Is hotel metasearch a distribution or advertising channel?
9 experts shared their view
Hotel metasearch has existed for over 20 years now (SideStep, acquired by Kayak), but has been elevated in importance ever since Google launched its Google Hotel Finder product back in 2010, which later became Google Hotel Ads (GHA).
For many years metasearch players used predominantly the CPC (Cost-per-Click) model (Trivago, TripAdvisor, GHA, etc.). Nowadays, most metasearch players use the CPA (Cost-per-Acquisition) model i.e. charge a fee in the form of a commission when a booking is done.
Last year, responding to the travel slump due to the pandemic, Google introduced its Pay-per-stay (PPS) model i.e. Google charges a fee in the form of a commission only if the booker actually stays at the property. Earlier this year Google even resorted to its masterful freemium model and offered hotels free booking link listings in GHA to lure more hotels into its metasearch program. By flooding each destination with booking options, Google is forcing hotels, OTAs and other booking sites to compete for visibility I.e. opt for the PPS premium listings.
The question is: Has hotel metasearch become a distribution channel that needs to be managed by the revenue management team like all commission-based channels like OTA, GDS, etc. or should remain as part of the marketing team's toolset?
In a nutshell: if you pay metasearch marketing in commissions as you do with OTAs, then they are almost the same thing. You can treat these as other distribution channels.
Deep dive explanation:
If nowadays we should play a Celebrity Deathmatch (an MTV stop-motion cartoon popular in the 90ties) of the hospitality distribution, it would be Commissions against Cost of Acquisition(CPA). In few words, the OTAs world versus hyper-targeted digital marketing.
In commissions, you know in advantage how much you'll pay. In CPA you can get a better deal but you are unsure of results.
To understand this, hoteliers should think as they were an OTA. Where do Booking, Expedia and others get their customers? Brand advertising, loyal customers but the majority comes from CPA. The business model of an OTA is to buy a customer from web giants paying its CPA (for example 12% of the generated revenue) and seeing this customer's booking to the hotel for a commission (for example 18%). The resulting 6% is OTA's margin. Again I say: "this is like trading". When you spend money in digital marketing to get a customer, you pay in advantage (usually for clicks) intending to get sales for an ideal percentage of the generated revenue. You can get a good deal but it's tough so in reality, you're buying this risk. On the other hand, if you go for the commission mode, you stay in the super safe area. You'll pay for commissions only when your intermediary will generate the revenue for you. It's like investing in Nasdaq stocks rather than going to the Post Office asking them to give you interests most safely.
Meta-searches have a central role in this as the majority of paid traffic (CPC and CPA) comes from them.
In 2018 I've made Botelier, an AI startup made to break the loop between the metasearch investment of a hotel and the resulting revenue that it MAY later get as result. Nowadays Google is pushing hard on this, trying to break this loop inside their GHA platform. They strongly use AI (and in particular algo-trading models) to let hotels advertise as OTAs but paying a "postponed and safe commission". The thing is: "how precise are these predictive algorithms?". Google GHA from its last update(early 2021), even uses data generated from OTA's advertising (made in CPC and paid upfront) to train the automatism (read AI) that allocates some "free clicks" to direct hotels to get an uncertain and late commission from them.
In this way, GOOGLE is putting direct hotels on the red carpet even allowing free advertising in the covid period. This is the "behind the curtain" of Pay Per Stay.
But how many are those "free clicks"?
The data tell us that paying GHA in commission mode (Pay Per Stay) delivers a very limited (less than 20%) part of the traffic (clicks) that you can get in PPC. So this sounds like a good deal: you get revenue for a safe commission rather than spending more than this to get just traffic. The downside is the volume. If you stay in the safer way of commissions in metasearch, nobody is going to risk for you, even Google. Algos will drive your risk exposure and you'll only get less than 20% of the volume of sales that you can generate in these channels managing your budget by yourself (CPC).
Digital distribution is a tough world for a great opportunity, revenue and marketing should work together to have a chance to cope with this trading.


