In previous research conducted, we've seen that the Net Promoter Score has a positive correlation to a hotel's TripAdvisor rating. Of course that makes sense, a positive review would hopefully tie in with someone willing to recommend your hotel to a friend or colleague but following from that, we decided to delve a bit further – what exactly is driving your guests to be promoters or detractors? Our analytics team looked into a huge number of responses and analysed their outcome to find some fascinating conclusions. Firstly, how do we find out if a guest is a promoter, neutral or a detractor? If scored between 10-9: If scored between 8-7: If scored between 6-0: Using the score and answers combined from over 5,000 responses, we were able to analyse every response and determine what factors impacted the scores that were given. These findings provide hotel managers with an understanding of the main reasons hotel guests recommend, stay passive, or recommend against staying at a property: What do promoters look for?
Using the famous Net Promoter Score, hoteliers are able to ask guests "How likely are you to recommend [hotel name] to a friend or colleague?" guests can answer this question using an 11-point scale (0-10 – see below) and are then asked a follow-up question, depending on the score given:
"Thanks for your feedback, we're glad to hear you're happy! If you were recommending [hotel name] to a friend, what one reason would you give them?"
"If one aspect of your experience with [hotel name] could've been better, what would it be?"
"What was missing or disappointing in your experience with [hotel name]?"
Through an analysis of what guests have explicitly stated while completing their surveys, we were able to identify why guests might recommend a hotel and therefore become a promoter. We found the following:
While location is difficult for a hotel manager to affect, staff and rooms are certainly areas a Hotel Manager can look to improve and really drive an impact in reviews/scores.
Why do guests stay as neutrals?
A neutral guest can be seen as a guest that mostly had a pleasant experience however would not be seen as an active promoter of the property or the brand. By identifying the areas that neutrals saw as issues, we can hopefully help improve the number of promoters and therefore online reviews/ratings and word-of-mouth recommendations. Our analysis of neutrals found the following:
Why do guests become detractors?
Of course we want to avoid this at all costs, if possible, but being aware of the issues at a property and then addressing them is all part of managing the guest experience. From this analysis we found some key issues that guests seemed to focus on in their comments if they were identified as detractors:
Summary
These findings help us identify that the following key aspects of every hotel can be instrumental in determining how a guest will review, score the property and if they will become the highly sought-after promoter:
Contact
Nicola Graham
VP Marketing
Phone: +442080683195
Email: ngraham@cendyn.com
Organization
Cendyn™
https://www.cendyn.com/
301 Yamato Rd, Ste 3194
USA
- Boca Raton, FL 33431
Phone: 1-561-515-6276
Email: info@cendyn.com
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