Google updates Hotel Finder with date, neighborhood, brand, and travel time search

Google has updated its Hotel Finder tool to invite users to narrow their searches by neighborhood and time period, plus (for a limited number of cities) its first unique innovation in metasearch: “time-based search.”

When a user clicks to runs a search, a dark box pops up on the screen spotlighting neighborhoods by name. As a user mouses over the neighborhood names, Google provides additional information on each district through pop-out boxes.

Google’s recently acquired Frommers text and photos could prove invaluable here.

When a user selects a neighborhood, Hotel Finder highlights on a map what the neighborhood’s boundaries are.

The update doesn’t change the custom neighborhood search function that Hotel Finder already had. Users can still select custom areas to search for hotels in by drawing a simple box.

google hotel finder

Brand search

Users can also now search by “Brand,” a new selection in the drop-down menu, helpful to users who collect loyalty points or prefer a familiar property type.

Current brands participating are major chains, such as Accor, Best Western, Hilton, Marriott, and NH Hotels.

The first unique innovation

Besides the updates to Hotel Finder announced yesterday, Google rolled out a related key innovation in late January as well: find hotels by travel time.

Hotel Finder now offers the option of searching for hotels by travel time (by transportation method) in cities where the company have partnered with local transit agencies to integrate their data.

When a user enters Eiffel Tower in the search box search and select “hotels by travel time”, he or she will see the hotels that that can be reached by public transport within 20 minutes. Users can adjust the travel time or their mode of transport, such as from transit to walking or driving.

google hotel finder

Ever evolving

Travelers can continue to run basic semantic search queries on the tool as well, such as “three star Rome under ÂŁ200 with WiFi.”

Launched in July 2011, Hotel Finder has since had a series of enhancements.

In the past, it has tested how its Hotel Finder appears in generic search results, and some users internationally have been seeing its test in which it invites users to use Hotel Finder above hotel-related search results from hotel chains and travel companies.

It has paid ads in Hotel Finder itself, which again, are ahead of the organic SERPs.

Related posts:

  1. Is HotPads Lasso Search an alternative to Google Hotel Finder shape drawing?
  2. Google repositions Hotel Finder atop organic search results
  3. Google Hotel Finder distances itself from Hipmunk with transit data
Sean O'Neill About Sean O'Neill

Sean O’Neill is a UK-based reporter for Tnooz.

Since university, he's been a full-time journalist for US consumer magazines and websites, and since 2007 he has covered B2C travel news full-time.

He lives in London and is travel tech columnist for BBC Travel. He used to work in New York City as the online senior editor for Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel.

In the past, O'Neill held editor, writer, and reporter positions at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance and Foreign Policy magazines in Washington, DC. Please visit his personal site and follow him on Twitter or Google+ .

Comments

  1. Ryan says:

    A very clean tool and it runs super fast! After playing with it for a few days now, I can see a huge appeal. However, I just cannot seem to ascertain how it chooses what companies to use for listings. http://www.executivetravellink.com beats many of their rates but I do not see them.

  2. Oz Har Adir says:

    Great improvements though I still find the map/area adjustment hard to use.

    What is interesting is in deed the suppliers list, where I spotted Room 77 as a supplier, along several ‘regular’ OTA. See: http://imm.io/VsGE

    So, if a room grader turned meta is also an OTA, and if every OTA tries to partner with other OTA’s inventories in order to be comprehensive, and if both can advertise as a supplier in the Hotel Finder marketplace, and with Google being both the ad-space and the meta, where are the lines between all these suppliers drawn? And why is there no official hotel rate to be found in almost any search (on either Hotel Finder or other metas?)

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