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You are at:Home » Why Hospitality Companies Miss Their Most Valuable Customers
Why Hospitality Companies Miss Their Most Valuable Customers
Travel

Why Hospitality Companies Miss Their Most Valuable Customers

19 March 20265 Mins Read

In Brief: Sethna and Ramachandran explore the common pitfalls hospitality companies face when trying to identify their most profitable customers, highlighting the potential for significant revenue loss.

  • The $15,000 Illusion: Why Hospitality Companies Miss Their Most Valuable Customers – Image Credit Unsplash+   

Consider a hotel guest with a recorded spend of $15,000. On a standard balance sheet, she’s a modest, mid-tier account. On paper, she’s hardly a candidate for executive intervention.

What the data doesn’t show is that she organizes her extended family’s annual reunion: a 20-room block that generates $50,000 in annual revenue. And she’s connected to three other families who’ve started booking the same weekend because she told them about your property.

If this guest pivots her loyalty, she doesn’t leave alone. She triggers a ripple effect worth multiples of her individual spend.

We call this the $15,000 illusion. It’s costing travel and hospitality companies millions in revenue they never knew they had, and millions more in revenue they’ll never even know that they lost. The failure to connect various threads within the guest data is weighing heavily on hospitality companies. For an industry built on ‘knowing the guest,’ this fragmented data landscape is becoming an increasingly expensive liability.

The Problem with Row-Level Thinking

The problem isn’t data scarcity: the travel industry generates more first-party data than almost any other sector. The problem is a data visibility gap. 

Traditional systems excel at tracking individual transactions: booking dates, room preferences, loyalty points accumulated. What they don’t see are the relationships between those transactions—the patterns that reveal who influences whom, who organizes group travel, and whose satisfaction ripples across an entire network.

Twenty-five percent of hotel executives acknowledge their data is fragmented across systems. Meanwhile, 68% of guests say they’d spend more for personalized experiences. The gap between those two numbers represents both a vulnerability and an opportunity.

When decision-makers rely solely on row-level data, they’re managing the enterprise through a straw.

Going from Transactions to Relationships with Knowledge Graphs

Knowledge graphs offer a different model built on connections rather than records.

Unlike traditional databases that store information in isolated rows, knowledge graphs map relationships between entities: guests, bookings, preferences, behaviors, households, and group dynamics. They answer questions that standard queries can’t: 

  • Who organizes family travel? 
  • Which guest’s dissatisfaction poses the greatest churn risk across their network? 
  • What life stage is this household entering, and what does that mean for their next trip?

Here’s what this looks like in practice: 

A couple honeymoons at a resort in 2023. They return in 2025, but now they’re searching for toddler-friendly accommodations.

In this scenario, a traditional system shows two repeat guests; but a knowledge graph recognizes a household entering a new lifecycle phase. It can subsequently surface family suite inventory, kids’ club programming, and early dining reservations before the family even asks. It can also flag the family for re-engagement when the child turns five and again at twelve, anticipating the travel patterns most likely to follow.

Another example: disruption recovery. 

When a winter storm leads to the cancellation of 40 flights, a traditional system may rebook passengers one by one, alphabetically or by status tier. A knowledge graph identifies which passengers are traveling together, prioritizes coordinated rebooking, routes communications to the group coordinator, and flags connected hotel reservations that need adjustment.

Same storm, same cancellations, but radically different recovery experiences.

When a global hotel chain unified 300 million customer records into a Customer 360 view—connecting loyalty data, booking behavior, and engagement signals across fragmented systems—it recovered $13 million in revenue within three months and cut forecasting errors by 75%.

The Strategic Knowledge Graph Advantage

Knowledge graphs facilitate a shift from transactional intelligence to relationship intelligence that drives three critical business outcomes:

Optimized resource allocation. When you can identify the connectors who anchor your most profitable networks, you can deploy high-touch retention strategies where they’ll generate the highest return (instead of spreading them thin across every loyalty tier).

Platforms like Customer Cosmos make this operational by aggregating 200+ behavioral attributes from first-party and third-party sources into a unified feature store, reducing campaign lead times by 30% and giving marketing teams the resolution to target connectors—not just segments.

Revenue resilience. Securing the anchors of group business creates a stabilizing effect across your portfolio, reducing the volatility of individual churn. Protecting those relationships could mean protecting an entire revenue ecosystem.

One vacation ownership company used AI-driven churn prediction and lifetime value modeling to re-engage 11% of churned owners, unlocking more than $6 million in potential revenue from guests the old system had written off.

Strategic differentiation. In an increasingly commoditized market, the ability to recognize a customer’s total influence, not just their individual spend is a competitive advantage that’s difficult to replicate.

In the travel and hospitality industry, the future of business intelligence will take data abundance for granted. Instead, leaders and trendsetters will be focused on making better connections across data sets.

The guest who appears mid-tier on the balance sheet—the one worth only $15,000, at least on paper—may be anchoring millions in network revenue. The question is which organizations have the means to reliably uncover those revenue anchors and then capitalize.

Strategic value is no longer in the row. It’s in the relationship.

Hutokshi Sethna, Head, Travel & Hospitality at Tredence 

Why Hospitality Companies Miss Their Most Valuable Customers

Hutokshi Sethna, Head, Travel & Hospitality at Tredence, is a hospitality technology strategist passionate about how AI and data converge to elevate guest experience, personalization, and loyalty in the travel industry. She has consistently demonstrated how AI can be harnessed to solve complex business challenges and drive tangible outcomes in the travel and hospitality industry with technology as an enabler.  

Arvind Ramachandran,  Director, Data Engineering

Arvind Ramachandran is a seasoned data and analytics leader serving as Director at Tredence, where he drives strategic leadership and innovative data engineering solutions for enterprise clients. With over 15+ years of experience in data engineering, platform architecture, and analytics delivery, Arvind helps organizations solve complex data challenges and scale modern data platforms.

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