Europe’s Independent Hotels Lag U.S. Brands on Google Hotels: New Skift Research
Skift Take
In Part I of our series on Google Travel, we analyzed the hotel distribution landscape in the U.S. by web-scraping over 5,000 hotels and their respective distribution offerings across Google’s sponsored and organic auctions.
In Part II of our series, we repeat our efforts across the European hotel market. We looked at 40 European cities and again web-scraped over 5,000 hotels to compare the distribution landscape in Europe versus the U.S.
One of the key conclusions from our analysis: Direct sites compete head-on with online travel agencies (OTAs) more often in the U.S. than in Europe.
Though both markets are fairly mature with similar levels of online penetration, Europe’s hotel industry differs from the U.S. in three key ways:
- Its underlying hotel supply is far less branded than the U.S. and instead skews more towards independent hotels.
- Its OTA market is more fragmented with a longer tail of small OTAs competing directly with the likes of Booking and Expedia.
- There are stricter rules prohibiting price parity clauses in Europe than there are in the U.S.
Independent hotels – which make up the larger share of hotel rooms in Europe – are more likely to source their distribution from the OTAs vs. their direct site, usually lacking the marketing budgets, tech capabilities, and large loyalty programs of the branded hotels that are necessary to obtain direct bookings.
Even though Google’s introduction of organic listings now makes it free – and easier – for smaller independent hotels to list alongside the major brands and OTAs, there are still tech barriers in place, such as needing a connectivity partner to display real-time rates and availability.
Therefore the direct site is less likely to feature in Europe – which skews more towards independent hotels – than the more branded U.S. market.
Read the full report for more comparitive analysis of the hotel distribution landscapes of the U.S. and Europe, presented in 20 impactful and digestible charts.
What You’ll Learn From This Report
- Unique and proprietary analysis based on web scraping of over 10,000 U.S. and European hotels across Google
- Understand which OTAs are bidding for bookings on Google’s sponsored and organic results in the U.S. vs Europe
- Understand whether Google Hotels is aiding the shift to direct in Europe, as we saw in the U.S.
- Evaluating the adherence of price parity rules in Europe vs U.S.
- A framing of key conclusions by comparing the hotel distribution landscape between the U.S. and Europe – considering the mix of branded vs independent room supply in each region, the market share of OTAs vs direct site and the share of Booking and Expedia vs a long tail of smaller OTAs.
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