Are you a numbers person? If not, you’re not alone. Many people are drawn to the hospitality industry because they’re great with people, not numbers. That’s a good thing when it comes to hosting guests, but today it’s increasingly difficult to avoid data analytics no matter where you work on property. Fortunately, there are numerous hotel software tools available that make data more accessible and do a lot of heavy lifting for you. Here we explore the role of data analytics in the hotel industry, explain key terms, tools, and metrics, and show you ways to leverage data to improve performance across your property. Data analytics is the process of examining data sets to search for patterns, draw conclusions, support decision-making, and predict future trends. By data, we mean facts and information, which, more often than not, come in digital and numeric format. In the hospitality industry, the shift to online trip planning and digital communications has created immense amounts of data. Everywhere travelers go during their guest journey, from OTAs to check-in to post-stay surveys, they leave digital footprints that hotels can use as clues to better understand their target demographics and deliver a better customer experience. Data has become so important it’s sometimes referred to as digital gold. Unlike gold, however, data isn’t rare or scarce. In fact, it’s so abundant we sometimes don’t know what to do with it. To be useful, data needs to be organized, filtered, and cleansed. Thorough data analysis can provide hoteliers with vital business intelligence to help make better decisions for their property. Personal customer data in guest profiles and payment transactions also need to be stored and used securely, not only because guests expect it but also because many jurisdictions are governed by strict data privacy and security laws. A data breach can cause huge headaches for hotels and erode trust with travelers. To avoid being overwhelmed by data overload, hotel management focuses on key performance indicators (KPIs). These are the metrics used to evaluate progress toward achieving the property’s most important objectives. KPIs are used to compare or benchmark performance against historical data, against competitors and similar properties, and against the local market or industry-wide averages. In addition to overall KPIs, properties have departmental KPIs. For example, an overall KPI is gross operating profit (GOP), whereas a KPI for the housekeeping department is average room cleaning time. Data analytics have all sorts of applications in the lodging industry, chief among them is finding ways to increase revenue, save costs, streamline hotel operations, and improve guest satisfaction. Here are just a few examples of how hotels can use data to improve performance: If you think you have a lot of data to sort through, imagine the challenges faced by the largest hotel company in the world. With 30 brands and more than 8,000 properties, Marriott is on the receiving end of a veritable firehose of guest data. And yet, the company is considered a leader in big data analytics. Marriott focuses on leveraging high-quality, integrated data to improve two key areas: revenue management and guest satisfaction, according to this article from Datumize. The company uses data to track competitors, identify new revenue streams, predict guest behavior, and make the guest experience as smooth and friendly as possible. If you operate an independent property, you don’t have the luxury of a dedicated team of data analysts like Marriott. But you can take inspiration at a smaller scale by focusing on the areas where you can achieve the best results. To start, look at opportunities in each department. Then identify your objectives, the KPIs you’ll use to track performance, and the tools you’ll need to collect, analyze, and report on results. A good hospitality management solution will include robust and integrated data and reporting functionality so you can get a comprehensive overview of your operations and make informed business decisions. In every department, you’ll find opportunities to leverage data analytics to improve performance. Here are just a few areas to focus on: Multiple departments contribute to the guest experience, from the front desk to housekeeping to the hotel restaurant. By tracking real-time data from online reviews, accommodation operators can measure overall guest satisfaction and ratings by department. Many properties supplement review data with data from post-stay surveys sent through guest messaging apps. Guest feedback data can be used to understand guest sentiment, identify trends and patterns, and prioritize the improvements that will bring the greatest benefits to guest satisfaction and loyalty. It can also be used as part of your marketing strategies to highlight the features guests love in hotel marketing campaigns. Guest experience KPIs. Examples of KPIs include average ratings in reviews and surveys, departmental ratings, and review or survey volume, as well as Tripadvisor