May 23, 2018

How Organic Search Is Becoming Ineffective for Hotels on Google

Most conversations that involve digital marketing and the efforts of hotels and online travel agencies to gain exposure usually revolve around advertising.
But that's only half the story, with search engine optimization still playing a significant role when it comes to how much visibility (or not) a brand can get from the "ten blue links" that still populate the Search Engine Results Pages (SERPS) on Google.

A common complaint from hotels is that they can't compete with keyword buying against the likes of Expedia Group and Booking Holdings (between them spent upwards of $10 billion during 2017) but research has shown just how dominant the same intermediaries are in organic search, too.

Hermann Valsson, a former-tourism student from the University of Iceland and an IT administrator in the Spanish island of Tenerife, analyzed SERPS on Google to see to what extent hotel brands in the region were featuring in organic search on Google.

The answer: very little.

OTAs have a SERPlus

Using the key phrase "hotel tenerife", Valsson looked at the ten countries sending the most tourists to the popular holiday destination.

Searches on the phrase in the United Kingdom, for example, which accounts for 34% of visitors to Tenerife, had ten out of ten of the organic results coming via online travel agencies, according to the research.

Only searches on the phrase from devices in Sweden and Finland saw any significant visibility for domestic (Tenerfie-based) hotels.

  • U.K. - 10 out of 10 links were OTAs
  • Spain - 10 out of 10 links were OTAs
  • Germany - 10 out of 10 links were OTAs
  • France - first 7 links, then link 10 were OTAs
  • Sweden - first 7 links were OTAs
  • Italy - first 7 links, then link 9 and 10 were OTAs
  • Denmark - 10 out of 10 links were OTAs
  • Finland - first 7 links were OTAs
  • Russia - first six links, then link 8, 9 and 10 were OTAs
  • Ireland - ten out of ten links were OTAs

Valsson claims multiple analyses have shown that some 90% of searchers only visited the first page of SERPS, with 37% of clicks hitting the first slot, 14% to the second and almost 10% to the third.

He says the analysis is not the first to demonstrate the prowess of intermediaries to dominate SERPS - giving them a sizeable presence when combined with paid for listings.

"The digital footprint just gets better and better for the OTAs, and worse and worse for the hotels, although we are searching for a hotel and NOT for a booking engine," he claims.

This is just one example, of course, but it is a trend that has been mirrored elsewhere on multiple search terms.

There is no suggestion in the wider world of digital marketing that those who spend heavily on PPC can influence organic search results. Yet the lack of success with SEO adds another layer of complexity to the already challenging environment that hotels operate in with their digital marketing.

Valsson says: "The fact that OTAs have taken over the organic part of SERPS will change the way that hotels work with their digital marketing. But what can they do - they have lost this digital fight, the OTAs are on top."

He argues that the situation has become a matter for respective competition authorities to investigate, with high-spenders in travel marketing unable or unwilling to change their tactics.


Copyright 2018 Northstar Travel Media LLC. All rights reserved. From https://www.phocuswire.com. By Kevin May.

To view all articles, check out the Internet Travel Monitor Archive