hospitality

Made In America

In the past decade, the low cost of labor in countries like China, Taiwan, and the Philippines naturally caused a large amount of US furniture to be imported. We’ve especially seen this amongst hotel FF&E renovations.

 

But new reports from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, The Boston Consulting Group, and Old Dominion Freight Lines are telling a different story. With the inflation rate skyrocketing in China and high productivity in the US, cost of production is expected to be equal in China and the U.S. by 2015. This infographic looks not only at that productivity for furnishings made in America but also the disparity in freight costs when shipping large containers.

 

Hotel Development Trends from Bisnow Lodging Investment Summit 2012 [Part 2]

In my last post, I studied the numbers and the macroeconomic effects on the hotel industry that the great brains from the Bisnow Lodging Investment Summit spoke about in DC.

 

While everything does revolve around the numbers, there were several panels that explored the innovations, traveler trends, and future of hotels from an experiential and development standpoint.

 

Technology [We're Not Going Off The Grid Anytime Soon]

 

Disappointingly, I was one of the few live tweeting during the conference with the #BLIS2012 hashtag, providing insight

Pebble, an E-paper watch for iPhone and Android, just raised $10 million in funding through Kickstarter.com

from great speakers in 140 character bites. [If you feel lost already, you need to hire our sister company OttoPilot Media to move you and your company into the digital age]. Many travelers consistently complain about the lack of outlets, especially in older hotels.

 

With the number of devices that we all have, and the desire to wander from the desk surface (I mean, they don’t call it a “lap”top for nothing), the power options are substantially limited. However, if you’re thinking of adding major electrical renovations to your PIPs now, rethink that. By the time you do that renovation, technology will have changed. You’re already behind.

 

Bill Fortier, SVP from Hilton Worldwide, reminded us on the development panel that the standard and acceptable Hilton TV is now 42″. This just shows a barometer of what a traveler expects–a home away from home with all the amenities. Technology investment will be required because customers will demand it.

 

Younger generations have three main requirements–control, connectivity, and immediacy. Hotels will need to learn to cater to these requirements to earn the loyalty of a typically unloyal consumer.

 

F&B Is Not Just About Restaurants

 

Sadly, food & beverage was previously seen as the redheaded stepchildren of many hotels. It’s been, at its nicest, referred to as a loss leader and many owners and brands have allowed F&B to be back burnered. From a trending perspective, panelists and speakers are now sitting up and taking notice of F&B again. It’s not that F&B has become profitable (in fact it’s rarely profitable in a union market), it’s because it’s an important part of the brand and travel experience. Jon Bortz, CEO of Pebblebrook, reminded conference attendees that F&B stands for “food and beverage” and not “restaurants”.

food and beverage in select-service hotels

Starwood's aLoft brand has 24/7 F&B kiosks to serve their guests

As select service becomes more experiential, we are seeing hotels with pantries and limited-service offerings really embrace that idea of F&B.

 

It’s About the Experience

 

Across the board, just like we hear in digital marketing, there is talk of the consumer’s experience. Virgin Hotels’ Allie Hope resonated soundly with conference attendees by painting a picture of the Virgin experience. She was also one of the few speakers that spoke about having a targeted demographic. For Virgin it’s mid-30s, high earners, seasoned travelers, into social media, and well-educated.

 

Marriott seems to understand that people are looking for more unique experiences in hotels now with their Autograph collection; frequently, this is what

Turnberry Isle Resort in Miami- a part of the Marriott Autograph Collection

draws travelers to independents and boutique hotels. Through their Autograph collection, Marriott has picked up individually iconic assets with a heavier leisure mix than their normal properties. The collection includes 30 hotels–like The Carlton in New York and Turnberry Isle in Miami–and is the fastest grown full-service brand in the industry, ever (according to CEO Arne Sorenson). If you even visit the Autograph Collection website, it’s a very un-Marriott like user interface…and the word “experience” is used pervasively. Evidently, Autograph is symbiotic because, since adding the flag, average hotel revPAR is up 5-10 points.

 

Where is Hotel Innovation Going?

 

Unfortunately, there seemed to be a lot of reactive thought for what hotels should look like here and now, with today’s

"Ohhh, the files are IN the computer?" (Zoolander)

traveler and today’s technology. There was a real dearth of talk about the future of hotels. The conference brought tremendous insight on economic futures and what we can expect from financing, but innovation was another story.

