
Too many hotels focus on what happens within their four walls. They polish their amenities, refine their food and beverage offerings, and streamline their booking process, believing this is the key to a guest’s heart. While important, these are just pieces of a much larger puzzle.
NB: This is an article from Demand Calendar
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Effective, truly Guest-Centric Journeys begin with a fundamental shift in perspective. It starts not with our property, but with our place. Before we can understand our guests, we must first have a deep understanding of the one thing that brought them to us: the destination.
Why Are They Really Here?
A guest doesn’t travel hundreds or thousands of miles for a comfortable bed or a fancy lobby. They come for the destination. They are drawn by the promise of ancient ruins, the buzz of a business conference, the thrill of a mountain peak, or the tranquility of a secluded beach. The hotel is not the destination; it is merely a necessary stop for rest and recharging before the next day.
This foundational knowledge is the first, indispensable step towards genuine personalization. By grasping the core appeal of your destination, you can finally connect with the underlying motivations of your guests.
Are they in a Cultural Hotspot like Rome, seeking to walk through history? Or are they in an Emerging Business Hub like Bangalore, looking to close a deal? Is your hotel a basecamp in an Adventure Location like Patagonia or a sanctuary in a Health and Wellness Retreat like Bali?
The answer to this question should dictate everything that follows.
From Observer to Expert: Actionable Steps
Becoming a destination-centric hotel requires a deliberate, internal effort. It’s time to become the leading expert on your location:
- Research Your Destination’s DNA: Go beyond the tourist brochures. Compile a comprehensive profile of what makes your location unique. Identify the key landmarks, cultural experiences, business sectors, major annual events, and hidden local gems.
- Analyze Your Visitor Insights: Use tourism statistics, market research, and your hotel data to understand who visits, when they visit, and why. Develop clear guest personas based on these motivations: the “Cultural Tourist,” the “Business Traveler,” the “Event Attendee,” or the “Leisure Seeker.”
- Assess Travel Accessibility: How do people get to you? Understand the journey by air, rail, or road. Identify the friction points—the confusing transfers, the lack of transport, the late-night arrivals—and ask, “How can we make this easier?”
Weaving the Destination into Your Hotel’s Fabric
Once you have this deep understanding, you can begin to align your entire operation with the destination’s unique draw. This is where the magic happens:
- Align Services with Appeal: In a historic city like Athens, offer curated walking tours or partner with local historians to enhance the experience. In a Business Hub like London, facilitate access to co-working spaces and high-speed business services.