rankings, and Net Promoter Score (NPS). Guest loyalty can be measured using metrics like stay frequency, average guest spend, and customer lifetime value (CLV). Aside from accounting, revenue management may be the most data-heavy department in hotels. Revenue managers combine external data like market demand and competitor activity with internal data like historical performance and business on the books to guide pricing decisions, inventory controls, promotions, and demand forecasting. Revenue management KPIs. Basic KPIs include average daily rate (ADR), occupancy (OCC), revenue per available room (RevPAR), and average length of stay (ALOS). Examples of advanced KPIs include revenue per available room (TrevPAR) and gross operating profit per available room (GOPPAR). Hotel marketing is another data-heavy department because it involves multiple channels, including the hotel website and search engine marketing, email marketing, and social media. Each channel generates valuable data for measuring return on investment (ROI) and deciding where to allocate resources to generate the best results. Marketing KPIs. Examples of website metrics include monthly site visitors, page views, bounce rates, and conversions. Email marketing metrics include subscription rates, email open rates, and click-through rates. And social media metrics include followers and engagement. Hotel restaurants, bars, and room services tend to run on tight margins, so it’s important to keep a tight rein on expenditures. If costs climb without commensurate increases in revenue, it can weigh heavily on the hotel’s balance sheet. Managers can analyze revenue data to find ways to increase guest spend through menu engineering, upselling, and promotions. It’s also important to analyze spending behavior to target guests with a high propensity to purchase F&B on property. Food & beverage KPIs. Examples include average check, average table occupancy, labor costs of sales, food and beverage costs of sales, and revenue per available seat hour. An important method for evaluating the success of a hotel’s revenue strategies is to benchmark performance against competitors. For many properties, this means subscribing to STR’s monthly STAR Report. The STAR report provides rate, occupancy, RevPAR, and market index data for a hotel’s competitive set, along with market averages and other valuable data points. The information helps property owners and operators visualize how they’re performing relative to competitors and identify opportunities to establish a competitive advantage, boost performance, and increase market share. Data analytics can be divided into four main types: Which type of analysis you perform will depend on your objectives and the type of data available to you. To learn more about data analytics, check out Cloudbeds’ newly released book, More Reservations, Happier Guests. To perform data analytics accurately and efficiently, hoteliers need the assistance of technology. Many of today’s software tools automate the collection, processing, storage, and reporting of data, saving hoteliers countless hours and preventing manual errors. Here are a few examples of data management tools by department: With so many data sources to manage in the travel industry, hoteliers need a modern PMS system that provides seamless, secure connections to tools and applications in every department, centralizing and streamlining the collection, integration, storage, and usage of all types of data. With the right tools, virtually anyone can be a numbers person. Cloudbeds can help you leverage data to improve your property’s performance. Learn more. Cloudbeds is hospitality's only intelligent growth engine — a unified platform trusted by the world's most ambitious hoteliers across 150 countries. Built to challenge the limits of outdated tech stacks, Cloudbeds connects operations, revenue, distribution, and guest experience in one powerful, intuitive system. The platform is enhanced with Signals, a hospitality AI model giving hoteliers the power to anticipate demand, run smarter operations, and craft more personal, profitable guest journeys at scale. Founded in 2012, Cloudbeds has earned top honors from Hotel Tech Report (Top PMS, Hotel Management System, and Channel Manager, 2021–2025), the World Travel Awards (World's Best Hotel PMS Solutions Provider, 2022), and Deloitte's Technology Fast 500 (2024). For more information, visit www.cloudbeds.com. What is data analytics in the hospitality industry?
How important is data analytics in the hospitality industry?
Cutting through the clutter with hotel key performance indicators (KPIs)
Benefits of data analytics in hospitality
Spotlight: Marriott and Big Data Analytics
Hotel data analytics by department
1. Guest experience
2. Revenue management
3. Marketing
4. Food & beverage
Spotlight: What are STR reports and why are they important?
What are the 4 types of data analytics?
Hotel data analytics software
The importance of data integration
Organization
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