TripAdvisor on your hotel website - good or bad?

July 14, 2009 | Hospitality Industry

Hospitality eBusiness lists all the cons it can think off why you should not put TripAdvisor on your website. In addition, it offers some alternative routes to get customer reviews on to your hotel site.

What are the pros and cons of creating a link on the hotel website to the customer reviews page of the hotel on TripAdvisor and displaying TripAdvisor reviews directly on the hotel website via the TripAdvisor Review Widget.

We have always recommended against both of these options.  Here is why:

1.  Creating a link on the hotel website to the customer reviews page of the hotel on TripAdvisor

This is a much simpler case. Have you looked at your property page and your customer reviews on TripAdvisor lately? Have you noticed that the page is full of advertisements by all the major online travel agencies (OTAs), all the major hotel brands, and many of your competitors?

By linking from your hotel website to TripAdvisor you are actively encouraging your potential customers to book with the OTAs or someone else. On the other hand, it is extremely expensive nowadays to bring visitors to your website (costs related to paid search, website development, SEO, hosting, email marketing, analytics, etc.), and you would not want to lose them that easily by sending them away.

2.  Displaying TripAdvisor reviews directly on the hotel website via the TripAdvisor Review Widget

The TripAdvisor Review Widget is placed on the hotel website by uploading a special TripAdvisor code that “pushes” live customer reviews from TripAdvisor.

TripAdvisor promotes this as a ‘friendlier’ option compared to Option 1 above because the hotel website visitors do not have to leave the site, and therefore will not be exposed to advertising by the OTAs and competitors.

Here are the cons as we see them:

Official vs. Unofficial Web Content

With social media becoming the “voice of the people” online travelers want to see both sides of the story:


The “Official Content”: this is the hotel website’s descriptions of the hotel product and services
The “Unofficial Content”: these are customer reviews and postings on social media sites, TripAdvisor, etc.
Mixing official and unofficial content by adding the TripAdvisor Widget on the hotel website goes against the very principle of separating official from unofficial content, convolutes the mere nature of social media content, creates confusion among online travelers and ultimately works against the hotel.

Lack of Control over Customer Reviews

No hotel will ever publish a negative customer review on its website. Having TripAdvisor push live customer reviews to the hotel website creates the very real threat that negative reviews will appear on the hotel website as soon as they are posted on TripAdvisor. How do you control that? There is no way that you can filter out negative reviews with this TripAdvisor Review Widget.

A Guest Satisfaction Survey should already exist on the hotel website

As per best practices, the hotel website should already feature a Guest Testimonials Page, as well as a Guest Satisfaction Survey, which aims to solicit customer opinions about hotel services, accommodations, etc. See a sample here: http://www.leparcsuites.com/hotel/guest-survey.php

Don’t Tempt the Competition

We have noticed that when the competition discovers that you feature “live” customer reviews from TripAdvisor on your website, they are often tempted to write a fake negative review about your hotel themselves.

Best Practices:

TripAdvisor created this functionality to link from the hotel website back in early 2008. As of today only a few hundred hotels have signed up (out of over 50,000 U.S. hotels). No major hotel brand has allowed its franchisees to link to TripAdvisor from their own websites, and no chain website links to TripAdvisor.

Why? The reasons sited above, as well as a very practical one:
the industry in general should not contribute to the expansion of monopolistic customer review depositories like TripAdvisor. This site already has more than 30 million unique visitors every month. It already has a big chunk of the marketplace. Its closest competitor has only 5 million visitors a month.

Our clients agree with us:

Here is what one of our clients, a luxury boutique hotel in California, had to say:
“I agree that the TripAdvisor Review Widget works against the hotel, particularly since in this economy we’ve been forced to play in the opaque sites (Priceline, Hotwire), we’ve found those customers posting reviews that are either only partial truth, at best, and/or certainly embellished, showing the hotel in a very negative light”.

Related Link: Hospitality eBusiness

Most Popular Articles

Does your hotel really need a social media strategy?
11 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Top ten best practices for today’s online hotel marketer
17 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

How TripAdvisor engages mass influencers
12 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

6 ways to drive more online travel sales in 2010
11 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Why should I open your e-mail?
09 Mar, 2010 | Internet Marketing

The need for a more holistic approach to revenue management
10 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

How have Web 2.0 & social media shaped online hotel marketing?
16 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Google Marketplace drives corporate travel apps
15 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Five creative strategies for hotels to attract new repeat guests
17 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Social media empowers new modes of travel
19 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Economic Downturn

Recovery over a year away, say European hotel executives
16 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

China expected to stimulate world travel economy in 2010
16 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

IATA sees brighter 2010 outlook
15 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Virgin America’s guide to not screwing up customer service
12 Mar, 2010 | Internet Marketing

UK travelers plan to take multiple trips abroad in 2010
09 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Un-stoppable growth in OTA bookings, GDS still lacking behind
05 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Global hotel prices dropped beyond 2004 levels during 2009
02 Mar, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Things are looking up for U.S. airlines
02 Mar, 2010 | Online Travel

Asia leads travel industry’s recovery
26 Feb, 2010 | Online Travel

Meeting buyers see budget cutbacks ease
25 Feb, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Travel companies grapple with “new normal”
23 Feb, 2010 | Online Travel

Europe likely to see recovery, not growth, says STR
22 Feb, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

Hogg Robinson Group sees early signs of recovery
22 Feb, 2010 | Online Travel

US Travel growth expected in 2010
18 Feb, 2010 | Online Travel

IHG’s profit drops 18%, as hotel rates continue to fall
16 Feb, 2010 | Hospitality Industry

E-Mail Newsletter


Visit our sponsors: