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What It Really Takes To Book More Groups, Meetings, and Events These Days – By Doug Kennedy

Image Credit Shutterstock/Doug Kenedy

Today's hotel and event salespeople work in completely different environments than most of their leaders experienced. Meeting and event booking sites have created a flood of leads, which can be overwhelming for those working in a sales role equipped and staffed for the era when leads came in by phone or website inquiry forms.

When revenues drop, salespeople are required to meet prospecting quotas, based on a set number of calls, sent emails, DMs, or door knocks. Yet calls go to voicemail, emails go to spam, random DMs go unread, and the office doors being knocked on are either locked, or if open, there's no one at the receptionist station because of remote work.

Self-serving “thought leaders,” employed by tech companies, offer blogs and conference presentations pushing automation RFP responses and AI-powered prospecting, leading to generic, spammy-feeling sales correspondence. They push urban legends such as “The hotel that responds first will get the deal,” and “Younger buyers love tech, hate human interactions, and prefer self-service.”

To me personally, this looks a lot like the commoditization of transient sales that happened in the early 2000s when OTAs stole market share from direct channels such as brand.com and voice, placing inventory on the same list and charging more to be at the top.

Think about how the hotel product of today looks and feels to buyers. Product? On the surface, hotel brands targeting the same market segment look an awful lot alike, copycatting each other's lobby designs, guest room décor, loyalty programs, and amenities. Place? Whenever one hotel starts to outperform, ground is broken by new competitors nearby. Price? With hotels subscribing to the same performance data reporting, using largely the same revenue management and pricing systems, powered by the same algorithms, rates are largely the same.

Now, if we add to that, hotels displaying rates for groups and events at online platforms, using the same sales CRMs to filter inquiries, pricing group rates with the same methodology, sending largely the same generic, AI-driven proposal templates and automated follow-up drip campaigns, it feels a lot like the 2010's all over again but this time with groups, meetings, and events.

If you wanna get as much business as everyone else gets, do the same things everyone else does, and you will likely get exactly your fair share of the market. If you are looking to outperform the competition, then always remember that as a salesperson, YOU are your hotel's superpower. Read on for training tips from KTN's sales training programs and my conference presentations.

Doug Kennedy

About Doug Kennedy

Doug Kennedy

Doug Kennedy is President of the Kennedy Training Network, Inc. a leading provider of hotel sales, guest service, reservations, and front desk training programs and telephone mystery shopping services for the lodging and hospitality industry. Doug continues to be a fixture on the industry's conference circuit for hotel companies, brands and associations, as he been for over two decades. Since 1996, Doug's monthly training articles have been published worldwide, making him one of the most widely read hospitality industry authorities. Visit KTN at www.kennedytrainingnetwork.com or email him directly doug@kennedytrainingnetwork.com.

Doug is the author of So You REALLY Like Working With People? – Five Principles for Hospitality Excellence.

Posted by on May 14, 2024.

Categories: Sales and Marketing

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