Online travel agencies are brilliant at one thing: putting your property in front of people who have never heard of you. That reach has a price — a commission on every booking, plus a guest relationship that belongs to the platform, not to you.
You will never replace the OTAs entirely, nor should you. The goal is balance: keep them as a discovery channel, and convert the guests they introduce into direct, repeat bookings you control.
Where commission quietly leaks
- No reason to book direct. If your own site offers the same price and less convenience, a guest has no incentive to leave the platform.
- A clumsy booking path. Every extra click, redirect or "email us to enquire" sheds bookings.
- No way back. Once a guest checks out, there's no follow-up — so the next trip runs through the OTA again.
Four systems that shift the balance
- A direct-booking perk. A small, honest advantage for booking with you — a welcome drink, late checkout, a better rate — stated plainly on every page.
- A booking flow that takes seconds. Real-time availability, clear pricing, mobile-first, no dead ends.
- Capture the relationship. Collect the guest's email at enquiry and booking, with consent, so the next conversation is yours.
- A reason to return. A short, genuinely useful sequence after their stay — a thank-you, a seasonal offer, a nudge before the next ski or summer season.
The compounding effect
The first direct booking saves a commission. The tenth, from a guest who now books with you every year, saves a commission and an acquisition. Owning the relationship is the asset; the systems above are how you build it — quietly, in the background, while you run the business.
