Is Fear Driving Your Revenue Strategy?

One of the biggest commercial risks isn't trying something new.

It's continuing to do something simply because it's what you've always done.

Every revenue manager has experienced occupancy that isn't building quite as quickly as you'd hoped, a tour operator that wants to secure a large allocation months in advance, or you're sitting at 98% occupancy and wondering whether you should keep selling.

In those moments, it's easy to fall back on what feels comfortable. Lower the rate. Accept the group. Stop selling. And sometimes those are exactly the right decisions.

The real question is this: are you making those decisions because the data supports them, or because they simply feel like the safest option?

Playing Safe Can Come at a Cost

Working in hospitality, we naturally like certainty. We like rooms on the books, healthy occupancy and avoiding difficult conversations.

No one wants to deal with an overbooking situation. No one wants to explain why they turned away a group enquiry that, with hindsight, would have been the right decision. Equally, nobody enjoys defending a pricing strategy when bookings are slower than expected.

Those concerns are perfectly understandable.

The danger is that, over time, caution can quietly become your default strategy.

·        You accept the low-rated group because at least the rooms are sold.

·        You stop selling because you don't want the risk of relocating guests.

·        You reduce your rates because occupancy feels lower than you'd hoped.

Every one of those decisions feels sensible.

But sensible and optimal aren't always the same thing.

Let the Data Challenge Your Thinking

One of the biggest advantages revenue managers have today is access to better information than ever before.

Booking pace, demand forecasts, cancellation trends, competitor performance and historical data all help us build a clearer picture of what's likely to happen next. The data won't always be right, but it means we no longer have to rely on instinct alone.

The next time a tour operator asks for a large allocation months in advance, pause for a moment. What is your forecast telling you? Could those rooms generate greater value through transient demand?

If you're approaching full occupancy, don't automatically stop selling because it feels like the cautious thing to do. Look at your cancellation patterns. If history consistently shows you'll lose a handful of bookings before arrival, a carefully managed overbooking strategy may actually be the more commercial decision.

Equally, if the data tells you demand has genuinely softened, have the confidence to change course. Revenue management isn't about stubbornly sticking to a strategy. It's about making the best commercial decision with the information you have available

Experience Still Matters

Good data doesn't remove uncertainty. It simply helps us understand it better. The more we understand risk, the more confident we can be in making commercial decisions.

The best revenue managers combine years of experience with objective data. They understand their market, recognise booking patterns and know when something doesn't feel quite right. At the same time, they're prepared to let the data challenge long-held assumptions.

Experience helps us ask the right questions…but data helps us answer them.

Together, they give us the confidence to make better commercial decisions.

Have the Confidence to Do Things Differently

The hotels that consistently outperform their competitors aren't necessarily taking bigger risks – they are just making better-informed ones.

  • They hold rates because the evidence tells them demand is still building.

  • They turn away business because the forecast suggests something more valuable is likely to come along.

  • They use overbooking strategically because the data tells them it's the right commercial decision -not because they're prepared to gamble.

Revenue management will always involve uncertainty. There will never be a strategy that guarantees the perfect outcome every time.

What has changed is the amount of insight available to us.

So use it…Trust your experience….Trust the evidence.

And don't be afraid to challenge what's comfortable.

Because the biggest risk isn't always trying something new.

Sometimes it's leaving revenue on the table because you were too afraid to.

If you are interested in finding out more about how Right Revenue can help support your business, we would love to chat. Please feel free to contact us at ask@rightrevenue.co.uk


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