Do Hotels Still Need Traditional Channels in 2025?

A Modern Perspective for Resorts and Urban Hotels

By Charles Tan

Despite rapid digital transformation, the hotel industry still relies heavily on a mix of traditional and modern distribution partners. While OTAs, social media, and performance marketing have grown dramatically, core pillars such as Overseas Wholesalers, Local Tour Operators, Airlines, Retail Travel Agents, Consortia/Consolidators, and Corporate accounts remain essential—particularly for properties aiming for stable, year-round occupancy.

Below is a refined, modern explanation for owners and management.

  1. Overseas Wholesalers — Still a Strategic Backbone

Even in 2025, overseas wholesalers remain one of the most dependable base-business generators, especially for:

  • resorts outside city centers
  • hotels reliant on long-haul markets
  • destinations with seasonal fluctuations

Wholesalers provide:

  • Forward bookings 6–12 months in advance
  • Strong allotments and guaranteed blocks
  • Access to traditional retail networks in Europe, Australia, Russia, Korea, Japan, and China
  • The ability to push promotions quickly through thousands of travel agents

Despite digital booking tools, many travelers still prefer booking through trusted agents, particularly for long vacations, multi-country tours, and group travel.

👉 Therefore, catalogs, negotiated rates, and early-bird contracts continue to be relevant and necessary.

  1. Local Tour Operators — Vital for Short-Notice Business

Local operators remain essential for:

  • FIT
  • Series groups
  • Family and incentive markets
  • Last-minute weekend demand

They also provide stable support during:

  • low seasons
  • market downturns
  • unexpected events

Local operators retain strong control over group itineraries, which hotels cannot ignore.

  1. Airlines — Still a High-Value Distribution Partner

Airlines remain critical for demand generation through:

  • joint promotions
  • destination campaigns
  • bundled room + flight packages
  • charter operations
  • loyalty program partnerships

Airlines can create entire demand waves for a destination.
This relationship remains one of the most powerful but often underutilized.

  1. Retail Travel Agents — Not Dead, Just Different

Retail agents continue to have strong influence in:

  • Asian family markets
  • Elderly travelers
  • Luxury and honeymoon segments
  • Long-haul travelers who want reassurance and guidance

They may no longer dominate the market, but they still convert high-value customers with less price sensitivity.

  1. Consortia / Consolidators — Essential for Corporate Volume

These partners remain crucial for a hotel’s corporate mix, offering:

  • negotiated corporate rates
  • access to multinational company networks
  • GDS distribution
  • secure, contracted volume

Even with modern digital RFP systems, the fundamental role of consortia remains unchanged.

  1. Corporate Accounts — A Must-Have for Base Business

Corporate stays continue to provide:

  • weekday occupancy
  • high F&B spending
  • repeat demand
  • stable long-term volume

Modern tools may change the way contracts are managed, but corporate relationships still require human interaction, negotiation, and account servicing.

  1. Is ITB Still Necessary? — Yes, but with Purpose

Major travel fairs like ITB Berlin, WTM London, Arabian Travel Market still hold significant value—not for walk-ins, but for:

  • strengthening partnerships
  • meeting wholesalers face-to-face
  • annual contracting
  • market intelligence
  • renewing or negotiating series, allotments, and joint promotions
  • building trust

Hotels that disappear from ITB often lose visibility and relevance.
Presence equals seriousness—especially in Europe.

  1. Should Hotels Still Produce Annual Catalogs? — Yes, but Modernized

Overseas wholesalers still expect:

  • negotiated contract rates
  • detailed hotel fact sheets
  • room descriptions
  • key selling points
  • high-quality images
  • promotions for the next year

However, modern catalogs should be:

  • digital-first (PDF + web version)
  • visually contemporary
  • concise and mobile-friendly
  • aligned with brand guidelines
  • updated quarterly instead of yearly

The format has evolved, but the need to supply trade partners with sales-ready material remains essential.

🔍 Conclusion: The Strategy Today Is Hybrid

A modern hotel cannot rely solely on OTAs, nor return to fully traditional channels.

The winners in 2025 are hotels that master both:

Traditional Channels (for stability + contracted volumes)

Overseas wholesalers
Local tour operators
Airlines
Consortia
Corporate
Retail agents

Modern Channels (for demand scale + real-time revenue)

OTAs
Metasearch
Paid media
Website + booking engine
CRM personalization
Social commerce

A balanced approach still delivers the highest RevPAR and owner confidence.

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