The message in the hotel industry is the time is right to buy hotel brands as the market is at a low. The dynamics of the hotel industry may not be relevant to most frequent guests, however, the availability of hotels for your stays, and places to earn and burn points is fundamentally useful information for the loyalty traveler.

Hubert Joly, CEO of Carlson Hotels, stated last week at the Carlson Hotels Global Summit in Orlando, “The future of the hotel business is strong brands will win.”

Consumers want value, and young travelers are even more focused on value. Hotel owners also want value and the big fish hotel chains provide that in this economic environment.

Hotel companies use a measure called RevPar index to measure performance of a hotel in its location against other hotels in its market segment. One of the slides shown at the Carlson conference used the Radisson St. Martin Resort in the Caribbean as an example property to show the effect of rebranding a hotel. Ten years ago this hotel was a Le Meridien (before Starwood Hotels bought the brand). It had a Rev PAR index of 85. The goal is to be at or over 100, which if I understand correctly, means the hotel is performing average or better than average in generating revenue among its competitive set of hotels. You want to be at least in the upper half of your hotel market segment.

The Le Meridien dropped its branding and went independent in 2005. Its RevPAR index plunged to 65. The hotel was severely underperforming. After Carlson Hotels rebranded the property as a Radisson Resort, the RevPAR index went up to 105 in 2008 showing its performance exceeded that of other hotels in its market.

The point I want to make is that independent hotels as a group are suffering more than branded hotels in this economic environment for the travel industry. I have seen data in the past year showing this statistic. That is why the time is right for the big hotel chains with capital to gobble up smaller independent hotels and hotel brands.

At the International Hotel Investment Forum in Berlin this week, Hubert Joly reiterated,  as he did last week in Orlando, that Carlson Hotels is sitting on a pile of cash ready to invest in expanding their hotel portfolio.

For those of us not in the hotel industry there may not be clarity in the relationship between a hotel company like Hilton, Starwood, and Carlson and its hotel properties. I am not in the hotel industry so my knowledge is quite basic, but this is how I understand the standard relationship.

Most hotels are not owned, and many are not managed by the major hotel companies. The hotels have owners and investors in a hotel investment company who agree to contract with Starwood, Hilton, or Carlson to align the hotel with a particular brand identity. The loyalty programs we belong to are incentives to concentrate our hotel stays with hotels in these brand identities. The parent chain like Hilton and Marriott set standards and practices for the hotel brands to enable a relatively consistent service quality for the guest as he or she travels from location to location and stays in different hotels within a brand.

The hotel owner gets name recognition for his hotel and the major hotel company receives fees from the hotel through the brand contract. The consumer has a recognizable name brand and receives loyalty program benefits. The hotel owner hopefully has increased occupancy and better rates due to hotel brand recognition driving traffic to the hotel. The hotel brand company like Hilton, Marriott, and InterContinental Hotels Group continues to grow as more hotels are willing to contract with a major industry player.

I met some hotel owners last week who own hotels branded with different chains like Hilton, Westin, and Carlson.  Just as we frequent guests compare programs to get the best deal, the hotel owners compare programs to contract with the companies where they feel the investment return will be strongest.

Stephen P. Joyce, president and CEO of Choice Hotels International states they are looking for a full-service brand to add to the portfolio. One of the recent brand additions to Choice Hotels is the Ascend Collection. These are often boutique hotels that have been added to the Choice Privileges network of 6,000 hotels (2nd largest hotel chain globally behind Wyndham Hotels).

Hotel brands change companies. Starwood bought Le Meridien several years ago and integrated the brand into the Starwood Preferred Guest program. Hilton bought Scandic Hotels, integrated those properties into HHonors, then the brand was bought and removed out of HHonors all in a period of about seven years. Hyatt purchased Hawthorn Suites and AmeriSuites. Many of the AmeriSuites Hotels were converted to the new Hyatt Place brand and Hawthorne Suites was sold and is now part of Wyndham Hotels.

The next couple of years look to be a time of hotel brand consolidation in the big companies. When a hotel company like Carlson Hotels states they are going to add 500 Country Inn & Suites and a couple hundred Radisson Hotels, these projects are mostly conversions of hotels from their existing brand to a new brand. The market place is currently flooded with hotel rooms and many hotels averaging 50% or less occupancy are in need of new life and possibly new owners. New hotel projects are slowing. Many existing hotels will be rebranded in the next few years.

The good news for loyalty program members is a new hotel option within your preferred loyalty program will be coming to a place where you need a hotel night. The big fish are poised to pounce on the little fish and the familiar brands will become more widespread.

Competition for the relatively low number of travelers in 2010 and 2011 should mean loyalty promotions will remain prevalent, lucrative, and competitive. This may not be a great time to be a hotel owner, but it sure is a good time to be a loyalty traveler staying at hotels.

Source: http://www.hotelworldnetwork.com/brands/wyndham-choice-accor-and-carlson-ceos-debate-branding

Ritz-Carlton, Le Meridien, Crowne Plaza, and Hampton Inn take top place in their respective hotel market segments of luxury, upper upscale, upscale, and midscale. So we have Marriott, Starwood, InterContinental Hotels Group, and Hilton ready to take the survey results to the PR market for 2010.

