Flashback
Enthusiast
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2006
- Posts
- 12,925
Over the past 8 years or so I've had on and off allegiances to Accor, SPG and Hilton and having done a hard slog to wind up at HH Diamond I sat back and looked at the overall perspective and wondered - is hotel status really worth it?
As a SFSC $/£ is king and after having had very lacklustre experiences (in regards to general hotel look/feel and what exactly the benefits were) I decided to re-evaluate my path. To be honest I've never really been one to care too much about status putting it in the nice to have basket. It is something that has occasionally blinded me and I look back thinking about some of the choices made and wondered why oh why would I have chosen such things?
In any case - I wanted to put this here as a point of discussion for people to think about what is important to them when it comes to a hotel?
Since I have moved to London I find I tend to travel a lot more. Coming from Perth that's no surprise really as it's quite pricey to get anywhere - or at least it was 5 years ago before I moved here. Since then there has been a rapid increase of LCC options to the likes of Air Asia X, Scoot, Jetstar, etc. with much more competitive pricing.
Originally I bought into the whole 'status' thing (for hotels especially) and kept chasing the goals out there, but never found it overly fulfilling.
Disclaimer: Keep in mind that airline status for me is slightly different. Being based in the UK and crediting to BA puts me in good stead to very cheaply renew BA Silver (OWS) each year for circa £1000 and that's without going to very much effort. Most of my travel here is in J - but is strategically done, it's not done as a matter of principle. By doing this I hear you say - well you get lounge access, selected seating etc. anyway. Yes, that's true ; but it's when I decide to burn my miles on short haul whY hops in Europe that it really provides the benefit for me. Seat selection, being able to have a nibble in the lounge before take off etc. makes the minor outlay on travel I'd do anyway worth keeping airline status.
But I digress.....
In the past 12 months or so as I've wound down my use of HH Diamond I started re-evaluating exactly what it was I wanted from my hotel stays. What it came down to for me (and Mrs Flashback - who shares a similar view... loves the airline perks, but couldn't really care less about the hotel ones) was the following key points:
Any facilities such as a pool, gym, etc. are a bonus but I found that I seldom used them anyway as when travelling I'm either too tired from having been out all day, getting exercise as part of my touring or swimming in the ocean etc. where suitable. A lot of hotels in Europe (IHG, Hilton, Accor etc) don't have pools generally anyway so that makes the decision for me even easier.
So what have I done this year? Well I've relied more heavily on Hotels.com as a booking agent. I do always crosscheck the rates vs other sites and they're usually on-par, sometimes cheaper. Rarely more expensive. What is great about them is their Welcome Rewards program where essentially for each stay you receive a 10% rebate; which then adds up and averages for every 10 stays providing you with a credit to use towards a free night. When you add to that the use of cashback sites, where often a 10-12% rebate is offered on top of that - you're looking at close to 20% off the ticket price. Nice.
What I've found is that this has opened me up to a much wider variety of hotels and instead of sticking to a cookie cutter corporate hotel it allows me to experience something a little more unique. Some have been great, some have been not so - however the same can also be said for a lot of the chain hotels I've stayed at.
When I look at my total hotel spend over a year now it has substantially reduced, I've not felt 'tied' to any one particular chain (I do still have 250k hotel points I need to use - just not had any recent desire to do so!!) and I've thoroughly enjoyed my new path that I have taken.
So my question to you is - do you feel tied to any particular chain (and why?) or do you go for a best of breed (or both?).
As a SFSC $/£ is king and after having had very lacklustre experiences (in regards to general hotel look/feel and what exactly the benefits were) I decided to re-evaluate my path. To be honest I've never really been one to care too much about status putting it in the nice to have basket. It is something that has occasionally blinded me and I look back thinking about some of the choices made and wondered why oh why would I have chosen such things?
In any case - I wanted to put this here as a point of discussion for people to think about what is important to them when it comes to a hotel?
Since I have moved to London I find I tend to travel a lot more. Coming from Perth that's no surprise really as it's quite pricey to get anywhere - or at least it was 5 years ago before I moved here. Since then there has been a rapid increase of LCC options to the likes of Air Asia X, Scoot, Jetstar, etc. with much more competitive pricing.
Originally I bought into the whole 'status' thing (for hotels especially) and kept chasing the goals out there, but never found it overly fulfilling.
Disclaimer: Keep in mind that airline status for me is slightly different. Being based in the UK and crediting to BA puts me in good stead to very cheaply renew BA Silver (OWS) each year for circa £1000 and that's without going to very much effort. Most of my travel here is in J - but is strategically done, it's not done as a matter of principle. By doing this I hear you say - well you get lounge access, selected seating etc. anyway. Yes, that's true ; but it's when I decide to burn my miles on short haul whY hops in Europe that it really provides the benefit for me. Seat selection, being able to have a nibble in the lounge before take off etc. makes the minor outlay on travel I'd do anyway worth keeping airline status.
But I digress.....
In the past 12 months or so as I've wound down my use of HH Diamond I started re-evaluating exactly what it was I wanted from my hotel stays. What it came down to for me (and Mrs Flashback - who shares a similar view... loves the airline perks, but couldn't really care less about the hotel ones) was the following key points:
- A bed to sleep in for the night (or 2)
- Not having a huge buffet breakfast on offer "for free" every day, it encourages over eating - either having a simple / reasonably priced in restaurant option, or with the guidance of Wikitravel / TripAdvisor seeking out local places to enjoy instead. Even a lot of Hilton buffets I've had have been quite average, so I find a lot of value is placed on something that's not really that great.
- Good location (often chain hotels are not, especially when you're outside of the major 'wow' cities; e.g. the IHG options in New Delhi weren't great)
- It doesn't have to be 'luxury' - as long as it's comfortable that's all I really need. I know some people feel otherwise, but I don't!
Any facilities such as a pool, gym, etc. are a bonus but I found that I seldom used them anyway as when travelling I'm either too tired from having been out all day, getting exercise as part of my touring or swimming in the ocean etc. where suitable. A lot of hotels in Europe (IHG, Hilton, Accor etc) don't have pools generally anyway so that makes the decision for me even easier.
So what have I done this year? Well I've relied more heavily on Hotels.com as a booking agent. I do always crosscheck the rates vs other sites and they're usually on-par, sometimes cheaper. Rarely more expensive. What is great about them is their Welcome Rewards program where essentially for each stay you receive a 10% rebate; which then adds up and averages for every 10 stays providing you with a credit to use towards a free night. When you add to that the use of cashback sites, where often a 10-12% rebate is offered on top of that - you're looking at close to 20% off the ticket price. Nice.
What I've found is that this has opened me up to a much wider variety of hotels and instead of sticking to a cookie cutter corporate hotel it allows me to experience something a little more unique. Some have been great, some have been not so - however the same can also be said for a lot of the chain hotels I've stayed at.
When I look at my total hotel spend over a year now it has substantially reduced, I've not felt 'tied' to any one particular chain (I do still have 250k hotel points I need to use - just not had any recent desire to do so!!) and I've thoroughly enjoyed my new path that I have taken.
So my question to you is - do you feel tied to any particular chain (and why?) or do you go for a best of breed (or both?).