NB: This is a guest article by Pedro Colaco, president and CEO of GuestCentric.
Independent hotels are paranoid about visibility. The hospitality industry is extremely competitive: as within any market with oversupply, capturing market share means someone else is losing out.
Hence, most hotel managers spend an inordinate amount of time thinking about ways to make their hotels more visible than their competitors. And increasingly so they are thinking about ways to do it online through digital marketing strategies.
A friend quoted to me that in one of the big OTAs, the #1 spot of the search results gets 36% of the reservations, and results on page one get a whopping 90% of all bookings.
It sounds a bit extreme, but this single fact is the reason why in certain markets, though booking.com’s published commission rate is 15%, hotels are providing commission overrides of close to 30% to be on the first page.
Because hotel visibility is key in a crowded market. And driving higher commission is a “simple” solution for many of these hotel managers.
But is it the intelligent solution?
“Buying rank” is driving an increasing commission war between hotels that solely benefits the OTAs. Typically hotels only notice this at the end of the month, when they pay tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars to the OTAs.
Using that budget for better digital marketing would be an alternative. This is why the big chains have recently launched RoomKey.
We are also seeing an increasing number of independent hotels thinking of Online Travel Optimization, not just hotel SEO.
The biggest obstacle is that hotel digital marketing is considered by many as complex, rocket science or a black art.
The “hordes” of what we at GuestCentric call “fake SEO experts” that sell naive hotel managers on the fact that through “advanced strategies” they will get the hotel on the first page on Google makes this matter worse.
Take note of what Google says on the topic:
- Be wary of SEO firms and web consultants or agencies that send you email out of the blue.
- No one can guarantee a #1 ranking on Google.
- Be careful if a company is secretive or won’t clearly explain what they intend to do.
Still, all hotel managers know that leveraging digital marketing is a good idea to increase their revenue and lower their distribution costs and it should be a powerful alternative to ever-increasing OTA commissions.
Most hotel managers are also aware that never before were there as many tools that they can leverage to engage consumers. Finally, technology now enables them to do so at a reasonable price through their hotel websites, by creating special offers, or by leveraging social or mobile.
But these solutions sound like “a lot of extra work”. So, is there a silver bullet?
Whilst much of this has been around for a few years, it is astonishing how many properties are still missing out (or ignoring?) the basics.
Below are five items that you should consider when trying to solve your digital marketing problems – RIGHT NOW:
1. Highlight your website as your main channel with automatic SEO
Google has many rules on how a website should be optimized.
Ensure that the content management system you select as part of your hotel digital marketing solution enables you to change content and pictures quickly, but also optimizes basic Google content like title tags, URLs, Alt-text for pictures, heading tags, robots.txt automatically.
For more information on this topic you can refer to Google’s Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide.
2. Create great content, spell check it!
Google nowadays looks at content quality. So be original and create content relating to your destination that is original and fun.
And don’t forget: one basic element of content quality is spelling, so spell check your content before pushing that “Publish” button.
3. Please optimize for mobile users. Please.
19% of hotel searches come from mobile, says Google. Hence, optimize your online presence for mobile users. Make sure you have an iPad-ready website (no Flash please!).
Create a mobile version optimized for lower bandwidth networks and quick completion of basic tasks like calling the hotel or checking the address. Make the booking experience simple and straightforward for a mobile user.
4. Please, please, please, leverage social networks like for a multi-channel strategy
Get a tool that populates your content and booking engine in as many channels as possible. Think about what the big OTAs do: they sell on their websites, but they also power hotel sales on websites of airlines, rental cars, etc.
So, use the same strategy: distribute your content and offers to as many content and distribution networks as possible. Most of these tasks can be automated and should take no extra effort.
5. Centralize customer databases
One key element of any digital marketing strategy is customer engagement. To achieve this, a hotel should have a central reservations platform that enables it to track the history of every customer.
This customer relationship database should enable the hotel to engage customers on special occasions, create additional value for loyal customers and provide incentives to return.
To combat OTA dominance hotel managers need a powerful hotel digital marketing solution: one that is simple and intelligent, that maximizes return from their direct channels and creates long-standing relationships with customers.
NB: This is a guest article by Pedro Colaco, president and CEO of GuestCentric.
NB2: Tnooz’s Fake Review Optimisation series.
NB3: Hotel mouse image via Shutterstock.
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whats new?
Agree
What is also true is that there are thousands of wildly deficient hotel websites out there who could do with ladlefuls of not only this advice, but also action
Hi Pedro,
As Patrick mentioned, these are known best practices. Still SEO and the engine are simply left untouched, so no harm in reiterating.
Question about point 4: yes OTA’s market the hotels in various platforms, also metasearch. How do you see hotels doing this as they don’t have the tech nor the scale?
Or did you mean to push their content in social, as the header described? How do you ensure ‘no extra effort’ without becoming a spammer?
Thanks for your article, which I’ve forwarded to a Dutch blogger who’s now writing tips for hoteliers.
Cheers,
Wouter.
Thank you for this thorough article. I do however feel that when offering SEO advice, too few people ignore the design aspect of a site. The author did indirectly touch on this subject, but design does play a big role in SEO. I’m not talking about technical aspects such as javascript and flash menus being unreadable by search engines, I’m talking actual aesthetics.
A great website design shows potential customers that you value their patronage and that you’ll go the extra mile to ensure their happiness, even if it’s just making their web browsing experience more pleasant. A poor design on the other hand is more likely to yield higher bounce rates and quite frankly is a slap in the face of web browsers. How can you expect people to take your business seriously when you don’t take your own image seriously? I’ve came across several instances in the hotel industry where fine establishments are being done an injustice by their own poor site designs.
Take time to make sure all elements are pixel perfect, and remember being minimalist doesn’t mean you have to be boring. There are no short cuts in SEO that actually work.
Good SEO article
Tks for the share
I agree. All over the world markets with oversupply is extremely competitive. That makes a good SEO strategy that much more important.
Independent hotel websites are indeed some of the worst out there. I’ve noticed that restaurants have, of late, begun to abandon their notoriously bad Flash sites for smarter design and more content-rich and engaging sites. Many are blogging!
I hope that independent hotels will be next. Blogging is a great way for them to start on a long-term SEO strategy and provide an almost concierge-like service to their guests and prospective guests; plugging other independent businesses (restaurants, shops, attractions, etc.) Basically, doing all the things that separate them from and give them an advantage over the chains.