Revenue. Management Science, 60
(7), 1632–1654.
Performance Analysis in Hotel Revenue Management 191
HTrends. Com (2014, August 20). Hama Study Documents Growing Acquisition
Costs Outpacing Hotel Revenue Growth. Retrieved from https://www.htrends.
com/trends-detail-sid-79384.html
Lado-Sestayo, R., Vivel-Búa, M. & Otero-González, L. (2017). Determinants of
TRevPAR: Hotel, Management and Tourist Destination. International Journal
of Contemporary Hospitality Management, 29 (12), 3138–3156.
Lindt, M. (2006, August 17). RevPAR Needs an Overhaul. Caterer and Hotelkeeper,
196 (4438), 16.
McGuire, K. A. (2017). ˜e Analytic Hospitality Executive: Implementing Data Ana-
lytics in Hotels and Casinos. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
Phumchusri, N. & Maneesophon, P. (2014). Optimal Overbooking Decision for
Hotel Rooms Revenue Management. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Tech-
nology, 5 (3), 261–277.
CHAPTER 8
OVERVIEW
Of the many contributing elements to a successful revenue strategy,
there is no single factor more important than market data. This is
because the industry standard for measuring top line success is Revenue
per Available Room (RevPAR) index or revenue per available room as
compared to the average of your nearest competitors. In many instances,
the RevPAR index contest is similar to a NASCAR race. Both scenarios
function in a series of constants: a race car encounters the same turns
as it speeds around the circular track just as the market brings similar
highs and lows year after year. Just as such permanencies exist in our
analogy, so do certain variables: those being external conditions and
competitor position. In a race, external conditions such as temperature,
humidity, and precipitation can dramatically impact speed and traction.
Similarly, in navigating revenue strategy, external conditions such as
customer reviews, weather patterns, and airline flight volume can both
accelerate or decelerate pace to prior year. The final external variable,
and perhaps most important, is competitor position. Visibility into
competitor positioning allows one to measure market elasticity on a far
broader scope than what would be possible individually. Such a vantage
point is key because it is impossible to perfectly navigate the future
markets based merely on one’s running pace and prior year trends alone.
Competitor pace not only signals unusual opportunity to compress
rates and restrict yielding, but also serves as a preliminary warning to
a variance in prior year trends that ultimately will demand a change in
strategy. In many ways, a revenue strategy without market data is much
like racing a car with no windows—if you cannot see the competitors
next to you, you are likely to have an accident.
193
194 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Di˜erentiate between the two design purposes of data modeling: reporting
and analysis
Recognize the pitfalls of utilizing only internal pace data and trends
Interpret historic competitive set benchmarking data to explain hotel perfor-
mance
Source forward-looking market benchmarking intelligence to derive sound
revenue strategy
Appreciate the consumer’s growing level of market visibility through tech-
nology and its impact on artiÿcial rate elasticity
Identify the broad array of alternative market data that can and will be used
to improve hotel revenue pricing, yielding and digital marketing e˜orts
Communicate data as a story according to your audience
OUTLINE
Introduction
INTRODUCTION
SO WHAT?
Revenue management has been one of the most powerful resources
within the airline, car rental, and hotel industry since the 80s due to
their high ÿxed costs and low variable costs, but are these the only
candidates that could beneÿt from revenue management? If not,
what other industries could adopt the principles of revenue manage-
ment and what sort of market intelligence would they need in order
to be successful?
Before digging into the many modeling formats of market data, it is import-
ant to note that data is commonly structured to solve one of two primary
purposes: reporting or analysis. In the context of this chapter, reporting will
be understood to mean data that is rolled up into a series of metrics to con-
vey a performance trend. Reporting is commonly used in a corporate infra-
structure to measure the health of the business and create informational
awareness. Because reporting is typically macro in nature, its primary func-
tion is to alert as opposed to divulging detailed causation. By contrast, data
formatted to derive analysis is designed to o˙er the user micro-insights that
can be directly leveraged to impact change or relay attribution. Analysis is
action-oriented and compliments the work of the practitioner. While both
reporting and analysis-based models can overlap at times, appropriately
navigating the design purpose of a data model will expedite the delivery of
a desired outcome. Monthly aggregate data o˝en “reports up” to alert the
user of broader trend that will need to be “analyzed down” to solve or opti-
mize. Both models are required to successfully optimize a business. Most
traditional data models relay business intelligence with the primary purpose
of reporting. If a reporting model exists alone, the practitioners can be le˝
guessing at potential solutions for lack of concrete proof of causation; this
meaning that one may understand a trend to exists, but is ill-equipped to
derive how said trend came to be. As access to “big data” has grown, so have
analytical data models, greatly empowering the work of the practitioner.
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 197
In the 80s, while revenue management was introduced to airlines, the hotel
industry was starting to realize the importance of segmenting their busi-
ness. No longer was a room just a room; it was a booking sold to a leisure
guest, a corporate traveler, or a large group of which each category had dis-
tinct buying behaviors. As it became apparent that the behaviors of each
customer segment were predictable, hoteliers utilized ÿnancial engineering
to create a series of top line reports to track internal trends and the behav-
ior within each customer segment to better predict future behaviors. Most
internal booking data falls into one of four quadrants related to booking
pace: monthly pace, monthly pickup pace, daily pace, and daily pickup pace
as illustrated below.
to the same net bookings and cancellations that occurred over the same
booking dates (by day of week) prior year.
• Daily Pickup Pace: Net bookings and cancellations committed within a set
booking period (i.e., last 7 days) for a given stay date as compared to the
same net bookings and cancellations that occurred over the same booking
dates (by day of week) prior year.
Within the measures of the four booking pace quadrants lie multiple
dimensions that the hotel property management system (PMS) commonly
attributes to each reservation. ˜ese dimensions typically include a market
segment which is linked to the segmentation found on the hotel proÿt and
lost statement (P&L), the booking channel or source, the room type booked,
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 199
the guests assigned to each reservation, and many more. With these dimen-
sions in mind, a revenue strategist can begin to view each of the booking
pace quadrants through a di˙erent perspective in order to more fully under-
stand a hotel’s booking behavior through the lens of each unique dimension.
˜ere are four key lenses that a strategist should seek to understand internal
booking through: the channel or source from whence the booking came, the
cost of acquiring the booking, the demand elements surrounding the prod-
uct type sold, and the booking path or patterns taken prior to transacting.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the above graph, which market segment has the longest
booking window? By contrast, which has the shortest window?
REAL PEOPLE
Jane feels this is very high compared to the projected market growth for
Midtown Manhattan, which is only expected to increase by 4 percent. Is it
possible that the expectations for Jane’s hotel are, in fact, fair and logical?
If so, what logic would you use to explain to Jane how it is possible that
her goals are set so much higher than most of her competitors?
With the rapid commercialization of the hotel industry and the rise of major
brands, the need to benchmark competitive performance became unde-
niable. In the mid-1980’s, a company called Smith Travel Research Global
(STR) answered this need and remains one of the industry’s top resources for
historic performance benchmarking. STR provides micro-economic envi-
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 203
THINK HISTORICALLY
While the process of counting cars in competitor hotel parking lots or
calling around to ask nightly may have been a bit archaic, it was one
of the few ways to estimate competitor business occupancies prior to
benchmarking services. Can you think of some alternative (legal) meth-
ods you might have used to gauge the level of business your competitors
were experiencing prior to benchmarking technology?
Standards of Benchmarking
With the above listed data points, STAR reports benchmarking metrics
according to:
In Figure 8.2, the monthly glance tab from a sample STAR report is given.
˜e data in the ÿrst row and ÿrst column begins with the monthly (Febru-
ary, 2013) performance of the subject property; in the second column, the
aggregate performance of the competitive set for the same period (excluding
subject property); and ÿnally, the index of the subscriber to the competitive
set in the third. Indexes can refer to occupancy by Market Penetration Index
(MPI), ADR by Average Rate Index (ARI) or Revenue/RevPAR by Revenue/
RevPAR Generation Index (RGI). An index over 100 represents a perfor-
mance higher than the average or greater than “fair share” to the competitive
set. Preceding rows include performance periods of year-to-date, the most
recent running three months, ending with “current” month, and the same
running 12-month period, also ending with the “current”s month. ˜e sec-
ond subset of rows refer to the percentage change verses same month prior
year allowing the reader to compare the growth of the subject hotel to the
growth achieved by the competitive set over the same period. In this case,
one would refer to MPI, ARI, and RGI followed by “percentage change” or
“% Chg.” MPI, ARI, or RGI % Chg represent the shi˝ in market share to or
away from the subject hotel. While one should aspire to perform at an index
above 100, the growth in share year-over-year (YOY) can also represent a
winning revenue strategy.
Tab 2 - Monthly Performance at a Glance - My Property vs. Competitive Set
Any Hotel 123 Any Street Any City, Any State 99999 (555) 555-5555
STR # 98765 Chain ID: 999999 MgtCo.: None Owner: None
For the Month of: February 2013 Date Created: April 09, 2013 Monthly Competitive Set Data Excludes Subject Property
February 2013
Occupancy (%) ADR RevPAR
My Prop Comp Set Index (MPI) My Prop Comp Set Index (MPI) My Prop Comp Set Index (MPI)
Current 69.0 68.9 100.2 164.66 147.37 111.7 113.59 101.48 111.9
Month
Year To 69.6 63.1 110.3 160.04 145.90 109.7 111.32 92.04 120.9
Date
Running 3 68.9 62.9 109.5 144.43 136.25 106.0 99.53 85.74 116.1
Month
Running 72.5 71.2 101.8 139.09 127.51 109.1 100.78 90.76 111.0
12 Month
206 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Is the subject property in this example achieving positive year to date
results? If so, what is the greatest contributor to this success? Did the
subject in the property before better indexes to the competitive set
this year or last? What element (ADR or occupancy) was responsible for
this shift?
When looking to interpret and action against STAR data, J. Freitag sug-
gests it is imperative to have the correct comp set and understand what that
set represents; to really get a sense of who you’re competing with and in what
arena. One of the best tools STR o˙ers to help clients identify competitors is
a Reverse Comp Set showing who has chosen you as their competitor. ˜is
brings context to one’s decision when understanding their market. Second,
the RevPAR % Chg. number is key because it encompasses both ADR change
and Occupancy change and the other is RevPAR Index Growth % Chg. that
allows one to measure gain or loss in market share relative to the competi-
tor’s gain or loss (J. Freitag, personal communication, January 4, 2016).
the Hotel Operating Statistics Almanac (HOST Almanac) report that o˙ers
benchmarked full P&L perspective revealing everything from department
expenses, to NOI, to GOP. While STR is able to o˙er this level of detail on a
monthly basis, most clients have not expressed an interest. As STR evolves,
the company is constantly wrestling with the di˙erence between interest-
ing and actionable data and thus products that point to areas of revenue
opportunity and greater proÿtability will take priority. Currently, STR plans
to take the HOST Almanac globally, bring deeper segmentation data to the
market and grow the usage of the F&B STAR in order to give better insights
into outlet, room service & banquets revenues (J. Freitag, personal commu-
nication, January 4, 2016).
Prior to demand data, hotels used and continue to use historical data,
internal reporting, convention calendars, and event and airline data to make
smart decisions. While that data is still relevant, Demand360®’s historical
and forward looking data allows hotels to understand the full picture for
future dates, and make decisions that can make a real-time impact, and fur-
ther analyze historical data to see trends (K. Moro, personal communica-
tion, January 15, 2016).
Overview Tab—note how July 2015 runs nearly 10 percent below the
comp set in occupancy indicating an area requiring strategic action. Cour-
tesy of TravelClick®.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the above graph, which month is the subject lagging
behind the set competitively the most? Which month is ahead the
most?
˜is high-level overview o˝en calls out periods of group need and o˙ers
insight allowing for more conÿdent group pricing, a feature beneÿting both
the sales and revenue team. Good group base business for most hotels is
critical to success.
210
Stay Date Subscriber Subscriber Non-Group Group Group Sold Comp Non-Group Group Group Sold Group Group Group
Total ADR-All Occupancy Committed Occupancy Set Total Occupancy Committed Occupancy Committed Committed Committed
Occupancy Sold Occupancy Occupancy Occupancy Occupancy Index Index
Rooms Index Variance vs. Change vs.
Last Year Last Week
01-May-2016 Sun 0.0% 0.0% 7.1% 0.1% 7.0% (107) 0
02-May-2016 Mon 0.0% 0.0% 8.1% 0.0% 8.1% 0.1% (107) 0
03-May-2016 Tue 0.0% 0.0% 6.4% 0.0% 6.3% 0.1% (456) 0
04-May-2016 Wed 0.0% 0.0% 4.6% 0.0% 4.5% 0.1% (92) 0
05-May-2016 Thu 0.8% 0.0% 0.8% 8.6% 0.0% 8.6% 0.2% 9 (52) (1)
06-May-2016 Fri 3.8% 0.0% 3.8% 10.9% 0.0% 10.8% 0.1% 35 (114) (4)
07-May-2016 Sat 14.6% 0.0% 14.6% 11.3% 0.0% 11.3% 129 115 (11)
08-May-2016 Sun 29.9% 0.0% 29.9% 25.2% 0.1% 25.1% 119 119 (1)
09-May-2016 Mon 29.1% 0.0% 29.1% 28.0% 0.1% 27.9% 104 104 0
10-May-2016 Tue 29.1% 0.0% 29.1% 30.2% 0.1% 30.1% 97 97 0
11-May-2016 Wed 29.1% 0.0% 29.1% 32.1% 0.1% 31.9% 0.1% 91 91 0
12-May-2016 Thu 24.5% 0.0% 24.5% 36.5% 0.1% 36.4% 0.2% 67 49 (1)
13-May-2016 Fri 7.3% 0.0% 7.3% 17.3% 0.2% 17.1% 0.2% 43 (2) (2)
14-May-2016 Sat 0.8% 0.0% 0.8% 9.7% 0.3% 9.5% 0.1% 8 (47) (1)
Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Pace Tab—tracks weekly pickup for both the subscriber as well as the
aggregate of the set by day with ÿlters options for both market segments and
contributing source. One can measure if an improvement is being made in
each area and over exactly what period said improvement is occurring.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the above graph, which day is the subject property best
positioned to the competitive set and why?
From the segmentation side, hotels can ÿnd opportunities where retail
business is compressing and begin to close out discounts in order to shi˝ the
mix of business away from high-cost distribution channels. Similarly, from a
negotiated standpoint, there may be need periods where corporate accounts
can help to ÿll a gap that would otherwise leave rooms empty. For each hotel,
the mix of business will be di˙erent, but thanks to forward looking aggre-
gate market data, revenue managers can make sure they are hand-selecting
212
Hotel Elegance
Booking date updated as of Jun 15, 2015
30-Jun-2015 41.4% 35.8% 5.6 115 3 of 9 108 44.0% 38.0% 0 35 47.9% 28.4% 15 $186 5 of 9 $77 3 of 9
Tue
01-Jul-2015 39.8% 32.5% 7.4 123 3 of 9 104 76.3% 31.4% 3 31 42.5% 25.2% 15 $181 6 of 9 $72 3 of 9
Wed
02-Jul-2015 54.4% 50.9% 3.5 107 4 of 9 142 51.1% 35.3% 1 23 19.3% 10.6% 8 $270 5 of 9 $147 5 of 9
Thu
Figure 8.5: TravelClick® Pace
Source: Courtesy of TravelClick®.
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 213
the best of what is obtainable before the results are in (K. Moro, personal
communication, January 15, 2016).
For large ÿrst-time events, OTAs have the ability to show how the mar-
ket is broadly trending in comparison to non-a˙ected historical patterns in
prior years. ˜is is useful because it is o˝en di°cult to price and yield opti-
mally when the scale of demand is unknown. Because the goal of revenue
management is to get the best of what can be gotten within one’s market,
OTA Insight is a company forward-looking buying behaviors and market
pricing is especially necessary when a region enters into “unknown terri-
tory.” In these cases, a strategic meeting with one’s OTA partners helps to
better understand the unique demand characteristics surrounding a special
event allow the revenue manager to posture strategy accordingly. In such
situations, a revenue strategist might request insight into the patterns that
occurred during the same event in other cities, historically. If short-term
cancellations for a particular event were heavy, one might respond by imple-
menting an aggressive overbooking strategy. Understanding whether aver-
age market occupancies run above, below or parallel the city, as a whole,
214 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
may bring pricing insight and elicit a change in one’s current hotel strategy
in order ensure competitive indexes.
Finally, regarding broader customer trends, o˝en times OTAs are the ÿrst
to see when a material shi˝ in customer buying behavior occurs. If short-
term cancellations begin to grow, an OTA partner can conÿrm to individ-
ual hoteliers that the behavior they are seeing exhibited by their own guests
is not a microcosm unique to just one property. When global currencies
change valuations, the OTAs typically notice the corresponding change in
destination-based booking behaviors. Understanding these insights allows
a revenue strategist to more successfully target promotions by destination.
Figure 8.6: Shifts in Star Rating and ADR YoY, Trends Over Rolling 3 Months
Notice how 4 star hotels are losing noticeable share from 3.5 and 5 star hotels.
˜is observation should cause a revenue strategist to re-asses his or her true
competitors, understanding that one’s “target customer” may be shi˝ing up
or down a level for various reasons.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the above graph, do you believe it is more likely that the
3.5 Star set or the 5 Star set is absorbing “share” from the 4 Star set?
Explain.
Pricing Curve—one can track the pricing behavior on the above graph
for each competitor noting the pricing behavior leading into day of arrival.
An average trend that grows into day of arrival would suggest that the mar-
ket is ÿlling and compressing while the opposite would lead one to believe
that hoteliers are chasing demand down in order to shi˝ business to them-
selves with more competitive price points.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the previous graph, do you believe demand is compress-
ing the city (meaning demand is outpacing supply) as day of arrival
grows closer or that the city is decompressing (that demand is falling
below supply)? Explain.
While market pricing is only one of many factors that should a˙ect a
revenue strategy, it is o˝en reˆective of competitor strategy and within a
like-competitive set, should indicate what the range of rates being booked
into your market is currently.
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 217
For years, consumer sentiment has been digitally recorded and displayed by
companies like Yelp and TripAdvisor. Even non-review-centric businesses
have created their own internal platforms from hotel distributors such as
Expedia and Booking.com to those in the restaurant business such as Seam-
less and Open Table. Regardless of the product, reviews are part of our pur-
chasing process; we trust our fellow shoppers and want to vet their opinions
prior to investing personally. Unfortunately, however, the process wherein
a variety of people write static reviews over a vast timeline doesn’t always
lend itself to determining if a service-driven product is a ÿt or not. Unalike
consumers who perceive value di˙erently can skew reviews. Also, outdated
reviews can haunt a business whose management has changed. ˜e con-
sumer isn’t the only one that can be misled by these ˆaws. Revenue manag-
ers struggle to unite all strains of consumer consent into an actual metric
that speaks the price elasticity of demand (PED) for their product at any
given point.
property(s), but also provides the same for one’s competitors allowing the
ability to analyze and understand the value di˙erentiators and where to
prioritize improvements.
In order to action the data, the product offers tools for hoteliers to
prioritize improvements so they can affectively move the needle where
the needle can be moved. That meaning, a complaint regarding loca-
tion will most likely not be resolved by hotel staff as the location is set,
whereas an issue with room cleanliness can be addressed promptly in
order to turn the tide of guest sentiment. ReviewPro reporting creates
a tangible bridge between direction of revenue strategy and those at a
property level that actually have the possibility of impacting the guest
experience. Daily GRI scores allow revenue managers to cross-analyze
reputation and ADR in order to annotate “optimized” vs. “underper-
forming” segments and source channels in order to charge optimally
according to demand. Ultimately a strong property reputation can be
used to curate more direct bookings valued for their lower cost of acqui-
sition. By contrast, a declining GRI score could be used to bring visibil-
ity to an increased dependency on OTA mix of business (RJ Frielander,
personal communication, January 06, 2016).
Air Traffc
Especially for primary and secondary markets, air tra°c volume serves as
an excellent indicator of future hotel occupancies because a large percent-
age of arriving guests do not live in the city they are visiting. ˜e notion of
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 219
foresight also applies because airline tickets are commonly booked before
hotel reservations are made. ˜us, a spike in airline activity will tie hand-
in-hand to compression surrounding hotel room bookings. ˜e two most
important metrics to the hotel community are arrivals and PAX, or pas-
sengers on the ground. Arrivals are the number of arriving aircra˝s and a
heavy number of them produce a surge in PAX that typically stay multiple
nights. If the number of arrivals in a given period exceeds the number of
departures, a compression bubble can be identiÿed and this bubble will
a˙ect hotel demand positively. By contrast, the opposite scenario (heavy
departures followed by fewer arrivals) o˝en foretells a so˝ening in hotel
demand.
Air Curve on the ground (OTG)—notice how the example date above
is carrying only half of the PAX OTG as same time last year. ˜is negative
trend ÿrst became apparent 50-days prior to arrival and grew dramatically
worse beginning at the 40-day window where last year arrivals surged, but
this year arrivals virtually plateaued.
A ÿnal alternative source of market data that has proven immensely valuable
to revenue strategists is the ability to track regrets and denials. A website
regret occurs when an individual selects and searches a series of dates in
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 221
the booking widget, but fails to transact. Essentially, the assumption stands
that something, namely the price, was not attractive enough to compel the
customer to ÿnalize his or her booking. Hence opportunity to covert a shop-
per into a paying customer has failed and the occurrence is registered as a
regret. In the same vein a denial occurs when a shopper similarly selects a
series of dates and searches for rooms, but receives and message stating that
there is no availability over the selected dates. ˜is could be due to a yielding
restriction that is purposefully in place or because the hotel has sold out over
the shopped dates. Regardless, the failed transaction is registered as a denial
to the customer for the shopped dates as the hotel is unable or unwilling to
accommodate the request. ˜e technology that allows one to track regrets
and denials is called a custom tag. Website developers can build these tags
over the booking widget in order to encapsulate recurring tasks. ˜is same
behavior can also be tracked by subscribing one’s website to Google Analyt-
ics with many additional features o˙ered.
If the hotel is sold out over a select date and the combination of
regrets and denials spikes, then it is possible that the property sold out
too quickly and could have taken advantage of guests later in the book-
ing curve who may have been willing to pay more than those that booked
earlier.
Regrets & Denials Lain Over Booking Curve—In the above example, a
multi-graph showing regrets & denials set over the booking curve can eas-
ily illustrate the level of market demand as the property reaches capacity
and regrets and denials similarly spike within the same short-term window.
Content generated by the authors.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Referencing the above graph, if one observed a consistent pattern
where regrets and denials spiked as the hotel sells out, would it be
beneÿcial to have priced higher or lower further out into the booking
window?
validate this strategy assuming the longer length of stay books through as
expected. If, however, the regrets and denials spike over the peak date while
the extended date series fails to book, one could determine that the demand
only centers on the peak date and a strategy of raising rate for the one night
might be more optimal.
While today’s use of market analytics has advanced dramatically over the
last ten years, it is almost certain that the next ten will evolve the industry to
a near-unrecognizable state. ˜is is not to say that the principles of market
analytics will change, only that the level of human interaction with the data
will evolve. More time will be spent prioritizing and auctioning the data vs.
compiling and ÿltering it. Here is a list of predictions to keep an eye out for
and to be sure you are updating your skillset with:
1. Standard excel usage will be replaced by data visualization tools such
as Tableau, Spotÿre, Raw, or Power Editor. If you are skilled in these
tools, your use of data will look like wizardry compared to an Excel
pivot table.
2. All data will be live and two-way. ˜is will close the dark space of
attribution modeling and will clearly link the entire purchasing pro-
cess together.
3. Forward-looking aggregate benchmarking will diversify into many
more channels, it will adapt forecast/regression modeling and will
source live data feeds.
4. Customer sentiment will be segmented in order to connect
like-reviewers with like-customers. It will answer the question:
“What do people like me think of this place?” Reviews will first
become time-sensitive and eventually will begin to forecast user
experience levels. This will bring more weight than ever to cus-
tomer sentiment indexes and may completely upset our current
understanding of price elasticity. Lastly, reviews will span far
beyond the current written format and will source anonymous
location tracking data and alternative crowd sourcing indicators
such as music tagging.
224 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
SEEING FURTHER
Speaking to Data
While the primary reason any business should embrace “big data” is to
perceive trends and action the content into perceptive management of
pricing, yielding and marketing strategy, it is also crucial to be able to
clearly speak to the data. ˜is is necessary in order to gain team align-
ment and create buy-in surrounding a proposed process or direction. ˜e
below Data Analytics Flow Cycle illustrates the natural ˆow of 1) compil-
ing the numbers 2) shaping context around metrics 3) creating visuals of
the behaviors you are tracking and 4) communicating those trends to a
broader audience. By embracing this cycle, one is sure to purvey the story
behind the data in a way that creates alignment, support and ultimately
inspires action.
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 225
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: Of all the forms of reporting and market data
covered in the chapter, what do you believe is the most useful
when seeking to create an impactful revenue strategy? Explain
your choice.
Question 2: Are there any forms of market data not covered in this chapter that you
believe would be beneÿcial for hoteliers to incorporate in the future? Explain how you
would use this data to optimize your revenue strategy.
APPLICATIONS
Explain the data sources you have chosen for each event and correlate
their use into actions Robert should take (i.e., reviewing historic Star data
over last year’s Jan and Feb will give Robert a general sense the obtained
ADR’s across the stated season and thus Robert should ensure his rates do
not exceed the observed cap.)
Explaining a Loss
During Emily’s ÿrst week on the job at a popular Miami hotel where she
was recently hired as the Director of Revenue Management, the property
received a terrible weekly STAR report showing a loss in RevPAR to prior
year, with a below 100 percent RevPAR Index (RPI) and a negative shi˝ in
RPI % Chg to the competitive set. While Emily was not employed as the
Director of Revenue Management at the time the losses occurred, she has
been asked to explain what caused the poor performance.
Create a list of the data sources Emily should use in order to understand
how the hotel performed poorly to the average of its competitors. List the
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 227
reports in the order Emily should review them in so that the line-up tells a
story.