All the big hotel chains are happy.

The BTN Hotel Survey is based on a survey of 387 corporate buyers. These are the people who negotiate contracts for corporate rates and conventions and such. Survey questions address topics like appearance of facilities, courteous staff, quality of food, quality of in room amenities, quality of business facilities, and perhaps most importantly the overall price-value relationship.

Here are leaders by hotel market segment.

Luxury Hotel Brands

     1. Ritz-Carlton (Marriott)

     2. Four Seasons

     3. Fairmont

     3. Waldorf-Astoria (Hilton)

     5. Mandarin-Oriental

     6. St. Regis (Starwood)

     7. Luxury Collection (Starwood)

 

Upper Upscale Hotel Brands

     1. Le Meridien (Starwood)

     2. InterContinental Hotels (Intercontinental Hotels Group – IHG)

     3. JW Marriott (Marriott)

     3. Sofitel (Accor)

     5. Renaissance (Marriott)

     6.  W Hotels (Starwood)

     7. Hilton

     7. Hyatt

     9. Omni

     10. Loews

     10. Westin (Starwood)

     12. Kimpton

     12. Marriott

     14. Sheraton (Starwood)

 

Upscale Hotel Brands

     1. Crowne Plaza (IHG)

     2. Hilton Garden Inn (Hilton)

     2. Hyatt Place (Hyatt)

     4.  EmbassySuites (Hilton)

     5. Doubletree (Hilton)

     6. Wyndham

     7. Four Points (Starwood)

     8. Courtyard (Marriott)

     9. Radisson (Carlson)

     9. SpringHill Suites (Marriott)

 

Midscale Hotel Brands

     1. Hampton Inn (Hilton)

     2. La Quinta Inn & Suites (La Quinta)

     3. Holiday Inn Express (IHG)

     4. Holiday Inn (IHG)

     5. Fairfield Inn (Marriott)

     6. Best Western

     7. Comfort Inn (Choice)

Source link: BTN 2010 U.S. Hotel Chain Survey

Here is a guide to cheap partner activities by March 31 for 6,000 bonus points in addition to the free 300 survey bonus points for answering four easy questions.

Priority Club has a partner activity promotion for 6,000 bonus points with three activities by March 31.

Register here for Partner activity bonus.

  • Earn 1,000 points for one activity.
  • Earn 2,000 additional points for second activity.
  • Earn 3,000 additional points for third activity.

Total = 6,000 bonus points + bonus points earned from three activities.

Cheap and Easy ways to Earn Partner Activity

1.       Points.com exchange (Points.com homepage)

If you are not yet a member, you can receive 25 Priority Club bonus points just for signing up. If you are a member, American Airlines AAdvantage has no minimum transfer requirement. 3 AA miles = 1 Priority Club point. That will hardly make a dent in your AA account and you will earn 1,001 Priority Club points after the transfer and bonus for the partner activity. [Update - Read the comments section. Apparently you need AA elite status for this.] 

Delta does not allow miles swap. Alaska has a 4,000 mile minimum swap so that is not a good value for points unless you have orphan miles that are unlikely to be used before they expire. I had Frontier miles that I swapped out (1,000 mile minimum) since I do not think I will earn sufficient miles in that account for a free ticket. I realized I lost 5,000 Distancia miles that were sitting orphan and at least I would have had some value if I had swapped them out in the past before I lost them. 

2.       Priority Club Rewards Shopping (limit of one partner purchase for promotion)

There are 200 partners. You may want to shop at Sears or Chicos, but if not, there are some store partners that most anyone can use for household or office necessities.

Walgreens has free shipping with a $25 order. Need some soap or diapers? 

Petco offers free shipping on $50 purchases. Are there hungry critters in your house?

Target has a daily special with a few items like $12 pants and $11 shoes and offers free shipping on the daily specials. The regular shipping cost is about $8. 

3.       Office Max (Free Shipping on $50 purchase)

Orders through Office Max appear to count as a separate partner and do not fall under the Priority Club Rewards Shopping limit of one purchase. Order $50 of stuff and get free shipping or you can pay $8 shipping for a lesser transaction.

4.       Buy Priority Club Points

Purchase the minimum 1,000 points for $13.50. This will give you a partner transaction bonus on top of the 1,000 purchased points.  

5.       Priority Club Dining (limit of one dining partner transaction for promotion)

Register a credit card for the Priority Club Dining program and go out to eat. New members earn 500 bonus points after first $25 dining transaction. I haven’t used dining for miles in a while, but for many travelers this is an easy way to get one transaction.

 6.       Just a small selection of other transactions are Hertz Rental Car, e-Rewards transfer to Priority Club points, Priority Club Visa purchase, transfer American Express Membership Rewards points or Diners Club Rewards points to Priority Club.

Three partner activities buying stuff you will buy anyway at some store can be achieved for just $20 or so in extra shipping. You can possibly earn 6,000 points at no additional expense if you order in quantities to earn free shipping.

Remember PointBreaks free nights are only 5,000 points so thiese bonuses can earn one or two free nights. Not even Priceline will get you a hotel room for $20.

Best of all is your bonus points all count for Priority Club elite status. Gold elite takes 20,000 points in a calendar year and Platinum elite takes 60,000 points in a calendar year.

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