The Hotel Industry Has a Demand Origin Problem. It Has Been Misdiagnosing It for Twenty Years.
For many independent luxury hotels, a meaningful share of bookings arrives through intermediary platforms that charge commission on the revenue they generate. The exact cost varies by market, contract, participation level, and channel mix. The strategic issue is not the exact percentage. It is the structural condition underneath it. The hotel controls the experience. The platform controls the introduction. That gap, between who controls the introduction and who controls the experience, is one of the most consequential strategic problems in independent luxury hospitality. It is not a marketing problem. It is not a channel problem. It is not a technology problem. It is a demand origin problem. And the industry has been misdiagnosing it for twenty years. What the Industry Got Wrong About OTA Dependence The standard diagnosis of OTA dependence goes something like this. Hotels became too reliant on third-party platforms for bookings. The solution is to invest in direct booking channels, improve website conversion, run better loyalty programs, optimize metasearch, and reduce OTA commission expense over time. That diagnosis is not wrong. It is incomplete in a way that makes it expensive. It treats OTA dependence as a distribution problem. Hotels are distributing too much inventory through expensive channels and not enough through cheap ones. The solution is channel rebalancing. Move more bookings to the direct channel. Reduce the commission line. Improve the margin. The channel rebalancing strategy produces measurable improvements. Direct booking share rises. Commission expense falls. Revenue management teams report progress. Ownership groups see the numbers move. And yet the structural condition persists. The hotel still does not know who its next guest is until that guest has already been introduced to the competitive landscape by someone else's system. The hotel still competes for attention after the comparison has begun. The hotel still funds the intermediary's growing intelligence about its own demand with every transaction it processes. The channel has changed. The structural condition has not. This is not a critique of the executives who implemented these strategies. The channel rebalancing logic is correct as far as it goes. The problem is that it does not go far enough upstream. It addresses where the booking is fulfilled. It does not address where the guest relationship is actually formed. A hotel that does not govern demand origin cannot answer three questions before a booking occurs: Who is considering us right now and why. Who introduced us into that consideration set. Which system learned from that consideration process and accumulated the intelligence from it. If those three questions have no answer inside the property, the hotel is operating downstream of the point where its structural position is actually determined. Rising direct booking share does not resolve this condition. A booking that arrives through the direct channel after originating in a metasearch comparison, a Google Hotel Ads click, or an AI-assisted recommendation is a direct transaction. It is not owned demand. The distinction between where a booking is completed and where the guest relationship originated is the distinction the
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