TEAM ACTIVITY
In groups of 3–5, use the maps feature of a search engine to locate simi-
lar hotels within the surrounding area of your subject hotel. Each group is to
propose the most logical competitive set of six competitors which will best
serve as an aggregate bench marker for both an o°cial Star and Demand360®
“comp set.”
INTERNET ACTIVITY
GLOSSARY
Average daily rate (ADR) – rooms revenue divided by rooms sold,
displayed as the average rental rate for a single room.
Cost of acquisition – fees, commissions, and expenses attributed
to each booking from third-party distributors or internal payroll
including GDS commissions, OTA commissions, direct marketing
expenses and all customer acquisition payroll.
Channel/Source – platform or engine responsible for delivering a booking
transaction. ˜is could range from the hotel/brand call center, the
hotel website, an online travel agency (OTA), a global distribution
service (GDS), or the internal hotel sales team.
Custom tags – are user-deÿned JSP language elements that encapsulate
recurring tasks. Custom tags are distributed in a tag library, which
deÿnes a set of related custom tags and contains the objects that
implement the tags.
Daily pace – net bookings and cancellations committed currently for a
given stay date as compared to the net bookings and cancellations
committed same day (by numbered date) prior year.
Daily pickup pace – net bookings and cancellations committed within a set
booking period (i.e., last seven days) for a given stay date as com-
pared to the same net bookings and cancellations that occurred over
the same booking dates (by day of week) prior year.
Index (Occupancy, ADR, RevPAR) – property performance divided by
competitive set performance multiplied by 100. Internationally,
indexes are also referred to as MPI—Market Penetration Index
(Occupancy Index), ARI—Average Rate Index (ADR Index), and
RGI—Revenue/RevPAR Generation Index (RevPAR Index).
Monthly pickup pace – net bookings and cancellations committed within
a set booking period (i.e., last seven days) for a given stay month as
compared to the same net bookings and cancellations that occurred
over the same booking dates (by day of week) prior year.
Monthly pace – net bookings and cancellations committed currently for a
given stay month as compared to the net bookings and cancellations
committed same day (by numbered date) prior year.
Market Data for Hotel Revenue Management 229
% change in price
Percentage change (% Chg) – amount of growth—up, down, or ˆat—this
period versus same period last year (day, week, running 28 days,
running month-to-date). Calculated as ((TY-LY)/LY) × 100.
Product type – deÿned narrowly as the room type, package element, or
booking policy attached to the reservation or more broadly as the
length of stay or lead time dimension. ˜is meaning, that a prod-
uct can be deÿned both by the physical attributes such a premium
room type or package element just as much as it can be considered
an accommodation available for purchase at the very last minute in
a compressed market.
Purchasing behavior – common purchasing patterns found within a given
group of bookers including price sensitivity, responsiveness to various
types of advertisement, propensity to cancel, and customer loyalty.
Rank (Occupancy, ADR, RevPAR, % Chg) – property performance ranked
versus hotels in the competitive set (e.g., a “3 of 6” ADR ranking
means the subject hotel’s absolute ADR is third highest of the six
competitors).
Revenue per available room (RevPAR) – total rooms-related revenue per
the number of available rooms in the hotel over a period of time:
[Rooms Revenue / (Rooms Available * Number of Days)].
Segmented data – rooms sold and revenue data broken down by source of
business (transient, group, contract) and source of revenue (room,
food and beverage, other).
REFERENCES
Data Analytics Flow Cycle, Chambers, C. (2016, March 26).
Economics Online. (2016) Price Elasticity of Demand. Retrieved from http://www.
economicsonline.co.uk/Competitive_markets/Price_elasticity_of_demand.
html
230 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Restaurant Revenue
Management: Basic Concepts
Kristin V. Rohlfs
OVERVIEW
Restaurant revenue management (RRM) focuses on how a restaurant
can produce the highest amount of revenue possible for a certain time
period. Every transaction includes elements of RRM and the use of many
RRM strategies is most beneficial when a restaurant has demand that
exceeds capacity. This chapter presents an overview of RRM theories and
an introduction to RRM terms, tools, and techniques.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to evaluate a
restaurant in the context of RRM. Speciÿcally, you should be
able to:
Apply revenue management principles to restaurants
Explain and calculate RevPASH (revenue per available seat hour)
Analyze a food service operation as a system through which customers ˜ow
Calculate the throughput time and throughput rate for a simple service
system
Perform an RRM analysis for a restaurant by establishing the baseline,
collecting data, and developing and implementing RRM solutions
231
232 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
RRM Program
• Establish the Baseline
• Collect Data
• Develop RRM Solutions
• Implement and Monitor RRM Solutions
Discussion Questions
Applications
• Tasty Banquets
• Muchacho
Team Activity
Internet Activity
Glossary
References
SO WHAT?
Mario Testa is a well-seasoned restaurant owner and operator of nine
full-service outlets in the greater Philadelphia area. Mario has been
thinking about the short conversation he just had with his son, Arturo,
who grew up working in Mario’s restaurants and recently graduated
from an accredited Hospitality Management program.
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 233
INTRODUCTION
RRM has slowly gained prominence in the food and beverage industry.
Savvy restaurateurs have realized that utilizing RRM principles and tools
can uncover and capture revenue-enhancing opportunities that do not
necessarily require huge investments. It has been reported that using RRM
increased the revenue of various restaurants by 3–5 percent (Sinclair, 2010).
°is chapter discusses the theory behind RRM and outlines the data and
metrics required to create and use an appropriate RRM program. It also pro-
vides basic tools and techniques for analyzing how the current operations
of a restaurant generate revenue and for identifying areas for improvement.
234 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Because restaurant operations occur in real-time, service providers face the risk
of not capturing all potential revenues if the capacity a restaurant has available
does not match the demand for its service. When a restaurant’s demand is too
low to ÿll available seats, it uses sales and marketing techniques, like coupons
or advertising, to attract additional customers. But when demand exceeds the
capacity of the restaurant, the problem becomes more complicated. RM pro-
fessionals and academics realized that RM could help restaurants solve this
problem. In theory, if the restaurant cannot serve every customer, it would
maximize its revenue by serving the most proÿtable customers—the classic
RM problem—thus beginning the ÿeld of RRM (Kimes et al., 1998).
SEEING FURTHER
As service businesses have realized the advan-
tages of managing revenue and customers have
become familiar with RM practices, the scope of
RM has been transitioning (Cross et al., 2009). The newer approach to RM
has a more strategic, customer-centric focus that is concerned not only
with using existing supply to fulÿll demand but also with creating and
managing new demand. Many aspects of a service operation, including
customer behavior, marketing, operations, technology, and design, can
now be considered part of the RM problem, further demonstrating RM is
an integrative, long-term operating strategy.
Another way RM has been progressing involves the proliferation of the
digital world. The predominance of eCommerce has changed the RM
landscape by creating new and diverse distribution channels, generat-
ing huge amounts of customer data, and opening the door for price
optimization (McGuire, 2016). In addition, customer-generated infor-
mation available through social media and review sites can impact pur-
chase decisions and perceptions of value (Noone & McGuire, 2013b).
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 235
Conditions Necessary
Operations Component
RevPASH
If a 145-seat restaurant is open 360 days a year for 10 h a day and has a
total annual revenue of $4,698,000, its RevPASH would be
238 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
TO DO
1. Use the data in the Excel spreadsheet to calculate RevPASH by hour
for each day of the week at Root. When is RevPASH highest? When
is RevPASH lowest?
2. You estimate that initiating an RRM program at Root will cost $100,000
and would likely increase revenues by 1% in 1 year. Assuming you
would not amortize the program, would you adopt the RRM program
if this were your restaurant? What if revenues increased by 2%?
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 239
THINK HISTORICALLY
Controlling dining duration and price are not new strategies to the res-
taurant business. Consider the following menus from two restaurants:
240 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
RRM PROGRAM
A process ˛ow chart is a visual tool that can help focus attention on how
a customer is moved through a service delivery system—and when that
customer is waiting for and participating in the service. Flowcharts have
long been used in industrial engineering, oˆen for planning and quality
control purposes and are so widely used that Excel has a built-in ˛ow-
chart function (Gilbreth & Gilbreth, 1921; ASME, 1949). °e symbols and
descriptions for several categories of actions used in a process ˛ow chart
are as follows:
242 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Figure 9.1: Simple Example of a Process Flow Chart for a Coffee Shop
A process ˛ow chart can become extremely complex if all possible activ-
ities, processes, and decisions within a service delivery system are included.
To illustrate, the process depicted in Figure 9.1 is considered simple not just
because it only has ÿve steps but also because it makes several signiÿcant
generalizations like process times never vary and every customer orders a
single drink. Although these assumptions are impractical, a simple process
˛ow chart includes enough detail and to serve as a baseline picture of the
core service system; complexity can be added and the simple ˛owchart can
be augmented if needed.
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 243
For an RRM baseline analysis, the process ˛ow chart should include at least
every high-level, major activity that directly helps fulÿll the needs of the
customer. Constructing a process ˛ow chart requires ÿrst observing the
service system and recording process times. Robust F&B POS systems and
spreadsheet skills can help estimate process times.
Throughput
°roughput time measures how long it takes for a pass through the sys-
tem, while throughput rate measures the output of a system. °ese metrics
re˛ect how e˝ectively a service system processes customers.
In Figure 9.1, the throughput time for a customer who did not order
baked goods = 15 s for order to be taken + 15 s to pay + 3 s waiting for the
barista to get the order + 60 s waiting for drink + 3 s getting drink = 96 s.
For Figure 9.1, the throughput rate for each process in the co˝ee shop is
as follows:
For the co˝ee shop example, adding another barista to the make drink
process results in the following:
Like a process ˛ow chart, a process ˛ow diagram is a visual tool that serves
as an abstract of the restaurant system. A process ˛ow diagram is a sketch
of the actual system operations and traces how customers, employees, and
other resources ˛ow through the facility. Process ˛ow diagrams are useful
when movement is a large part of how the restaurant operates, like in a buf-
fet setting, a self-service establishment, or a sequential-step/made-to-order
service model. °ey also can be useful when movement within a restaurant
is impeding e˙cient operation, such as if hosts, servers, and customers all
share a narrow staircase to reach the dining room.
Flow diagrams aid in identifying potential failure points, which are the
places in the system where operations are most likely to break down. Identi-
fying potential failure points in a baseline analysis will ultimately help direct
and prioritize RRM recommendations. Potential failure points oˆen found
using a process ˛ow diagram include gaps in the service delivery system,
unnecessary steps within processes, and redundancies across processes
(Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons, 1999).
Figure 9.2: Process Flow Diagram for the Seating Process at a Casino Buffet
246 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Fishbone Diagram
Arrivals
of customers arriving to Trader G’s peaks around 6:00 p.m. every night and
is markedly higher on weekend nights. Although a small spike in demand
occurs for lunch, the peak demand period is at 6:00 p.m. and shoulder
times are 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Dining Duration
Once raw dining duration data has been gathered, a spreadsheet analysis
is used to calculate the average and standard deviation of duration. °e stan-
dard deviation measures the amount of variation in a system, so a low stan-
dard deviation indicates a high level of consistency in operations. Common
ways in which dining duration data are examined include by party size, by
steps in a meal, by hour, and by day of week. Figure 9.5 provides an example
of a dining duration analysis.
services) that can generate revenue, they are situated at tables, which are the
actual units sold in most restaurants.
If the restaurant has nine tables and eight checks (parties) from 7:00 p.m.
to 8:00 p.m., its table occupancy for that time period = 8/9 = 88.9%.
Seat occupancy will almost always be lower than table occupancy. °is is
because restaurants operate with table sizes (e.g., two-top, four-top, six-top,
eight-top) that do not always match the sizes of parties (e.g., party of 1, party
of 3, party of 5, party of 7). However, when table occupancy is much higher
than seat occupancy, the restaurant usually beneÿts from an advanced RRM
analysis of its table mix.
250 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Average Check
RevPASH
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
1. Calculate the RevPASH for each restaurant below.
2. Which restaurant would you rather manage and why?
Restaurant Seat occupancy Average check RevPASH
per person
A 30% $25
B 40% $21
C 50% $18
D 80% $11
E 90% $10
TO DO
Explore the RevPASH Web App, found at http://www.bu.edu/revpash/.
Use the app to calculate and chart monthly RevPASH for the past year.
What are the months with the highest RevPASH? What are the months
with the lowest RevPASH?
Hints for using the app: Work in the Monthly tab, add rows, hours open
is not the same each month.
252 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Collect Data
For instance, to determine the dining duration for Friday nights from
5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. would require that roughly 30 tables were observed
each hour, preferably over several di˝erent Friday nights, and duration data
were recorded. However, if there is access to thousands of observations (for
instance, through a POS system), much more data should be used. In addi-
tion, all data should also be “scrubbed” of incorrect or duplicate entries to
ensure that only sound data are included in the analysis.
One progressive RRM solution that is useful in both high and low
RevPASH scenarios is the use of electronic menus. Electronic menus allow
operators to change menu o˝erings and vary prices in real-time, essentially
enabling a restaurant to respond to almost any demand situation in a reve-
nue-maximizing manner.
One more thing every RRM program has in common is the need to
monitor the program and update it when necessary. °is is done by period-
ically recalculating metrics and analyzing processes again—essentially rees-
tablishing the baseline. If RevPASH has not performed as well as anticipated
256 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
aˆer the last round of RRM updates, a ÿshbone diagram would be helpful in
determining why.
REAL PEOPLE
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Consider this scenario: The Cat Pub, a bar and restaurant in
Hershey, PA, o˛ers discounts on appetizers and drinks from
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. each night. These happy hour specials are
quite popular, especially on the nights when the local ice
hockey team plays nearby.
Should the happy hour specials be o˛ered every night? Why does o˛ering the
happy hour specials every night of the week represent a suboptimal solution to
an RRM problem?
2. You are trying to determine if the cashier process or the kitchen process is the
bottleneck of dinner service at Crazy Joe’s Chickn n’ Wa˙es Fast Food Truck.
Crazy Joe’s has one cashier who takes orders and payment and also hands out
prepared meals and two cooks who prepare the meals. You know that the cashier
can process 16 customers per hour and that each customer purchases 3 chickn
n’ wa˙es meals on average. You also know that the throughput rate of each cook
is 25 meals per hour. Follow the steps below to gather more information about
what is happening at Crazy Joe’s to help you identify the bottleneck.
• Determine how many meals customers demand in an hour.
• Determine how many meals the kitchen can produce in an hour.
• Calculate how many customers the kitchen can serve in an hour. This is the
throughput rate of the kitchen or the number of customers the kitchen can
serve in an hour.
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 257
Compare the throughput rate of the cashier to the throughput rate of the kitchen
and determine the bottleneck. The process with the smaller throughput rate is
the bottleneck, as it limits how many customers can be served in this simple
scenario. Is the bottleneck’s throughput rate signiÿcantly smaller than the other
process? How does the signiÿcance of the di˛erence between throughput
rates of processes impact the solutions you would recommend to alleviate the
bottleneck?
3. Explain why doubling the capacity of a bottleneck would not necessarily double
the capacity of a system.
4. Using restaurant revenue management directly impacts the FOH operations,
especially since RRM solutions often address elements like the types of customers
FOH sta˛ will serve, the busyness of a facility, and the layout of a dining room ˜oor.
Certainly, RRM practices also directly in˜uence kitchen operations. For instance,
a restaurant that issues a two-for-one entrée coupon is trying to build demand,
but its kitchen must be ready with ingredients and sta˛ to accommodate that
greater demand. What are some other ways and scenarios that illustrate how
FOH-centric RRM practices impact BOH operations?
5. For a busy restaurant that frequently has a wait, why would the POS data of time-
check-opened not be a reliable source to determine arrivals?
APPLICATIONS
Tasty Banquets
Muchacho
TEAM ACTIVITY
• Average dining duration, taken from the POS system and measuring
the time from check-opened to check-closed, of 79 min.
• °roughput time for a table, from seat to ready for reseating, of 86
min.
• Revenue, averaged over 3 months, by day of week
Monday $3,879
Tuesday $3,686
Wednesday $4,721
Thursday $5,476
Friday $6,641
Saturday $7,463
Sunday $4,077
Restaurant Revenue Management: Basic Concepts 259
Using all the tools possible from this chapter, what can you tell about the
operations and performance of McArdees? What other information would
you need to perform a baseline analysis?
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Go online and search for a table for a party of two at the most
popular restaurant in your town for a busy Saturday at 7:00 p.m.
Is a table available at the requested time? If not, were other times
o˝ered? Describe the RRM technique of demand smoothing and
discuss if you think it is being used in this scenario.
Imagine that a table for two is only available at either 5:15 p.m. or 10:00
p.m. What are some ways this restaurant could entice you to make a reser-
vation at one of these alternate times instead of choosing a competitor at 7
p.m.?
GLOSSARY
Bottleneck – °e process within a system that limits the operation
and output of the entire system.
Capacity – °e supply of seats a restaurant has available to accom-
modate customers.
Dining duration – °e amount of time a customer spends at a
restaurant, measured from arrival to departure.
Suboptimal solution – An RRM solution that has a positive impact in one
area but a negative impact on the overall service system.
˜roughput rate – °e number of customers that ˛ow through a service
system over a certain time.
˜roughput time – °e time a customer spends in a service system from
enter to exit.
REFERENCES
American Society of Mechanical Engineers. (1947). ASME Standard: Operation
and Flow Process Charts, 1947. New York.
Cross, R. G., Higbie, J. A., & Cross, D.Q. (2009). Revenue Management’s Renais-
sance: A Rebirth of the art and Science of Proÿtable Revenue Generation.
Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 50 (1), 56-81.
260 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OVERVIEW
The field of restaurant revenue management (RRM) combines elements
of demand management with concepts of supply management to
provide both a theoretical base and an operational plan to maximize the
revenue a restaurant can make. The demand side of RRM includes issues
related to pricing, how and when customers arrive at the restaurant, and
ways to influence customer behavior and the customer experience.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to evaluate
restaurant demand in the context of RRM. Speciÿcally, you
should be able to:
Explain ways in which restaurant demand impacts restaurant revenue and
discuss how managing demand ÿts into RRM
Evaluate several demand management techniques for restaurants and iden-
tify the strategies to use in di°erent operational situations
Describe variable pricing and apply it to a restaurant. Assess variable pricing
practices, such as price fences and couponing
261
262 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Pricing
• Variable Pricing
• Variable Pricing Strategies
• Setting Prices
Arrivals
• Types
• Basic Arrivals Analysis
• Forecasting Demand
Waiting Lines
• Why ˜ey Happen
• Psychology of Waiting Lines
• Wait List Management
Summary
Discussion Questions
Applications
• Cayuga Resort
• Northman’s
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 263
Team Activity
Internet Activity
Glossary
References
SO WHAT?
A goal of almost every food or beverage service operation is to be
proÿtable. No restaurateur starts a business to have lagging revenues
and elevated expenses. To help ensure that a restaurant is maximiz-
ing its revenue stream, many operators employ the theories and tech-
niques of restaurant revenue management (RRM). Some well-known
RRM tools frequently used to manage demand include an often costly
multiple-platform reservations system and restaurant seating and POS
systems.
In many restaurants, managing demand is the responsibility of the
host function. However, this is often a low-paying position that does
not require any business training or restaurant experience. Why would
this be the case?
INTRODUCTION
˜e demand side of RRM is the focus of this chapter. Because all parts
of a restaurant are directly exposed to demand ˝uctuations and demand
264 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Managing demand means making sure all the operating policies and
procedures, prices, and sales and marketing programs are designed and
functioning to attract and maintain the most profitable customer base.
The set of demand management strategies being used must work col-
lectively in the best interests of a business, with no secondary objective
overshadowing the primary RM goal of optimizing revenue. The demand
management side of RRM combines traditionally different operations
management (e.g., forecasting) and marketing (e.g., pricing) methods
and techniques to influence demand in a way that maximizes RevPASH.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Services implement demand management practices in various ways.
For instance, airlines in˛uence the timing of requests for seats on ˛ights
by o°ering signiÿcant discounts for booking early. And hotels shift
demand from peak to o°-peak nights by having length-of-stay restric-
tions.
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 265
Food and beverage outlets frequently use the four types of demand
management practices previously listed. To in˛uence the types of
requests for service, a restaurant may use atmosphere and table size
to attract higher-revenue-per-person parties of two. A common strat-
egy to in˛uence the timing of service requests is to issue coupons for
speciÿc times only. To shift demand, many restaurants use early bird
specials or happy hour discounts. And many restaurants train sta° to
shift demand to di°erent products by upselling and suggestive selling.
Can you think of another strategy a restaurant could use for each of the
four demand management practices?
Pricing
Variable Pricing
Consider the graphs in Figure 10.1. ˜ey are basic economic price-quan-
tity graphs with the revenue determined by the amount sold and price
charged. Figure 10.1a shows one month of revenue from the baked ziti entrée
at a family-style Italian restaurant. When one price—$14 in this case—is
charged for the baked ziti, 100 dishes are sold, bringing in revenue of $1,400.
Figure 10.1b shows the potential revenue that could be made from baked
ziti when three prices—$8, $14, and $20—are charged. At $8, 65 dinners are
sold, 35 are sold at $14, and 25 are sold at $20, which totals $1,510. More of
the potential revenue is captured when more prices are o°ered.
• customer value and company value are balanced (i.e., prices can be
raised to maintain proÿts, but not to raise proÿts) and
• customers have been made to expect to be charged di°erent prices at
di°erent times and for di°erent products (i.e., as in the airline, hotel, and
car rental industries) (Kimes & Wirtz, 2003; Simon & Dolan, 1999).
THINK HISTORICALLY
In the early 1990s, when the application and success of yield manage-
ment (now more commonly known as revenue management) in the air-
line industry was emerging, Robert Crandall, then the CEO of American
Airlines, famously said “If I have 2,000 customers on a given route and
400 di°erent prices, I’m obviously short 1,600 [prices].”
Now, over 20 years later, the use of variable pricing has not reached such
an extreme level but customers undoubtedly have accepted that prices—
especially on services—change without warning.
Because restaurants sell an experience, it would seem that variable pric-
ing would be a fantastic idea, since every customer would have a di°er-
ent price in mind that she is willing to pay for her experience.
However, consider this theoretical scenario: Becky, Pat, and Lou have
enjoyed a wonderful dinner at Ray’s Lobster & Crab, which practices
pure variable pricing. When the bill came, Becky told the waiter she had
a discount code she got online, Pat commented that she thought the crab
was worth less than it was priced on the menu, and Lou didn’t think it
was crowded enough to warrant the peak-hour surcharge.
˜is type of scenario would present operating and customer service
problems and would likely cause dissatisfaction for all parties. Can you
think of examples of what could go wrong in a restaurant that heavily
uses variable pricing?
268 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Tyrel’s Burger Stop, a fast casual restaurant located in the heart of the
Wall Street ÿnancial district.
3. Adjusting service o°erings: Changing what is available for cus-
tomers to purchase at speciÿc times is another variable pricing
technique. Examples of adjusting a service o°ering include having
di°erent menus/prices for lunch and dinner and making a reduced-
price pre-theater menu only available until 6:30 p.m. Limiting what
is o°ered for sale can potentially defer demand from overcrowded,
peak hours to shoulder or o°-peak periods.
Whatever variable pricing strategies are used, research has shown that
presenting price di°erences as discounts instead of premiums makes vari-
able pricing seem more acceptable to customers (Kimes & Wirtz, 2003). ˜is
practice is called framing. For example, a restaurant that o°ers both a low-
er-priced lunch menu and a higher-priced dinner menu should frame the
lunch menu as a discounted dinner menu instead of vice versa.
SEEING FURTHER
A popular variable pricing strategy is the online
group coupon. Groupon and LivingSocial are
examples of websites that sell huge discounts in
the form of coupons. Many restaurants have been using these types of
sites to stimulate demand.
However, Alex Failmezger, an RRM executive, has observed: “These cou-
pons are really taking a toll on the industry because, in some cases, they
overstimulate demand but from the wrong customers at the totally
wrong price. Already-struggling restaurants hoping to boost short-term
revenue need to make certain they can cover the costs to fulÿll all of the
coupon purchases. Plus, group coupons attract discount-seekers, who
may not always be the best repeat business prospects.”
Alex agrees that in the right situation, group coupons can be a good vari-
able pricing strategy to use to attract demand or, with the right restric-
tions, smooth it from peak periods. She just warns restaurateurs, “If your
demand is already strong, there is no need to issue a group coupon.
Everyone already wants to go to your restaurant and giving them a dis-
count just sets you up to never get to charge them full price!”
270 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
What are some situations where using a group coupon with restrictions
would be beneÿcial to a restaurant? What are some restrictions that could
be used to create a proÿtable, but still customer-friendly, coupon deal?
Another wide-reaching discount strategy that has gained popularity in
the restaurant industry is social media marketing. Gracie Doren, an inde-
pendent F&B consultant, commented that “giving discounts for check-
ing in or following an establishment are certainly great ways to reach
an expanded potential customer base. But a good social media strategy
requires planning, analysis, ˛exibility, and attention, and doesn’t always
need to be about cost and coupons.”
Can you think of any social media campaign in the F&B industry that pos-
itively or negatively impacted your perception of the business? Was there
a discount associated with this campaign?
Setting Prices
Restaurants can determine their prices—no matter the extent to which they
use variable pricing—in several di°erent ways. A full discussion of menu
pricing is outside the scope of this chapter, but a synopsis of several com-
mon pricing methods is provided below.
• Cost-plus: Each menu item’s price is based on the cost to make it plus
a predetermined markup. Costs include ingredients, condiments
and garnishes, overhead, and may/may not include labor. Mark-
ups are generally chosen based on a variety of factors, including the
atmosphere provided to customers, labor (if excluded from the cost
portion), and investment goals.
• Competition-based: Under this market-based approach, menu item
prices are set by benchmarking the prices of similar items from com-
peting restaurants and tailoring them as needed. An extreme exam-
ple of competition-based pricing is Wally’s Clam Shack charging
$12.99 for a bucket of fried clams simply because both Under-the-C
Clam Stand and Von’s Clam Truck charge that price.
• Demand-based: Prices are set based on what customers will support.
