Millennial travelers rate unique experiences and rewards as crucial when choosing a hotel loyalty program
Deloitte Development LLP on 1 Aug 14
Two-thirds (66 percent) of millennial high-frequency travelers rate
"unique rewards" as an important factor when choosing a hotel loyalty
program, compared with just 43 percent of their older counterparts,
according to a new Deloitte study, Winning the Race for Guest Loyalty.
"Our study indicates that customers will wait and see which program will
provide them with the greatest rewards before they start to behave
loyally, but they will not wait for too long," said Guy Langford, vice
chairman, Deloitte LLP and U.S. Travel, Hospitality and Leisure practice
leader. "The race is on for brands to provide swift gratification,
particularly for the savvy millennial travelers, who are quick to share
their positive experiences or broadcast their discontent over their
social networks, and who are acutely aware of the rewards that come to
loyal customers. As such, the brand that locks in the customer's loyalty
first and wins that race — is the brand that wins that customer, and
potentially their loyalty, for life."
Three-quarters (75 percent) of millennial respondents also indicate they
would remain loyal to a hotel brand even if they lost all their points
and status, compared with two-thirds (66 percent) among other travelers.
Deloitte Survey: For Millennial Travelers, It’s the Experience That Counts
High-frequency travelers participate in multiple hotel loyalty programs,
waiting to see which generates the most value before focusing on one.
Once past this tipping point, guests will go out of their way to build
equity with their brand of preference. As Millennials become a more
dominant spending segment, it will be especially important for hotel
companies and brands to understand their purchasing and loyalty
behavior.
Additionally, the types of program benefits millennial travelers expect
are no longer solely points-focused.,Overall, 68 percent of frequent
travelers indicate that they consider themselves loyal to the program
where they have accumulated the most points. However, millennials highly
value "soft" benefits such as VIP treatments and exclusive experiences
more than other groups. Two-thirds (66 percent) of millennials indicate
that unique experiences matter, compared with half (50 percent) of
frequent travelers in other age groups.
The study also revealed that the average millennial traveler checks 10
online sources before making a travel purchase, and trusts advice from
strangers online more than their own friends and family. Roughly
one-quarter (24 percent) of millennials check social media or customer
review sites before booking a hotel, whereas only 16 percent check with
family.
The 'tipping point' and the power of true loyalty
The study showed that mere enrollment in a loyalty program does not
alone lead to active loyalty. Seven in 10 (69 percent) of frequent
travelers belong to more than one hotel loyalty program, and the average
traveler is enrolled in nearly three (2.6) loyalty programs. As such,
finding a traveler's "tipping point" that converts episodic guests into
dedicated loyalists — can transform the hotel loyalty program from a
cost center to a revenue engine.
The study revealed that once customers establish allegiance to one brand
loyalty program, they will go out of their way to patronize that brand,
and millennials are most likely to do so. Millennials indicate they
would pay $41 more per night and travel up to 15 minutes out of their
way to stay with their preferred brand, compared with business travelers
in other age groups, who are willing to pay an extra $29. This behavior
spills into leisure travel, where millennial travelers would pay up to
$35 more per night to stay with their chosen brand, compared with $20
among non-millennials.
Turning casual visitors into active loyalists may be easier said than
done, as travelers expect services traditionally considered perks to now
be a standard part of the hotel experience. For example, the study
revealed that for frequent traveling millennials, free Wi-Fi ranked with
cleanliness and comfort as a top three hotel attribute — not a perk,
but as an expected basic.
"Ultimately, there is a distinction between a customer who has enrolled
in a loyalty program and a customer who makes regular, truly loyal use
of the brand because of it," continued Langford. "In the mind of the
traveler, particularly millennials, only one brand truly wins their
long-term loyalty. To journey past a customer's tipping point and turn
them into loyal and enthusiastic brand devotees, companies must
understand how travelers view and use rewards, and use that knowledge to
craft a program that goes beyond the ordinary and the expected. The
prize will be dedicated relationships that enhance long-term revenue."
For additional information or to download a copy of the study, please visit: http://www.deloitte.com/us/thl/hotelloyalty2014.
About the Survey
The survey was commissioned by Deloitte and conducted
online by an independent research organization over an eight-week period
in early 2014. The survey polled 3,001 high-frequency U.S. travelers,
defined as individuals who spent more than 25 nights in a hotel in 12
months prior to taking the survey
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