“ROUNDING THE RENTAL REVENUE”
A couple of weeks ago I booked a hire car online which highlighted
some of the recent hospitality trends and also illustrated two very important
elements of the developing VR industry. The first is that the potential travel
income stream is very extensive and second is this chain of opportunity has
“links” which can be gamed by marketplace businesses to their best advantage.
Any vacation rental owner, manager or agents is a
fundamental part of this chain and one of the strongest links, but many are
unaware of the power they hold and the potential data and income “leakage”.
THE HONEY MONEY POT
How many people book flights as the first stage of their
holiday? A backpacker: probably a high
percentage. However a family holiday or couple searching for a continental weekend
away will often seek their accommodation first and match this with cheap flights
or book a “bundled” offer from high street travel agents or OTA’s. Dates also often
need to match with time off work and children’s holidays.
The major components in this travel event are well known.
They are core to any travel business’s success and creating a single invoice via
a multiple service daisy chain, will make each transaction more profitable.
Travel, accommodation and also “experiences “are the central
elements of any trip with current emphasis on the “complete experience” rather
than the individual building blocks of a holiday. It is these building blocks
that each has value however.
Imagine this as chain starting with a travellers initial
thought process and ending with their return home and eventual review! There
are enough building blocks to make a small Lego set.
The main travel methods are often booked online: such as
ferries, hire cars, taxis flights and trains. There is also a fine balance when
booking between destination, distance, length of stay, price, availability and
convenience with many OTA’s offering dynamic packaging to ease the booking
burden and lead you through the “look to book” process.
Real time management of travel & inventory with great presentation
and keen pricing, achieved through scales of economy, can bring significant bundling
rewards for the net based marketplaces.
WHERE IS THE MONEY?
Much like hotels, the car hire companies for example are
served by many online marketplaces and are equally challenged by search
positions, technology, and marketing reach. This means, as with most
marketplaces, referral commissions are available to distribute further and
wider. This may sound familiar to you as vacation rentals move into more
mainstream travel channels!
In every part of this booking process and distribution there
is margin to be made. Flights have notoriously low margins for agents and are
limited in their number simply by the volume of airlines and airport
destinations.
There are probably one hundred recognised commercial airlines
globally and 500+ in total, but there are 1/2m hotels and 3m vacation rentals
and significantly more travellers using a vast array or service. Airlines heavily market hotels and car rentals
and can significantly improve their transaction margins, but extending the
chain.

In the example above a £35 flight may witness a £200 hotel
booking and a £100 car rental, each at 10% commission. The company is at the
forefront of the travel chain and has first bite! To see a vacation rental as
an option here, the industry needs to be much less inflexible. This is hard
with 3m micro-businesses.
The example above is powered by Booking.com and shows 205
apartments from 2238 properties available.
The more fragmented and less centrally co-ordinated
businesses and geographically diverse travel services now provide opportunities
for integration in the coming years, as they breach their technology barriers
and are confronted by the global marketplaces.
What really grabbed my attention was when looking for a good
deal. I tried a few sites to get a good price and a recognised brand with good
reviews and “on-airport” pickup and delivery.
The first site is I used was carrentals.com which is an
Expedia company and then rentalcars.com which is a Price Line Company but also appeared
with a HomeAway logo on the site. Odd in
itself, but the message is clear when you consider the other acquisitions that
have been in the press recently with respect to monetising bookings.
None of these companies own the car rental company I booked
or any of the others on offer, they are simply marketplaces and curiously
cheaper than going direct to the brand! The power of marketing and aggregation
is plain to see!
There are plenty of other marketplaces that make your
choices theoretically easier and aggregate inventory. Restaurants are a prime
example.
“OpenTable” an acquisition by Price Line provides a service
that makes sense to bolt onto the booking chain or offer after a booking has
been made as a further revenue generator.
In fact the number of revenue opportunities open to a creative
business is very varied. Take a typical holiday overseas for a small family: There is transport to consider, accommodation,
insurances, airport parking, airport hotels, restaurants, attractions, tours,
taxis, communication services (phone, Wi-Fi), travel goods, currency exchange
and more.
We as holiday home businesses are all within a very
important part of this travel chain and are a primary focus as we provide the
glue that holds the daisy chain together throughout the whole stay and the
reason our real time data is of paramount importance to the large marketplaces.
Bundling allows a higher margin per transaction and this is not possible unless
all data and terms are compliant and synchronous.
Consider: If the travel method or accommodation information
is not available then the booking data is lost and ancillary sales are not
targetable.
A travel agent may make <5% on a flight, 10% on
accommodation, but up to 20% on car hire. In real terms a $500 flight and $1000
accommodation may realise $125, but add 20% of a $400 car hire and a 10% of a
few tours and this soon becomes $200. Now add in insurance, luggage, pet care,
visa services and more and the value per person rises sharply.
HOWEVER: The only
businesses that can provide this service are the ones at the front of the
chain, which is invariably travel and accommodation. This puts vacation rental
businesses in a very strong but highly targeted sector and a strong or weak
link in the chain depending on where you are standing.