If a series of menu items prepared tableside by a chef has enough
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 271
demand to sell out every night, the price set will be as high as pos-
sible until interest decreases, which signals that price should be
decreased.
In recent times, the restaurant industry has greatly expanded its use of
marketing and delivery systems that make the price of restaurant services
more transparent than ever before. Restaurant websites and third-party res-
ervation sites, such as OpenTable.com and Yelp.com, provide sample menus,
o˙entimes complete with prices and service charges. A consequence of
these market changes is that restaurant pricing is heavily competition- and
demand-based (Cli°ord, 2012).
Menu Engineering
Sales Volume
Low High
Puzzle
High
Stars
Contribution Margin
Low
Each menu item is categorized based on its level of sales and level of
contribution margin.
In the example of ˜e Cove, the chicken is a Cash cow. Its sales volume is
high and its cost is the lowest on the menu, so a marginal price increase could
potentially increase CM without radically decreasing the number sold. ˜e
Duck entrée is a Dog but should not be removed from the menu since it is
the restaurant’s signature dish. Instead, management could consider raising its
price to increase its CM and move it closer to the Star category. ˜e Lamb is a
Puzzle, as it is one of the higher-CM items on the menu but is not as popular
as most of the other dishes. Highlighting the Lamb on the menu to drive sales
could help make it a Star. ˜e Sea Bass and the Filet are the Stars of the menu,
as both high sales and high CMs. ˜e Filet is by far the most popular and
proÿtable entrée, and its pricing does not need any adjustment in this analysis.
˜e Sea Bass is also a Star, performing well relative to most other menu items.
Management could highlight it to grow sales, increase its price, or do nothing
and choose to focus resources on the other categories at this time.
To Do
1. Sort and separate data into menu categories and calculate the aver-
age sales for each category. Determine the CM for each menu item
and calculate the average CM for each menu category.
2. Compare each item to the averages, using = IF statements as nec-
essary. Determine the Stars, Cash cows, Puzzles, and Dogs for each
menu category.
3. What changes would you suggest to the menu?
Arrivals
time-shi˙ problem of using POS data by accounting for time before checks
are opened and can be estimated via a time study.
Types
Restaurants choose the type(s) of arrivals to use based on the type of restau-
rant and how the operators want business to be conducted.
Walk-ins
Reservations
Many restaurants take some reservations but leave the rest of the seats
and tables open for walk-in business. Most restaurateurs and dining room
managers use knowledge of their demand base and historical data to set
the number of reservations to accept for di°erent dates and di°erent times.
However, determining the optimal number of reservations to accept and
the number of no-shows to anticipate is a mathematical problem that is
outside the scope of this chapter.
278 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Call-ahead Seating
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Imagine that you are the new owner of a 150-seat Louisiana-style sit-
down restaurant and oyster bar. Business is good and waits at peak
dinner hours on the weekends can sometimes exceed 45 min. During
the week, waits are closer to 10–15 min at the busiest hours. What
types of arrivals would you recommend the owner use and at what
times?
A basic analysis of arrivals begins with collecting data and cleaning it of out-
liers or other dirty data. Cleaned arrivals data is then sorted by hour and day
of the week and the average number of arrivals for each hour and each day of
week is calculated. Analyzing arrivals by hour and by day of week is a good
place to start for most sit-down, full- service operations. Restaurants that are
quick-service style or that have high levels of steady demand warrant a more
detailed analysis, such as using 15-min increments.
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 279
Graphing Arrivals
Patterns are sometimes harder to discern and can re˝ect short sea-
sonal e°ects or more extended cycles in demand. Examples of di°erent
patterns are shown in Figure 10.4: Figure 10.4a shows seasonality, since
the data has consistent peaks and valleys across time; Figure 10.4b shows
cyclical data with gradual increase and decrease over more extended peri-
ods.
280 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
From a basic graph of arriving demand, the following periods are notice-
able:
• Peak demand periods: Times when demand is consistently at its
highest.
• Shoulder periods: Times of increasing demand before a peak period
and decreasing demand a˙er a peak period.
• O°-peak periods: Times when demand is consistently at its lowest.
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 281
REAL PEOPLE
For most RRM analyses, determining the overall average party size dis-
tribution is suˆcient, although atypical or demand-stimulating events (e.g.,
a children-eat-free promotion or 2-for-1 coupons) should be analyzed sep-
arately. Figure 10.5 provides an example of a party size distribution for a
Chinese restaurant that serves dim sum during brunch hours on Sundays.
TO DO
1. For each meal period, calculate the percentage of total demand for
party sizes 1–8+.
2. Does the mix of party sizes di°er between lunch and dinner?
Forecasting Demand
Forecast Considerations
Forecast Methods
though, the best method to use is the one that produces the most accurate
forecast.
Waiting Lines
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
A small pub can serve, on average, 10 customers per hour. If its arrival
rate is 6, would it have a waiting line?
A mall bistro has an arrival rate of 32 customers per hour during peak
times. If its service rate is 22, does it have a waiting line? How could
this situation be remedied?
Lines are characterized by quantity (single or multiple lines) and server (sin-
gle or multiple servers). Common types of lines are as follows:
• Single line, single server (e.g., single-register co°ee shop)
• Single line, multiple servers (e.g., bank, post oˆce)
• Multiple lines, multiple servers (e.g., toll booth, grocery store)
288 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
A hybrid line combines line types at di°erent stages of the wait. An exam-
ple of a hybrid line is the line for an airline check-in system—it includes
a single-line, multiple-server component for coach passengers and a sin-
gle-line, single-server component for ÿrst-class passengers.
Many larger F&B outlets face a choice between the single line, multiple
servers and multiple lines, multiple servers types. ˜e pros and cons for both
are as follows:
In a sit-down restaurant, when all tables are occupied, the next party
to be seated starts a waiting line. At this point, many restaurants sim-
ply record a name and party size for customers(s) waiting for a table in
the order of arrival, thus creating a wait list. Managing the wait list entails
trying to match party and table sizes while maintaining the FCFS rule,
quoting accurate and reliable wait times, communicating with customers,
290 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
SUMMARY
˜e demand side of RRM is concerned with the number, type, and prof-
itability of customers that frequent a restaurant. Operators have less
control over demand than they do capacity, so understanding and applying
demand management tools and strategies can help a restaurateur operate
more e°ectively and maximize proÿtability. Practices that in˝uence the
timing of demand and/or the services demanded must work in harmony
with capacity management to avoid suboptimal RM solutions.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. Customers arrive to the drive-thru window at the Co°ee Hut
every 2 min. What is the arrival rate per hour? If the sta° at the
drive-thru can process a customer in 45 s, what is the service
rate per hour at the Co°ee Hut?
What can you deduce about the line at the drive-thru window?
2. Taking reservations is one way a service business can try to reduce the uncertainty
of arrivals. Predicting when a customer is going to walk in the door could help
management precisely plan and manage an experience that delights a customer
in the most e˝cient and cost-e°ective way.
For a restaurant, however, taking a dinner reservation does not reduce arrival
uncertainty as much as it does for a hotel that takes a room reservation. Explain
some reasons for this.
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 291
3. Calculate the contribution margin for each entrée in the following table. Average
the three contribution margins together and compare the average to each
entrée. Which entree has above- average contribution margins? Which entrées
have below-average margins?
APPLICATIONS
Cayuga Catering
Northman’s
for Northman’s. Unfortunately, Pete and Sandy do not agree on the following
two main issues:
• Whether or not to use call-ahead seating.
• How to seat parties—on an FCFS basis or on a match-party-size-to-
table-size basis (right sizing)?
Sandy does not want to use call-ahead seating or right-sizing; she is ada-
mant that customers will be very angry if a party that entered a˙er them
is seated ÿrst. Pete thinks both of these practices would be beneÿcial in
decreasing wait times, preserving customer satisfaction, and fulÿlling as
much demand as possible in a timely manner.
Help Pete by providing support for the use of call-ahead seating and
right-sizing. Answer questions such as: How would wait times likely be
impacted under both strategies? How could the issue of potentially angry
customers be handled?
TEAM ACTIVITY
A˙er observing dinner operations for a few days, your team notices the
following things:
• Demand is very strong from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., and customers
wait for what seems to be a long period of time. Customers do not
look happy in line.
• During peak hours, tables are only unoccupied when waiting to be
bussed and then waiting to be seated.
• Lots of customers balk and renege, especially a˙er being quoted the
wait time.
• Demand builds up slowly to 5:30 p.m. but falls o° quickly a˙er 7:00
p.m.
Advanced Demand Management Concepts 293
Customers arrive at the bu°et and wait in line to pay one of two cashers.
˜ey then snake through a roped-o° line in a large holding area. At the front
of this line, each party chooses to join one of three very short lines, each
headed up by a host. ˜e ˝oor manager ÿnds an unoccupied table for the
party and informs the host of the table assignment. ˜e host then takes the
party to its table.
INTERNET ACTIVITY
GLOSSARY
Balk – When customers who had intended on joining a system do
not do so once they see the line.
Contribution margin – ˜e proÿtability of a menu item, measured
by its price less its food cost.
Data patterns – Consistent ups and downs in data over the short to
medium term.
Data trends – Consistent ups and downs in data over a long period of time.
Jockey – When customers leave one line to join an- other line.
Renege – When customers leave a line before being served.
Unconstrained demand – ˜e total demand in a segment or overall in the
absence of any constraints.
294 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Cli°ord, S. (2012, September 4). When it Comes to Reservations, Time is Money.
˛e New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com.
Croxton, K., Lambert, D., García-Dastugue, S., & Rogers, D. (2002). ˜e demand
management process. ˛e International Journal of Logistics Management, 13
(2), 51–66.
Dube-Rioux, L., Schmitt, B., & Leclerc, F. L. (1989). Consumers’ Reactions to Wait-
ing: When Delays A°ect the Perception of Service Quality. Advances in Con-
sumer Research, 16, 59–63.
Kimes, S. (1989). Yield Management: A Tool for Capacity-constrained Service
Firms. Journal of Operations Management, 8 (4): 348–363.
Kimes, S., & Chase, R. (1998). ˜e Strategic Levers of Yield Management. Journal
of Service Research, 1 (2), 156–166.
Kimes, S., Chase, R., Choi, S., Lee, P., & Ngonzi, E. (1998). Restaurant Revenue
Management: Applying Yield Management to the Restaurant Industry. Cor-
nell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 39 (3), 32–39.
Kimes, S., & Wirtz, J. (2003). Has Revenue Management Become Acceptable? Find-
ings from an International Study on the Perceived Fairness of Rate Fences.
Journal of Service Research, 6 (2), 125–135.
Maister, D. (1985). ˛e Psychology of Waiting Lines [White paper]. Retrieved June
16, 2001 from davidmaister.com/articles
McGuire, K., Kimes, S., Lynn, M., Pullman, M., & Lloyd, R. (2010). A Framework
for Evaluating the Customer Wait Experience. Journal of Service Management,
21 (3), 269–290.
McGuire, K., & Rohlfs, K. (2005). Wait List Management: A Simulation Study. Paper
Presented at the HEC 80 Conference, Ithaca, NY.
Noone, B., Kimes, S., Mattila, A., & Wirtz, J. (2007). ˜e E°ect of meal pace on Cus-
tomer Satisfaction. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 48
(3), 231–244.
Schwartz, B. (1975). Queuing and Waiting. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Simon, H., & Dolan, R. (1999). Price Customization. ˛e Journal of Professional
Pricing, 7 (3), 15–18.
CHAPTER 11
OVERVIEW
The objective of Restaurant Revenue Management (RRM) is to ensure that
the capacity offered by a restaurant serves the demand for a restaurant in
the most profitable way. The capacity side of the RRM equation is usually
under the control of the restaurant operator to a greater extent than the
demand side. This chapter covers the aspects of RRM related to supply.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to evaluate
restaurant supply in the context of RRM. Speciÿcally, you
should be able to:
Relate capacity planning and capacity management to RRM
Explain ways in which optimizing capacity usage leads to
maximizing revenue
Perform an analysis of both occupancy and dining duration
Construct and perform a table mix analysis
Name several RRM solutions to possible supply side issues
295
296 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Supply = Capacity
• Capacity Planning
• Capacity Management
• Utilization = Occupancy
• Dining Duration
• Di˜erences in Supply O˜ered
• Supply Mix
• Layout of Supply
Summary
Discussion Questions
Applications
Team Activity
Internet Activity
Glossary
References
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 297
SO WHAT?
Some RRM research looks at how di˜erences in what seem-to-be iden-
tical physical inventory units contribute to the goal of maximizing
revenue (Rohlfs, 2009). For example, hotel rooms with one king, one
queen, or two double beds are all considered standard rooms. And all
seats in a restaurant seem to be identical, but they really di˜er by table
type (e.g., banquette, round), table size (e.g., four-top, eight-top), and
the amount of space tables take up (e.g., 45 square feet, 108 square
feet).
In the context of RRM, space is deÿned as the physical area that is
needed to put a unit of inventory into use. Space is an important facet
of the RRM problem since some physical inventory units (e.g., 8-tops)
take up more space than other physical inventory units (e.g., 2-tops).
So, a restaurant may be able to capture more revenue if it takes space
into account when determining its capacity proÿle.
To understand better, imagine this scenario:
You are planning a restaurant and tell your designer to allot 15 square
feet of space for each seat. A portion of the drawing she gives you is
shown below. You are surprised at how tiny the two-tops look next to
the six-tops. What do you think is the problem with the drawing?
INTRODUCTION
RRM practices can optimize the revenue that a restaurant generates over a
period of time. RRM combines elements of both demand and supply man-
298 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
agement in an e˜ort to in°uence how and when demand occurs and how it
is processed by the service system once it arrives. For the most part, oper-
ators have more control over what is supplied to customers demand from
operators.
˛is chapter focuses on the supply side of RRM. Because RRM aims to
increase top-line revenues generated by an operation, it has traditionally
focused on front-of-house (FOH) concerns. Accordingly, supply in an RRM
context generally does not mean the raw ingredients needed to provide food
to customers. Instead, supply refers to the dining experience provided to
customers—the food plus the time and e˜ort spent doing actions in a restau-
rant, such as entering, ordering, receiving, consuming, paying, and exiting.
SUPPLY = CAPACITY
Capacity Planning
Capacity Management
Two traditional strategies for managing resources are the chase and the
constant methods. ˛e chase method calls for using °exible capacity so that a
300 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
delivery system can respond quickly and easily to demand (Johnston, 1999;
Sasser, 1976). Essentially, supply is supposed to “chase” demand. Trademark
chase techniques include using shared equipment, scheduling short-term
employees, and increasing customer participation in the service delivery
process.
THINK HISTORICALLY
˛e nature of services—speciÿcally, their immediacy and inherent lack
of an inventory cushion—requires mixing aspects of the chase and the
constant methods. Services that can e˜ectively mix the strategies can
keep costs down and support an agile service system that reacts well
to variations in demand (Sasser, 1976). Traditional chase strategies that
have long been used by restaurants include eliminating service bot-
tle-necks and opening earlier/staying open later. A more contemporary
strategy used to help supply react better to demand is opening a “next-
door” add-on restaurant adjacent to a popular counterpart.
Traditional constant strategies utilized in restaurants include seating cus-
tomers only at certain times, o˜ering incentives to encourage customers
to vacate tables as needed, and o˜ering limited menus during the busiest
times. A more contemporary constant strategy used by many restaurants
is waitlist management, which focuses on making waits more expected,
comfortable, and acceptable to customers.
A chase strategy frequently used in high-capacity restaurants is opening
and closing dining room sections as needed. What are some other chase
strategies used in restaurants today?
A constant strategy frequently used by all types of full-service restau-
rants is taking reservations. What are some other constant strategies
used in restaurant today?
change the number of customers who can ÿt at any given time. Because of
this, total restaurant capacity is substantially ÿxed and it would seem that
restaurants should follow the constant strategy for capacity management.
However, restaurants have a higher level of °exibility in their capacity than
many other services. If necessary, a restaurant can add another table or seat
to its inventory to fulÿll demand without incurring a signiÿcant additional
cost, which is a chase capacity management strategy.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
A factor that impacts the management of all capacity is customer
involvement in the service process. In reality, customers often unknow-
ingly manage capacity themselves. Think about this situation: you are
planning a visit to a very popular theme park on the most crowded day
of the year. One strategy you consider to avoid the largest crowds, and
make your time at the park more enjoyable, is to visit the park later in
the evening. This strategy also beneÿts the park because you are e˜ec-
tively moving your use of the park facilities to times that could better
accommodate you.
What are some other strategies you could consider to make the most of
your planned visit to the theme park? How do these strategies also help
the park manage capacity?
302 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REAL PEOPLE
Utilization = Occupancy
and seat occupancy—help track how well the physical inventory of the service
is working. ˛e two measurements are both important, because although
seats are the smallest inventory unit in a restaurant system that can generate
revenue, they are situated at tables, which are the actual units sold in most
restaurants. ˛e formulas for these occupancies are:
Many restaurant operators are familiar with seat occupancy and calcu-
late seat occupancy by:
• Summing the number of covers for a time range, with covers being
deÿned as the number of people whose check was opened during
that time range (e.g., a party of 4,seated at a six-top at 6:35 p.m.
would translate to 4 covers in the time range of 6:00–6:59 p.m.)
• And then dividing this number by the total number of seats in the
restaurant.
Crow & Steel has 300 tables, and the table mix is as follows:
150 two-tops; 120 four-tops; 20 six-tops, and 10 eight-tops
TO DO:
1. Average the Number of Checks by hour and day-of-week. Assume
duration is 1 h/table. Calculate the overall table occupancy by hour
and day-of-week.
2. Average the Number of Covers by hour and day-of-week. Assume
duration is 1 h/table. Calculate the overall seat occupancy by hour
and day-of-week.
306 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Dining Duration
A party occupies a table at a restaurant for the duration of a meal; this means
a table (and its corresponding number of seats) is taken out of the physical
inventory available to serve other customers. Dining duration is signiÿcant
in RRM because e˜ectively, in addition to selling an actual meal, a restaurant
is selling the use of one or more of its physical inventory units for a period
of time (Kimes et al., 1998). So if an operator is able to control the time a
customer occupies a seat at her restaurant, she can better manage RevPASH.
Measuring Duration
˛e data used to calculate dining duration are usually gathered from the
POS system. If duration is not automatically computed by the POS, this sim-
ple formula can be used to determine for dining duration:
Duration times calculated using POS data are not always completely
accurate. Some activities keep a table occupied but are not captured by the
POS data. ˛ese include the time it takes for a server to greet a table and
open its check in the POS system and the time a party at a table lingers aˆer
its check has been closed. So measuring duration using POS data can under-
state the true amount of time a physical inventory unit is in use.
In addition, using POS data does not provide information about the
steps in the dining process. Studying a process by breaking it into smaller
elements is a technique that dates back to Frederick Taylor, the “father” of
scientiÿc management, in 1881. It is applicable here because understanding
which activities within the dining process take the longest and/or vary the
most can help isolate problems and identify areas that can be improved. Per-
forming a manual time study provides the needed information.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
You extracted data from your restaurant’s POS to calculate dining dura-
tion for each day of the week. You scrubbed the data for problems, and
of the 1200 transactions you pulled, you found four outliers—observa-
tions that are noticeably unlike the rest of the data in some manner. The
outliers are listed in the table.
Table Table Party size Check Check closed
identifer size opened
Z2 4 4 8:16:08 11:58:49
X17 8 6 8:19:19 8:21:22
F1 4 9 8:25:30 9:29:00
Z9 2 1
What is wrong with each of these data points? What should you do with
them?
Analyzing Duration
2. Calculate the average and standard deviation for the overall dining
process and for each activity. ˛e mean, or average, re°ects how long
tables are generally occupied (and how long each activity takes) and
the standard deviation measure show variable these average num-
bers are. Using the observations in Exhibit 1, Exhibit 2 gives exam-
ples of time measurements that may be of interest.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
5PM Avg: 58:39 Avg: 57:33 Avg: 55:38 Avg: 59:16 Avg: 59:38 Avg: 64:23 Avg: 74:01 Avg: 80:01 Avg: 86:36 Avg: 88:45
SD: 5:16 SD: 8:01 SD:5:16 SD: 8:56 SD: 5:16 SD: 7:32 SD: 8:19 SD: 9:12 SD: 13:19 SD: 14:00
6PM Avg:52:51 Avg: 52:33 Avg: 56:11 Avg: 59:01 Avg: 60:40 Avg: 63:54 Avg: 74.02 Avg: 75:26 Avg: 85:34 Avg: 89.23
SD: 5:04 SD: 6:44 SD:5:15 SD: 7:31 SD: 8:08 SD: 8.23 SD: 8:19 SD: 10:19 SD: 12:59 SD: 15:46
7PM Avg: 52:45 Avg: 63:09 Avg: 58:19 Avg: 60:52 Avg: 60:01 Avg: 65:13 Avg: 80:09 Avg: 89:06 Avg: 84:13 Avg: 90:15
SD: 10:12 SD: 8:56 SD: 14:12 SD: 8:22 SD: 9.44 SD: 10.17 SD: 9:41 SD: 9:20 SD: 10:09 SD: 18:26
As a rule of thumb, if the CoV is above 0.5, the process is likely a prob-
lem area and should be studied as soon as possible. If the CoV is below 0.5,
the process is likely satisfactory.
Notice that the CoV for the seating process is less than 0.5, while the
CoV for the check process is greater than 0.5. ˛e CoV rule of thumb would
identify the check process as the problem area between these two processes.
CoV calculations are easily accomplished and only require two sum-
mary statistics for each process—average duration and standard deviation
of duration. Recall the time study data from Exhibit 2, reprinted here:
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 311
that step in the process too long? Why is this process so variable? What is the
bottle neck? Where should I put extra resources?
SEEING FURTHER
Pam Artly, a new assistant manager at a well-es-
tablished and popular restaurant, decided to
take the initiative and use some RRM tools to
examine issues the restaurant was having. After authorizing a lengthy
time study, she analyzed dining duration and found a huge problem
with the time between entrée and check delivery—the time that it was
actually taking customers to eat. With a CoV of 0.867, the time to dine was
extremely variable.
After using a ÿshbone diagram, Pam determined that the high CoV was
caused by a combination of two things: including too many outliers in
the analysis and the check-dropping process. In fact, Pam found so many
outliers in her sample that she was compelled to take a closer look at the
transactions.
Upon further investigation, Pam discovered that three servers had been
providing free food to tables of friends and family, so nothing was entered
in the “check delivery” ÿeld in the data for the duration study. A glitch in
the spreadsheet analysis interpreted this as the closing time, so many
durations for the entrée-to-check delivery time were grossly overstated.
Consequently, the CoV was not as alarming as it appeared at the begin-
ning of the duration analysis and was able to beneÿt from reÿning the
process for dropping checks and retraining servers accordingly. Of course,
the three servers who were involved in the crimes Pam uncovered were
terminated.
What other potential causes of the high CoV do you think were included
on the ÿshbone diagram?
Why do you think anything above 0.5 is the threshold for an unaccept-
able CoV?
Controlling Duration
Fences
Combining Tables
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Combining tables can mean that one or more units have to be taken
out of inventory and put on hold until all the tables needed are unoc-
cupied and ready to be combined. Why is this not desirable?
316 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Supply Mix
Another aspect on the supply side of RRM that impacts how much revenue
can be generated is the mix of physical inventory units used. As with a dura-
tion analysis, the inventory under consideration in a supply mix analysis is
tables. Research has shown that better matching the physical supply of tables
to customer demand characteristics positively impacts revenue (Kimes &
˛ompson, 2004).
Percentage Match
1. Determine the demand percentages for each of the two table types
supplied, remembering the seating rule that parties of 1–2 should be
seated at two-tops when possible and parties of 3–4 should be seated
at four-tops.
Parties of 1 and 2 = 16.67% + 50.00% = 67% Parties of 3 and 4 =
22.22% + 11.11% = 33%
2. Estimate the number of tables by applying the party size percentages
to the number of seats available:
% Parties 1–2 × 36 seats = 0.67 × 36 = 24 seats
Divided by 2, since there are 2 seats per two-top = 12 two-top tables
Estimate the number of four-tops:
% Parties 3–4 × 36 seats = 0.33 × 36 = 12 seats
Divided by 4, since there are 4 seats per four-top = 3 four-top tables
Percentage-Duration Match
Adding more information into a table mix analysis will oˆen produce
more accurate results. For instance, adding duration to a table mix analy-
sis accounts for how long di˜erent parties actually occupy tables. However,
more information can quickly complicate the problem.
˛e two main problems with the percentage match and the percentage-du-
ration match methods in determining the best table mix are as follows:
• Recommended table mixes that cannot ÿt into the dining room space
available. ˛ese simple models allocate the existing number of seats
to di˜erent tables without initially taking into account the actual
space each table needs.
• Table mixes may be based on the wrong number of seats. ˛e two sim-
ple models work by allocating the existing number of seats to di˜er-
ent groups of demand. However, the number of seats in use may not
be right for the operation and the space it has available.
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 319
Many complex table mix models have been developed and tested to
either solve these problems or to include more demand and/or supply infor-
mation and assess if better results can be achieved (Kimes & ˛ompson,
2004, 2005; Rohlfs, 2009; ˛ompson, 2011).
One common aspect most of these models share is the use of Integer
Programming (IP), which is a mathematical model used to solve a problem
with many parts. ˛e purpose of using an IP is that table mixes are oˆen
unrealistic because the recommended number of tables is a fraction. Simple
table mix methods simply round to the nearest whole number using con-
ventional rounding rules, so the table mixes they produce are not “optimal”
in that, while they capture a good amount of available revenue, they do not
capture all of it.
Demand intensity and demand value can also in°uence the results of a
supply mix model, but usually to a lesser extent than party size and duration.
Additionally, table space measurements and table seating options could pos-
sibly impact supply mix models.
Space Allocation
- ˛e area needed for sta˜ to circulate around the table during din-
ing service
• ˛e total amount of useable FOH area. Useable dining space includes
the area that can actively be used to put physical inventory. It does
not include stairs, poles, and FOH requirements such as restrooms
and coat-check areas. ˛is should be carefully measured to ÿnd this
total.
Once a table mix that better matches demand is adopted, seat occupancy
would be expected to increase. If it does not, it is likely that the average
seat occupancy is already quite high or that the demand information upon
which the model is based is incorrect. ˛ese table mix models are perfectly
sensitive to changes in a restaurant’s demand mix, so even small changes in
the distribution of party sizes could drastically impact the recommended
number of tables.
TO DO
Use the Excel spreadsheet to determine how many 2-top, 4-top, 6-top,
and 8-top tables to order.
322 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Layout of Supply
˛e layout of a dining room, including seat types and table types and loca-
tions, is another aspect of restaurant operations that can be tied in to RRM.
All of these characteristics further di˜erentiate physical inventory not only
in their looks and comfort, but also possibly in the amount of space they
take up.
Seat types include chairs, stools, banquettes, and booths. Table types
include freestanding, booths, cocktail tables, and communal tables. Table
locations range from anchored to a wall or other obstruction, in the center
of the room, in a corner, or with a view.
SUMMARY
˛e supply side of RRM is concerned with how well the physical capacity
of a restaurant is being used to capture and generate revenue. As capacity
is usually under the control of the restaurant operator to a much greater
extent than demand, learning, and applying the capacity management
tools associated with RRM provides restaurateurs with many opportuni-
ties to improve a business. While di˜erent capacity strategies are useful
when demand is high compared to when demand is low, applying RRM
techniques helps an operation use its available supply to e˜ectively and
e˙ciently serve its demand.
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 323
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. In the simplest terms, the objective of RRM is to use the
fundamental supply and demand conditions of a restaurant
to maximize revenue. What elements of the supply are under
the control of the restaurant? What elements of demand are
under the control of the restaurant?
2. Flo’s is a breakfast-only diner, open from 5 a.m. to 11 a.m., and very popular with
the employees of a local package delivery warehouse. Flo recorded the “at” seat
occupancy for each 15-min period from 8:00 to 10:00 a.m. over a few weeks; the
averages are provided below. What is the “from” occupancy for each hour? Which
method of recording occupancy do you think is more useful for Flo?
Party Party Party Party Party Party Party Party Party Party
of 1 of 2 of 3 of 4 of 5 of 6 of 7 of 8 of 9 of 10
5% 25% 5% 25% 3% 5% 5% 15% 5% 7%
3. The current mix of tables at a restaurant with 102 seats is as follows: 4 two-tops,
18 four-tops, 2 six-tops, and 1 ten-top. The seating rule currently used at the
restaurant is to seat the largest waiting party at tables as they come available.
Demand at the restaurant is distributed as shown in the table below.
What is your opinion of the current table mix?
4. Recall that fences are used in RRM to di˜erentiate seats, so these identical physical
inventory units can be sold as di˜erent products. O˜ering tables of di˜erent sizes
is a type of fence; the seats situated at a 6-top are used to accommodate a party
that would not be able to use the seats at a 2-top, as a larger party could not ÿt.
Describe how a seating assignment rule can be used as a fence to di˜erentiate
identical inventory.
5. Conceptualize (but do not try to calculate) a table mix model using the
percentage-duration method for a restaurant with the following characteristics.
Use able FOH space for tables = 8000 square feet current number of seats=535.
Be sure to ÿrst deÿne the seating rule the restaurant will follow.
6. Restaurants usually follow a hybrid of the constant or the chase methods
for managing capacity. Because a restaurant has a ÿxed amount of space to
serve customers, it has to use some constant strategies. However, restaurant
capacity can be quite ˛exible and often can be changed at a low cost to better
accommodate demand, which are characteristic chase strategies. What are some
other constant and chase strategies that coexist in a restaurant operation?
APPLICATIONS
Vail Ski Mountain Restaurant
Arepas
You visit Arepas and write down your observations about the dining pro-
cess:
• Customers wait for a long time at the hotel and when they ÿrst walk
in.
• It takes a long time to navigate through the maze of tables when
being seated.
• Servers bring fried plantains to the tables when greeting customers.
• ˛e menu o˜ers no appetizers.
• ˛e dessert menu is limited, but the co˜ee and liqueur selection is
impressive.
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 325
Tacky Fingers
TEAM ACTIVITY
Your brother can get a good deal on new two-tops and four-tops, so
these are the only two table types that he will use. Fire codes indicate that
no more than two people can be seated at a two-top and no more than four
people at a four-top. You are to assume that tables cannot be combined.
Decide how many of each table type you will have (remember that you
only have 36 seats). Use the table sizes and restaurant footprint in the Appen-
dix to sketch a layout for Shockwave.
326 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Now let’s test how your table mix performs. As you go through the list of
parties arriving to Shockwave (Arrivals), you should:
• Seat each arriving party at appropriate tables by marking an X for
each customer on the table.˘
• Keep track of any parties that cannot be accommodated, recording
them as lost demand.
Arrivals:
Party # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Party Size 2 4 2 5 3 1 3 2 4 2 2 6 3 2 2 1 2 2 1 3
INTERNET ACTIVITY
• Aˆer you’ve entered Day 1, press the Flow Data button. Click on the
Daily tab to see that the data have been summarized and transferred.
• Returning to the Hourly tab, click on the Clear Table button. Re-en-
ter 60 available and enter Day 2 data. Press the Flow Data button and
check the Daily tab that the data have been transferred.
• Again, clear the Hourly tab, enter Day 3 data, and °ow the data to the
Daily tab.
Look at the Charts tab. What day generates the most revenue per seat?
GLOSSARY
Duration – ˛e amount of time a customer spends at a restaurant,
measured from arrival to departure.
Fences – Di˜erences in physical inventory units.
Nonphysical inventory – ˛e intangible resources required to
deliver a service.
Physical inventory – ˛e tangible resources required to deliver a service.
Planning square – ˛e square footage required to accommodate a table in
a restaurant.
Seating assignment rule – A guideline used to regulate which party size can
sit at which table size.
Service capacity – ˛e amount of output a service system can produce.
328 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Bradach, J. (1997). Using the Plural for Min the Management of Restaurant Chains.
Administrative Science Quarterly, 42 (2), 276–303.
Crandall, R., & Markland, R. (1996). Demand Management—Today’s Challenge for
Service Industries. Production and Operations Management, 5 (2), 106–120.
Cross, R. G., Higbie,J. A., & Cross, D. Q.(2009).Revenue Management’s Renais-
sance: Are Birth of the Art and Science of Proÿtable Revenue Generation.
Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 50 (1), 56–81.
Eppen, G., Martin, R. K., & Schrage, L.(1989).A Scenario Approach to Capacity
Planning. Operations Research, 37 (4), 517–527.
Johnston, R. (1999). Service Operations Management: Return to Roots. Interna-
tional Journal of Operations & Production Management, 19 (2), 104–124.
Katsigris, C., & ˛omas, C. (1999). Design and Equipment for Restaurants and
Food Service: A Management View. New York: Wiley.
Kimes, S. (1989). Yield Management: A Tool for Capacity-Constrained Service
Firms. Journal of Operations Management, 8 (4), 348–363.
Kimes, S. (1999). Implementing Restaurant Revenue Management: A Five-Step
Approach. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 40 (3),
16–21.
Kimes, S., Barrash, D., & Alexander, J. (1999). Developing a Restaurant Reve-
nue-Management Strategy. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration
Quarterly, 40 (5), 18–29.
Kimes, S., Chase, R., Choi, S., Lee, P., & Ngonzi, E. (1998). Restaurant Revenue
Management: Applying Yield Management to the Restaurant Industry. Cor-
nell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 39 (3), 32–39.
Kimes, S., & ˛ompson, G. (2004). Restaurant Revenue Management at Chevys:
Determining the Best Table Mix. Decision Sciences, 35 (3), 371–392.
Kimes, S., & Wirtz, J. (2003). Has Revenue Management Become Acceptable? Find-
ings from an International Study on the Perceived Fairness of Rate Fences.
Journal of Service Research, 6 (2), 125–135.
Lovelock, C. (1984). Strategies for Managing Demand in Capacity-Constrained
Service Organizations. ˛e Service Industries Journal, 4 (3), 12–30.
Noone, B., Kimes, S., Mattila, A., & Wirtz, J. (2007). ˛e E˜ect of Meal Pace on
Customer Satisfaction. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quar-
terly, 48 (3), 231–244.
Pullman, M., & ˛ompson, G. (2003). Strategies for Integrating Capacity with
Demand in Service Networks. Journal of Service Research, 5 (3), 169–183.
Rohlfs, K. (2009). ˛e Role of Space in Revenue Management (Doctoral disserta-
tion). Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
Sasser, W. E. (1976, November– December). Match Supply and Demand in Service
Industries. Harvard Business Review, 48, 133–140.
Advanced Supply Management Concepts 329
OVERVIEW
Revenue management in the hospitality industry has traditionally been
associated with the management of sleeping rooms. A strong database
of information and multiple distribution channels allowed you to position
your inventory to an eager public. In this chapter, however, we are going
to examine a revenue stream that isn’t as clear-cut as rooms: Function
Space, and the multiple revenue streams associated with banquet/
catering events.
331
332 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Describe the relationship between hotel rooms and function space
Translate the concepts of function space optimization into a Yield Manage-
ment Strategy
Apply the Yield Management Strategy to increase bottom line proÿt
Identify what we are selling and its relationships within Space Optimization
theory
Segment your customer base and sales force to position yourself for success
Justify the importance of communication in keeping your team focused and
aligned
OUTLINE
Introduction
• ˜e Group Segment
Communication and Communication Tools
Closing
Summary
Discussion Questions and Applications
INTRODUCTION
Another Busy Day!
Is there anyone who thinks the pace of business is slowing down or that the
decisions we make daily are getting easier? Case in point: the decisions a
Sales Manager faces daily. Typically, the ÿrst thing one would check is your
Request for Proposal (RFP) inbox. You have 15 requests since 6 pm last
night all looking for a response within 24 h with requests ranging from:
(1) A group looking to arrive October/November requiring 900 rooms
with a peak room night of 250. ˜ey need general session space for
600 with breakouts, breakfast, lunch, and a dinner/reception upon
arrival. ˜ey are looking for an answer by 2 pm.
(2) Another group has no date ˛exibility arriving in May for three
nights, with peak rooms at 325 rooms, requiring all your function
space with a food minimum of $250k.
(3) A catering request for your best ballroom on a Wednesday night in
April, F&B minimum $90k.
(4) A group looking for 30 sleeping rooms with meeting space for 75
people requiring breakfast, breaks, lunch, and breakout space arriv-
ing in two weeks.
(5) A large group looking for your best rate and F&B prices to arrive
over July 4. ˜ey require 90 percent of your room inventory, multi
occupancy rooms taking all double doubles but only 50 percent of
your function space with breakfast, lunch, and general session.
˜ese are the types of decisions a property is faced with on a daily basis,
competing against multiple properties, all with the knowledge that the ÿrst
responder normally gets the business 70 percent of the time. While speed of
response is a major factor, responses based on accurate fundamentals and
training win the game.
334 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
SO WHAT?
In “Another Busy Day!” you get a sense of the pace and demands of
a sales environment matched against the needs of the client. ˜ere
are so many factors involved in deciding what piece of business is the
best ÿt, but there is one overriding factor of all, time. Why is time so
important? What makes it a leading factor in every decision and nego-
tiation which takes place in a hospitality organization?
THINK HISTORICALLY
Function space management 30 years ago consisted of manually logging
your event into a function book called the “Bible.” You hoped that while
you were selling the space to your client another colleague wasn’t sell-
ing the same space to theirs! ˜en the Direct Operating System (DOS)
arrived, an operating system which actually allowed a sales person to
view the “Bible” electronically at their desk and manage a properties
function space in real time. As Sales and Catering databases evolved
a team approach to selling became apparent, now you can track a sale
from the initial “prospect” status of meeting the client, to generating a
contract and sending it o˝, “tentative” status, to the actual signing and
receipt of the contract, “deÿnite” status.
Function Space Optimization 335
Questions:
˜e evolution of “SPACE” has transitioned from a perspective of
operations to sales: how does this change beneÿt your organization?
Databases were over˛owing with information and while business realized
the potential, there was still a divide between having the information and
accessing it for analytical purposes. No longer is that a problem, we now
have the tools; all that’s leˆ is to ensure the information being entered is
accurate. We now have at our disposal a wealth of information collected
and reÿned over decades from which Function Space Optimization has
emerged.
Taken down to their essences, function space and sleeping rooms are
the same, they are space. A physical structure located in a speciÿc location/
vicinity with o˝erings that attract visitors.
• Aˆernoon: 2 pm to 6 pm
• Dinner: Aˆer 6 pm
Upselling Opportunities
Suggestive selling can also impact the ˛ow through of a meal period to
improve the margin of the meal. While not a consideration at the start of the
booking process, designing a menu which increases the average check can
signiÿcantly impact proÿtability. Let’s look at beverage sales. If the sales team
can improve the beverage margin by selling a “package beverage service”
by the hour for each of the guaranteed guests in attendance, it will impact
the ˛ow through to the positive. Why? ˜e preponderance for all guests to
drink at the same level over a set time is unlikely, unless the demographic
is the same. As a result, top line revenue improves with a guarantee of sales,
˛owing positively to the bottom line. ˜is is relevant in both the actual meal
period and when analyzing opportunity. Certain types of business have the
ability to increase expectations and others are less likely to drive the oppor-
Function Space Optimization 341
Understanding the ˛ow though of each meal period is the key to under-
standing the proÿtability of your facility and the optimization of your space.
In this example the labor and cost of goods sold for the morning/lunch
period vs evening period delivers a 6 percent increase in proÿt, an additional
$585 to the bottom line.
342 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Space Optimization is about ÿtting the right piece of business into the
best function room on the proper date. Only by analyzing each Request for
Proposal (RFP), then breaking out the requested meal period and matching
to available space and sleeping room patterns can you optimize your space
to meet budgeted objectives.
How do you match the RFP request with the proper space? Data from
your Sales and Catering database is the key. It contains everything you need
to know in ranking your function space based on revenue production. All
that is required is a measurement technique to turn the information in the
database into usable standards for space valuation. ˜e standard measure-
ment of space is in square feet. A hotel or function facility is as much a piece
of real estate as a warehouse or o˙ce complex measured and valued in reve-
nue per square foot. Yes, the o˝erings of the function space add complexity
through scenic views, room layouts and décor, but the basic measurement
is revenue per square foot. Some identify the calculation as Revenue per
Available Space (RevPAS) but the formula is the same.
Revenue/Sq. Ft.
Total revenue generated in the space for a speciÿc time period/Square
footage of the space:
Ballroom 1 is 15,000 sq. ft.
Revenue generated in the month $500,000.
$500,000/15,000 sq. ft. = $33.33 per sq. ft.
Only when applying the Revenue per Sq. Ft. calculation on a daily,
monthly, and meal period basis can you best understand and rank the value
of your space. ˜e Function Room Occupancy Report brings this all together.
It relates the demand utilization of the space by month, day of week, and
time of day producing an occupancy percentage for measurement, tracking,
and comparison.
As in any business where you are called upon to identify your best
employee, menu item, or car type it is imperative in the hospitality industry
to comprehend which of your physical assets is the most valuable and why.
With that data you set minimum revenue expectations driving both the top
line and margin limits dictated by owners. Would we put a prom in a prime
ballroom on a highly sellable night? To answer this, we analyze the occu-
pancy report, identifying demand patterns and revenue per Sq. Ft. returns
contrasted against the contribution dollars of the business we are consider-
ing. We need to keep in mind that each piece of business yields di˝erently.
Perhaps the prom, with a chicken dinner and no alcohol is “trading down”
on our best space not optimizing the day/time patterns. If demand shows
that we could place another dinner in this prime real estate with a higher
contribution and additional revenue sources (such as alcohol, rented linens,
and other resources) we would not want to under yield the room with the
less contributing event. Equally we would not want to break a sellable group
pattern with a social event in the middle of the week if we could sell to a
weeklong group. ˜e consideration of all these inputs constitutes a func-
tion space optimization strategy easily identiÿable because of the Function
Room Occupancy Report.
Function Room Occupancy Report
Dates: October
Status: Defnite
Sq Ft 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Occ % Revenue Rev /
Sq Ft
We Th Fr Sa Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su Mo Tu We Th Fr
October
Capital D = Complete Ballroom in Use Small d = Divisable ballroom only a portion in use
Pulling directly from the Sales and Catering database the Function Room
Occupancy Report highlights by function room, how the space is being uti-
lized. Which meal period is generating the highest return in which month
and day of week. Linked to a speciÿc function room you derive expected
minimums to deÿne your yield strategy. ˜is report highlights the status
of business, for example Deÿnite, Tentative, and Prospective, identifying if
a ballroom is subdividing by using lower case and capital letters (see sam-
ple deÿnite report above). Ballroom 1 subdivides into three parts providing
greater ˛exibility when determining its best use, the report highlights this.
Only when you view your data in this manner can you truly understand and
yield your product e˝ectively. Looking historically at the data you can set
anticipated revenue minimums based on identiÿable patterns. From a future
perspective you can develop a sales strategy to optimize the utilization of
the space and yield the anticipated returns based on; business on the books,
what status they’re in, how long have they been in that status and how much
time is leˆ for selling, the “booking window.” Everything you need to know
is condensed into an easily accessible format.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Looking at the Function Room Occupancy Report above Ballroom 3 is
producing $10.90 sq. ft. for the month. This is far below the other ball-
rooms: what factors could be in°uencing this and what can be done?
˜e Revenue per Sq. Ft. is not only used to identify selling patterns or
value space, when viewed over time it can indicate trends. It starts the inves-
tigation as to why is the space generating this value? Has the value changed
Function Space Optimization 345
Full service hotels may divide room segments into the three main cate-
gories:
(1) Transient: Individual travelers who are staying for business or lei-
sure
(2) Group: Organizations or corporations who gather for a shared pur-
pose.
(3) Crew: Airline employees or longer term stays who by their nature
are transitory and need temporary housing.
˜e demand of your market will dictate the probable mix with the Group
segment laying a base which requires function space. To understand this
symbiotic relationship between rooms and space consider the:
When the ratio is low you have too few rooms to ÿll the space and a high
ratio indicates your space may not be su˙cient to ensure all the rooms can
be ÿlled. Remember we are looking for the balance of both to employ in our
Yield Management Strategy.
What this is telling you is that for each room night associated with
the group segment $173.91 of banquet revenue is being generated. Group
Banquet Revenue Contribution tracked by year and month provides the
historical baselines to evaluate all future business presented in the group
segment over this particular date range or season.
revenue the Group Banquet Revenue Contribution ties the Rooms and
Banquet revenues together to give an accurate depiction of the business or
mix you are considering. When you look at, and understand the amount of
banquet revenue generated in relation to each group room night consumed,
tie that revenue to the function space utilized, and measure it against histor-
ical parameters, can you accurately evaluate a piece of “Group” business and
ÿnd the optimal mix of Transient, Group, and Crew.
As you can plainly see, only when you consider all the revenue streams
can you achieve optimal revenue generation. Focusing on a high REVPAR
348 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
never factored in the banquet revenue revealed in the above analysis, and
when considered, the shiˆ in segment mix between Transient and Group
delivered an additional $20,200.
To Do:
You have a 200 room property with 10,000 sq. ft. of meet-
ing space which breaks out as follows;
5000 sq. ft. Ballroom Average Checks
2500 sq. ft. Ballroom Cont. Breakfast - $30 Breakfast - $34
1000 sq. ft. Lunch - $54 Break - $17
Conference Room
3/500 sq. ft. Dinner - $75 Reception - $60
Meeting Rooms
Focusing on Event Type, Flow Through, Covers and Group Banquet
Revenue Contribution evaluate 2 pieces of business to choose the bet-
ter ÿt arriving in May for 2 days with an ADR of $329 per night.
Sleeping Rooms per night 1st Day Events 2nd Day Events
1) 100/20 Dinner 100/Reception 100 2 Breaks 100 ea./Break-
fast 100 Lunch 100
2) 75/75 Cont. breakfast 125 /Lunch 125/Break 125 Cont.
Breakfast 125/Lunch 125
1. Would you change your segmentation strategy and how would
that e˛ect your distribution strategy?
˜e sheet details the following criteria which are all instrumental in con-
sideration for contracting business, not only with rooms and associated ban-
quet revenue, but all business generating revenue for your property.
1. Room pattern being requested, number of sleeping rooms Blocked
and Rm Rate O˝ered and if Commissionable to a third party. It also
denotes the existing business on the Deÿnite line and how this will
impact the pattern for the time period.
2. Minimum Available Rate (MAR): A rate determined by the Director
of Revenue based on history and forecast
3. Meal Type, Covers and Revenue projected to be generated by the
group
4. Function Rooms to be used and number of Days required
5. Revenue produced by each Meal Type
6. Anticipated Proÿt by each revenue stream; F&B Proÿt, R-O (Rent/
Other) Proÿt, Rm Proÿt, Total Proÿt.
7. Group Banquet Revenue Contribution generated
8. Total Proÿt Margin
9. Comments to inform the management team of pertinent informa-
tion on Group History, Competition, is the group ˛exible or is this
the only or preferred date. Any information relevant to help us arrive
at an optimal decision.
10. Group Banquet Revenue Contribution, Rooms Only: ˜is section
breaks the ÿnal decision into 3 categories based on all the informa-
tion entered, comparing input to history providing 3 alternatives for
Banquet Revenue and Group Banquet Revenue Contribution:
a. Way To Go = Exceeding historical levels
b. Bring to REVMAX =Close to historical averages but allows the
Sales Manager to argue why this piece of business should be
taken, even at the lower margins i.e. (Valued Client, Booking
Window Closing, Other Meetings in the Pipeline, Pattern com-
pliments other groups to optimize revenues)
c. Time To Talk: business should be turned down not meeting
minimum potential.
350 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
As you can see there are a multitude of factors here but the REVMAX
Sheet condenses them down to an easily understandable format that takes
only minutes to complete providing answers based on empirical data.
REAL PEOPLE
˜is business segment can ÿll the gaps leˆ from groups not utilizing
evenings where the space would otherwise sit empty and continue to
optimize the inventory. ˜is segment is important because it oˆen
establishes the “reputation” in the business community for the prop-
erty. ˜e events this segment produces oˆen speak to the creativity
of the property, community engagement and ability for the property
to create a name for itself in the local business and social scene.
• Weddings: 6 month to 1.5-year booking window. A highly proÿt-
able subset of Social Catering separated only because of the booking
window and speciÿc need for weekend/holiday demand dates. ˜e
potential here is not only for high revenue opportunities (especially
with the opportunity to bundle beverage and other services). As well,
weddings have a high emotional bonding value for the property. ˜e
repeat potential for business from this segment is extremely high.
Having been the venue for such a personal and memorable lifetime
experiences, the preponderance for the venue, especially a hotel, to
be the purchaser’s destination of choice and the property garnering
a customer for life is very high. ˜is creates a speciÿc, however not
totally quantiÿable value for the decision making process. Lastly,
weddings are almost recession proof. ˜is is where dynamic pricing
and contribution are e˝ective.
˜is is where negotiating comes in. Once selling teams are educated in
the science of space optimization, and they are utilizing the REVMAX sheet
to present business opportunities to management and their coworkers daily,
they can begin to negotiate for the optimal result. Should the rate be higher?
Lower? How e˝ective is the weekly booking pattern? What is the Group
Banquet Revenue Contribution? All these questions must be considered.
However the time to have that negotiating process is not just with the cus-
tomer, it is with the internal management team to ÿrst determine the highest
and best use of the available rooms and space based on the time leˆ to sell
the diminishable inventory remaining. ˜en the negotiating conversation
happens with the customer!
ago and only this interaction between Sales and Operations can opti-
mize the results as they are today.
3. Forecasts: Weekly for operations to schedule and plan, monthly to
review the business for the next 90 days to focus Sales, Marketing
and Operational initiatives.
4. Pace Reports: An analytical perspective of Rooms and Banquets to
see how we are “Pacing” to Budget, Forecast, and history. ˜e Pace
Report is a good indicator of anticipated pickup from this point in
time compared to what’s on the books. Will we make budget and if
not is there time to put a strategy in place to overcome the short fall.
To Do:
Build a Pace Report to answer this question:
As we enter Q4 will we make budget at year end? (Use history
to predict/forecast the future)
SUMMARY
SEEING FURTHER
Continued advancements in technology and
the use of algorithms will lead to the develop-
ment of tools which will advance the calculation
of time in the equation. These tools will suggest alternative dates, times
and function rooms moving ever further toward a holistic view of busi-
ness encompassing; Rooms, Space and F&B factoring in booking win-
dows. Function Space Optimization has and will continue to be a di˝cult
calculation taking into consideration all the factors we have discussed
thus far, but we are inching ever closer to a Revenue Management Sys-
tem that takes all aspects of revenue generation into account to produce
optimal results for a property.
The owner of a downtown property with a mix of business 70 percent
Transient/30 percent Group is ecstatic that his STR report shows him
leading in his Comp Set RevPAR. How can Function Space Optimization
help him?
Function Space Optimization 359
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: Is there ever a bad piece of business? What factors
should be considered when relating your properties needs to the
piece of business before you?
Question 2: The Group requires 20 breakout spaces with no F&B
but will generate $75,000 from a dinner and reception while only using 50 sleeping
rooms: is this a good piece of business?
Question 3: Catering has a $50,000 dinner for a Wednesday in October 5 months
away; should we take it?
APPLICATIONS
The Excelsior Hotel—Case Scenarios
Businesses to be Evaluated
Below are two REVMAX sheets which lay out the piece of business which
we must accept or turn down. All pertinent information is contained within
each sheet. ˜e challenge is for you to determine whether this business should
be bid on or turned down and why? °e Banquet Revenue, Group Banquet
Revenue Contribution and Rooms Only sections have been removed as to not
give the answer:
1) Business A: Orthopedic Summit: ˜is is a “Group” piece of busi-
ness e˝ectively selling out your property of both sleeping rooms and
function space as it layers over an existing piece of business. ˜e
booking window is long so there is plenty of time. Is this best choice
at this point of time?
2) Business B: Spin Council—Is a “Catering” piece of business using your
largest space. Space is wide open in October and your booking win-
dow is 6 months. No sleeping rooms are required and looking at your
Deÿnite line on the REVMAX sheet sleeping rooms are available.
Function Space Optimization 361
TEAM ACTIVITY
Let’s evaluate a piece of business. In this activity, divide the class into
the representative roles of a Sales organization.
As you review the business to decide to accept or not, ask each team to
provide their unique perspective of the business, and then as a team, make
the decision to accept or decline and why. ˜e Director of Sales and Direc-
tor of Revenue are the ultimate decision makers taking all the voiced per-
spectives into account ˜e ultimate goal of this team activity is to learn the
perspective of the other team members and the business opportunities they
represent. Ultimately, there is room for each sub segment in any Hotel. ˜e
key to the puzzle is balancing business, ÿnding the integrated day which
supports multiple sub segments maximizing the day’s opportunity and mar-
gin. ˜e lead roles of Director of Sales and Director of Revenue are to facil-
itate the conversation. ˜ey look to build consensus from the team, with
respect for each piece of business, and are ultimately ÿnal decision makers
of what is the optimum ÿt.
Business To Be Presented:
Engineering Alliance: ˜is Lead came into the property in February for May
of the same year arrival, with minimal sleeping rooms required. All perti-
nent information is contained in the REVMAX Sheet including the com-
ments section.
Team Perspectives
1. Group Sales Managers: Your responsibility is to book large volumes
of business for the current year as well as any future years. You are
responsible for generating both rooms and associated food and bev-
erage revealed through the Group Banquet Revenue Contribution.
You are always interested in multiple night patterns with open space
to layer in a base of business.
2. Catering Sales Managers: Your responsibility is to ÿll the gaps leˆ by
the Group and Small Meetings Sales Managers. Your main oppor-
tunity periods are evening and weekends. Your focus is food and
beverage top line revenue.
3. Small Meetings Sales Managers: Your goal is to ÿll gaps leˆ by the
Group Team who lays the base. You are looking for the best ÿt
with overall, high contribution. As in any yield strategy the short-
term bookings are usually the highest rated contributors providing
the best REVPAR and Group Banquet Revenue Contribution.
Function Space Optimization 363
(Remember the rule of thumb: Be the last to ÿll its always the highest
rated business) To this end, you always want to save some rooms and
space for the short-term meetings team.
4. Wedding Sales Managers: While not a role in every hotel the focus
of this specialist team is weekends and holiday periods driving room
nights, F&B revenue and ultimately proÿt.
5. Director of Sales: Your role is to balance the selling initiatives to
achieve the strategic sales strategy. You have to think “big picture”
always and keep the customers need in check with ownership objec-
tives while motivating the entire selling team to achieve top line rev-
enues.
6. Director of Revenue: Your role is optimization of the opportunity
presented while balancing the “big picture” perspective. Oˆen a
counter role to the Director of Sales in that this role focuses on net
operating proÿt as opposed to top line revenue. ˜is role does not
manage employees but manages the business principles of the orga-
nization.
INTERNET ACTIVITY
• Research your local Convention and Visitors Bureau
website to identify the role they play in both selling the
city as a destination and their role in the lead distribution
to hotels and facilities in their community.
GLOSSARY
Banquet event order (BEO) – Form generated by your Sales and
Catering system delivering detailed instructions to all oper-
ational teams in your organization.
Proÿt and loss statement (P&L) – ˜is ÿnancial statement details
the revenue, expenses, and proÿt (loss) generated during a
ÿxed period of time.
Revenue per available space or revenue per square foot (RevPAS) – ˜e
revenue generated on a square foot basis for a speciÿc period of time.
364 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REFERENCES
Kimes, S. E. (2011). ˜e future of hotel revenue management. Journal of Revenue
and Pricing Management, 10(1), 66-72.
Kimes, S. E., & McGuire, K. A. (2001). Function-space revenue management: a case
study from Singapore. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly,
42 (6), 33-46.
Kimes, S. E. & Renagan, L. M. (2011). ˜e role of space in revenue management.
In Revenue Management: A Practical Pricing Perspective; Yeoman, I., McMa-
hon-Beattie, U., Eds.; Palgrave and Macmillan: Basingstoke, pp 17–28.
CHAPTER 13
OVERVIEW
At its core, cruise line revenue management is similar to hotel revenue
management. Like his or her hotel revenue management counterpart, the
cruise line revenue manager’s job is to ÿll ships to capacity at the highest
prices available in the market. But consumers buy cruises very di°erently
than they buy hotel room nights; and commercial terms and practices vary
signiÿcantly between these two sectors of the hospitality industry. Cruise
line revenue managers are tasked with achieving exceedingly high capacity
utilization and have a vast array of tools at their disposal for meeting that
challenging objective.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Describe the cruise industry’s evolution from a narrow market niche for
wealthy travelers to a rapidly growing vacation alternative that appeals to
tens of millions of guests around the world
Di°erentiate between hotel revenue management and cruise line revenue
Explain the roles that those di°erences play in allowing cruise line revenue
managers to achieve full capacity utilization
Understand the key tools available for managing prices
Detail the types of strategic cruise line prices
Explain how cruise line revenue managers use discounted prices to stimu-
late demand
Be familiar with cruise line revenue management systems
367
368 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Cruise Industry Evolution
• Brief History
• Capacity Growth
• Ship Size/Amenities
• Internationalization of Passengers
• Worldwide Deployment
SO WHAT?
While cruise revenue managers and hotel revenue managers face
similar challenges, cruise line revenue managers operate in a very
different environment. Which aspects of the cruise line operating
environment are most different from the hotel operating environ-
ment? Why do you think those differences are so important?
Brief History
Around the same time, steamship lines also began to compete by try-
ing to outdo each other, and by laying claim to being ever more spacious,
luxurious, faster, and safer than any ship that had sailed before. Sadly, we
have all heard the tragic story of the doomed Titanic, which in 1912 with
capacity for 2200 guests and crew was the ill-fated wonder of ship building
engineering.
Since 1998, the world’s cruise ship capacity has increased 181 percent from
185K guest berths to 521K berths in 2018. Passenger growth has been even
more dramatic. In 1998, the Cruise Line Industry Association reported that
5.9 million people took a cruise. By 2017, that number had increased by 337
percent to 25.8 million. And as of 2018, there were 106 new cruise ships on
order, representing another 261,812 cruise berths.
During this period of rapid cruise industry growth, cruise ships them-
selves have undergone tremendous change. ˛ey have gotten much bigger,
and with the increased guest capacity has come a host of new onboard ven-
ues and amenities.
Internationalization of Passengers
In the early days, cruising appealed to a narrow market segment. Most guests
were older, retired North Americans and Brits. Today, cruising attracts
guests from virtually every major demographic including its traditional base
of older retirees, but also families with children, baby boomers, time-press-
ing young professionals, spring breakers, and honeymooners. And cruising
has expanded its reach far beyond North America and the U.K. ˛e appeal
of cruising has spread throughout the European continent. ˛e number of
Europeans cruising has increased 155 percent from 2.7 million in 2003 to
6.9 million in 2017. Today, guests from emerging markets in Asia represent
the fasting growth segment of cruisers. In fact, some industry forecasters
predict that China will soon become the world’s second largest cruise mar-
ket.
Worldwide Deployment
As cruise lines’ ˝eets have expanded to include more ships and as their guest
sourcing has spread to more international markets, ship deployment has
expanded as well. In cruising’s early days, most ships were deployed in the
Caribbean calling on ports in the Bahamas, San Juan, Jamaica, Mexico, and
the U.S. and British Virgin Islands. But cruising soon expanded to summer
deployments in Alaska and the Mediterranean with port calls in cities like
372 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Based on all of this expansion and growth, it is clear that with more
than $40 billion in annual ticket and onboard revenue, the worldwide cruise
industry o˙ers ample challenges for revenue management professionals.
THINK HISTORICALLY
In the mid-1900s, the passenger shipping industry was virtually wiped
out by two things: (1) Changes to immigration laws that dramatically
curtailed the ˝ow of people from Europe to the United States and (2)
the advent of commercial ˝ights across the Atlantic Ocean, which were
dramatically faster and cheaper than crossings by ship. What threats do
you see, if any, to the modern day cruise industry? What steps should
cruise lines be taking to mitigate these threats?
˛ere are many di˙erences between hotel and cruise line revenue manage-
ment, which will be explained in detail below. But fundamentally, the reve-
nue management principles are the same.
Question to Consider #1
Cruise durations are ÿxed, so cruise line revenue managers do not have to
cope with uncertain arrival and departure dates and signiÿcantly varying
demand between weekdays and weekend days.
Cruises vary in length from 3-day weekend vacations that depart on Fri-
day and return on Monday to 120-day around the world cruises that leave
in January and return in April. ˛e most common cruise length is 7 days,
which ÿts well with most people’s vacation plans, although 10-, 11- and
14-day cruises are also common.
While cruise lengths vary, any given cruise has a ÿxed duration with
a discrete start and end. All guests arrive on the same day to embark the
ship and they all leave the ship on the same debarkation day. From an
operational perspective, embarkation and debarkation days are known as
“turnaround” days. In the morning, guests leave from the cruise that is just
ending. In the a°ernoon, new guests embark a sparkling clean ship that has
just been prepared by the housekeeping sta˙ for a new cruise. Cruise ships
remain in-service at all times, other than during mandatory maintenance
periods every other year.
Cruise line booking terms vary signiÿcantly from hotels. Cruise line book-
ing processes typically follows these steps:
At the end of the option period, guests are required to pay a deposit.
In most cases, the deposit is fully refundable in the event of cancellation
long before the cruise departure date. Some cruise lines, however, assess an
administration fee in the event of cancellation. Once guests make a ÿnancial
commitment to their reservation, the cancellation rate is low, typically less
than 10 or 12 percent.
As the departure date approaches, full payment becomes due. Due dates
for full payment vary by cruise length, with longer cruises requiring full
payment earlier than shorter cruises. For a 7-night cruise, ÿnal payments are
typically due 60–75 days prior to departure.
who cancel at 30 days typically pay a penalty of 75 percent. Guests who can-
cel within 14 days are likely to lose the entire cost of their cruise.
In this way, a cruise will o°en sail with more guests than the ship’s dou-
ble occupancy capacity. So, by industry convention, a cruise line’s occu-
pancy rate can be more than 100 percent. If a ship with a double occupancy
capacity of 3000 is carrying 3150 guests due to family and friends travel-
ing in third and fourth berths, the occupancy for the cruise is 105 percent,
which is calculated as 3150 total guests divided by the ship’s 3000-person
double occupancy capacity. Furthermore, when one person is in a cabin, it
is counted at 50 percent occupancy, which somewhat o˙sets the impact of
thirds and fourths.
For these reasons, cruise pricing is expressed on a per person basis, not
on a per cabin basis. Also, since cruises are sold in their entirety, not per
night, cruise pricing is expressed on a per person per cruise basis. (Note:
While some people in other industries may well question cruise line occu-
pancy calculations, what’s re˝ected in this textbook chapter is consistent
with industry practices, including SEC ÿlings among the public companies,
including Carnival, Royal Caribbean, and NCL).
Hotels are ÿxed in a certain spot and are forever tied to the seasonal demand
patterns of their location. Cruise ships, on the other hand, are able to move.
So they tend to follow the good weather, which minimizes their days spent
operating in an o˙-season during which pricing and/or occupancy would
otherwise be particularly low.
Wave Season
In the months leading into the Wave season, cruise line revenue manag-
ers are able to clearly read the demand characteristics of each departure for
the coming calendar year. Cruise pricing and inventory control settings are
ÿne-tuned accordingly. But more importantly, strong promotional o˙ers are
launched into the general marketplace, supported by millions of dollars of
advertising spend and signiÿcant support from the sales department and its
distribution channels.
By the end of March, when the Wave season is over, cruise lines have
typically booked 85 percent or more of their revenue goals for the current
calendar year. As such, when Wave season is over, cruise line revenue man-
agement departments begin to turn most of their attention to the following
calendar year.
Cruise Line Revenue Management 381
Cruises have a ÿxed start date and end date. Cruise guests must book an
entire cruise. So there are no broken room nights caused by a mismatch of
arrivals and departures.
Ships are deployed in a way that maximizes demand throughout the year
and repositioning cruises are kept to a minimum. So there is never a time at
which full occupancy is not possible.
For all of these reasons, cruise line revenue managers are able to achieve
occupancies unlike any other sector of the travel industry. One measure of
excellence among cruise line revenue managers is a propensity to sail with-
out a single empty cabin. In fact, the most successful cruise line revenue
managers have a credo: “Zero tolerance for empty cabins.”
382 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Source: Annual reports for Carnival Corporation, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.,
and Norwegian Cruise Holdings.
In order to support their full ship mentality, cruise lines have built signiÿ-
cant passenger sourcing infrastructure and they have also conÿgured their
Cruise Line Revenue Management 383
ships with revenue optimization in mind. Both factors are key tools used by
revenue managers.
Cruise lines have saleforces that establish deep and broad relationships with
individual travel agencies and travel agency consortia around the world. ˛e
major cruise lines have a signiÿcant sales presence in all of the important
global cruise markets. Even small cruise lines typically maintain salesforces
in their main domestic market as well as one or two additional international
markets.
Customer Databases
Ship Confguration
Cruise ship cabin conÿgurations are designed to maximize the total units
of demand while at the same time capturing maximum value from di˙er-
ent cruise customers’ willingness to pay. A cruise ship can have up to 30
di˙erent cabin categories ranging from small, windowless rooms on low
decks to expansive, multi-level suites on upper decks. Prices for a 7-day
cruise could easily vary across these cabins categories by 785 percent, from
a low of $949 per person to a high of $8399 per person, with many price
points in between. In this way, cruise line revenue managers are able to
use a single cruise ship to appeal to a wide array of guest demograph-
ics, from value-oriented vacationers on a relatively tight budget, to luxury
and high-end amenity seeking guests at the opposite end of the willing-
ness-to-pay spectrum. A revenue-maximizing cruise ship is broken down
into six major cabin categories, each aimed at a distinct willingness-to-pay
guest segment:
Balcony Standard size cabins, with a sliding glass door that opens onto a
private balcony overlooking the ocean. Most cabins on modern
cruise ships fall into this category.
Premium Balcony Same as standard balcony cabins, but with upgraded amenities
such privileged access to the Spa or concierge services.
Super Suite Very large cabins, sometimes as much as 1500 square feet or
more. Include all of the features of standard suits plus butler
service, in-room dining rooms, multiple bedrooms and bathrooms,
huge wraparound balconies and state-of-the-art entertainment
systems.
386 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Question to Consider #2
Ship 1 Ship 2
Number of Per Person Number of Per Person
Cabins Price Cabins Price
Suites 50 $1,499 150 $1,349
Balconies 500 $1,199 500 $1,199
Window 100 $999 50 $1,049
No Window 100 $899 50 $949
˛ere are two basic types of cruise line pricing: strategic and tactical. Strate-
gic cruise pricing refers to the prices that are set-up when a cruise is opened
for sale in the reservations system, typically 18-months prior to departure.
Tactical pricing refers to price adjustments and promotional o˙ers that are
implemented in response to actual booking patterns.
When cruises are opened for sale, cruise line revenue managers publish
a comprehensive set of prices for all cabin categories. ˛at set of prices typ-
ically includes the following:
Cruise Line Revenue Management 389
Brochure Cruise line brochure rates are like the MSRP of a car.
No one pays this price, but it is used to establish a
reference price against which discounts are positioned.
Not all cruise lines use brochure rates.
Group – Meeting & Incentive Meeting and Incentive groups are also an important
part of a cruise line’s total guest mix. Because these
groups tend to be bigger than promotional groups and
because they tend to have different requirements for
onboard services, these groups are priced separately.
Charter Small cruise ships with fewer than 750 beds are often
chartered for meeting and incentive programs. For
these ships, its typical for cruise line revenue managers
to provide the sales force with rates for full ship
charters.
390 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Once a cruise season has been opened for sale and the strategic pricing
has been launched, cruise line revenue managers begin to track the pace
of bookings relative to expected booking patterns. ˛ese booking patterns
are tracked in a detailed manner and are discretely measured across cabin
categories on the ship, across customer segments in the market place and
across geographic sectors of the distribution channel. As the actual booking
pace begins to vary from expectations, cruise line revenue managers begin
to adjust prices accordingly.
Stronger than expected demand scenarios put cruise line revenue man-
agers in the catbird seat. With 100 percent occupancy assured, they can shi°
the guest mix away from lower priced segments and increase rates in core
markets. In this case, cruise line revenue managers raise prices in order to
guard against spilling demand which would otherwise exceed supply.
1. Aimed at the right part of the ship: Cruise line revenue managers pay
careful attention to which cabin categories need promotional sup-
port. If the suites are on pace to sell-out, for example, any promo-
tions should exclude suite categories.
2. Targeted to an underperforming customer segment: When possible,
it is better to stimulate demand among weak performing customer
segments. If that approach fails, a cruise line revenue manager may
have no choice but to further stimulate demand among customer
segments that are already performing as expected.
3. Targeted to an underperforming sector of the distribution channel:
Sometimes a particular travel agency consortium is underperform-
ing. In these cases, it may make sense to o˙er special sales incentives
to steal share from other cruise line alternatives.
4. Discounted enough to stimulate suˆcient demand without giving
away more than necessary: Cruise line revenue managers rely on
price elasticity models and assumptions about price/demand rela-
tionships to determine the level of discounting necessary to stimu-
late just the right about of additional demand.
5. Compelling and easy to communicate: In order to successfully stim-
ulate demand, cruise line promotions must be easy to understand
and o˙er a compelling reason to book. Many cruise lines accomplish
this by using high brochure prices to o˙er a Two-for-One deal, which
is a very e˙ective promotional tool. In other cases, cruise lines o˙er
additional amenities for free, such as free airfare, free hotel nights
before or a°er the cruise, or free drinks onboard.
Pricing Constraints
But the social milieu on a cruise ship is quite di˙erent. Strangers meet
over dinner, at the card tables in the casino, in the bars and during a vari-
ety of group activities around the pool or during shore excursions. It is not
unusual for people to talk about how much they paid for their cruise.
REAL PEOPLE 1
If you were a cruise line revenue manager, would you have adopted the
same approach?
˛e best cruise line revenue managers address weak demand scenarios early,
as soon as booking patterns begin to vary from expectations. Otherwise,
they may be le° with too much space to sell too close to departure, when
cruise lines and other travel companies dump their space in a panic. Because
cruises are typically sold to leisure travelers who make their vacation plans
far from departure, there is relatively little natural demand for cruises within
30 days of departure. At that point, any unsold cabins are considered at risk
of sailing empty, with the corresponding lost ticket and onboard revenues.
˛erefore, cruise lines that are caught with too much space close to depar-
ture o˙er highly distressed prices in order to assure 100 percent occupancy,
even at very low APDs. ˛e problem has become so bad that senior man-
agement at one cruise line issued an outright ban on discounting within
30-days of departure.
394 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
REAL PEOPLE 2
If you were a cruise line revenue manager, would you have adopted the
same approach?
In the early days of the cruising, there were no computerized systems. Cus-
tomer service agents on roller skates would manually update customer
reservations in berthing books. Years later, when cruise line revenue man-
agement practices ÿrst started to take hold, revenue managers would go
from meeting to meeting carrying reams of paper reports and use rulers to
keep track of rows and columns of numbers that spanned the full width of
legal-sized paper.
˛ere are still vestiges of those old paper-based reports, but most large
cruise lines have installed computerized revenue management systems that
use high-level mathematics to forecast demand, gauge consumers’ price
elasticity, and recommend optimal prices and upgrade limits.
CONCLUSION
It is true that the airline, car rental, and hotel industries are much big-
ger than the cruise industry and o˙er many more potential jobs for travel
industry revenue management professionals. But with its unique charac-
teristics and drive for 100 percent occupancy, the cruise industry o˙ers an
exciting opportunity for revenue management professionals looking to be
challenged and willing to assume important leadership roles within their
companies.
SEEING FURTHER
The sophistication of cruise line revenue man-
agement has increased as the business has
grown. Today, all major cruise lines use predic-
tive demand modeling and revenue optimization models to support
decision making about price and inventory settings. But cruise line rev-
enue management continues to be used primarily as a tactical method
to manage the physical inventory of cabins and determines things
such as the number of cabins to sell at a given price and when to open
and close prices.
Some revenue management departments in other hospitality sectors
are taking a more customer-centric approach and are using strategies
and promotions to maximize the lifetime value of a customer and are
blending both ticket revenues and onboard revenues.
What are some of the ways that you think cruise line revenue managers
could leverage the data in their CRM systems to increase cruise line
proÿtability?
396 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1) With the cruise industry continuing to grow, more and more
cruise lines are diving into the hot market of Asia, more
speciÿcally China. The Chinese government is predicting that
by the year 2020, the cruise tra˛c in China will amount to 4.5
million passengers (Forbes). What do you think makes cruising so popular in Asia?
How does cruising in Asia compare to cruising in others parts of the world, such
as Europe, the Caribbean, and Alaska?
2) In order to stay a˝oat in the competitive cruising industry, Norwegian Cruise Line
plans to spend $400 million to build new ships and improve older ones (Skift).
With the introduction of the Norwegian Edge program, ships from the company’s
extensive ˝eet are going to be modernized and improved upon. What areas do
you think the company should focus allocating that money when improving their
ships? Which will be the most proÿtable and set the cruise line apart from others?
3) Which types of cruises are the most expensive for customers yet still generate the
highest demand?
APPLICATIONS
Application 1
Ohio Arizona
Current Cruise Price $1299 $1299
Current Air Price $499 $599
Air Cost $350 $475
Commission Rate 15% 15%
In your analysis, you should assume that all the promotional options
will generate the incremental 100 guests required to ÿll the sailing. Be sure
to consider air costs and commissions on both cruise fares and air add-ons.
Application 2
Isabel Alonzo has been asked by the owner of a small-ship cruise line to help
decide whether the line should build a new ship. ˛e owner has asked Isabel
to consider the following questions:
1. Where should the ship be deployed?
2. How many suites and super-suites should the ship carry?
3. What pricing can the company expect?
4. How would the pricing of other ships already in the ˝eet be impacted?
5. What types of investments would the company have to make in marketing
and sales infrastructure to ÿll the additional, new capacity?
Yields by itinerary?
Prices by cabin category?
Premium pricing that can be achieved on new ships versus older ships?
Size of the company’s past passenger database?
Potential to grow the company’s traditionally strong guest sourcing mar-
kets? Opportunities to expand into new guest sourcing markets?
For this exercise, formulate how you would approach such an analysis
and discuss how the ÿndings would in˝uence your recommendations.
TEAM ACTIVITY
tion? Why or why not? If not, what would you propose as an alternative and
why?
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Using the Internet, study the types of promotions that are in use
at three or four cruise companies. Separate the promotions into
two categories: Value Add and Dollars/Percent discount.
What is similar between the two examples? What are the signiÿcant dif-
ferences? Which do you believe would work better and why?
GLOSSARY
ALBDs – Abbreviation for available lower berth days, which is
the measure of cruise capacity. Some cruise lines refer to PGCDs,
which means potential guest cruise days.
APD – Abbreviation for average per diem, which is the net ticket
revenue divided by the number of days in the cruise. Some cruise
lines refer to NPD, net per diem, which is the same statistic.
Cabin categories – Cruise ship cabins have di˙erent physical attributes and/
or di˙erent locations on a ship. Similar cabin types are grouped into
the same cabin category and sold at the same price.
Cancellation penalties – Fees assessed in the event that a cruise is canceled
a°er the full payment due date.
Crew – ˛e cruise ship sta˙ is referred to as crew. ˛is includes hotel oper-
ations sta˙ who serve the guests and marine and technical sta˙ who
operate and maintain the ship.
Cruise berths - Beds on a cruise ship are referred to as berths. ˛e ÿrst two
beds in a cabin are referred to as lower berths. ˛e third and fourth
beds are referred to as upper berths.
Cruise length – ˛e number of days in a cruise.
Cruise Line Revenue Management 399
Debarkation day – ˛e date the cruise arrives at its ÿnal port of call and
passengers leave the ship.
Departure date – ˛e date the cruise departs from its ÿrst port. Also
referred to as embarkation date.
Deposit – ˛e payment required to hold a reservation. Can range from
$500 to $1,000 dollars or more.
Dilution – ˛e amount of a refund given to a guest who converts to a tacti-
cal promotion a°er having already booked at a higher fare.
Double occupancy capacity – By cruise industry convention, each cabin has
a capacity of two guests (a small percentage of cabins are designed
for single guests) and a double occupancy capacity of 2. If that cabin
carries a third guest, its occupancy is 150% (3 divided by 2.) If that
cabin carries four guests, its occupancy is 200% (4 divided 2.) In this
way, cruise ship occupancy typically exceeds 100%.
Embark – To board a ship.
Full payment date – ˛e date the full payment for the cruise is due, typically
30 days or more before the start of the cruise.
Full ship mentality – Cruise line revenue managers are expected to sell
every cabin on a ship prior to the departure date. ˛is is a cultural
imperative at the most successful cruise lines.
Itineraries – ˛e cruise region and the ports of call during the cruise.
Leisure travelers – People traveling as part of a personal vacation without a
business purpose. Leisure travelers tend to be more price sensitive
than business travelers and tend to book further in advance.
Lifeboat seats – By law, a cruise ship must carry lifeboats with enough seats
for every person onboard the ship, including both guests and crew
members.
Net onboard revenue – Onboard revenue a°er deducting the cost of goods
sold.
Net ticket revenue -- Ticket revenue a°er deducting travel agent commis-
sion or other direct sales costs (such as airfare for air-inclusive tick-
ets.)
400 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Travel agent commission – Roughly 65% of cruises are sold through travel
agents who earn commissions ranging from 10% to 20% of Ticket
Revenue.
Two-for-One – ˛e most e˙ective cruise line promotion is o˙ering two for
the price of one. Some cruise lines purposely set their brochure rates
high enough so they are willing to accept that fare for the ÿrst guest
and no fare at all for the second guest.
Year-round itineraries – Some cruise ships are deployed on the same itin-
erary year round, o°en in the Caribbean.
