Hotel Tech Will Be the Foundation for 2023 Wine Revenue

GMs may want to take a closer look at their alcohol beverage strategy – and the role technology will play – for the upcoming year as it could assume a powerful role in maintaining a property’s profitability during a possible recession.
10/5/2022
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With all the unpredictability of global events, the economy and the ‘normalization’ of travel numbers heading into 2023, why should any GM, owner or senior executive prioritize wine over planning discussions of where best to allocate budget for labor, equipment or capital investments?

In all honesty, you shouldn’t. Those three and likely many others should take precedent. But having a solid wine strategy will help to drive TRevPAR – the total revenue you capture from each guest and a critical metric towards merging ancillary spend analytics into the brand’s decision-making process. Heading into a recession year, it’s no longer a game of maximizing heads in beds like it has been during the current recovery period, but of maximizing satisfaction per stay, for which we all know that the more a guest uses a property’s services and amenities, the happier they are, the greater the chance of a positive review and the more likely there will be positive word of mouth.

So, thinking in terms of boosting TRevPAR and guest satisfaction in light of any drops of travel numbers we may confront in 2023, wine, and all alcoholic beverages for that matter, can thus assume a powerful role towards maintaining profitability.

But growing wine revenue cannot be done nowadays without a solid tech backbone to enable every element from initial reservation and prearrival messaging through to folio settlement and pushing all the ancillary spend data through to the CRM. In this sense, setting an objective to boost wine sales in 2023 will require a shrewd eye towards how various systems can automate labor allocation, inventory management, upselling opportunities, loyalty and analytics, thereby helping the process by which you ramp up other profit centers.

In the abstract, this all makes sense. Here are some boots-on-the-ground ideas to consider:

  • Wine as an arrival amenity can help to sell value-added hotel packages, and yet after each reservation is completed on the booking engine, you need an operations management platform to promptly execute those service orders as well as strong data connections to push any wine-related purchases from the POS and PMS into the CRM for repeat guest marketing campaigns.
  • Even if a guest doesn’t opt for a wine-centric package during the initial reservation, wine as an arrival amenity can become a key offer disseminated via any prearrival communications, but only if you have the right platforms in place to reach customers with your cross-selling offers on their preferred medium, at the right time and in the right display order.
  • Let’s also not forget the role a complimentary bottle of wine can play in ameliorating guest sentiments during an error recovery scenario, but that all depends on the mini-surveys and operations platforms you are using to identify then address those errors.
  • You want your incoming guests to book a table at your restaurant as soon as possible so that you can more accurately forecast labor requirements, for which having a great wine selection can be used as a tool to cajole those reservations lest patrons ‘miss out’.
  • Any system you can deploy to save servers time, such as conversational AI to help offload incoming calls or better online reservation booking software, will translate into those team members having more time to spend tableside to flesh out the narrative behind any given bottle in order to convince patrons to spend more and enhance the meal experience.
  • Needless to say, digitizing inventory management systems and the reordering process along with any automations for the accounting team can save time and increase wine cellar accuracy (oh, the discrepancies we have found when auditing the Excel records for a cellar against what’s actually there!).
  • Analytics of guest service orders – for instance, how long it takes to fulfill a wine arrival amenity request as well as how the quantities of these requests vary by day of week, time of year, guest type or length of stay – can become instrumental towards anticipating labor needs in light of ongoing staffing challenges.
  • Circling back to the CRM, if you are able to properly compartmentalize wine-related guest data, then this means that you can do the same for particularly any other behavioral characteristic that may help to guide future sales efforts, packaging, onsite events, loyalty engagement or new brand initiatives requiring capex.

While we can wax poetic about the differences between Burgundy and Bordeaux or Barolo and Barbaresco, wine still needs tech to make any sale possible. In this sense, the systems and processes you establish to sell more wine will have manifold applications beyond beverage revenues.

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Together, Adam and Larry Mogelonsky represent one of the world’s most published writing teams in hospitality, with over a decade’s worth of material online. As the partners of Hotel Mogel Consulting Limited, a Toronto-based consulting practice, Larry focuses on asset management, sales and operations while Adam specializes in hotel technology and marketing. Their experience encompasses properties around the world, both branded and independent, and ranging from luxury and boutique to select-service. Their work includes seven books: In Vino Veritas: A Guide for Hoteliers and Restaurateurs to Sell More Wine (2022), “More Hotel Mogel” (2020), “The Hotel Mogel” (2018), “The Llama is Inn” (2017), “Hotel Llama” (2015), “Llamas Rule” (2013) and “Are You an Ostrich or a Llama?” (2012). You can reach Larry at [email protected] or Adam at [email protected] to discuss hotel business challenges or to book speaking engagements.

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