In The Wake Of Real Turmoil, The Rise Of The Virtual Hotel

Toronto Star:

You book a room on the website of a famous international hotel chain. As you arrive to check in, its reassuring brand name is above the door. Its logo is everywhere: on the staff uniforms, the stationery, the carpets.
virtualhotel

But the hotel is owned by someone else – often an individual or an investment fund – who has taken out a franchise on the brand. The owner may also be delegating the running of the hotel, either to the company that owns the brand or to another management firm altogether.

The bricks-and-mortar may be leased from a property firm. In some cases, yet another company may be supplying most of the staff, and an outside caterer may run the restaurants.

Welcome to the virtual hotel.

The franchising of hotels, like the franchising of fast-food restaurants, is half a century old. But it has received a further boost in the past few years, as the biggest international hotel chains, under pressure from shareholders to return capital, have put even their poshest properties up for sale.

They are now mainly franchisers and managers, rather than owners. In return for the fees they charge the hotels’ owners, they provide a glossy brand name and a steady stream of bookings from their online reservations systems.

Among the keenest adopters of this virtual-hotel model, also called “asset-light,” is InterContinental, a British-based firm that in addition to its eponymous hotel chain owns the Holiday Inn and Crowne Plaza brands. More.

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