Yield – ˛e most important revenue management statistic in the cruise
industry. Yield can be calculated two ways: 1) Average per diem
times occupancy percentage, and 2) net ticket revenue divided by
ALBDs. But equations give the same result.
REFERENCES
Anonymous, PR Newswire. (2010). CLIA’s 35th Anniversary Puts Spotlight on
Remarkable Story of Growth & Evolution of Cruise Industry: History of
Industry’s Leading Trade Association Parallels Dramatic Transformation of
Cruising, Cruise Ships, Consumer Expectations. Proquest. Fort Lauderdale.
Biehn, N. (2006). A Cruise Ship Is Not a Floating Hotel. Journal of Revenue and
Pricing Management, 5(2), 135-142.
Cruise Lines International Association: Press Releases. (2005). Strong 3rd Quar-
ter Passenger Growth Extends 2005 Trend for CLIA-Member Cruise Lines.
Cruise Lines International Association. New York.
Cruise Lines International Association: Press Releases. (2006). Cruise Industry
Reports Double-Digit Growth in Second Quarter 2006. Cruise Lines Interna-
tional Association. New York.
Cruise Lines International Association: Press Releases. (2009). ˛e State of the
Cruise Industry in 2009: Well-Positioned for Challenging Times. Cruise Lines
International Association. Fort Lauderdale.
Cullen, K. (2015). ˜e evolving dynamics of revenue management. A Comprehensive
Revenue Optimization Road Map for Hotel Owners, Operators and Practition-
ers. HSMAI Foundation.
Garin, K. A. (2006). Devils on the Deep Blue Sea. ˜e Dreams, Schemes and Show-
downs ˜at Built America’s Cruise-Ship Empires. New York, NY: Penguin.
Green, M. (2015). CLIA Reports on Cruise Trends for 2015. Travel Age West. North-
star Travel Media Group.
402 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Lieberman, W. (2012). Pricing in the Cruise Line Industry. In Ö. Özer & R. Phillips
(Eds.), ˜e Oxford Handbook of Pricing Management; ; Oxford, UK: Oxford
University Press, 199-216.
Maddah, B., Moussawi-Haidar, L., El-Taha, M., & Rida, H. (2010). Dynamic
Cruise Ship Revenue Management. European Journal of Operational Research,
207, 445–455.
Mathisen, O. (2012). State of the Industry Report. Cruise Industry News. New York.
More, R. (2015). Why Holiday cruises are more expensive. Examiner.com.
Royal Caribbean International Company Brochure. (2008). Independence of the
Seas.
Sampson, H. (2016, January 22). To Get an Edge on Competition Norwegian Cruise
Plans to Spend $400 Million. Ski°.com.
Scott, L. & Ramdeen C. (2013). Cruise Ship Itineraries and Occupancy Rates.
Tourism Management, 34, 236–237.
Selby, D. (2013) Revenue Management in the Cruising Industry. In P. Legohérel,
E. Poutier, E. & A. Fyall, A. (Eds.), Revenue Management for Hospitality and
Tourism; ; Woodeaton, Oxford: Goodfellow Publishers Limited, pp. 157–168.
Shao, H. (2014). Fast Sailing: China’s Cruise Market to Become World’s Second
Largest by 2017. Forbes Asia.
Sun, X.; Jiao, Y., & Tian, P. (2011) Marketing Research and Revenue Optimization
for the Cruise Industry: A Concise Review. International Journal of Hospital-
ity Management, 30, 746-755.
Toh, R., Rivers M., & Ling T. (2005). Room Occupancies: Cruise Lines Out-Do the
Hotels. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 24, 121-135.
CHAPTER 14
OVERVIEW
Over the last decade, the hospitality industry realized that revenue managers
cannot solely focus on room pricing and inventory management. Long gone
are the days when guests were assigned a monetary value solely based on a
room rate. A more holistic approach needs to be taken and all revenue streams
per guest should be considered to truly drive total hotel proÿt instead of just
room’s revenue. Improvements in technology are enabling revenue managers
to measure the overall guest spend and guide the sales and marketing
team to attract these high-value segments to the hotel. This new revenue
management branch is called total revenue management (TRM).
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Explain the key foundations of TRM
Identify the di°erent RM time-based metricize used to measure auxiliary
revenue performance
Describe and implement a revenue management strategy to a nonroom
outlet
Perform calculations to evaluate which business is most proÿtable based
on TRM
Combine all outlet revenue management strategies into a holistic TRM
approach
Apply a framework to implement a successful TRM strategy
Discuss the opportunities and future of TRM
403
404 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
Demand Forecasting
Price Optimization
• Casinos
• Customer Segmentation
• Demand Forecasting
• Pricing
• Groups
• Pricing Strategy
Displacement Analysis
• Catering
Creative RM Strategy
Future Opportunities for TRM
Discussion Questions and Applications
Total Revenue Management 405
INTRODUCTION
In the past, revenue management (RM) was solely focused on room’s reve-
nue being the most important factor in maximizing proÿt. Most methods
that were used in order to optimize business mix looked only at room rev-
enue and occasionally food and beverage in the decision-making process.
Customers who were willing to pay a higher room rate were considered
the hotel’s “best” guests. ˜is meant that the optimization of other reve-
nue streams was overlooked or little focus was placed on sources such as
restaurants, spas, or golf courses in the optimization decision. Only in the
last couple of years has total revenue management come to the forefront
of incorporating all guest spend at non-room outlets into a comprehensive
strategy. Even though more hotels are adopting such a comprehensive RM
model the industry is slow to keep up with such changes due to the avail-
ability or cleanliness of data. ˜ere is also not a clear uniÿed measurement
to compare a hotel’s performance against its competitive set.
SO WHAT?
Due to the success of revenue management being applied to hotel
rooms, expanding the horizon into other revenue-generating areas
is the next opportunity. How do you think competitive analysis and
benchmarking tools need to evolve in order to keep up with such
trends?
TRM is the holy grail of RM. It shines a light on what is possible when a
hotel focuses on optimizing revenue on all levels instead of just the room’s
department. When implemented e˛ciently, TRM takes into account all
possible guest revenue-generating streams and enables revenue managers to
drive the highest overall hotel proÿt.
TRM strategy relies heavily on the mix of business that the hotel is
receiving and making sure that the correct segments are being attracted.
TRM decisions need to involve the sales and marketing teams so that they
are targeting the most proÿtable segments. A revenue management culture
needs to be instilled in all the outlets of the hotel so that every employee
is dedicated on the proÿtability of the entire operation. ˜is is critical for
implementing a successful TRM strategy. ˜is chapter will focus on how
RM tactics can be implemented at various non-room outlets. It will then
look at combining the outlets’ RM strategies into a holistic TRM framework
and what is required to be successful in the long run. Finally, it will look
at the future of TRM and where the boundaries can be pushed to generate
higher proÿts.
such as golf and spa. However, very few have combined these individual
outlets’ revenue strategies with a TRM framework. It is no longer enough
to simply approach local revenue optimization on an outlet level to make
granular decisions. On a customer level, a more holistic method is necessary
to better understand the impact of total guest spending on the hotel’s overall
proÿt.
˜ere are four key pieces for implementing a successful strategic TRM
framework.
1. Outlet Level Optimization
2. Guest level revenue management
3. Proÿt focus
4. Total revenue management ICEing
Here are the steps adapted from McGuire (2016) that can assist in imple-
menting revenue management strategy for any untapped outlet.
1. Know the existing theory and metrics
2. Roadmap for new outlets
3. Recognize “immediate wins”
408 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Each stage is very unique and has its own objective with a focus on an
outlet TRM revenue framework. Working through each of these steps will
help hotels implement a revenue management strategy and drive incremen-
tal revenue. Once implemented, it can then be integrated with a customer
level optimization for a holistic TRM strategy.
˜e following will outline some of the key theories, best practices, and met-
rics for implementing a revenue management strategy for most common
hotel outlets. ˜ese are ready to go RM tactics that can immediately be
implemented on an outlet level.
Spas
Many hotels and resorts have spas that are considered a key auxiliary revenue
generator. However, it is very rare that spa revenue management techniques
are implemented. ˜is is mainly due to the fact of how spas currently mea-
sure their performance and view their sales. Reconÿguring some of these
metricize allows spas to implement a successful RM framework that can
then be incorporated into a TRM strategy. A TRM strategy not just enables
the spa to maximize its own outlet revenues but makes sure that customers
that are visiting the spa are the most proÿtable for the hotel.
Spa Characteristics
Spas are very similar to hotels and have all ÿve characteristics for a suc-
cessful revenue management strategy to be implemented (Kimes, 2009).
˜e number of spa treatment rooms and therapists are considered a ÿxed
capacity. ˜e building’s physical limitations cause a natural constrain and
all rooms might not be available due to a specialized therapist not being
on duty. Demand is highly variable by time, causing some periods to be
busier than others. Urban spas can be signiÿcantly busier over Saturdays
whilst midweek could be much quieter. Customers can also be segmented
easily. For example, a segment could be a leisure day user living nearby the
spa. Such a customer would be available to visit the spa any time of the day,
Total Revenue Management 409
in contrast to a corporate guest who has limited time allocated during the
day for a spa visit. Most spas demonstrate high ÿxed costs and low variable
costs. Facilities and in some cases salaried therapists are also considered
ÿxed costs. In most cases spas usually would need to make enough revenue
to cover their variable costs and at least a portion of their ÿxed costs.
Spa operators, in general, look at cost and revenue for any given month
but ignore the time factor in the equation. Kimes suggests that a spa inven-
tory should be considered only the actual time the treatment rooms are
available for treatment (both room and therapist) instead of just the physical
rooms or therapists. If the capacity of the spa is not fully occupied at any
given moment it is lost forever. ˜e best way to measure spa e˝ectiveness
is to look at the revenue or contribution per available treatment hour
(RevPATH). ˜is measurement not just focuses on volume of sales (aver-
age customer expenditure) but also incorporates a time-related revenue fac-
tor (occupancy). RevPATH can be calculated by multiplying the treatment
room occupancy by the average treatment-related expenditure per person.
It can also be calculated by dividing revenue for a speciÿc time period by the
number of treatment hours available to the same time frame (Kimes, 2009).
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
A spa has ÿve treatment rooms that on Tuesday between the hours of
1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. make $755 in revenue. Calculate their RevPATH
for the spa over the given time frame. What would you say to the own-
ers when asked how the spa is performing in the market if you know
that other spas have a RevPATH of $73?
Spa Optimization
By analyzing RevPATH and looking at low and peak demand periods a spa
revenue management strategy can be developed. ˜e two revenue manage-
ment levers that can be implemented are time management and price man-
agement (Kimes, 2009).
Time management is the ÿrst lever that has to do with controlling the
customers’ time at the spa. Spas sell a ÿxed time slot for each treatment with
a deÿned duration. ˜e easiest way for spas to manage time is to vary the
410 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
treatment lengths being o˝ered from the standard 1-h treatment to treat-
ments ranging from 30 to 90 min. However, guests are actually buying an
“experience” and not just a time slot. Hence there needs to be a ÿne-line
in managing the duration of the guests’ stay without inhibiting their expe-
rience. Even though this can be sometimes di˛cult, the primary driver to
controlling the time slot is making sure that the treatment can be completed
in the allocated time frame. By training therapists and setting up various
cues for the guests, such as chiming of a bell or o˝ering a beverage to indi-
cate that the service is over, helps in managing the allocated treatment time.
Also, looking at ways to reduce the changeover between treatments can
allow spas to schedule more appointments resulting in increased revenue.
During low demand periods, spas need to focus on attracting more cus-
tomers. ˜is can be done by o˝ering special priced treatments to attract
customers that are available to ÿll the gaps.
Price management is the second lever that has to do with o˝ering dif-
ferential pricing based on the level of demand at the spa. Typical hotels and
airlines o˝er di˝erential pricing to their guests based on the demand levels
and are o˙en fenced. Spas on the other hand, in general, tend to o˝er the
same price regardless of customer demand or segment without any real rate
fences. ˜ere might be a peak and o˝-peak pricing structure at some spas
but it is not fully integrated into a maximizing RevPATH strategy. Imple-
menting rate fences, such as room location, view, time of day/week, or length
of treatment, can help build a strong revenue management strategy to help
drive the highest margin business at peak times. At the same time, steps also
need to be taken to entice demand to be generated over slow periods. ˜is is
usually done with discounting such as a two for one o˝er, reduced premium
Total Revenue Management 411
Golf Courses
Golf Characteristics
inventory and cannot be resold or kept for another day; if they are unsold
they disappear. ˜ere are only a limited number of tee times that a golf course
can accommodate on a given day. Due to the ˆow of the game tee times need
to be spaced out so that players do not impede other players ahead or behind
them. Capacity restrictions are due to the size of the golf course, numbers of
holes, and the hours of operation. Golf courses vary highly in size and can
range anywhere from 9 to 36 holes. Most typical golf courses are around 18
holes. Customer price sensitivity can be based on various demand periods
due to seasonality, day of the week, and even time of the day. Less price-sen-
sitive players are willing to pay premium rates to play during high demand
periods (for example early in the morning on the weekends), whereas more
price-sensitive players might wait for later in the day and potentially mid-
week or leverage potential discounted o˝ered. Golf courses also have a high
ÿxed cost due to turf and clubhouse maintenance but a low variable cost as
the impact of selling one additional tee time is relatively minimal.
Demand Forecasting
One of the challenges golf courses face is to accurately forecast demand since
customers make tee time reservations through di˝erent channels, whether
online or in-person and for di˝erent size parties. ˜ere is a maximum of 4
players per tee time and golf courses need to ÿnd the best way to combine
2 and 2 players or 3 and 1 players to ÿll the entire spot. If players prefer to
claim the entire tee time over peak periods and are less than 4, then the golf
course should charge a higher price to account for the potential displace-
ment from that time slot. ˜e following is a list of items that need to be
considered when forecasting demand for a golf course:
• Day of the week, weekday/weekend
• Time of the day
Total Revenue Management 413
• Weather
• Size of party (1–4)
• Booking lead time
• Season
• Player skill level
• Member versus visitor
Price Optimization
As with all other revenue management areas the key is to determine what is
the best price to charge customers during peak and o˝-peak times to max-
imize revenue. Since we have determined when customers are booking and
their patterns, a systematic pricing structure needs to be implemented based
on the demand periods and the price elasticity of demand. One method that
is suggested which simpliÿes pricing structures is to o˝er a base rate and
adjust it with addition or multiplication o˝sets depending on the selected
variable options (Pekung et al, 2013). For example, multiply the base rate for
a single player by a demand period multiplier and by the number of players
within the party (base rate × 1.2 peak period multiplier × 2 players = 2 player
pricing over peak period). ˜is sort of pricing would mainly be used for vis-
itor pricing as member pricing is usually ÿxed. Member demand also needs
to be taken into consideration as it has an impact on capacity. Pricing also
needs to be in conjunction with continuous monitoring of competitor pric-
ing to remain market centric. As within the hospitality industry customers
are savvier and are easily able to benchmark your pricing vs the competition
using the Internet.
One pitfall that needs to be addressed is the fact that the duration of
a game of golf is highly unpredictable (Kimes, 2000). Within the hotel or
airline world guests clearly purchase a deÿned time frame of utilization.
Guests stay for a set number of nights or use the seat for a predeÿned time
414 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
until they arrive at their destination. Whereas, golfers book a round of golf
with no time restriction and can play as long as they wish until the round
is completed. ˜is puts some uncertainty into booking tee time frequency
and causes delays. ˜erefore, even though theoretically it might make sense
to schedule more tee times to generate more revenue due to slow play, all
scheduled players might not be accommodated (Kimes & Schruben, 2002).
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Your golf course has a RevPATT of $89. The neighboring golf course
down the street has a RevPATT of $103. Calculate your RevPATT index.
What does it mean if you had a -4 percent index change year over year?
What if the change was 3 percent?
Casinos
Casinos are a perfect example of where TRM can be e˝ectively used. Large
casinos such as the ones in Las Vegas have a variety of revenue streams such
as restaurants, bars, and night clubs as well as the main source of income the
casino itself. Most guests that gamble are part of a casino loyalty program
that allows casinos to collect highly valuable customer data. Casinos need
to make sure that they use this data to establish three key pillars: customer
segmentation, demand forecasting, and strategic pricing. With these pillars
combined the value of a guest can be calculated and TRM can be imple-
mented.
Customer Segmentation
All of these segments are linked by one metric which is the theoretical
win or “theo.” ˜e theo is calculated by multiplying the coin-in amount by
the hold percentage. ˜e coin-in amount is the total money spent by a cus-
tomer on a given occasion. ˜e hold percentage is the probability that the
casino will win a speciÿc play. For example, if the coin-in from a customer
is $10 and the slot machine is programed to return $7 to the customer on
average then the hold percentage is 30 percent. ˜e average theo of all games
played by the customer over a given period is called the average daily the-
416 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
oretical (ADT). ˜is value can also be supplemented with a more holistic
spend that incorporates all revenue streams of the casino and not just ˆoor
spend. Basically, the higher the ADT of a customer the more valuable they
are to the casino as they spend more.
THINK HISTORICALLY
Harrah’s Entertainment is currently one of the leaders in casino loy-
alty program or so-called “slot club.” Even though these loyalty pro-
grams have grown popular over the last 30 years they were met with
some resistance when casinos tried to pioneer such programs in the
80’s. Casino managers claimed that these programs were creating bar-
riers between casinos and their guest’s individual needs. Fred Kiser,
Vice President of Marketing for Becker Gaming’s Arizona Charlie’s
brand, at the time remarked, “They don’t keep coming back to us
for slot clubs, we don’t have one. They like the personal attention ...
We don’t have to put them in a computer and turn them down for a
complimentary show or restaurant because they missed the number
of points needed for that day. This happens in other places” (Pledger,
1994).
Why do you think not adopting a “slot club “would have been a critical
mistake as it relates to casino TRM?
Total Revenue Management 417
Demand Forecasting
Pricing
standard for what the reinvestment amount should be but it ranges any-
where from 12 percent up to 30 percent depending on how much competi-
tion there is in the market. Once a reinvestment amount is established, we
can then subtract it from the best available rate for the desired stay period.
Whatever the remaining value is should be the optimal rate o˝ered to the
guest. If the reinvestment amount is equal to or greater than the daily room
rate the guest should be o˝ered a complimentary room as their theoretical
daily spend would o˝set the room revenue loss. Using the ADT and rein-
vestment amount, casinos can optimize total revenue based on individual
customer value (Hendler & Hendler, 2004).
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Assume that a speciÿc customer has an ADT of $500. The casino has
determined that they have a 30 percent reinvestment policy based on
the ADT value of the guests. The hotel is currently selling at BAR rate
of $250. Based on this information what rate should the casino should
o°er to the customer?
Groups
Groups have always been looked at as a way to support hotel operations and
as a good base to ÿll the hotel with rooms that could not be sold to tran-
sient business (Cullen & Helsel, 2010). However, there is a huge potential
in breaking down groups into their own revenue-generating discipline and
incorporating it as a part of a TRM strategy. With a proper plan in place for
groups, hotels can make sure that all revenue potential can be maximized.
Pricing Strategy
Displacement Analysis
It is very important to make sure that the full impact of taking a certain
piece of group business is understood. Due to the constraints imposed by
the hotels, physical capacity not all sources of business can be taken over
a given day. ˜is means that the hotel will potentially have to turn away
some business if demand exceeds capacity. In most cases, such a displace-
420 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Transient Group
Number of rooms 20 20
ADR $200 $150
Room’s revenue total $4,000 $3,000
Ancillary revenues $1,500 $5,000
Rooms costs −$900 −$900
Catering costs −$0 −$1,500
to create a comprehensive analysis. It can also be used to see what rates are
needed to break even between two segments or should there be a need to
increase rates.
Catering
˜ere are typically two types of catering events, one that involves hotel room
nights and one that is catering only. ˜ey both have an impact on TRM and
can help drive revenue contribution. Catering contribution per group room
is one measurement that can be used to assess the value of a piece of catering
business. However, this metric is only useful if the catering business has group
rooms attached to it. An overarching measurement that includes both types of
catering source is revenue per available square foot (RevPAS). ˜e following
items are examples that can contribute to RevPAS (Cullen & Helsel, 2010).
• Catering menu
• Audiovisual/Internet
• Parking
• Valet
• Meeting and function space rental
Creative RM Strategy
Hotel packages, such as ones that include massages can be used in order
to drive incremental business into the spa. Spas can then place their high
sale volume items strategically on shelves in order to capitalize on impulse
purchases. Resort credit can also be used to help entice guests to increase
their spend at various outlets. O˝ering a $25 dinner credit to a couple, when
Total Revenue Management 423
the hotels know its average check is $45 per person, can help drive that addi-
tional spending that would not have naturally occurred. Hotels should think
even further outside the box and look at unconventional revenue streams
such as ATMs. Most hotels have an ATM in their lobby so that customers
have access to quick cash. Hotels make money on the transaction fee that is
being charged to the guest once they take out money. Looking at ˆuctuating
transaction fees based on time of day and demand can be a very avant-garde
way to drive additional revenue and be part of a TRM strategy. Another
strategy that is becoming more common is the implementation of a resort or
city-center fee for various services or amenities. ˜is additional fee is added
on top of the room rate and ideally incurs no cost for the hotel. ˜is allows
the incremental proÿts gained to ˆow directly to the bottom line. Las Vegas
resorts have been using resort fees for years but recently it has started to
pop-up in city centers such as New York hotels.
REAL PEOPLE
How would you educate and convince employees in these outlets that
a comprehensive TRM strategy can help drive proÿts into their respec-
tive departments?
*name changed
424 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Establish a Baseline
Detailed information must be collected from the outlet and then analyzed
thoroughly to understand the current state of the outlet. ˜e informa-
tion collected should focus on the key revenue management levers: price,
duration, and space and how they relate to the current performance. Some
examples of data collected should be pricing strategies, demand patterns,
and inventory utilization. A revenue per available time-based inventory unit
(RevPATI) to measure performance needs to be clearly established. Data
can be collected from various sources including but not limited to the PMS,
POS, reservations systems, and methodical observation.
Develop an RM strategy
Once the performance drivers are understood, areas, where the revenue
management levers can be applied, needs to be identiÿed. Example of some
questions that should be answered are:
• How can the outlets be optimized?
• Can demand be stimulated or restricted by altering prices?
• Will technology or sta˛ng levels improve utilization?
Total Revenue Management 425
Once you have understood the theory and are working to implement the
revenue management roadmap as outlined above, do not forget that small
changes can have “immediate wins.” Do not try to recreate the wheel by rede-
veloping processes and procedures but look for the small changes that can
have a big impact on revenue. Try to answer the question “What can we do
immediately that will generate more revenue for us?” Even though there are
multiple new so˙ware solutions out on the market that can help almost opti-
mize anything, small operation changes should not be overlooked. ˜ere are
multiple examples identiÿed in the theory above, such as credit card guar-
antees to decrease now shows (Kimes, 2009), golf marshals to speed up the
game (Kimes and Schruben, 2002) or cross-training spa therapists (Kimes,
2009) that can be used as the groundwork for these changes.
426 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
RM Celebration
Make sure that the success of the program is publicized whenever possible.
Using success stories and sharing them with all sta˝ can be very helpful in
instilling a RM mindset. ˜e wins can also generate a hype about the initia-
tives and inspire the team on all levels to perform even better. ˜ese celebra-
tions also help break down the silos between departments as mentioned in
the previous step and create unity with a TRM focus.
level segmentation where guests are grouped based on their spending power
instead of traditional segmentation. A guest value revenue strategy needs to
be implemented as a fundamental element of TRM. ˜ere are two potential
ways to look at assigning a monetary value to a guest.
A value per stay method looks at the guest’s total spend during their last stay
and assigns a total spend value based on the past. ˜is method is best imple-
mented in the casino industry. As mentioned earlier in the chapter, a casino cre-
ates an ADT for each guest. By encouraging players to join their robust player
loyalty program, guest’s bets, and purchases can easily be tracked. A few resorts
have started to use this approach in order to better track guest spending. Hyatt
and Fairmont are looking in the near future to incorporate a proprietary in
their RM practices a loyalty program scoring system based on historical spend.
When total spend on a guest level is incorporated into the revenue manage-
ment decision it tends to favor guests that have a higher value per stay.
Customer lifetime value (CLV) is the second method that sums all proÿts
from a given customer over their lifetime relationship with the hotel. ˜e
simplest way to calculate CLV is to assess guest proÿtability, forecast future
spending, adjusting for probability of guest retention, discount this back to
present value, and then sum up all transactions (McGuire, 2016). In this
method, the revenue is accounted for the entire life horizon of the guest
instead of just focusing on the short term potential.
have the capabilities to integrate all transactions from various points of sale
unless guest’s charge items to their room. Until this becomes feasible, there
is no method that can give a 100 percent accurate value on an individual
guest level. Furthermore, guest values change over time due to the ˆuctu-
ation in the willingness to pay. ˜erefore, the TRM goal should always be
to look at ways to grow the guest value over time. It is not enough to just
simply establish what the anticipated guest value is and project it into the
future. Long term growth opportunities need to be also incorporated into
such calculation and impact TRM decisions.
PROFIT FOCUS
˜e third part of the TRM framework is directing the focus from revenues to
proÿts. Once more revenue streams are integrated into the overall guest con-
tribution proÿle the better hotels can identify their most valuable customers.
For a TRM strategy to be successful in the long run a proÿt-focused revenue
management philosophy needs to be shared equally by all departments. ˜is is
important as there will be occasions where one revenue stream might be sacri-
ÿced for the overall beneÿt of driving another more proÿtable revenue source.
With the rising cost of distribution impact all channels it will not be enough to
just optimize based on revenues without taking costs into the decision.
that try to put a value on customer contribution. TocPAC does not just take
into consideration the associated costs with the room but also looks at the
total value of the guest spend within the hotel. Below is the calculation for
total guest contribution:
SEEING FURTHER
Technology has changed signiÿcantly over the
past decade. More and more systems are now
integrated making the abundance of guest
data a reality. This trend will continue into the foreseeable future allow-
ing for transactional data to be collected on an individual level no mat-
ter where at the hotel the purchase takes place. To have a successful
TRM culture silos between departments need to be broken down and
all outlets need to function as one unit.
