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Andrew
Morsi, Co-CEO & Founder of eRevMax addresses the debate
on IDS (Internet
Distribution Systems)-
an upcoming technique in Distribution
One of the great benefits of being a member of the HSMAI
Hudson Valley Chapter is a dual membership with the HSMAI
Big Apple Chapter. In 2002 the Big Apple Chapter took
us on as a "sister chapter" affording our members
a dual membership. What this means to our members is that
you can go to all the functions and events of the Big Apple
Chapter as if you were a member there as well!
Following are the highlights of the recent Big Apple Chapter
luncheon held on May 8, 2003 as reported by our member Shaun
Johnston, President of Fair Street New Media. Thank you Shaun
for your input!
Shaun writes:
TOPIC: "Navigating the New Distribution Jungle--How to
be a Winning Survivor"
Panel
o
Andrew Morsi, Co-CEO & Founder of eRevMax Technologies
Inc.
o Chris Connar, National Sales Manager of Travelweb.com
o Jeff Osborne, Ozone Strategic Marketing
o Jim Struna, Hotwire
o Philip Saims, PS Hospitality
Chairperson,
Lorraine Sileo, VP Information Services, PhoCusWright
Lorraine lives in Hudson Valley, incidentally, in Dover Plains.
Lorraine:
"Only 10% of hotel rooms are sold online. So why is there
so much fuss about it? Because the percentage is growing rapidly.
And half of those rooms are sold through intermediaries, through
channels we don't control. Having given away the store, we
may want to take back control of our distribution."
Below
are panelists' remarks grouped by topic.
RATE PARITY
"First
step in regaining control of our own distribution is rate
parity, selling the same rooms at the same prices in different
channels."
"Price
needn't be the same in every channel, as long as it's appropriate
to the channel. I want to be represented appropriately within
each channel."
"Depends
on degree of transparency. If your price is concealed, included
as part
of a package for example, then you have some flexibility.
But in the published rates there should be parity."
"The
key is moderation. Don't price very differently in different
channels. Need to look realistically at fixed costs, and cover
them at every price. Don't sell below cost."
ROLE OF GDS
"I
was managing a 1200-room hotel in Manhattan. Mid week I had
spare rooms for the weekend. I gave them to a IDS. For Friday
they sold 120 rooms, Saturday they sold 160 rooms. There was
no other way I could move so many rooms. Use channels when
appropriate."
"Some
Internet sites can sell where you can't. So you need them."
"Hawaii
and Europe are farther ahead in working with intermediaries.
US is behind, is having difficulty making the adjustment."
"Some
channels were charging a 30% markup. Now set back to 25% and
is going even lower."
Reference
was made to the deal Hilton made with Expedia at a lowered
rate. "Hilton has taken hotels.com out of their program."
"GDS
won't go away. Under stress they reinvent themselves. They're
too useful. They're here for at least the next five years.
Hotels have to take account of them."
LOYALTY
GDS.
"Our audience is more interested in price than in brand.
We say, let us bring you the customer. But then you can make
them loyal, we're happy with that."
"The
situation is a triangle. Work with the GDS, but also work
with the customer. Regain connection with the customer."
"There's
been a shift in our customers from loyalty to price. Maybe
that will shift back when the economy improves."
"Disagree.
When people are dealing with third parties online, loyalty
is never important."
"Consumer
buying pattern has changed." (General agreement.)
WHO'S MOST VULNERABLE asked Lorraine
Individual
hotels. "Some IDS are spending $300,000 a week on marketing
their sites. If you don't have a brand you can't compete."
"Hotel
chains. The brands. They claim that they can drive business
to the individual hotels. But they can't afford to advertise
at the levels of the IDS. The IDS can do it better."
"IDS.
There are too many of them. There'll be consolidation."
"IDS.
Hotels will win by spending more on their own sites and reclaiming
sales."
MANAGING DISTRIBUTION
"Need
a full-time manager to handle all the channels. Hard to build
a culture for e-commerce."
"The
more you can plan ahead the more you can benefit from deals
with intermediaries."
"Revenue
Management is the art of turning business away."
"Play
in channels that are friendly"
"Hotels
can leverage good partnerships with online partners. Select
IDS partners carefully."
"Reduce
reliance on third parties. Attract people back to your own
web site."
"Last
few years, we've seen the airlines improve their sites, provide
more services. Hotels need to do the same."
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Below are
highlights from some dinner-table conversations.
300-room
Manhattan hotel gets around 300 bookings a month from its
web site, but that's only 4% of total sales. Intermediaries
bring many more. Does not see own site ever delivering a significant
amount of business.
90-room
individual hotel works with several intermediaries and maintains
a copy of own site on each one. All these copies are kept
up to date. Not too much work. Implication was, this is essential,
so you get manpower for it.
Complaint,
not having enough freedom to adjust pricing on rooms sold
by intermediaries.
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