If Revenue Management Were a Sport…
Fabian Bartnick
Revenue Management the right way | Founded 2 companies that optimize hotel & restaurant/bar profits through software, consulting & coaching | 50,000+ took my Revenue Management training
Welcome to the 22 new subs this week. You found your tribe. :-)
I would normally say: Close your eyes and imagine....bummer that this is a newsletter for reading so pretty pointless. right? BUT: Picture this: you’re sitting in the front row, hot dog, pretzel, cupcake - whatever is your flavor - in hand, stadium lights blaring, and the anticipation is thick.
You’re about to watch the most thrilling sport known to humankind: Revenue Management.
Forget football, tennis, gymnastics, formula 1....THIS is the ultimate test of strategy, adaptability, and maybe a bit of caffeine-induced mania. Tough as nails you gotta be Master Yoda says!
The Arena:
A conference room stocked with more screens than a NASA control center, spreadsheets cascading like waterfalls. Athletes (aka revenue managers) in their natural habitat, rocking their best “I got this” expressions. Headsets are on, fingers hovering over keyboards, ready to execute that winning play.
The Gear:
Forget jerseys and cleats. RM sports gear includes an arsenal of color-coded Excel sheets, a massive whiteboard (mandatory), and at least three mugs of coffee within arm’s reach.
The real pros have a backup mouse for when they click so hard they break the first one.
The Rules:
The Halftime Show:
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As our athletes take a breather, it’s time for the true MVPs of revenue management to shine: the dashboards.
Spectators gaze in awe at real-time updates on RevPAR, ADR, and occupancy rates projected on the Jumbotron. Coaches (or as we call them, C-Suite Execs) analyze every blip and dip, making strategy notes on who should be subbed out—aka, which tool gets cut from the budget next quarter.
Fan Favorites:
Nothing gets the crowd riled up like a dramatic “Demand Surge” overtime play.
Imagine it: the team’s behind, but thanks to some last-minute group bookings, our RM athlete pulls off a surge in ADR that leaves everyone breathless. Forget a buzzer-beater in basketball—this is the stuff legends are made of.
The Victory Lap:
Once the metrics align and the quarter’s targets are met, the champions don’t just high-five. No, they celebrate with a spreadsheet victory dance, wrapping themselves in pivot tables like they just won the World Cup. No trophy, just that sweet satisfaction of knowing they managed to make numbers go up. The ROI is the MVP, and everyone knows it.
So next time you see a revenue manager furiously typing away, just remember:
You are witnessing a world-class athlete at the top of their game.
Love,
Fabi
I help hoteliers discover their true revenue potential - #revenuemanagement #hotelmarketing #ecommerce #datalover
1 个月Finally a sport I can excel in
Hotel Regional Revenue Management Team Leader | Actioning Data to Drive Profit | Collaborating with Sales and Marketing Teams to Achieve Optimal Results | Independent Hotel Ninja
1 个月What stadium sells…cupcakes???
Rooms Division Manager @Wyndham Hotels & Resorts | Rooms Division |Revenue Management | Strategic Planning | Team Leadership | Sustainability Advocate
1 个月Fabian Bartnick what a brilliant analogy! Revenue management really does feel like a high-stakes sport. The mental agility, quick decision-making, and ability to pivot in real time make it just as thrilling as any physical competition. The way you’ve described "Dynamic Pricing Sprints" and "Competitive Forecasting" really captures the intensity and strategy behind it all. And who knew that the “Where’s Waldo?” of anomaly detection could keep us all on our toes like the final minutes of a championship game? Revenue managers truly are the unsung athletes of the hospitality world—competing in a game where every data point can change the outcome. Looking forward to seeing more victories on the “scoreboard!
tech enthusiast | speaker | @Onsai | @HSMA
1 个月Be happy that it's not Quidditch as the rules there don’t make sense ??: 1. The Snitch dominates the game ?? – 150 points for catching it, making everything else almost irrelevant. 2. The Seeker almost always decides the game, and the rest of the team becomes secondary ??. 3. Games can last forever ? – not practical or fair. 4. Some roles are way more dangerous than others ???. 5. Little team strategy – it’s mostly about the Snitch. Great for a book, but as a real sport? Hmm… ??