Which department(s) other than revenue management do you think
holds the key to success and why?
What sort of information do you think would help the hotels’ goal of
TRM?
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: What are the necessary characteristics that need to
be present in order for revenue management to be successfully
implemented? Give an example of why each characteristic is
important?
Question 2: Why is it best to use a RevPATI metric to establish a baseline and track
performance?
Question 4: Why do you think it is taking so long for total revenue management to
be implemented?
Question 5: Do you think there is an industry-wide deÿnition of TRM? What are some
areas that the deÿnitions could vary?
Question 6: What do you think the future of TRM is? Where do hotels need to focus
and what challenges do you expect they will encounter?
432 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
APPLICATIONS
1. Which of the two customer segments below would
you accept to stay at your hotel purely based on TRM?
• An individual corporate client arriving on Mon-
day night for three nights with and ADR of $559.
˜e guest has three breakfast at the hotel that costs
$25 per breakfast. Hosts a client dinner one eve-
ning for a total of $275. Uses the limo service for
$150 per trip to and from the airport and prints/
faxes items at the business center for $40.
• A leisure couple arriving ˜ursday for four nights with and ADR
of $259. ˜e guests have breakfast each morning for a total of $20
per person. ˜ey eat dinner twice in the restaurant for a total of
$150 per dinner. ˜e wife gets a spa treatment on Saturday for a
total of $400 whilst the husband plays a round of golf for $300.
˜ey valet parked their vehicle for the duration of their stay for
$55 a night.
Cost per occupied room is $60 per night. F&B cost margin is 30 percent.
All other outlets have a cost margin of 10 percent.
2. You are the Revenue Manager of Historical Hamilton Hotel which
has 150 rooms. ˜e sales team has approached you with a new piece
of business that they are looking at taking. It is over a highly com-
pressed period so you suggest that a displacement analysis be done
in order to make sure that taking the business makes the most total
revenue sense. ˜e group pattern is for arrival Monday and depar-
ture on ˜ursday for 80 rooms a night. ˜e sales manager has indi-
cated that the group has an ADR budget of $190 per room per night.
˜e 150 attendees will have breakfast daily and one dinner at the
property. ˜ey will also have a meeting room rental fee of $1,500 and
AV for $900 per day.
You know that typically you are busy over the speciÿc stay pattern with
transient guests with an ADR of $299. ˜erefore, by taking this group the
hotel going to walk 10 guests to another hotel for at an ADR of $280 per
night. On average, transient guests have breakfast every day of their stay
and one dinner at the property. You also know that 50 percent of guest use
Total Revenue Management 433
overnight parking which cost $25 per night and 70 percent pay to use the
Internet at a daily rate of $9. Transient reservations have the following dis-
tribution source, 40 percent direct at property, 20percent GDS, 10 percent
chain website and 30 percent OTA. Group reservations are 40 percent call in
and 60 percent on the website.
Calculate the displacement for the above scenario and decide on which
piece of business is best suited for the hotel based on TRM principles?
What is the lowest ADR rounded to the nearest dollar that would you
change your decision and the switch proÿtability from one segment to the
other?
TEAM ACTIVITY
Guest 1: Basic massage, tee time on ˜ursday at 3:00 p.m., F&B $75, stan-
dard king room (three nights, Tuesday–Friday). Corporate traveler for a
conference and leisure, before ˆying home.
Guest 2: Basic massage, basic manicure, and pedicure, deluxe suite (three
nights, ˜ursday–Sunday), F&B $230. Leisure couple ˆying in from a major
city for a romantic weekend.
Guest 3: Tee time on Saturday at 8:00 a.m., one-bedroom suite (one night,
Saturday). Leisure couple driving in for a weekend getaway
434 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Guest 4: Presidential Suite (one night, Tuesday), F&B $375. Corporate CEO
for overnight business meeting
Guest 5: Tee time on Friday at 5:00 p.m., tee time on Sunday 2:00 p.m.,
standard double room (three nights, Friday–Monday), F&B $125. Leisure
couple coming for a golf weekend
Assignment:
• Pick a resort in the US that has a golf course, spa, and restaurant.
• Choose a speciÿc week and use real-time pricing information by
browsing their website site (calling the hotel if you need more infor-
mation) to determine how much revenue each of the ÿve guests’
stays generate at the resort (if couple, assume that both guests will
play golf and/or have the same spa treatments).
• Identifying which guest proÿle generates the most revenue, then as
a team, create ÿve di˝erent marketing techniques you could use to
attract a similar target guest.
INTERNET ACTIVITY
Casinos are very popular across America and not just for gam-
bling. Many have multiple nonroom revenue outlets and operate
as fully as a resort.
Choose a casino in Las Vegas, Nevada and explore their website. Iden-
tify a nonroom revenue-generating outlet (besides, golf, spa, or restaurant)
For your chosen new outlet, write down what data you would need?
What could be impacting the performance? What strategies you would
implement? How would you go about implementing the strategy? How you
would monitor the success?
Total Revenue Management 435
GLOSSARY
(ADT) Average daily theoretical – ˜e daily average “theo” of all
games played by the customer over a given period.
(CLV) Customer lifetime value – ˜e sum of all proÿts from a
given customer over their lifetime relationship with the
company.
Reinvestment amount – ˜e monetary value corresponding to the services
and products given away to a customer o˙en expressed in terms of
a percentage.
RevPAS – Revenue per available space, or revenue per square foot the rev-
enue generated on a square foot basis for a speciÿc period of time.
RevPATH – Revenue per available treatment hours.
RevPATI – Revenue per available time-based inventory unit.
RevPATT – Revenue per available tee time.
(˜eo) ˜eoretical win – ˜e “theo” is calculated by multiplying the coin-in
amount by the hold percentage. ˜e coin-in amount is the total
money spent by a customer on a given occasion. ˜e hold percent-
age is the probability that the casino will win a speciÿc play.
(TocPAC) Total contribution per available customer – (Room’s revenue +
auxiliary revenue – variable cost) / number of guests
(TRM) Total revenue management – Decision process based on the sum of
all revenue streams from both room and outlets on a customer level.
REFERENCES
Cullen, K., & Helsel, C. (2010).ˇˇ˜e Evolving Dynamics of Revenue Management: A
Comprehensive Revenue Optimization Road Map for Hotel Owners, Operators,
and Practitioners. HSMAI 109-120
Hendler, R., & Hendler, F. (2004). Revenue Management in Fabulous Las Vegas:
Combining Customer Relationship Management and Revenue Management
to Maximize Proÿtability. Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management, 3 (1),
73-79.
Kimes, S. E. (1989). ˜e Basics of Yield Management.ˇCornell Hotel and Restaurant
Administration Quarterly, 30 (3), 1419.
Kimes, S. E., & Schruben, L.W. (2002) Golf Course Revenue Management: A Study
of Tee Time Intervals. Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management, 1 (2), 111-
120.
436 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Revenue Management:
A Hotel Owner’s Perspective
Jonathan Jaeger and Lambis Pahiyiannakis
OVERVIEW
Hotel Revenue Management has become increasing vital to the success
of a hotel; owners and asset managers must understand the underlying
concepts in order to analyze and improve the performance of a hotel. A hotel
owner’s involvement in revenue management can vary dramatically based
on ownership type and objectives. Important decisions regarding the pricing
of hotel units are typically made by the revenue manager alongside other
members of the executive committee and operations team. The owner and/
or asset manager of a hotel may not be involved in everyday pricing decisions,
but will typically maintain a level of oversight.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Explain the unique perspective hotel owners have towards revenue
management and how it di˜ers for institutional versus individual owners
Analyze long-term revenue management goals as a hotel owner and
demonstrate how to measure success
Demonstrate why consistent revenue management is critical for owners
with regard to both proÿtability and responsibilities to a hotel’s lender
Discuss the relationship between hotel owner and hotel operator and
how it relates to revenue management
Apply operational revenue management skills in order to identify the
future potential of a hotel
Describe ways for hotel management to maximize the value of a
property through revenue management strategy improvement
437
438 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
OUTLINE
Introduction
SO WHAT?
INTRODUCTION
new online booking companies and third-party travel agencies, the revenue
manager is now responsible for repricing rooms on a minute-by-minute and
on a channel-by-channel basis. Revenue Management initiatives can and do
have an enormous impact on the value of a hotel.
While all hotel owners have di˙erent agendas and programs for manag-
ing or asset managing a hotel, revenue management is now at the forefront
of every decision being made regarding the revenue producing aspect of
hotel management. ˜e four factors listed above are true for all hotel assets.
˜e last factor, regarding ability to predict future demand, has expanded
in recent years given the creation of sophisticated forecasting tools such as
Hotelligence, TAP Reports, and the products o˙ered by Kalibri Labs.
Prior to the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, most hotels did not have a reve-
nue manager; today the revenue manager is o˛en one of the highest ranking
members of the hotel executive team. While general managers were previ-
ously recruited, and hired primarily based on experience in the rooms, sales,
and food and beverage departments, savvy hotel owners are now looking for
operations executives who truly understand and have experience in revenue
management.
managers, but will concentrate on how owners interface with the revenue
management function of a hotel. Hotel owners with a propensity to under-
stand the historical performance and future marketing strategies of a prop-
erty must have a working knowledge of the subject. Many owners reserve
the right to make higher level decisions regarding future pricing strategies.
˜is chapter will explore how di˙erent hotel owners approach revenue man-
agement directly or indirectly through their management teams/operators.
˜e advent of new technologies within the lodging industry has led to the
increasing importance of revenue management. According to several hotel
owners, the 2008/2009 downturn in the hotel industry was another cata-
lyst for the revenue management concentration, for reasons which will be
explored within this section.
New online travel agencies and their respective technologies have been
deÿned as disrupters within the industry. Several of the more well-known
online travel companies are as follows:
1. Priceline (Booking Holdings)
2. Booking.com (Booking Holdings)
3. Orbitz (Expedia, Inc.)
4. Expedia (Expedia, Inc.)
5. Travelocity (Expedia, Inc.)
6. Hotels.com (Expedia, Inc.)
7. Trivago (majority owned by Expedia, Inc.)
8. Hotel Tonight (Airbnb)
9. RoomsTonite
Within the list of online travel companies presented above, there has
been a signiÿcant consolidation in the industry over the past several years.
As a result, many of the agencies presented are now owned by the same
parent company. Something all of these companies/websites have in com-
mon: they did not exist prior to the 1990’s. All of the aforementioned sites
o˙er a variety of products and services to di˙erent customers, but for the
most part they represent additional booking options for the same perish-
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 441
able hotel room night. In other words, they have created an intermediary
between the hotel product and the end user (customer). Without the pro-
liferation of online booking agencies competing with direct sales methods
by hotel owners, the revenue management ÿeld would not be as complex
as it is today. Prior to the ease of booking a room online, consumers had
few options when making travel plans. Many guests either called the hotel
directly or went through a traditional “brick and mortar” travel agent. Now,
hotel guests have seemingly endless options for booking the same hotel
room, and many can be accessed directly from a smart phone. ˜e entire
process of booking a hotel room can now be completed within seconds.
THINK HISTORICALLY
Before the Internet technology boom in the late 1990s and early
2000s, many of the aforementioned online travel agencies did not
exist. According to CNN, during the mid-1990s there was a peak
of 34,000 travel agents; today there are less than 13,000 retail travel
agents in the United States. The following newspaper advertisements
date back to the year 1900.
Source: ˜e Seattle Post Intelligencer, May 20, 1900, Page 35, Image 35.
442 <y> Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Hotel revenue managers must be cognizant of the different booking
engines while developing pricing models. If a hotel room is priced at
$99 on two different websites, what will drive the consumer to book
directly on the hotel website versus a third-party travel agent?
While there are also other types of hotel ownership groups, most ÿt into
one of the previous ÿve categories. Di˙erent types of ownership groups can
be more active depending on the current state of the economic cycle. For
example, during the 2010–2012 recovery period following the economic
recession, hotel REITs were the most active buyers due to their low cost of
capital. However, a˛er dramatic declines in the stock price and enterprise
value of hotel REITs during 2015, most have become net sellers. Another
investor group, international buyers, have become increasing active over the
past several years, especially in gateway markets such as New York City and
San Francisco.
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
Private Equity investors are often focused on the short term as opposed
to the long term. For example, if a Private Equity owner had the option
to patch a leak in the roof for a cost of $25,000 versus replacing the
entire roof for $250,000; which option do you think the Private Equity
owner would choose and why?
All hotel owners have di˙erent management strategies, but the more
open communication between owner and revenue manager typically
results in stronger performance. By way of example, some management
companies have a “heads in beds” strategy in which they would rather
ÿll rooms at a lower rate, potentially in an e˙ort to maximize ancillary
revenues, versus other companies who focus on a higher average rate and
are willing to forego rate for a lower occupancy. ˜e revenue management
strategy must ÿt within the overall strategy of ownership in order to meet
budgetary goals.
REAL PEOPLE
Written by:
As bottom-line driven asset managers, one of the things we frequently try to under-
stand is whether concierge ˜oors are, in fact, additive to a hotel’s ability to yield
both revenue (and, thereby proÿt) or whether they are simply a marketing tool used
by the brands to appeal to, and enhance the experience of, their loyal and frequent
guests at the expense of ownership. In a recent example, we worked with one of our
luxury hotel operators to analyze this topic.
˛e subject property is located in a large, but not primary U.S. market, with the
hotel experiencing typical occupancy in the mid-60% range with a market mix of
approximately 50% of its demand in the group segment. At these levels, it was unclear
whether or not a concierge ˜oor/lounge was accretive to the hotel or not, particularly
given the relative few nights when the hotel was compressed and could yield guests
onto the concierge ˜oor at a premium price.
We initially considered a strategy which would close the concierge ˜oor saving
nearly $400,000 in annual operating expenses including ÿve employee FTE’s, cost
of food and beverage, reducing rooms expenses due to higher housekeeping room
credits, and reducing size and cost of guestroom amenities. We also calculated that
by closing the concierge ˜oor, revenue would decrease by approximately $150,000
in reduced rooms and honor bar revenue. ˛us, we determined that the concierge
˜oor was resulting in a loss of approximately $250,000 per year.
˛is dynamic pricing ranged from as low as $30 per night during low occupancy
periods to as much as $100 per night during peak demand periods. In addition to
the online and voice channel o˝erings, a rejuvenated e˝ort was also made to upsell
the concierge ˜oor at the front desk through speciÿc individual and team incentives
designed to motivate the front desk agents to promote the concierge ˜oor.
448 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Questions:
1. Name several positive and negative factors that ownership may have con-
sidered when studying whether or not to abandon the concierge ˇoor
operation.
2. Do you think ownership ultimately made the right decision regarding
the concierge ˇoor?
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
The subject property is a ÿve-diamond resort located in the Caribbean
and owned by a REIT. The hotel is currently operated by the brand with
oversight from a third-party asset manager (such as LW Hospitality
Advisors) that has been retained by ownership. Who does the revenue
manager report to? What types of con˛icts may arise between the asset
manager and the revenue manager?
Month/ Price Per % Chg Month/ Price Per % Chg Month/ Price Per % Chg Month/Year Price Per % Chg
Year Barrel Year Barrel Year Barrel Barrel
Nov-15 $42.91 -7% Dec-13 $97.63 4% Dec-11 $98.56 1% Dec-09 $74.47 -5%
Oct-15 $46.22 2% Nov-13 $93.86 -7% Nov-11 $97.16 13% Nov-09 $77.99 3%
Aug-15 $42.87 -16% Sep-13 $106.29 0% Sep-11 $85.52 -1% Sep-09 $69.41 -2%
Jul-15 $50.90 -15% Aug-13 $106.57 2% Aug-11 $86.33 -11% Aug-09 $71.05 11%
May-15 $59.27 9% Jun-13 $95.77 1% Jun-11 $96.26 -5% Jun-09 $69.64 18%
Apr-15 $54.45 14% May-13 $94.51 3% May-11 $100.90 -8% May-09 $59.03 19%
Mar-15 $47.82 -5% Apr-13 $92.02 -1% Apr-11 $109.53 6% Apr-09 $49.65 4%
Feb-15 $50.58 7% Mar-13 $92.94 -2% Mar-11 $102.86 16% Mar-09 $47.94 23%
Jan-15 $47.22 -20% Feb-13 $95.31 1% Feb-11 $88.58 -1% Feb-09 $39.09 -6%
Nov-14 $75.79 -10% Dec -12 $87.86 2% Dec -10 $89.15 6% Dec-08 $41.12 -28%
Oct-14 $84.40 -9% Nov-12 $86.53 -3% Nov-10 $84.25 3% Nov-08 $57.31 -25%
Sep-14 $93.21 -3% Oct-12 $89.49 -5% Oct-10 $81.89 9% Oct-08 $76.61 -26%
Aug-14 $96.54 -7% Sep-12 $94.51 0% Sep-10 $75.24 -2% Sep-08 $104.11 -11%
Jul-14 $103.59 -2% Aug-12 $94.13 7% Aug-10 $76.60 0% Aug-08 $116.67 -13%
Apr-14 $102.07 1% May-12 $94.66 -8% May-10 $73.74 -13% May-08 $125.40 11%
Fisc al Year Chg Dec - Nov 14/15 12/13 7% 10/11 9% 08/09 90%
-28%
Fisc al Year Chg Dec - Nov 13/14 11/12 -12% 09/10 13%
-22%
QUESTION TO CONSIDER
How can a revenue manager use the information presented above
regarding the constantly changing price of oil when making pricing
decisions for a speciÿc hotel property?
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 451
˜ere are many other creative ways for revenue managers to utilize
macro and microeconomic data in order to assist with pricing decisions.
Within the Permian Basin, each county releases a monthly report con-
taining the number of drilling permits that were issued. In order to better
understand the activity of oil/gas companies in the area, revenue managers
can track this information and remain informed on where companies are
still actively drilling. During downturn periods, owner’s typically place more
emphasis on both Sales and Revenue Management strategies in order to pro-
tect their asset. Properties with attentive owners and revenue managers are
able to outperform competitive properties during diˆcult times, such as the
current situation in the Permian Basin and other energy dependent lodging
markets throughout the country.
metrics such as: occupancy, average daily rate (ADR), and RevPAR. Although
these metrics are widely accepted as the most important tools for measuring
success, their scope is conÿned to the top line (revenue only), while hotel
owners are more focused on the bottom line, also known as proÿtability. As
hotel guests continue to utilize online booking intermediaries when making
reservations, the cost of guest acquisition (further discussed later in this sec-
tion) has been increasing at a disproportional rate. ˜erefore, using RevPAR
as the sole metric to benchmark a hotel against its competitive set seems to
be an outdated methodology. Hotel owners want to establish that not only
RevPAR has been maximized, but also that it has been strategically maxi-
mized by using the lowest cost channels and booking methods.
SEEING FURTHER
The metric known as GOPPAR is an important
indicator of hotel performance. GOPPAR is cal-
culated as follows:
GOPPAR = GOP (Gross Operating Proÿt) / # of Available Rooms
When analyzing the GOPPAR of a hotel property, the results can di˜er
dramatically based on many di˜erent factors. While results can di˜er,
the GOPPAR metric is widely used throughout the industry to measure
hotel performance. The GOPPAR provides ownership with a better indi-
cation of proÿtability when compared to RevPAR. As the industry con-
tinues to evolve, what other of metrics would be useful in assessing the
performance of a hotel?
chase a good or service, they are receiving the value they feel appropriate.
Continuously ˇuctuating rates at a hotel to achieve maximum short-term
occupancy confuses guests who may be used to paying a certain rate. While
guests may or may not understand the dynamic pricing model, it is import-
ant not to employ extreme pricing ˇuctuations for repeat guests. Retaining
rate integrity is critical to long-term ADR sustainability and growth of a
hotel. From an asset manager’s perspective, decisions such as rate parity in
the short term should support the long-term revenue management strategy
put in place for the entire investment horizon.
Selling the right room to the right customer requires revenue managers to
be able to accurately segment their demand and control room inventory and
pricing for each segment. Each segment of demand has di˙erent character-
istics, including sensitivity to pricing (price elasticity), timing of booking,
and brand sensitivity to name a few. One of the most important character-
istics to hotel owners is the path each segment choses to book reservations,
especially transient segments. ˜e type of channel a booking comes through
may directly impact the cost of guest acquisition. ˜e cost of guest acquisi-
tion is deÿned as the cost a hotel owner incurs to procure a new guest to stay
at their hotel. It is crucial to maintain a low cost of guest acquisition in order
to maximize the proÿtability of each guest’s stay at a property.
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 455
All reservations are not created equally. For a hotel owner who is pri-
marily focused on a hotel’s proÿtability (and value by relation), the custom-
er’s booking channel is of critical importance due to the cost associated with
guest acquisition. Whether a hotel is supported by a major brand (Mar-
riott, Hilton, Hyatt, etc.) or whether it is an independent hotel, it contin-
uously invests in its marketing e˙orts which aim to publicize the hotel to
guests seeking accommodations. Branded hotel owners market their hotels
by investing in franchise fees, national marketing fees, and by operating
in-house marketing departments. Franchise fees (also known as royalties)
are fees branded hotel owners pay to the major brands such as Marriott,
Hilton, and Hyatt in order to have the right to use those names and central
reservations systems (CRS). National marketing fees are monetary contri-
butions all branded hotels make that go towards advertising the brand as a
whole. A good example of such advertising is watching the “Courtyard by
Marriott” ads on TV during a sporting event. ˜e purpose is to advertise the
Courtyard by Marriott brand as a whole and increase brand familiarity of
the speciÿc brand of Marriott hotels, not promote a single Courtyard hotel.
In-house marketing departments are sta˙ed marketing teams whose sole
focus is to promote the subject hotel and to secure group business and cor-
porate negotiated business. Independent hotels do not pay the brand related
fees and instead funnel their marketing e˙orts and expenditure into their
on-property marketing teams. ˜e size of the marketing team varies across
hotels, with large hotels and resorts requiring a much larger sta˙ and budget
compared to smaller select service hotels requiring a lesser in-house mar-
keting e˙ort (especially if aˆliated with a national brand).
ably can have a major impact on the proÿtability of such a guest, especially
when it is layered on to the existing marketing costs described above. As
a result, hotel owners drive their managers to generate bookings for their
hotels through direct channels, which they have more control over and
have already paid for through their ÿxed cost associated with operating the
in-house marketing departments.
˜ere are other downsides to using OTAs beyond increasing the cost
of guest acquisition. Guests who book hotel stays through OTA tend to
be hotel agnostic and the likelihood of converting them to a repeat guest
decreases versus a guest who may not always place pricing at the top of their
booking criteria. Additionally, the fact guests booking through OTAs are
price sensitive usually means they tend to not generate revenue at ancillary
departments in the hotel such as restaurants, room service, or even spas and
golf at resort hotels.
prices rise quickly. Alternatively, on a typical Sunday night (the least trav-
eled day of the week) hotel rooms tend to be extremely price elastic, where
a small change in price may a˙ect the consumer’s decision to choose one
hotel over another.
When a lender issues a mortgage on any type of real estate asset, one of
the most important metrics is the LTV ratio, which examines the amount
of debt provided compared to the collateral’s value. For example, if a hotel
worth $100M received a senior mortgage of $60M, the loan is said to be a
60 percent LTV loan. Lenders decide on the outset of the loan what amount
of LTV they are comfortable with and do not typically allow the LTV of the
loan to far exceed that initial level. As a result, in the above example they
may stipulate the $60M loan placed on the $100M asset may not at any time
during the course of the loan become a 65 percent LTV loan. ˜is would
occur if the value of the hotel ˇuctuates downward. If the hotel, for example,
decreased in value and was worth $95M, the loan would be deemed a 63
percent LTV loan, which would not yet trigger the LTV test provided by the
lender. However, if the value of the hotel declined to $90M, the loan would
be deemed a 67 percent LTV loan, an LTV level that would trigger the LTV
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 461
test and would cause signiÿcant issues for the borrower. According to loan
standards, the borrower would be in default on the loan.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
When a prospective lender is underwriting a hotel loan, what are the
most important factors that must be considered? How can lenders
assure that loans are safe and income levels will remain above the
desired debt service coverage ratios?
462 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
As illustrated, there are many reasons why hotel owners must moti-
vate the executive team and revenue managers to strive for maximum
and consistent profitability to ensure a stable hotel valuation, a credible
standing with their lenders, and to ensure capital availability when the
hotel is due for renovation. The strength of a hotel’s bottom line is directly
tied to the health of a hotel’s ability to generate revenue. Therefore, rev-
enue managers must be continuously challenged to drive performance
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 463
and strive to flex their revenue management strategies and execute them
with accuracy. Although the above concepts are of crucial importance to
most hotel investors, high net worth investors or sovereign wealth inves-
tors may focus primarily on prestige or brand equity to retain and grow
value. A good example of this would be the Langham Hotel in London.
Its value stems primarily from its status as one of the oldest and most
prestigious hotels in London and secondarily from its income perfor-
mance. It also has tremendous value for Langham as a flagship property
for the brand.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Question 1: From an owner’s perspective, what are several
potential challenges of a brand managed hotel as it relates to
revenue management and pricing decisions?
Question 3: Why would a revenue manager ask about the owner’s short- and long-
term objectives prior to accepting a job at the hotel?
APPLICATIONS
Case 1:
John and Anna have been tracking this sharp decline in the price of
oil and understand this will impact their hotel. However, there is dis-
agreement surrounding which revenue management strategy to imple-
ment. John believes the oil price shock will have a long-term impact on
local corporate business, so he is inclined to renegotiate local negotiated
rates at lower levels quickly to ensure loyal corporate demand continues
to stay at the hotel. He also believes all specific marketing efforts should
be implemented to secure the group business that delivers a fixed amount
of rooms quarterly and guarantees the usage of the hotel’s meeting space.
Anna has a different opinion. According to her, the oil price shock will
be short lived and local oil industry companies will not be significantly
impacted. She believes they should hold a hard line with their corporate
accounts and keep their negotiated rates in place. Based on her research,
Anna says there are other demand sources in the market that will allow
them to backfill corporate demand rooms (should they decrease) with
OTA generated rooms. She also believes they have a competitive advan-
tage with their meeting space compared to other competitive hotels in
the market.
