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Source: briefing by Mr. Andreas Berger / area manager of Austria Trend Hotels /Verkehrsbüro Hotellerie GmbH, Vienna / Linz, March 2011

BAR is based on a pricing software, that fixes the price for the hotel rooms automatically on the basis of two facts:

  1. Internal factors, such as occupancy rate in our hotel during the ame period last year – corrected by events in our city last year / this year, taking into account individual guests / group bookings, business travelers etc;
  2. External factors: continuous check on the internet of prices of competitors.

The system works within a system of price brackets, at the Hotel Schillerpark, Linz Austria, e.g. between 59.- € and 250.- €.
The vast majority of hotels with 50 rooms and more, present in the internet for booking, apply this system in Europe and worldwide nowadays; exempt are only the “low budget” and the luxury segment – they follow other price strategies, like low / peak season etc.


Article from internet on this topic for a detailed contemplation:

Consortia-Corporate-Group 
Best Available Rate (BAR):
Good or Bad for Hotels? 
By Caryl Helsel

In 2003, American Express Travel quietly introduced best available rate (BAR) contracts for the 2004 contract year. American Express designed the new program in response to the growing challenge facing travel managers in preventing travelers from making bookings via online agencies.

 

PRINCIPLE:
THE RATE CONTRACTED
WILL FLUCTUATE TO BE THE SAME
AS UNRESTRICTED RATES
AVAILABLE PUBLICLY OR ANY OTHER CHANNEL INCLUDING ONLINE RETAILERS,
HOTEL WEB-SITES,
THE GDS,
THE CRO OR
THE HOTEL DIRECTLY.

The rate may require additional value added benefits such as complimentary local phone calls, breakfast or high-speed Internet access.

As hotels are continually feeling the strain of downward rate pressure due to the online retailers and the merchant model, so are consortia, mega travel agencies, meeting planners and corporate travel departments (referred to as travel contractors) continually feeling the stress to offer these lower rates to their travelers and clients.  However, the last thing that hotels can afford is to offer a merchant model-type program to all of the travel contractors which have traditionally been a hotel’s best and highest ADR revenue source.

In order to understand the issue, a look at the past is in order. Travel contractors have contracted with hotels for a fairly static rate throughout the year.  Though the rate could be offered seasonally, with high season, shoulder season and low season rates being contracted, it was not flexible on a daily or even hourly basis. In addition, most consortia contracts, and many corporate contracts, required last room availability without restrictions.  Before the proliferation of rates on the Internet and the merchant business model explosion, this type of pricing was beneficial for both hotels and the travel contractors. 
However, now that rates are transparent to the traveller, and now that most hotel companies have agreed to do business with merchant model online travel agencies, the old model no longer works for travel contractors.  Thus, they have been searching for a new pricing model to compete in the new world of hotel distribution. 
As a result, many have decided to pursue BAR pricing.  While this may be great for the travel contractor, this type of pricing, if not managed well, could exacerbate a downward spiral of RevPAR for many hotels.  Thus, hotel companies must be certain they manage pricing even better in the future, as this rate model gains popularity in the corporate and consortia world.
As a result of this new pricing model for travel contractors, there are many key opportunities for hotels and travel contractors to examine:
Opportunity 1: Hotels must employ congruent pricing strategies as quickly as possible.  This will permit pricing to be equal across channels and will allow prices to be appropriately increased when demand indicators dictate an increase. 

Opportunity 2: Hotels who have the capability to technologically offer this type of pricing should approach their top customers to enter into BAR contracts. 

Opportunity 3: Technology providers to hotels must ensure that systems are capable of dynamically changing many prices at once to allow hotels to honor their contracts.

Opportunity 4: Travel contractors must change their approaches to pricing.  If not the BAR model, contractors must find models that allow them to be competitive with online retailers.  Whatever model is chosen must be supported by the hotel industry.
In order to act on the key opportunities available, all business partners in this new model have challenges that must be faced and resolved:

Challenge 1: Hotel technology must be able to support dynamic pricing.  Though many systems support dynamic pricing, not many connect to all online retailers to make immediate changes and many hotels have the systems configured incorrectly to support dynamic pricing.  In addition, many smaller hotel companies do not use revenue management systems, which would allow a system instead of a human interface to control their pricing strategy.

Challenge 2: On-property directors of revenue must fully understand the value of congruent pricing.  This also requires that they must stop providing lower rates to online merchant model retailers during business travel and high demand periods.

Challenge 3: Travel contractors may be stuck in tradition.  They must buy into a new pricing model that makes sense for both the hotel industry and their own success.

Challenge 4: Resources are very limited in hotels, thus resulting in less than congruent pricing deployment.  Both technological and human resources are required to deploy a successful congruent pricing strategy.  Hotels traditionally have very limited resources in this area, so culture must change within hotels to allow them to be successful.
In order to manage this process more effectively, hotels need to employ the following success factors.
First, hotels must immediately create online and offline pricing strategies to ensure their future success and RevPAR performance.  Without this step, BAR will further delude revenues and undermine hotel pricing efforts.
Second, hotels must immediately employ congruent pricing and intelligent revenue management.  Congruent pricing, resulting in intelligent revenue management is defined as maximizing ADR and RevPAR through optimal market segment mix management and distribution channel management via intelligent pricing strategies per segment. 
Third, hotel corporate offices need to carefully monitor their hotels to ensure compliance with the new pricing models.  Without these checks and balances in place, rogue directors of revenue will play their own games, ultimately resulting in angry travel contractors and deluded RevPAR.
Next, hotel corporate offices and individual hotels must provide the technological and human resources to their directors of revenue to ensure they can efficiently manage flexible pricing in all channels.  Without human and technological resources, very capable and intelligent directors of revenue will find it extremely difficult to maintain congruent pricing.  This new pricing may require purchasing new, or configuring differently, reservations, revenue management and/or property management system technology.
Finally, hotels must support this new pricing model, but must be prepared to manage it effectively.  This model has already been successful for American Express and other mega agencies and corporations, thus it is likely others will follow. 
If appropriately managed, this new pricing model can be successful for hotel and travel contractors alike.  But hotels must ensure they manage it well to be successful.

Caryl Helsel Caryl Helsel is Hospitality Practice Director for Solutionz Group International (www.solutionz.com), a business development and strategic consulting group headquartered in Tampa, Florida.  She can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

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