In order for hoteliers to really understand what the future holds, they need to stop hanging out with and only learning from hotel people. Look to industries that are typically more cutting-edge–technology, sustainability, arts, entrepreneurship. Those are the industries that understand where this ship is going and what people are going to want in the future.

 

We’re on the right track with understanding experiential needs, but we are already behind by planning PIPs and CapEx projects with today’s technology and traveler in mind.

Keep Cool in the some of the Best Hotel Pools

People go to hotels for many different reasons: luxurious rooms, top quality service, business trips, family vacations, etc. Most don’t choose hotels based on their swimming facilities, but these pools will make you think otherwise.

Image: Concierge.com

Hotel Fasano in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil dones this lovely pool. Underlite and heated this pool attracts the upper-class echelon of Brazilians. Rooms at the Fasano start at $530 (concierge.com). Dream under the stars in this top-of-the-line rooftop pool!

Image: travelandleisure.com

How about a hotel with the pool imbedded in the cliffside? Hotel du Cap Eden-Roc in France allows you to swim amongst the rocks, complete with a rope swing into the pool! The infinity edge on this cliffside pool makes it seem as if you’ll fade into the adjoining Cannes Bay. Swim among celebrities such as Bruce Willis and Kate Moss! (travelandleisure.com)

Image: www.santorini-hotels.info/katikies.htm#zoom

Looking for something a little more exotic? The Katikies Hotel in Santorini is a great get-away. Equipped with 2 pools, the Aegean architecture of this hotel in the small village of Oia is something to talk about. How about this pool itself? The pool is inside a cave not to mention the beautiful blue background. The cave pool found at this hotel is one of a kind. (santorini-hotels.info/katikies)

 

What are some of your favorite hotel pools?

 

 

How to Satisfy Hotel Guests

What do hotel guests want? Hoteliers ask themselves the question all the time to increase room bookings and revenue.

Above all hotel guests want personalization, this can be accomplished in a variety of ways:

1. Engaged Employees

As HotelNewsNow.com has repeatedly stressed, satisfied employees mean satisfied customers. If employees have a sense of purpose and a more general view of how their job matters, the results will benefit everyone. Rooms will be cleaner, receptionists will be more welcoming, and the overall guest experience will be better and more personalized. If employees are engaged and motivated to develop relationships with the guests, the guests will notice.

2. Social Media 

The whole concept behind the success of social media is personalization. Allowing guests to express their experience on the hotel social media page (Facebook or Google+) and responding to them creates a personalized relationship. Guests feel they are being heard, and as a business, you get personalized feedback! It’s a win-win situation.

Social Media is also a great way to get more bookings. If someone’s friend ranks a hotel high, they are more likely to think more highly of that hotel. It’s word-of-mouth advertising, personal relationships rule!

3. Customized Products and Services

People aren’t looking for the subjective 5-star rating like they used to, people want a more personal feel with customized products and services. Because of new technology, competition, and readily available methods of comparing hotels; customers look until they get exactly what they want. Maybe that will be a Designer hotel or local food that appeals to them. Maybe a renovation would be a good idea to make your hotel less generic and more personalized. Whatever it may be hotels can cater to customers by giving them the tools to customize the experience for themselves.

By understanding what guests want, hotel owners can increase hotel room bookings and improve hotel revenue.

Do you agree that hotel guests want a personalized experience? What do you want as a hotel guest?

Designer Hotels

In the last blog post  guest personalization was stressed. These new brands of hotels take brand recognition to a large scale with actual designer hotels. Think big: Bulgari, Missoni, Armani, etc. This brilliant marketing campaign takes the brand recognition, loyalty, and ritz of these high-end designers and extends it to an upscale hotel! Check out some pictures from these places:

Bulgari Hotel, Bali:

Image: www.luxury-hotel-news.com

Bulgari Hotel, Milano:

Image: www.jaunted.com

Armani Hotel, Dubai:

Image: http://velvetpalette.wordpress.com

 

Image: http://velvetpalette.wordpress.com

Missoni Hotel, Scotland:

Image: http://www.hotelchatter.com

Like I said before these hotels take branding to the next level. It is a proven fact that people have brand loyalty, especially the upper class that can afford the designers listed above. So why not make luxury designer brand hotels?! Now not only can people wear their upscale designer brands, they can live them too (with the same loyalty no doubt!).

What is your favorite designer? If they had a hotel would you stay there simply for the name? I know if Kate Spade had a hotel I’d book a room in an instant!