What do you think the correct revenue management strategy is for this
hotel? How is John’s strategy going to impact top and bottom line? How is
his strategy impacting long-term performance of the hotel? How is Anna’s
strategy going to impact top and bottom line? What are the di˙erences of
corporate negotiated rate business and OTA business and which would you
prefer to have at a time of rate uncertainty? Does John’s strategy for increas-
ing sales e˙orts of their meeting space make sense if Anna is right about
their existing competitive advantage?
Case 2:
Philip Motely is the Director of Acquisitions for a small private equity real
estate investment ÿrm based in Boston, MA. Philip has identiÿed what he
believes is an interesting hotel acquisition located in Burlington, a prom-
inent and growing submarket of Boston. He believes he could acquire the
hotel and signiÿcantly improve revenue management initiatives by replacing
current management with a local experienced management company. ˜e
following chart depicts the existing room night segmentation compared to
the projections post acquisition:
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 465
Group
Business 5,475 85.00 465,375 6,023 87.00 523,958
SMERF 9,855 75.00 739,125 9,855 80.00 788,400
Contract
Airline 4,380 65.00 284,700 1,643 65.00 106,76
Total 37,230 81.10 3,019,463 39,420 88.22 3,477,720
TEAM ACTIVITY
INTERNET ACTIVITY
GLOSSARY
Ancillary Departments – Providing necessary support to the pri-
mary activities or operation of an organization, institution, indus-
try, or system (e.g., in a hotel the spa, ÿtness center, etc. would be
considered ancillary)
Dynamic Pricing – Practice of pricing items at a level determined
by a particular customer’s perceived ability to pay.
Gross Operating Proÿt per Available Room (GOPPAR) – A company’s
revenue from sales in a given period of time less its cost of goods sold
divided by the total number of rooms available for sale.
Macroeconomics – Branch of the economics ÿeld that studies how the
aggregate economy behaves.
Perishable – An item or good likely to decay or go bad quickly (e.g., a hotel
room is perishable and cannot be sold once the night has passed)
Revenue Management: A Hotel Owner’s Perspective 467
REFERENCES
Educational Institute of the American Hotels & Lodging Association. (2006).
Uniform system of accounts for the lodging industry (10th ed.). Lansing, MI:
Author.
Hales, J. A. (2011). Accounting and Financial Analysis in the Hospitality Industry.
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall.
Hayes, D. K., & Miller, A. A. (2011). Revenue Management for the Hospitality Indus-
try. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
Parker, J. (2016). GOPPAR (Gross Operating Proÿt Per Available Room) – Best
Measurement of Success. Retrieved from http://hotelexecutive.com/business_
review/1920/goppar-gross-operating-proÿt-per-available-room-best-mea-
surement-of-success%20).
Stuart-Hill, T. (2016). Revenue Management: An Overview on Past, Present, and
Future. Retrieved from http://hotelexecutive.com/business_review/3194/rev-
enue-management-an-overview-on-past-present-and-future.
Sturman, M.; Corgel, J., &Verma, R. (2011). ˛e Cornell School of Hospitality
Administration on Hospitality. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
˜e Economist. (2010). Asset-Light or Asset-Right? Retrieved from http://www.
economist.com/node/17463399.
Glossary of Terms and
Abbreviations
A
AAA – American Automobile Association.
Ancillary Departments – Providing necessary support to the primary activ-
ities or operation of an organization, institution, industry, or system
(example: in a hotel the spa, ÿtness center, etc. would be considered
ancillary).
ADR – Average Daily Rate—Rooms revenue divided by rooms sold, dis-
played as the average rental rate for a single room.
ADT – °e daily average ‘theo’ of all games played by the customer over a
given period.
ALBDs (Cruise) – Abbreviation for available lower berth days, which is the
measure of cruise capacity. Some cruise lines refer to PGCDs, which
means potential guest cruise days.
APD (Cruise) – Abbreviation for average per diem, which is the net ticket
revenue divided by the number of days in the cruise. Some cruise
lines refer to NPD, net per diem, which is the same statistic.
ARI – Availability, Rates, and Inventory—referred to by connectivity sys-
tems.
ARI – Average Rate Index.
Arrivals – Amount of rooms set to arrive.
B
Balk – When customers who had intended on joining a system do not do so
once they see the line.
469
470 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
C
Cabin Categories – Cruise ship cabins have di˛erent physical attributes and/
or di˛erent locations on a ship. Similar cabin types are grouped into
the same cabin category and sold at the same price.
Cancellation Penalties (Cruise) – Fees assessed in the event that a cruise is
canceled a˙er the full payment due date.
Capacity (Restaurant)–°e supply of seats a restaurant has available to
accommodate customers.
Channel/Source – Platform or engine responsible for delivering a booking
transaction. °is could range from the hotel/brand call center, the
hotel website, an online travel agency (OTA), a global distribution
service (GDS), or the internal hotel sales team.
Channel Management – Where the sources of reservations are controlled
for purposes of revenue and proÿt enhancement.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 471
D
Daily (Pickup) Pace – Net bookings and cancellations committed within a
set booking period (i.e. last seven days) for a given stay date as com-
pared to the same net bookings and cancellations that occurred over
the same booking dates (by day of week) prior year.
Data Patterns – Consistent ups and downs in data over the short to medium
term.
Data Trends– Consistent ups and downs in data over a long period of time.
Debarkation Day – °e date the cruise arrives at its ÿnal port of call and
passengers leave the ship.
Demand Generator – Any event, sports area, hospital, military base or busi-
ness that creates lodging demand for a market.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 473
Departure Date (Cruise) – °e date the cruise departs from its ÿrst port.
Also referred to as embarkation date.
Departures – Amount of rooms that will or have checked out.
Deposit (Cruise) – °e payment required to hold a reservation. Can range
from $500 to $1,000 or more.
Dilution (Cruise) – °e amount of a refund given to a guest who converts
to a tactical promotion a˙er having already booked at a higher fare.
Dining Duration – °e amount of time a customer spends at a restaurant,
measured from arrival to departure.
Displacement Cost – °e value of the business that will be turned away
because the inventory has been committed to another segment
(group, contract, etc.)
Distribution Channel – °e chain of businesses or intermediaries through
which a good or service passes until it reaches the end consumer; in
the hotel industry distribution channels are business or intermediar-
ies through which a customer can purchase a hotel room.
DORM – Director of Revenue Management.
Double Occupancy Capacity (Cruise) – By cruise industry convention, each
cabin has a capacity of two guests (a small percentage of cabins are
designed for single guests) and a double occupancy capacity of 2. If
that cabin carries a third guest, its occupancy is 150% (3 divided by
2) If that cabin carries four guests, its occupancy is 200% (4 divided
2) In this way, cruise ship occupancy typically exceeds 100%.
Duration—See dining duration.
Dynamic Pricing – Practice of pricing items at a level determined by a par-
ticular customer's perceived ability to pay.
E
Early Departures – Rooms that are scheduled to depart on a later date but
have checked out earlier than expected.
Extranet – Connectivity system website where hotel’s upload their rates and
availability to display on the associated third party website.
474 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
F
Fair Share – °e proportional share of business assuming an even distribu-
tion of supply, revenue, and demand among all properties included
within a competitive set.
Fences – (Restaurant Revenue Management)—Di˛erences in physical
inventory units.
Fencing/Segmentation Hedges – Methods of control used by Revenue Man-
agers to manage which reservations they are willing to accept based
upon the price being paid.
FIT – Frequent Independent Traveler or Foreign Independent Tour - pre-
paid packaged tours for individual travel.
Fixed Costs – Costs maintained even if the hotel was empty.
Flow °rough (Space Optimization) – °e revenue that ˝ows to the bottom
line a˙er all expenses have been deducted.
Frame of Reference – Describes alternative choices in the market today to
set a baseline of existing expectations and further support the Point
of Di˛erence.
Full Payment Date (Cruise) – °e date the full payment for the cruise is due,
typically 30 days or more before the start of the cruise.
Full Ship Mentality – Cruise line revenue managers are expected to sell
every cabin on a ship prior to the departure date. °is is a cultural
imperative and the most successful cruise lines.
Function Space Optimization – °e application of yield management prin-
ciples to function space to optimize the return on an extremely per-
ishable resource.
G
GDS – Global Distribution System—A worldwide computerized reservation
network that provides transactions to travel agents, online reserva-
tion sites, and large corporations.
GM – General Manager.
GOPPAR – Gross Operating Proÿt per Available Room—A company’s rev-
enue from sales in a given period of time less its cost of goods sold
divided by the total number of rooms available for sale.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 475
H
HRM – Hotel Revenue Management.
HRP – Hotel Rooms Pricing.
I
Impressions – °e amount of times an ad or link has been shown.
Index (Occupancy, ADR, RevPAR) – Property performance divided by com-
petitive set performance multiplied by 100. Internationally, indexes
are also referred to as MPI—Market Penetration Index (Occupancy
Index), ARI—Average Rate Index (ADR Index), and RGI—Reve-
nue/RevPAR Generation Index (RevPAR Index).
Inverse SWOT Analysis – Conducting a SWOT analysis through the lens of
a competitor.
Itineraries – °e cruise region and the ports of call during the cruise.
J
Jockey – When customers leave one line to join an other line.
K
KPI – Key Performance Indicator.
L
Leisure Travelers (Cruise) – People traveling as part of a personal vacation
without a business purpose. Leisure travelers tend to be more price
sensitive than business travelers and tend to book further in advance.
Lifeboat Seats – By law, a cruise ship must carry lifeboats with enough seats
for every person onboard the ship, including both guests and crew
members.
476 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
LOS – Length of Stay – Duration of a guest’s stay beginning with arrival date.
Revenue managers must manage revenue by adjusting strategies by
arrival pattern as this is the control point.
LRA – Last Room Availability – a condition granted to Special Corporate
accounts where their negotiated rate is automatically available if the
hotel is selling standard inventory.
M
Macroeconomics – Branch of the economics ÿeld that studies how the
aggregate economy behaves
MAPE – Mean Absolute Percentage Error.
MAR – Minimum Available Rate– °e lowest rate the property manage-
ment team sets for any day of the week to be quoted to consumers.
Market Segment – A subset of a customer group that can be easily identiÿ-
able by one or more common characteristics such as demographics,
purpose of travel, and buying behavior.
Meta Search Engine – Travel website that uses multiple search engine’s
(OTAs and brand.com) data to produce a compiled result.
Micro-Segments – Segments that can be further broken out in order to more
precisely group together those that share a similar level of interest in
a set of features.
Mix of Sales – see Market Segmentation.
MLOS – Minimum Length of Stay.
Monthly Pace – Net bookings and cancellations committed currently for a
given stay month as compared to the net bookings and cancellations
committed same day (by numbered date) prior year.
Monthly Pickup Pace – Net bookings and cancellations committed within
a set booking period (i.e. last seven days) for a given stay month as
compared to the same net bookings and cancellations that occurred
over the same booking dates (by day of week) prior year.
MPI – Market Penetration Index.
MXLOS – Maximum Length of Stay
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 477
N
Net Onboard Revenue (Cruise) – Onboard revenue a˙er deducting the cost
of goods sold.
Net Ticket Revenue (Cruise) – Ticket revenue a˙er deducting travel agent
commission or other direct sales costs (such as airfare for air-inclu-
sive tickets.)
NOI – Net Operating Income
Nonphysical Inventory—°e intangible resources required to deliver a ser-
vice.
No-Shows – Rooms that are scheduled to arrive but do not before a new date
arrives.
No-Shows (Cruise) – Guests holding a fully paid reservation who do not
cancel in advance and who do not show up at the ship on the depar-
ture date. Typically, very few people are no-shows.
O
Occupancy (Cruise) – °e percentage of available capacity that is occupied
or sold. Calculated as the guest cruise days divided by the ALBDs.
Onboard Revenue(Cruise) – Revenue derived from onboard sales in venues
such as bars, casinos, shore excursions, gi˙ shops, spas, etc.
Opaque – Where a guest books and is unaware of which hotel they are book-
ing until the non-refundable reservation is made.
Operations Forecast – Forecast utilized by operations leaders to appropri-
ately sta˛ the hotel.
Option Period (Cruise) – °e number of days between the time of reser-
vation and the time the reservation will automatically cancel if a
deposit is not received. Can range from 1 day to 1 week.
OTA – Online Travel Agent (OTA) – Travel website allowing customers to
plan and book travel.
Overbook – Selling hotel rooms beyond the hotel’s capacity.
478 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
P
Pace – Tracking performance versus a previous period, mostly done to com-
pare to the same moment in time as last year. For example, how many
rooms were sold at this point last year for the upcoming month ver-
sus how many are sold today for the upcoming month?
Pace Reports – An analytical report on how current business performance is
relative to budget, forecast, and history.
Passenger Sourcing Infrastructure – In order to ÿll all capacity for all depar-
tures, cruise lines build customer relationship management systems
to facilitate frequent direct marketing to past guests and prospects.
°ey also deployment sales teams around the world to build and
maintain relationships with the travel agency distribution system.
PAX – Passengers on the Ground.
PED – see Price Elasticity of Demand.
Percent Change (% Chg) – Amount of growth—up, down, or ˝at—this
period versus same period last year (day, week, running 28 days,
running month-to-date). Calculated as ((TY-LY)/LY)*100.
Perishable – An item or good likely to decay or go bad quickly (example:
a hotel room is perishable and cannot be sold once the night has
passed)
P & L – Proÿt and Loss Statement—°is ÿnancial statement details the rev-
enue, expenses, and proÿt (loss) generated during a ÿxed period of
time.
Physical Inventory – °e tangible resources required to deliver a service.
Planning Square – °e square footage required to accommodate a table in
a restaurant.
PMS – Property Management System.
Point of Di˛erence – What qualities separate the brand from its competitors.
°is trait must be imitable.
Positioning Statement – Statement of the hotel’s product and service o˛ering
that address the target market it is trying to fulÿl with a point of dif-
ferentiation compared to existing substitutes and includes a reason
why this organization is able to deliver the promise made.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 479
PPC – Pay per Click—Ads that are placed on websites that cost a certain
amount per each click on the ad itself.
Price Discrimination – O˛ering various prices to various consumers.
Price Elasticity – A consumer’s willingness to purchase a product depending
on the level of price. Price elasticity of demand shows the relation-
ship between price and quantity demanded and provides a precise
calculation of the e˛ect of a change in price on quantity demanded.
°e following equation enables PED to be calculated.
% change in quantity demanded
% change in price
Q
Qualiÿed Discount – Any discount that a consumer must be qualiÿed for
such as Senior Discount, AAA discount, Student Discount, etc.
Qualiÿed Segment – A segment that requires some type of membership
identiÿcation in order to qualify to receive the discount.
480 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
R
Rank (Occupancy, ADR, RevPAR, % Chg) – Property performance ranked
versus hotels in the competitive set (e.g. a “3 of 6” ADR ranking
means the subject hotel’s absolute ADR is third highest of the six
competitors).
Rate fences or Segmentation Hedges – Restrictions put in place to change
the price point o˛ered to a guest. Fences consist of 5 basic forms:
physical form, controlled availability, customer characteristics,
transactions characteristics, or product line.
Rate parity –Identical retail rate is quoted across all channels.
Reason to Believe – Provides the context of how the business is able to deliver
on its positioning statement.
Reinvestment Amount – °e monetary value corresponding to the services
and products given away to a customer o˙en expressed in terms of
a percentage.
Remaining Demand – Number of rooms the hotel can expect to sell with
unlimited physical capacity.
Remaining Supply – Number of rooms available for sale.
Renege – When customers leave a line before being served.
Retail Rate / Best Available Rate (BAR) – °e rate a customer pays “o˛ the
shelf ”, o˙en referred to as “best available”
Revenue Cycle –°e ability of a hotel to drive and optimize demand while
maintaining guest satisfaction.
Revenue Manager – °e individual or team responsible for maximizing rev-
enue within the constraints of available capacity and unconstrained
demand through e˛ective yield management.
Revenue Optimization Models (Cruise) – Large cruise lines use mathe-
matically sophisticated models for forecast demand at various price
points and in various markets and recommend prices that will result
in the highest proÿt contribution.
RevPAR – Revenue Per Available Room – Total rooms-related revenue per
the number of available rooms in the hotel over a period of time:
[Rooms Revenue / (Rooms Available * Number of Days)].
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 481
RevPAS – Revenue per Available Space, or Revenue per Square Foot the
revenue generated on a square foot basis for a speciÿc period of time.
RevPASH – Revenue per Available Seat Hour.
RevPATH – Revenue per Available Treatment Hours.
REVPATI – Revenue per Available Time Inventory Unit.
RevPATT – Revenue per Available Tee Time.
RFP – Request for Proposal—A detailed requisition a client sends to proper-
ties to begin a dialog. It details the needs of the client (dates and size
constraints) and allows the property to match its facilities to those
needs.
RGI – Revenue Generation Index.
RM – see Revenue Manager
ROI – Return on Investment – Excess cash ˝ow (proÿt) received over the
initial investment. ROI is typically expressed as a percentage
Rooms to Space Ratio – Sleeping Rooms/ Sq. Ft Function space. A metric
which allows you to deÿne the structure of your property enabling
you to see the symbiotic relationship of rooms and space.
Rooms Revenue – What a hotel receives for the sale of its rooms.
RRM – Restaurant Revenue Management.
S
Sales Strategy Meeting – Revenue management strategy meeting consisting
of all members of the revenue management committee.
Seasonal Itinerary – Some cruise ships are deployed on various itineraries
throughout the year. For example, a ship might sail in the Caribbean
in the winter and reposition to Alaska for the summer, returning the
Caribbean in the Fall.
Seating Assignment Rule – A guideline used to regulate which party size can
sit at which table size.
Segmentation/Mix of Sales – How revenue managers and marketers classify
and target customers in speciÿc groups based upon their character-
istics, behaviors, and preferences. °e most common customer seg-
mentation is transient, group and contract.
482 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
Segmented Data – Rooms sold and revenue data broken down by source of
business (transient, group, contract) and source of revenue (room,
food and beverage, other).
Service Capacity – °e amount of output a service system can produce.
Shoulder Dates – Dates that fall on the sides of peak demand dates.
Shoulder Night – A night where total hotel demand is not strong enough to
reach capacity.
SMERF – Groups booked that ÿt into the following classiÿcations: Social,
Military, Education, Religious, and Fraternal.
Smith Travel Research (STR) – Global provider of competitive benchmark-
ing, information services and research to the hotel industry with
performance data from over 63,000 hotels in 180 countries.
Solo Traveler – A cruise passenger traveling alone.
Spill (Cruise) – When there is more demand than supply, the demand that
can’t be accommodated is “spilled.”
Spoilage – Each unsold room at the end of a period.
Spoilage (Cruise) – When there is less demand than supply, any cabins that
sail empty are “spoiled.”
Stayovers – Rooms that occupy the room overnight and for subsequent
nights.
STLY – Same Time Last Year.
STR – Smith Travel Research.
Suboptimal Solution—An RRM solution that has a positive impact in one
area, but a negative impact on the overall service system.
SWOT Analysis – A four quadrant analysis to examine the subjects Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities and °reats.
T
Target Market – Segment of customers the business it trying to reach.
Ticket Revenue – Revenue derived from cruise fares and does not include
any ancillary revenues from onboard or other sales.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations 483
U
Unconstrained demand – Total demand in a segment or overall in the
absence of any constraints. (See also constrained/unconstrained
demand.)
484 Hospitality Revenue Management: Concepts and Practices
V
Variable Costs – Expenses from labor and supplies to service the room a˙er
use, the expense of the utilities associated with the guest’s occupancy
and a designated cash reserve towards a capital budget for replacing
furniture, generally every 3–7 years, as part of a regularly scheduled
refurbishment.
Variable Pricing – A pricing strategy where a business o˛ers varying price
points at di˛erent locations or points-of-sale. °is is a common
approach used by retailers when the costs of o˛ering certain goods
and services and the level of market demand justify it.
Variable Pricing (Restaurant) –°e practice of charging di˛erent prices to
di˛erent customers.
Visit – A visit is when a consumer accesses and has an interaction with a
website.
Y
Year-Round Itineraries – Some cruise ships are deployed on the same itiner-
ary year round, o˙en in the Caribbean.
Yield – °e return or proÿtability of an asset.
Yield (Cruise) – °e most important revenue management statistic in the
cruise industry. Yield can be calculated two ways: 1) Average per
diem times occupancy percentage, and 2) net ticket revenue divided
by ALBDs. But equations give the same result.
Yield Management – A variable pricing strategy, based on understanding,
anticipating and in˝uencing consumer behavior in order to max-
imize revenue or proÿts from a ÿxed, perishable resource (such as
airline seats or hotel room reservations).
YOY – Year-over-Year.
Index
485
486 Index
applications, 396–397 D
avoiding close-in discounting, 393
Distribution channel
cancellation fees, 376–377
and acquisitions among key players
capacity growth, 370–371
clear method, 105
cruise line
OTA standpoint, 105
occupancy, implications for, 381
Priceline Group, 106
pricing, 388
analysis, 91–93
revenue management systems, 394–395
applications, 109
tools for managing prices, 382–383
average daily rate (ADR), 87
customer databases
challenges, 94
control dilution, 384
customer relationship management (CRM) big data, 95
systems, 384 CRS system, 95
past guests and prospects, 384 fragmented distribution network, 95
stimulate demand, 384 proliferation, 95
test price points, 384 connectivity among
and debarkation dates, 375 availability, rates, and inventory (ARI), 104
deposits, 376–377 channel manager, 104
discretionary, leisure travelers, 374–375 CRS, 103
final payments, 376–377 extranet, 103
fixed embarkation, 375 pros & cons, 104
history, 369–370 continued mergers
hotel and cruise line revenue management clear method, 105
compared, 373–374 OTA standpoint, 105
internationalization of passengers, 371 Priceline Group, 106
internet activity, 398 cross device channel platforms
long booking window, 375–376 OTAs, 107–108
option periods, 376–377 Webtrends, 106
per person pricing drive direct practices
cabin, third and fourth guests, 377 methods, 94
lifeboat seats, 377 evolution of
ship, double occupancy capacity, 377 highlights, 89
solo traveler, 377 future of, 105
pricing constraints, 392–393 internet activity, 110
pros & cons, 390 online travel agencies (OTAs)
ship configuration agency, 97
cabin categories, 385–386 billboard effect, 97
easier than implementing a promotion, 387 hoteliers, 96–97
less disruptive to guests, 388 major benefits, 96
lower price dilution, 387 merchant, 97
ship size and onboard amenities, 370–371 opaque, 97
strategic cruise pricing, 388–389 rate parity and best rate guarantee
tactical cruise pricing legal challenges, 100–101
promotional offers, 391–392 pros & cons, 100
risk of spoilage, 390 sharing economy, 108
spilling demand, 390 social media
well-crafted cruise promotion, 390–391 increased involvement of, 106
team activity, 397–398 strategies used
wave season, 380 central reservation system (CRS), 88
worldwide distribution mix differences, 88
deployment, 371–373 global distribution channel (GDS), 88
guest sourcing, 383–384 hotel website, 87
year-round ship deployments versus seasonal meta websites, 88
ship deployments, 380 online travel agency (OTA), 88
itineraries, 379 voice, 88
Index 487
ship, double occupancy capacity, 377 Restaurant revenue management (RRM), 234, 263
solo traveler, 377 applications
Performance metrics Arepas, 324–325
average daily rate (ADR), 13–14 Cayuga Quick Grub, 291
house profit, defined, 15 internet activity, 293
indicators, 12 Muchacho, 257
key performance indicators (KPIs), 12 Northman’s, 291–292
length of stay (LOS), 13 tacky fingers, 325
occupancy, 12–13 tasty banquets, 257
profitability, 14–15 team activity, 292–293
revenue manager comparison, 15 Vail Ski Resort Mountain Restaurant, 324
room revenue, 14 BCG matrix to categorize entrees, 271
room statistics, 12 capacity in
room statistics in a profit & loss statement, 16 areas of, 302
Price elasticity of demand (PED), 217 combining tables, 315
Property management system (PMS), 198 complex methods, 318–319
controlling duration, 312–314
R dining duration, 306
Rate parity and best rate guarantee duration study, 308–312
legal challenges, 100–101 fences, 314–315
pros & cons, 100 layout of supply, 322
Reporting and analysis, 196 measuring duration, 306–307
applications percentage match, 316–317
explaining loss, 226–227 percentage-duration match, 317–318
selecting right data, 226 space allocation, 319–321
benchmarking performance supply mix, 316
forward looking benchmarking data, supply offered, 314
208–208, 211–212 utilization, 302–305
OTA market data, 213–215 cyclical pattern in data, 280
pricing market data, 215–216 internet activity, 259, 326–327
Smith Travel Research Global (STR), managing demand, defined, 264
202–203 arrivals, 275–276
standards of benchmarking, 204–208 basic arrivals analysis, 278
internet activity, 227 call-ahead seating, 278
market analytics, future of, 223 Cove, 272
speaking to data, 224–225 data, collected, 272
modeling internal booking data extent waiting lines, 286–287
average daily rate (ADR), 198 forecast considerations, 283–284
booking curve, 200 forecast methods, 284–286
four booking pace quadrants, 197–198 forecasting demand, 283
four lenses of segmentation, 199–200 graphing arrivals, 279–280
property management system (PMS), 198 line terms and types, 287–288
year over year (YOY) growth, 201 menu engineering, 271–274
non-traditional market data party size distribution, 282
air traffic, 218–220 pricing, 265
consumer sentiment converted into data, psychology of waiting lines, 288–289
217–218 reservations, 277
custom tags, 217 setting prices, 270–271
global review index score (GRI), 218 strategies, 273–274
price elasticity of demand (PED), 217 types, 276–277
tracking website regrets and denials variable pricing, 265–268
through custom tags, 220–223 variable pricing strategies, 268–269
pros & cons, 220 wait list management, 289–290
team activity, 227 waiting lines, 286
Request for proposal (RFP), 333, 342 walk-ins, 277
Index 491