Brands across the industry are working to stay relevant at a
time when the tastes and expectations of hotel guests are rapidly changing. Corporate
travel buyers in Business Travel News' 2017 Hotel Survey gave top marks to brands
that are deploying initiatives and technologies geared toward meeting the individual
preferences of a diverse traveling population.
BTN's survey ranked brands across seven tiers. Of last year's
winners, only one brand returned to the top: Marriott International's Ritz-Carlton
came in first place for the second consecutive year in the luxury tier. Among the
multibrand hotel companies, Marriott and Hyatt Hotels Corp. had the strongest overall
performance—each had five brands finish in the top three of their respective tiers.
Hilton had three brands finish in the top three, while InterContinental Hotels Group
and Best Western each had two.
A Critical Crowd
This year, BTN added a new criterion to the dozen by which it
traditionally has asked travel managers to rate brands. The new factor: overall
traveler satisfaction.
More corporate programs are taking travelers' opinions into account,
whether the goal is to increase compliance and save money, to aid in employee retention
or to embrace a changing culture. "We have definitely seen more and more customers
that are becoming more flexible or more focused on traveler satisfaction than we
have in the past," said Eric Jongeling, director of Americas hotel solutions
for Carlson Wagonlit Travel.
In this environment, BTN wanted to see whether the brand preferences
of travel managers vastly differed from those of their own travelers. For the most
part, the two tastes aligned. In five out seven segments, the first place brand
also scored highest for traveler satisfaction. However, some brands that didn't
make it into the top slots, such as Four Seasons, tied with the first place finisher
for this criterion.
Overall, however, travel managers are the ones who may be less
satisfied with hoteliers and their brands. Excluding the new criterion, the top
brands in all seven segments received the lowest total scores since 2013. Jongeling
said the lower scores may be the result of travel managers expecting more.
"There is an expectation in terms of better service, more personalized service—free
Wi-Fi absolutely being kind of a requirement now."
BTN's report also comes at a time when hoteliers, including Marriott
and Hilton, are introducing stricter 48-hour to 72-hour cancellation policies.
"A lot of our customers feel like, 'You're pushing this on us without us having
any input,'" Jongeling said. "It becomes a give-and-take. They're saying,
'Well, if you're going to push these things, you better deliver something that benefits
us in return.'"
The lower satisfaction from travel managers comes also as the
lodging options for corporates are expanding, thanks to increased awareness around
corporate housing and to strengthening corporate positions among alternative players
like Airbnb.
The current hotel cycle appears to be heading for
a downturn. From January to July, year-over-year U.S. hotel demand growth, at 2.3
percent, still outpaced supply growth, 1.8 percent, according to STR. But supply
is exceeding demand already in upper-upscale, upscale and upper-midscale, where
most of the industry's new construction has occurred in recent years.
Methodology
For its annual Hotel Brand
Survey, Business Travel News emailed readers who are responsible for corporate hotel-buying
decisions, and 401 participated in an online survey between June 16 and Aug. 4 to
rate the hotels with which they have conducted business in the past year. They rated
each brand on as many as 13 attributes on an ascending scale from one to six. BTN
reported results only for hotel tiers and brands with significant respondent usage.
The survey bases hotel-tier divisions on price-point data provided by STR Global
and on industry knowledge of how buyers relate with specific brands.