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Compiled by Benjamin Verot, Founder of HotelMinder & Lobby
Today, hoteliers are facing a seemingly never-ending series of distribution and revenue management challenges; from understanding how AI search and booking functionality will impact their direct bookings, to shortening booking windows, there are A LOT of questions and not a lot of answers.
So, to help hoteliers better understand the impact of the current global shift toward a shorter booking window, I’ve compiled advice from some of Lobby’s hospitality industry experts on the strategic and actionable steps hoteliers should take today to ensure they are competitive and profitable despite these changes…
Bart-Jan Leyts – Otamiser
“This shift toward shorter booking windows reflects a broader change in traveler behavior: people are more spontaneous and expect flexibility, which means operational updates must happen in real-time, as market conditions change. Visibility, pricing, and content need to adapt in real-time to capture last-minute demand, and technology is crucial in facilitating the necessary dynamism in hotels’ operations. Hotels that rely on static strategies will simply miss the booking window, literally.”
Jose Carlos Vazquez Gutierrez – Short-Term Rental Optimization Consultant
“For consumers, I think that the recent trend of shorter booking windows comes down to one simple fact: there are no real benefits to booking in advance, as consumers are now aware that inventory is perishable and that prices are likely to decrease as the arrival date approaches.
The best strategy to incentivize consumers to book their hotel earlier is to provide a real incentive to the guest for booking early and direct – be it a financial incentive (i.e., a discount that won’t be matched or beaten as the arrival date approaches) and/or a value add (i.e., free airport transport, free breakfast, free parking, etc.).”
Martin P. Coghlan - Focus Revenue Management
“Don’t overlook the importance of guest experience and reputation management in generating repeat bookings. It takes time, effort and is costly to source new business so it is very important to make sure your guest experience is flawless, from start to finish.
Always ask for guests’ contact info when they check-in to enable post-stay marketing efforts to satisfied guests, as those who have a positive stay will be your best champions and a fantastic way to drive bookings in periods of softer demand.”
Sarah Stahl – Market Movers LLC
“Hotels need to stop chasing guests based on short-term consumer booking trends and start proactively shaping long-term demand through consistent, creator-driven marketing. When you partner with creators regularly — not just as one-off collaborations — you create a constant stream of authentic storytelling that compounds over time to generate predictable bookings and sustainable demand.
Actionable steps for hoteliers:
The result? After two years, more than 93% of all bookings were coming through direct channels and many guests booked up to three months in advance.”
Matea Sragalj – Suite707
“Social media is the new booking engine. Platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook are where those impulse decisions happen. TikTok sparks wanderlust (“I wish I were there this weekend”), Instagram converts it with flash sales and Stories, and Facebook’s targeting helps fill those last empty rooms.
To keep up, hotels should…
Ultimately, success comes down to agility. The hotels that react fast, post strategically, and make booking via mobile effortless will turn this last-minute trend into real revenue.”
Manuel Kuckenberger – Hotel Tech Fixer
“1. Do. Not. Slash. Rates.
Yes, you’ve heard this before. And no, hotels don’t always listen, especially not when the STLY panic sets in.
2. Don’t let your RMS run wild in short windows
Configure guardrails or take manual control of your pricing, as it’s about not doing long-term damage.
3. Give your guests a third option (not just non-flexible or flexible rates)
Offer semi-flexible rates (i.e., 72h cancellation window) to drive early conversions, reduces cancellation regret and keeps your operational team out of refund debates.
4. Message them before they message you
Guests who booked 14 days ago are probably checking back 7 days before arrival to see if they can get a better deal; after all, many of these last-minute could just be travelers who are rebooking after spotting a rate-slasher?
Use your guest messaging tools to reassure them their rate is still the best or offer them a last chance to switch to non-flexible payment terms. You’ll protect your booking curve, reduce rebook churn, and maybe even secure payment, without ever touching your rates.”
Stefanie Händel – Simple Hotel Strategy
“As someone focused on revenue management and data-driven decision-making, I’d like to share my “first-aid” tips for hotels that may not yet be very tech-savvy but still want to adapt to the rise of last-minute bookings…
Small, consistent actions can make a big difference… no fancy tech required.”
Basile Jodeau – Operations & Revenue Management Consultant
“Here are actionable steps hoteliers can take to capture more last-minute reservations and drive direct revenue growth:
By combining visibility, trust, localization, and automation, hotels can remain competitive despite the shorter booking window, and convert spontaneity into opportunity!”
Diogo Vaz Ferreira – Consultant in Digital Transformation & Commercial Performance
“Hoteliers need to consider two key points when establishing a strategy to accommodate this shift in consumer booking behavior…
Ways to drive more early bookings:
How to remain competitive & attract as many last-minute bookers as possible: