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The Curious Identity of RoomKey.com
publication date: Sep 21, 2012
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author/source: Steve Solinsky
Consumers shopping for a hotel online have many options to find the property they want at the prices they demand. RoomKey.com, a website originally founded by six of the largest hotel chains, launched earlier this year to help the founding brands capture bookings that might otherwise happen on an OTA To gauge its success to date, Compete evaluated traffic volumes and sources using our patented normalization process which leverages Compete’s industry-leading panel and ability to unique consumers (which avoids false positives associated with double-counting). Room Key started small but has grown at a remarkable pace, reaching over 4 million unique visitors in July. The growth rate reads as a success, though the obvious next question is around the sources of its traffic as the site has evolved. We identified two distinct phases. The Curious Identity of RoomKey.com
Room Key Phase I: Meta-Search Websites most commonly visited before and after RoomKey.com are those of the founding partners: Marriott, Hilton, Choice, InterContinental, Wyndham, and Hyatt. Room Key’s gains in traffic volumes are largely the result of an exit traffic strategy in which partners display a pop-under window showing properties on the founders’ sites consistent with search results on RoomKey.com. This strategy effectively made Room Key a meta-search engine. It also meant that approximately 90% of Room Key traffic came from the founding brands’ sites. On average, less than 2% of Room Key visitors come from paid or natural search. Room Key sends about the same amount back to the partners’ sites (i.e., when a Room Key shopper clicks on booking buttons). Consumers that did not return to a partner site most often returned to a traditional search engine.
Phase II – Meta-Engine/Online Travel Agency Hybrid Room Key was updated in May. The site’s “beta” tag was removed, reviews from sites like TripAdvisor were more tightly integrated into the hotel information pages and, most importantly, the partnership with Travelocity’s Partner Network, res99.com. With the Res99 addition, Room Key became more of a hybrid in that it shows inventory from the founding partners and Travelocity. The good news is that it increased consumer choices (i.e., more inventory). The challenge is that it eroded the flow back to the partner sites: Res99 captured 7.4% of Room Key booking-driven transfers in its first month, which increased to 11.4% in June. * A Room Key Transfer is defined as a click on a partner link from a RoomKey.com search results page
Measuring Success in Interrupting Flow to OTAs Room Key’s success hinges on its ability to drive bookings directly to the founding suppliers’ sites and not OTAs. YTD results show that the founding brands’ losses to OTAs have increased over time, reaching nearly 24% in July.
Unlocking Room Key’s Potential What we found:
Logical next steps to unlock Room Key’s potential could be:
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