Data Storytelling
Data Analytics

Connecting the Dots with Hotel Revenue Data Storytelling

By , Area Vice President, Account Management, EMEA & APAC

Revenue management today involves so much more than forecasting and setting prices, it requires creativity to shape the insights learned from data and deliver them in a way that makes sense.

Hospitality is entering a new era defined by insight, based on experience and backed by data. To properly guide connected commercial organizations using the insights gained from data analysis, hotel operators are relying on savvy revenue leaders to deliver their knowledge and understanding in a way that is concise and actionable.

These revenue leaders possess the ability to dig into historical data, then compare and contrast it against current events in a way that has never before been possible. In a fully connected commercial organization, this allows revenue teams to pull in data from every corner of the property and portfolio, gaining real insight into how bookings and rates are evolving and how operators can respond in kind.

The problem is data can be unwieldy when it comes to acting on it. While it can provide important revelations that can change the way operators approach business, this is all for nothing if leaders miss the message.

Revenue leaders must become adept data storytellers, using the revenue management system, in tandem with other analytics technology and business intelligence tools, to connect the dots and create a strategy for greater profitability and commercial success.

Focus Your Message

“Everything was the same—until one day it all changed.” This might sound like the beginning of a great pitch to Netflix, but storytelling for business requires a different approach. Revenue leaders can set the scene by quickly identifying where a shift in data has occurred, what triggered it, and how to execute based on this knowledge.

The goal for such messaging should be to boil everything down into one statement or key visual. The best way to do this is through a powerful headline for each report, followed by a hypothesis for the implications of these findings. Most importantly, revenue leaders should adapt their reports based on the departments receiving them. Sales, marketing, the front desk, food & beverage and housekeeping each consume and work with information in different ways.

This hands-on approach from revenue leaders is necessary as continued economic uncertainty suppresses business’ urge to experiment. Operators must adapt to new ways of growing revenue, and revenue management is the key to overcoming their fear of failure. Hoteliers can use data as their guide, enabling them to put more confidence behind their decision-making every step of the way.

Create Context

Operators don’t have time to learn the history behind historical data. They need to rely on the data revenue leaders are basing their decisions on, and where these decisions are leading them. Keeping this in mind, revenue leaders can focus on building context around data analysis first and foremost.

The challenge here is twofold. First, revenue leaders must be able to form a relationship with corporate and commercial leaders that allows them to freely share ideas. Second, they must willingly step outside the confines of a traditional revenue management role, becoming commercial analysts and leaders of change capable of directing a hotel’s operational trajectory.

It’s easy to fall back on operational strategies that worked in the past, but revenue leaders must remember that their role is one of the newest in hospitality, and it has continued to evolve at a rapid pace. The role’s definition continues to change, and it’s during periods of economic uncertainty that revenue management is needed to unlock a hotel’s potential growth. By using their existing skills to take on a broader commercial leadership role, revenue leaders are positioned to influence hotel operations beyond the position’s traditional scope.

Speak Up

Through data, revenue leaders have become experts in long-term strategic planning, but the challenge to evolve does not rest solely on their shoulders. Hotels must create an environment that favors experimentation and provide the capabilities to do so. Revenue management software can only do so much if it remains detached from other hotel systems. A fully connected organization allows revenue leaders to pull information from every corner of the hotel, but many hotels continue to use legacy systems disconnected from the cloud.

The role of revenue management has evolved a great deal from its humble beginnings, and today’s revenue leaders possess marketing skills for increasing growth that are unique to today’s business landscape. That’s why it’s up to modern revenue leaders to push back against the use of inferior technology and data sources, take the lead in championing the power of sophisticated revenue technology, and foster a holistic revenue strategy across the entire commercial organization.

Hotels today remain limited by a shortage of workers and rising guest expectations. Only operators willing to try new things at all levels of business are positioned to succeed—and revenue management is leading the movement.

Area Vice President, Account Management, EMEA & APAC

Sibylle Luger leads a team of industry experts committed to developing, nurturing, and growing relationships with clients of IDeaS. She has spent her entire career in hospitality and loves developing solid and lasting relationships with clients. Sibylle joined IDeaS in 2007 after wearing many hotel hats, from housekeeping to food and beverage and revenue management.

Related Resources

Hungry for more?

At IDeaS, we’ve always got an ear to the ground and our fingers on the keyboard, ever-ready to share our latest learnings, data, trends, and happenings with you, dear reader.

See all blogs
×