Rewards programs are common among large hotel chains, but they just
scratch the surface in terms of CRM's capabilities in nurturing customer
loyalty. They could keep track of information on room preferences, for
example. Or keep tabs on special needs such as non-allergenic pillows or
other details that "tell the customer that they are valued," said Prism
Partnership's Maureen O'Hanlon.
Pick a room -- any room. There are lots of choices
of places to stay for travelers in the U.S. In fact, there are 4.4
million guestrooms across the country, according to the
American Hotel and Lodging Association.
And that's a problem. Competitors in the hospitality sector need some
kind of an edge to gain new customers and, even more importantly, to
keep their current customers coming back to the same hospitality brand
whether the actual guestroom is in New York, Denver, or anywhere else.
That's where an active CRM system fits in. For the major hotel chains, utilizing CRM is a way of life.
"For the really big hotel chains, the use of CRM is very robust, but
they tend to focus almost exclusively on using CRM tools for loyalty
programs," Maureen O'Hanlon, senior partner at the
Prism Partnership,
told CRM Buyer. Hotel loyalty programs are designed to build repeat
business with frequent-guest rewards, borrowing from the model of
airline frequent flyer programs.
"I'd say 95 percent of the hotel programs are focused on frequent
travelers," O'Hanlon said. "The hotels are trying to fill rooms that
would otherwise go empty just like the airlines are trying to fill
seats."
Hotels Lag in CRM
Generally, the hotel industry programs feature such rewards as extended
stays at a discount or for free, or offering discounted rooms at a later
date based on points accumulated from frequent stays at a facility
operated by a particular hotel chain. However, moving beyond the free
room concept into broader and more innovative applications of CRM has
been problematic in the industry.
"The large chains and casinos are more involved with CRM than the
small brands and independents," Jason Price, executive vice president of
Hospitality e-Business Strategies, told CRM Buyer, "but the entire industry lags behind the airlines and online travel agents."
Regarding CRM systems, "the online travel agents get it, and devote a
lot more attention to this side of the business than the hotel industry
at large," said Price. "The cost and need for hotels is greater than
ever, and yet hotels are still the slowest and most reluctant to apply
simple CRM exercises to their daily business practice."
As a case in point, Price cites the example of a small Midwestern
group of hotels that generated more than US$1 million in extra revenue
by simply upselling their hotel suites through their reservation
confirmation messages. After a customer made a reservation, the hotel
sent a confirmation letter with the offer to upgrade from a standard
room to a suite for a modest additional fee.
"Any hotel can do this, and yet most do not," Price said.
More recently, larger hotels have been tweaking their rewards programs by offering incentives beyond discounted or free rooms.
"They are getting more sophisticated and using tie-ins to the hotel
gift shop, or the hotel restaurants, or other types of merchandise
offers," O'Hanlon said.
Tracking Customer Behavior
However important rewards programs might be, they are still only one
aspect of CRM. Equally important is the need to learn more about
customer behavior so as to design offers tailored to a type of customer
or even to individual customers.
"The gaming resorts and casinos have done some innovative things in
terms of enhancing the customer experience," Suzanne Clayton, director
of gaming and hospitality at
SAS Institute, told CRM Buyer.
When guests check in at Harrah's Casinos, for example, they are given
a casino card that acts like a credit card and can be used to gain
access to gaming rooms and machines, the resort spa, restaurants and
other places within the casino, said Clayton.
"As a result, the casino gets a real-time history of where the
customer is spending his time on the site, and they can offer rewards or
discounts and other promotions based on those patterns," she explained.
"Because it's real-time, they can even offer the incentives during the
current stay or as an inducement to gain repeat business."
The larger hotel chains are beginning to make progress in providing a
better customer experience by using CRM tools, O'Hanlon said.
"They are improving the use of all the data they have on customers in
terms of guest histories, and demographic or psychographic
information," she said.
The hotels, for example, can break out information on room
preferences that are suitable to families with small children or
teenagers; keep tabs on special needs such as non-allergenic pillows or
other details that "tell the customer that they are valued," O'Hanlon
pointed out.
Some chains are better at such targeting than others she noted, but all seem to see the need to enhance their CRM capabilities.
The large hotel chains, of course, do not account for the entire
hospitality sector. In fact, there are more than 49,000 guest properties
in the U.S. that have a minimum of 15 rooms, according to the American
Hotel and Lodging Association.
Second Tier Offers Big CRM Potential
"Once you get below the big outfits, the whole sector has underutilized
the tools available through CRM programs," Gregg Hopkins, president of
Libra OnDemand,
told CRM Buyer. A little more than a year ago, Hopkins established his
company to provide CRM assistance not only to large hotel chains but
also to mid-sized and smaller firms in the sector.
"A lot of hotels at the mid-size level or below think CRM means using
email to contact customers, and that's it," Hopkins said. However, the
technology and programs exist for hospitality providers at this level to
implement more extensive CRM programs.
"It's possible for these hotels to gather the necessary data to
improve their customer contact and develop programs," he added. "In
fact, a rewards program might not be appropriate, because they don't
have a lot of units in their chain -- but there are other things they
can use to improve the ability to recognize customers and provide a good
experience. But right now there's a lot of educating to be done for
these hotels in terms of using CRM."
SalesForce.com is Hopkins' platform of choice for CRM. The hosted
model lets hotels implement programs with a modest investment, he noted.
Systems can be deployed for $75,000 to $120,000 per year for a single
property, Hopkins said. In a recent advisory, he advocated the enhanced
use of hotel Web sites as the focal point for building a CRM system at
an affordable cost.
"Today's technologies allow Web sites, regardless of the hotel
company's size, to feature CRM capabilities by seamlessly integrating
the Web site with the customer relationship management application," he
said. "Customers accessing the Web site can take the initiative to
manage their personal information, update their preferences, and track
rewards in a safe, secure environment that they control."
It's clear that computerized reservation systems and rewards programs
are almost universal in the hospitality sector, but hotels at all
levels can do much more in capturing and managing guest information and
designing customer-friendly programs through the efficient use of CRM
tools.
"A lot of money is being thrown at CRM programs," O'Hanlon said --
but that doesn't mean CRM usage has reached its full potential.
"There is a lot of data being generated, but it depends on how it is
used," she emphasized. "The tools exist. It's a matter of chief
executives figuring out what their goals are."