The COVID-19 pandemic shook the lodging industry particularly hard and turned many hotel businesses upside down. But, like a shaken snow globe, the post-COVID-19 landscape may be as good or even better than before the pandemic — because people are, and will always be social animals.
And whether they prefer a big-city hotel run by a global chain, a lodge at a ski resort, or a quiet bed-and-breakfast, people will always want to “getaway.”
Hotels will first have to focus on cleanliness and safety certifications, and technology will be a big part of how that is achieved, “Pre-COVID, all these tech features were offensive in nature,” Perez-Alvarado said. “They’re defensive now. You better get on it.”
As data from travel advertising technology company Koddi show, safety matters:
But eventually, that might change, as people will likely start refocusing on convenience if they haven’t already.
Basically, what COVID-19 did was remind those in the hotel business of a fundamental business principle: Listen to the customer. “Making the guest feel comfortable, no matter the situation, is and always will be the aim of a hotel and its staff,” said Terry King, a regional director at the technology, security, and investigative consulting firm Guidepost Solutions.
The knockdown punch:
It’s easy to quantify how hard the pandemic hit the largest hotel chains, as SP 500 index SPX components like Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. HLT and Marriott International Inc. MAR has to publicly disclose quarterly results.
For Hilton, which offers nearly a million rooms in more than 6,200 properties across 118 countries, second-quarter revenue per available room — or RevPAR, a key financial metric in the hotel industry — tumbled 81% from the same period a year ago, as the company swung to a net loss of $430 million from net income of $260 million.
As travel restrictions and lockdown measures spread across the globe, Hilton was forced to play defense, by temporarily closing hotels, furloughing employees, cutting salaries and other costs, and borrowing money to provide some financial breathing room.