OTA, CRS, FIT, OCC, REVPAR, POS, GDS, F&B, PMS, CRM, POS, LMFAO

As requested by Gwaenynog B&B today's blog is a glossary of terms that large hotels tend to use. The most difficult to get your head around are the ones relating to tech travel industry, that are worth knowing if you are dealing with third party channels. I hope you find them useful, if you don't agree with any or feel I have missed out on anything then please feel free to comment. 

 

While browsing definitions I came across this darts term which I found interesting!

 

Breakfast (or Bed N Breakfast)

A score of 26 made up of a single five, single 20 and single one which comes from the typical price of a bed-and-breakfast in times gone by: 2 shillings and sixpence or 'two and six'.

 

 

Central Reservation System (CRS/CReS)

The ability of guests to make a reservation for one out of a number of hotels by contacting one agency. This agency is contracted by the hotels acting as a group, to operate this 'central' reservation service.

 

Frequent Independent Traveler (FIT)
Designation which applies to visitors who arrive on their own as opposed to being a part of an organized group.

 

Guest Amenities
Not to be confused with 'amenities', this is the term given to the range of disposable items provided in guest room bathrooms and includes such items as shampoo, lotion, conditioner, soap, toothpaste, toothbrush, shower caps, etc… The cost of these items are built into room rate.

 

High (Peak) Season / Shoulder Season
The period of consecutive months during which optimum revenues, room/suite occupancy and average room rates are generated. I

 

Occupancy (Occ. %)  (Occ Rate)
The percentage of available rooms occupied for a given period of consecutive time. This figure is calculated by dividing the number of rooms occupied for a period, by the number of rooms available for the same period and is expressed as a percentage.

 

Rack Rate
The full, undiscounted published room rate (price).

 

Registration Card (Reg. Card)
A form on which arriving guests record their names, addresses, and other details including mode of transportation used, nationality, purpose of visit (usually business or pleasure), method of payment, and length of stay. A space is also provided for signature, room rate and room number. Additional questions may be included as a part of the hotel's market research platform. (Twitter and Facebook details).

 

Revenue Per Available Room (REVPAR)
Revpar is the key measure in the performance of the core business of hotels selling rooms. Revenue per available room (revpar) is the key indicator of performance for hotels and can be broken down into two parts reflecting occupancy and rates:

Revpar = occupancy (percentage of available rooms occupied) × average room rate per night.

Trends in revpar are very important. Revpar can be used to compare companies but only if they have broadly similar hotels - i.e. similarly priced in similar locations. 

 

Point of Sale (POS)

Computerized systems that retail outlets such as restaurants, gift shops, etc, enter orders and maintain various accounting information. The POS generally interfaces with the property management system (PMS).

 

Property Management Systems (PMS)

A computerized front desk system that manages hotel room inventory, guest billing and interfaces with various other systems such as telephone, call accounting, point of sale (POS), entertainment, etc.

 

Average Occupancy Per Room

A ratio that shows the average number of paid guests for each room sold. Calculated by dividing number of paid room guests by number of rooms sold. Measures management's ability to use the lodging facilities. 

 

Proprietary Booking Engine

A internet reservation system that is owned and operated by an individual hotel or group of hotels to allow them to take reservation on their own website without paying a fee to the GDS, third party booking engines, distribution channels or franchise reservation systems.

 

 

Distribution Channel or OTA (Online Travel Agent)

An internet site that provides a booking engine and a marketing/sales service.  A traveller can search a large number of lodging facilities for availability and reserve a room. The lodging facilities are not affiliated with the site and pay a fee for the business that the third party site generates. Examples of third party sites include: hotels.com, priceline.com. Booking.com

 

 

Merchant Model

A business model in which a hotel provides an online company with a net rate that is a fixed discount off the hotel's retail rates, and the online company then sells the room to the customer at a rate of its own choosing and retains the difference. A common alternative to this model is an arrangement under which an online company sells to consumers at the hotel's rate, and the hotel pays the online company a percentage of the revenue generated.

 

REVPAR

Revenue Per Available Room

 

Affinity Leads 

Sales and marketing opportunities related to groups organized around a common interest, such as AARP, AAA, and others.

 

Consortia

Marketing organizations that link together small to medium sized independent travel agencies to leverage purchasing power and marketing opportunities. 

 

CRM - Customer Relationship Management 

A strategy used to learn more about customers' needs and behaviours in order to develop stronger relationships with them and create a value exchange on both sides.

 

F&B 

Food and beverage.

 

GDS

Global Distribution Systems are the original electronic sales systems linking hotel companies and other travel suppliers to travel agencies worldwide. 

 

Look to Book

The ratio of shopping requests versus bookings on a website. 'Convert Lookers to Bookers'.

 

 

LMFAO

Laughing my fat ass off

 

 


 

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I've Seen The Future, And The Future's Mobile

You may or may not know that I spent the end of last week hobnobbing with industry bigwigs at the Travel Distribution Summit. Everyone with the ability to wear a suit mumbled about Mobile Internet. And then, (after a few post conference Kronenbergs!) I saw it... The future of how your customers will find you

You may know all this stuff already and I had heard of it, but up until now I've ignored it. There's so much techy stuff around that I just have to deflect most of it. I'm scared that I'll become a robot and out of touch with the real world. I want to be a real person for readers of this blog, and not a lazy writer that becomes obsessed with tech and updating the blog using other people's techy discoveries.

However this is important, very important and I truly believe that to be one step ahead of the game you need to learn all about it now.

There are two companies in America who are big news. Foursquare and Gowalla. They have basically combined the world of Google Maps with social media. Users log in to Foursquare from their mobiles and then update their status telling everyone where they are and what they are doing. 'I'm singing at a Karaoke Bar', 'I'm at an Art Gallery'. The idea is that other Foursquare users can meet each other in the real world as they know each other's locations. Each user gets points for being the most exciting or active and they then get freebies or special offers from local companies signed up to the scheme.

Yahoo recently had a $125 million bid turned down for the Foursquare application.

What's important about this for you is not the game or the company names to remember (Facebook may soon be taking over this space) but the advancement in technology and how this will become very important for your B&B.

I truly believe that lots of customers will soon no longer pre-book accommodation online. They'll wait until they reach a city/town and then walk around looking at their phones/sat navs. Like real-life signs, there'll be signs on their phones through Google maps from accommodation providers with rooms available.

The user will see a sign, click on it and read the last 10 reviews from Trip Advisor, they'll have a look around the room pics, click to book and stroll in (like David Essex) with a booking number.

It's exciting for independent hoteliers because this really will level the playing field out there and while the online world as we know it is awash with large hotels using 'distribution channels' to reach to the top of Google, this will no longer be the case when reality and virtual combine. So long as you have a 'sign' present on a location map, then you have as much chance as the big chains to reach the customer.

Filed under  //  four square   gowella   marketing on facebook   mobile   mobile internet   social media   technology  
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