MMHI Winners

Hotels are facing a difficult time as consumers and businesses tighten spending on vacations and scale back on conventions and business travel. Despite the escalating recession, the hotel industry has, up to this point, been surprisingly resilient in its ability to protect the guest experience. As with most service industries, customer service tends to get better when there are fewer customers to serve. However, in the second quarter of this year, the impact of the recession finally took its toll. With severe budget pressures and cuts in staff and services, 154 of the 274 hotel companies measured in the MMHI received lower satisfaction scores compared to the first quarter of 2009.

In addition to lower satisfaction scores, measures of loyalty declined for most hotel brands, with guests less likely to recommend or return to their last hotel. Critical to customer loyalty, value scores, also declined with guests feeling they received less for their money compared to last quarter. Loyalty programs played less of a role in hotel selection and customers were less concerned about green programs when booking a hotel. Guests did not feel as welcome and staff friendliness scores were down. Guests also felt less pampered and less entertained during their stay. Other declines were product related (Comfortable bed & furniture, Proper functioning lights etc.), showing further evidence that budget cuts have made an impact on the guest experience.

Passenger satisfaction with airlines improved (+0.2 to 75.7) despite the sour economy. With fewer people flying, there have been shorter lines, increased on-time arrivals, less lost luggage, more space availability, and higher steward-per-passenger ratios. Midwest Airlines (85.3) was the top scoring airline. US Airways (+0.7 to 70.4) benefited from its more generous frequent flyer miles and discounts on select flights as well as from a better on-time arrival record.

The car rental industry (-0.1 to 79.6) continues to face a difficult operating environment with fewer people renting cars and rising costs. Reductions in staff and operational cutbacks continue to hamper service and impact customer satisfaction. Dollar (+1.6 78.4) showed the biggest improvement in customer satisfaction while Thrifty (-2.7 to 77.2) showed the biggest decline. Enterprise continues their industry dominance with overall satisfaction and loyalty scores well above competitors.

Results:
    2009 Winners (2nd Quarter YTD)
    2009 Winners (1st Quarter YTD)
    2008 Winners
    2008 Winners (3rd Quarter YTD)
    2008 Winners (2nd Quarter YTD)
    2008 Winners (1st Quarter YTD)
    2007 Winners
    2007 Winners (3rd Quarter YTD)
    2007 Winners (2nd Quarter YTD)
    2007 Winners (1st Quarter YTD)
    2006 Winners
    2005 Winners (4th Quarter Only)
    2004 Winners
    2003 Winners

Market Metrix Hospitality Index 2009 Winners (1st Quarter YTD)
WINNER   SEGMENT  
Hotels
Mandarin Oriental 96.2 Luxury Graph
Kimpton Hotels 94.7 Upper Upscale Graph
Staybridge 90.9 Upscale Graph
Holiday Inn Select 82.3 Midscale w/F&B Graph
Drury Inns 91.9 Midscale w/o F&B Graph
Microtel Inns & Suites 84.8 Economy Graph
Casinos
Wynn Las Vegas 93.3 Upscale Casino Graph
Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino 88.1 Casino Graph
Timeshare Accommodations
WorldMark by Wyndham 91.5 Timeshare Accommodations Graph
Web Sites
Residence Inn by Mariott 93.3 Hotel Brand Web Site Graph
Hotwire.com 80.6 Hotel Travel Web Site Graph
Airlines
JetBlue 83.2 Airline Graph
Car Rentals
Enterprise 82.2 Car Rental Graph