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Selling Hospitality. Chapter 4. Unit Essential Question. How are hotels and restaurants marketed?. Essential Question 1. How has the internet impacted hospitality marketing and how can it be used to increase sales in hospitality businesses?. Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant.
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Selling Hospitality Chapter 4
Unit Essential Question How are hotels and restaurants marketed?
Essential Question 1 How has the internet impacted hospitality marketing and how can it be used to increase sales in hospitality businesses?
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Marketing Hospitality Properties • Selling involves more than renting rooms or tables. • Image • The sales team needs to decide the image the hotel or restaurant will project.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Marketing Hospitality Properties • Ranking systems • Most ranking systems use a star or diamond system. • 5 stars refer to the highest quality and best-in-class accommodations. • Hotels or restaurants with more stars may charge higher prices however, the services and amenities offered must justify the higher costs.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Marketing Hospitality Properties • Customer satisfaction • Requires the involvement of all employees and staff. • Begins with the front desk clerk or restaurant host. • A bad experience will result in an unhappy customer who will tell potential customers about being dissatisfied.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Internet Impact • The internet is having a major impact on how individuals and businesses correspond with one another. • Infomediaries: Third parties used to make reservations through the internet.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Internet Impact • What customers expect • Convenience • Consistency • Information • High-speed access
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Changing Rules in Hospitality Marketing • Successful hospitality businesses have the common traits of speed, flexibility, and consistency. • Speed is necessary to respond to a dynamic business environment. • Customers are very fickle, and brand loyalty is much harder to accomplish today. • Flexibility is necessary to survive in the competitive marketplace.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Changing Rules in Hospitality Marketing • New rules for resources • Success in the hospitality industry depends on visionary leadership and a strong commitment to customer relations. • Creativity and risk taking are characteristics necessary for success. • Finding, training, and keeping employees who can respond to the demanding environment are becoming increasingly difficult. • The bottom line is customer satisfaction.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Changing Rules in Hospitality Marketing • Traditional sales techniques • Includes brochures, mailings, and bulk distributions. • Brochures should clearly identify hotel and restaurant highlights and must be readily available for prospective customers. • Targeted mailing lists are useful when sending out sales promotions that revolve around sporting events, honeymoons, family weekend packages, etc.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Changing Rules in Hospitality Marketing • Tracking quality • Customer feedback is important in maintaining repeat customers. • Psychographic information: Identifies reasons why customers stay at a particular hotel or eat at specific restaurant. • Psychographic and demographic data are combined and used to create successful marketing plans.
Marketing the Hotel or Restaurant Changing Rules in Hospitality Marketing • Restaurant sales • Sales strategies for restaurants are based on upon market trends, changing customer tastes, and competition. • Restaurants cannot depend on past successes and must constantly work to maintain customer loyalty. • Excellent food, atmosphere, and service are major factors when determining repeat business.
Essential Question 2 What are the various types of reservations and how has technology impacted the reservation business?
Hotel Reservations Reserving a Hotel Room • There are many ways a guest can make hotel reservations: • Telephone • Mail • Fax • Email • Face-to-face • Web site
Hotel Reservations Reserving a Hotel Room • Computer reservation systems keep the latest tally on available rooms. • Desk clerks can readily see which rooms are available, C/O, and occupied. • Customer loyalty is built on the assurance of reservation accuracy. • Nonsmoking rooms and the size of beds are important for different hotel guests. • The hotel’s sales department may offer good group rates for conventions or family reunions.
Hotel Reservations Reserving a Hotel Room • Types of reservations • Regular reservation: • A non-guaranteed reservation that is usually held until 6 p.m. on the date of arrival. • After 6 p.m. the room is made available on a first-come, first-serve basis. • Guaranteed reservation: • Requires the guest to pay for the first night prior to the guest’s arrival. • Held with a deposit or credit card. • Gives guests the peace of mind that they have a room no matter how late they arrive at the hotel.
Hotel Reservations Reserving a Hotel Room • Cancelled reservations • Courteous travelers call when they do not plan on using a reservation. • Cancellation numbers are assigned so the customer is not charged and the room is changed to available status. • Stayovers or overstays:Persons staying longer than their reservation. • Due-outs: People expected to check out.
Hotel Reservations Third-Party Reservations • Third-party distribution channels • Examples: • Travel agents • Internet • Hotels have become increasingly dependant on third-parties. • The hotel will usually pay a commission to the third-party.
Hotel Reservations Third-Party Reservations • Importance of communications • The reservation process is also linked to the data-gathering process. • Advances in technology, shortages in clerical employees, and consumers’ willingness to seek the best deal on their own make a focus on easy, accurate, and economically competitive reservations essential.
Essential Question 3 What markets take advantage hospitality event marketing and what strategies can be used to attract them?
Sales and Event Planning The Big Business of Hospitality • Hospitality Event Planning: Sales strategies that attract the business of large conventions and banquets. • Some use a Conference and Visitors Bureau (CVB): Promotes tourism and convention business. Typical members include accommodation facilities, special attractions, restaurants, and tour companies. • Group sales: Involve renting multiple rooms and meeting rooms. • Awards Banquets • Weddings • Proms • Reunions • Conventions • Social Events
Sales and Event Planning The Big Business of Hospitality • Sales staff • Plans strategies for convention and banquet business. • Must market the entire hotel product, including room, food and beverage service, meeting space, and recreational facilities.
Sales and Event Planning The Big Business of Hospitality • Advertising and research • Necessary elements are advertising, direct mail, publicity, and public relations. • Alert sales departments take advantage of free positive publicity in the newspaper. • Sales departments use marketing research to determine the best days of the year for business. • Forecasts: Projections of potential business based on past records of rooms sold, convention business, walk-ins, and meals sold. • Necessary for staffing, purchasing food, and ordering linen supplies.
Sales and Event Planning The Big Business of Hospitality • Catering for hospitality events • Catering has an enormous impact on the success of a conference. • Customer expectations rise with prices. • Most catered meals at hotels are expensive, so it is extremely important to have high-quality food and good service. • The catering department • Helps clients determine a meal that meets their budget and taste. • Has the task of making the customer’s experience a pleasant one.
Sales and Event Planning Potential Markets • Every meeting or convention has a unique personality with its own special needs. • Professional organizations: • Lawyers, doctors, teachers, or other skilled professionals • Political conventions • Special events: • Kentucky Derby, The Player’s Championship (TPC), The Super Bowl, etc.
Sales and Event Planning Sales Strategies • Brochures • Internet • Virtual tours • Mailing lists • Chambers of commerce • State tourism offices • Tour operators • Newspaper articles