Hotel loyalty members are far from loyal is the conclusion from a new survey by Deloitte. Loyalty members distribute as much as 50% of their hotel stay spend with their non-preferred brands.
The Deloitte report “A Restoration in Hotel Loyalty: Developing a blueprint for reinventing loyalty programs” is one of the more interesting takeaways I have from the Americas Lodging Investment Summit (ALIS) 2013 at the JW Marriott@LA Live this week. The report suggests hotel loyalty programs are broken based on the propensity of customers to change hotel brands for many of their hotel stays each year.
Adam Weissenberg, vice chairman of Deloitte, presented the loyalty report summary on a panel at ALIS.
My preliminary assessment of the Deloitte survey and report of hotel frequent travelers indicates there is a distinct division between high frequency loyal business travelers and travelers who seek out hotels more for leisure and value. Not surprising to me is the advice to redefine hotel loyalty programs with a personalization focus to reward high revenue travelers. Think of SPG’s 50 nights for suite upgrade certificates and 75 nights for higher points earning bonus instituted in 2012. Stay 100 nights at Starwood Hotels and get your own VIP Concierge.
Hotel loyalty programs may be changing for the frequent leisure traveler gaming the transparent system to earn loads of free nights and upgrades. Social media has reduced the opaqueness of hotel loyalty programs for social media users and technology may allow hotel loyalty programs to reinstitute opaqueness and differentiation. Or at least provide the best rewards to their most profitable guests. Personalization of rewards based on customer profile data mining may see hotel loyalty programs becoming more like casino loyalty programs. Free drinks are so much harder to come by these days when playing penny slots.
What Type of Frequent Traveler are You?
Deloitte grouped frequent traveler hotel guests into four types. [My comments are bracketed to indicate they are not part of the Deloitte report.]
The Proficient Traveler – Gen X and Baby Boomers pressed for time.
- Average 10 nights per month in hotels.
- Average nightly spend $210.
- $26,000 average annual hotel spend.
- Majority of stays luxury or upscale brands.
- Desire free wifi
- 58% of hotel spend is with preferred brand
- 42% of hotel spend with other brands.
- 24% of customers at risk of changing brand loyalty.
- Proficient travelers rank hotel loyalty program higher than other three travel types.
The Newbie Traveler – Millennials driven by experiences; social and tech-savvy.
- Average 8 nights per month in hotels.
- Average nightly spend $200.
- $20,000 average annual hotel spend.
- Majority of stays luxury or upscale brands.
- Want their needs understood and to feel hotel ‘values me’.
- 49% of hotel spend is with preferred brand.
- 51% of hotel spend with other brands.
- 25% of customers at risk of changing brand loyalty.
The Moderate Traveler – Gen X and Baby Boomers. Patient. [Does the ‘patient’ descriptor indicate a traveler who is not an asshole when the elite loyalty line at the counter is not being serviced?]
- Average 6 nights per month in hotels.
- Average nightly spend $170.
- $12,000 average annual hotel spend.
- upscale or moderately priced hotels
- seeks value for money
- free parking
- free wifi
- 49% of hotel spend is with preferred brand.
- 51% of hotel spend with other brands.
- 36% of customers at risk of changing brand loyalty.
[Obviously the free parking aspect excludes mostly luxury hotel stays for this group.]
The Mature Leisure Traveler – Baby Boomers and Seniors who go with the flow, pressure free.
- Average 5 nights per month in hotels.
- Average nightly spend $150.
- $8,000 average annual hotel spend.
- moderately priced hotels or stay with friends and family
- seeks value for money
- staff attitude [Does this preclude staying at some of those hip lifestyle brands?]
- 51% of hotel spend is with preferred brand.
- 43% of customers at risk of changing brand loyalty.
I think I fit mostly in the Moderate Traveler group. But my average nightly hotel spend is more like $80 to 100 per night for upscale and upper upscale hotels. I use hotel loyalty programs to travel frequently with big savings. I am in the traveler demographic hotel loyalty programs seek to reduce when they discuss moving beyond points.
Which traveler profile group do you identify with most?
Redefining loyalty
Redefining loyalty programs is likely geared for limiting the advantages and benefits received by savvy frequent travelers like me and most of you reading this blog.
Hotels these days don’t want you to just ‘like’ them. Hotel brands want you to display emotional commitment with an online presence beyond the hotel walls that spreads brand ‘love’ across social media to family, friends, and the masses. I tend to see that in plenty of travel blogger posts these days.
Restoring hotel loyalty is focused on using data mining to build comprehensive customer profiles. Hotel brands want to foster emotional loyalty that creates and retains high revenue customers. Differentiating hotel loyalty program offers to encourage loyalty from the kind of customers the hotel brand wants to retain is what I read into the report.
Reinventing hotel loyalty programs with an objective to create a relationship-based commitment that is demonstrated by a larger share of spend with the preferred hotel brand is the objective.
Is this starting to sound like marriage?
Just like a marriage, the more time you have spent together, the more detailed understanding partners realize about each other.
In the near future I may walk into my hotel room to find the room temperature at 69 F, the curtains open, the ice bucket filled and the minibar with a six pack of Stella Artois.
And if you really want to show me the love, please waive the hotel parking fee (or let me pay that with points at a good value exchange rate).
You can read the full Deloitte report here A Restoration in Hotel Loyalty: Developing a blueprint for reinventing loyalty programs.
JW Marriott Chicago asked me to fill out a survey prior to arrival for a sponsored press trip in May 2012. I was pleasantly surprised to see an ice bucket of Stella Artois beer when I walked into the room.
Is this the future trend for hotel loyalty program recognition?
Ric Garrido, writer and owner of Loyalty Traveler, shares news and views on hotels, hotel loyalty programs and vacation destinations for frequent guests. You can follow Loyalty Traveler on Twitter and Facebook and RSS feed.
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