THE RENTAL OPPORTUNITY
As owners or managers however we have all the booking and
potential booking information for the guests, whether they used commercial
travel or not. The travel element prior
to a trip is generally of little importance to us, but when a trip is bundled
with car hire, airport hotels, airport parking
and travel insurance for example, it can make for an attractive single
source proposition to OTA’s who can offer the complete solution, from leaving
to arriving home.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
Consider that we in the rental business know when guests
arrive and depart, their nationalities, their ages, the party size, home
address, even flight information and potentially more detail related to why
they booked a trip: holiday, celebration, family gathering etc. This is very
valuable information for bundling of ancillary services pre or post booking and
is in great demand by the marketplaces. Mining of huge datasets is very topical
and the travel industry is ripe for the picking. This article is generalised
but is well placed for 2015.
http://www.theguardian.com/accenture-partner-zone/big-data-monetization-future-business
Local accommodation suppliers know their markets extremely
well and are best placed to assist their guests at a personal level with
potentially lucrative after booking services. Traditionally we have been by
suggesting to customers small local car hire companies or local restaurants that
have served us personally for years or have recommended local guides, tour
operators and much more.
The Internet is allowing guests to research all manner of
leisure and service activities themselves of course and this is where
monetisation is now happening in the rental industry.
These often small individual local services also have to become
more market savvy, plus marketplaces that aggregate services are becoming more
acquisitive daily. This is driving the
need for real time data to be synchronised and another reason vacation rental
providers are under so much pressure to comply with marketplace rules on
availability and instant booking! Shareholders can see the possibilities but do
not understand the technical and industry objections!
The mainstream business services such as car hire have
sophisticated data management systems that can offer more centrally organised
bookings with instant online access. This trend is now seeing local suppliers
needing to become part of these marketplaces in order to gain access to new
business, but in so doing suffer loss of margin, more regulation and a necessary
investment in technology. This may sound familiar to you?
THE POWER IS IN OUR HANDS
Very recently we have witnessed endless arguments and seen
aggressive moves by vacation rental marketplaces to “enforce” more rules on a
very diverse range of businesses world-wide.
Their reasons are often stated as customer wishes:
- 1. 90% of guests want to book online
- Guests need to know real time availability to avoid wasting their time are yours.
- Instant booking with payment and real time availability and pricing allows greater distribution of the accommodation globally
- The millennia’s will only work this way
- Our travel brands are trusted
Without doubt there is some truth in all this, but look
carefully and consider the data acquisition implications for future bookings,
dilution of revenue and loss of possible ancillary earnings.
EXPERIENCES CARRY VALUE
Many of us download apps and use them to access data. GPS
and mapping and Uber are two prime examples.
Now consider that any request for your personal life
experience and paid for recommendations to be entered into a central online
repository, by you, whether web or mobile app, could be shared by all guests in
your destination. We live in a cosy sharing world, so why wouldn't you as an
accommodation business want to help that restaurant succeed?
This is the central tenet of reviews and is of course used
by consumers to make decisions. If for example you recommend a restaurant with
great breakfasts and distribute the information, others will make purchasing
decisions on this data. There is nothing
wrong in this, you are happy to share information, you’re that kind of person!
How would you feel however if that fabulous restaurant you
have been hyping up or a beach-side coffee shop with equally good breakfasts was
the decider on accommodation location and there was an equally nice apartment 2
doors away and not a couple of miles away. The marketplaces can map all
accommodation to your recommendation, rather than the reverse. Unknowingly we
are all creating potentially competitive situations and compiling large
valuable data sets that can assist the less helpful!
SELL YOUR DATA?
The moment you receive a booking from an enquiry then the
data is only available to you and the guest. The intrinsic monetary value of
that data is a commission for a manager and potential future commission. To a
large multi-national OTA, it may be worth double or triple that value as they
can monetise the chain and “lean on the customer” in more creative ways for
years. They also don’t share the income around. Selling your data is not
ethical, but is using the data without your permission also ethical (it’s all
in the small print of course).
The question that
perhaps we should all ask is: “Can owners and managers benefit from these
types of services monetarily themselves without the management burdens and
large marketplace demands?”
To do this means working in one of a number of ways: Offer guests information and arrangements,
personally organised. This is time consuming and relies on continual supplier relationship
management but you are completely in control. Supplier staff changes and lack
of notifications are a major problem.
2.
Subscribe to an affiliate program directly, add
an advert to the site or/and send links to guests and perhaps make a small
commission. Affiliate programs offer notoriously poor rewards and can mean
people leave your site prematurely and affiliates often offer alternative
accommodation themselves, so diluting your potential core business.
3.
Use a professional third party who supplies
these services under your brand and is prepared to share income and segregate
data. This removes the technology issues
and the after sales support in case of supplier issues.
This approach also improves your brand and
increases revenue! One such company recently in the news is Vreasy. They
provide this service to managers and owners along with technology to ease your
life! http://www.vreasy.com
The world of vacation rentals is facing its sternest
challenges right now and the future will hang as much on technology and data
control as personal service and customer care.
Adding private revenue streams will help support this and improve your
business image and customer retention.
Discovery Holiday Homes
Discovery Holiday Homes







Interesting article, I can see your point. However, after my own struggle to find a good hire car company this week I'm loath to recommend or advise on nay of these marketplaces to my clients. There is only one in my area I would really, happily suggest and it's independent. I'm an affiliate to one such marketplace but quite honestly I can't see me ever earning anything out of it! However, if one knows of a good, reliable local company, restaurant etc. there might be some discounts or commissions in the offing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the thoughts and a really common problem and have experienced it myself. Any service business wishing to survive in next 10 years will need to improve both service and tech.
ReplyDeleteThe article points to the large companies doing this and generally in major destinations, but it will spread.
What I'm hoping is that this part of the industry will specialise and pay you for the booking data and share the rewards, rather than force us to expose the booking data and then use it to their best advantage.