Hospitality company OYO Hotels & Homes is continuing its quest to become
the largest hotel chain in the world with confirmation this week that it is rolling
out its first OYO Townhouses in the U.S.
OYO Townhouse is the India-based company’s brand that is
targeted to millennial travelers.
Combined with its other brands - OYO Homes,
OYO Living, OYO Rooms, SilverKey and Pallete – the company says it finished
2018 with 458,000 fully controlled, leased and franchised rooms in more than
18,000 properties in over 500 cities in India, China, Malaysia, Nepal, Indonesia, United Arab
Emirates, the Philippines and the U.K.
The company already has several employees in the U.S.
According
to LinkedIn, Marcus Higgins began as head of U.S. operations for OYO in
December, and the company has hired business development managers and other sales
executives in cities including Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, Miami, Orlando,
Denver and Charlotte.
“We aim to bring our franchising, revenue management, and
hotel management expertise to the large unbranded market that exists,” says an
OYO spokesperson via email.
“We see great opportunity in this market, but also
appreciate the competitive nature of franchising and uniqueness of the United
States. We will bring learnings from building similar markets like the U.K. and
constantly learn and modify our strategy to suit the needs of the U.S. market
like we did to succeed in the U.K.”
Brand strategy
The OYO model is based on transforming unbranded hotels through
property renovations, a proprietary technology stack that manages revenue,
pricing, inventory, food and beverage and front desk operations and a guarantee
of services such as air conditioning, free Wi-Fi and clean bathrooms and linens.
On its website, OYO invites hotelier to join its network, stating
it delivers a 100% increase in revenue within six months for its partners and
70% occupancy every day.
That combination of physical and technological upgrades and
higher revenue could make OYO a welcome opportunity for unbranded
accommodations in the U.S., which number around 18,000 – about a third of all
hotels in the country.
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“The U.S. hotel market isn't clamoring for it, but the
business model will be very attractive to a lot of small hotel owners who are
not being well served by the lower tier hotel franchise brands,” says Robert Cole,
Phocuswright’s senior research analyst for lodging and leisure travel and
founder of hospitality consulting firm RockCheetah.
“OYO won't kill the major hotel brands in the U.S., but if
they execute well, they can have a successful business that will present the
major hotel brands with some challenges, similar to the way Airbnb is creating
issues.”
One possible entry point - the Asian American Hotel Owners
Association, which says its 18,500 members own almost half of all hotels in the
U.S. and about one-fifth of those are independent properties.
“The OYO model should work in the U.S.,” Cole says.
“Its focus is on technology and operations. They totally
control their distribution. That’s pretty different from the U.S. franchise approach
that is almost totally branding, with some centralized technology and
hit-or-miss property-level operational technology that owners have to deal
with.”
European expansion
In Europe operations are well under way, with OYO’s aspirations clearly extending beyond the nine
properties currently listed on the brand’s U.K. website.
The company has hired Andrew Verbitsky as European Union
region head, Jeremy Sanders as country manager for the United Kingdom and Tobias
Jörk as country manager for Spain.
Prior to joining OYO in January, Verbitsky was general
manager for central and eastern Europe for Airbnb for nearly four years and
before that was a regional managing director for Kayak.
Sanders joined OYO in
October, around the time of the U.K. launch, and was formerly co-founder and
CEO of a quick-service chain of Italian restaurants. And Jörk was with a digital marketing agency and also was Groupon’s
CEO in Spain.
With those executives in place, now OYO is looking to add staff to ramp up its European operations – its website lists more than a
dozen positions each in the U.K., Spain and Germany.
“At first glance, there would seem to be a lot of potential
for this concept in Europe,” says Peter O’Connor, Phocuswright’s senior market analyst
for Europe and a chaired professor at ESSEC Business School in France.
“Seven out of ten hotels are currently unbranded, so on the
supply side the concept could have legs.
But, given its diverse geographical markets, Europe is too fragmented on
the consumer side. So I think it would be too difficult - and expensive - for
them to build awareness.”
OYO has raised about $1.6 billion
since it launched in 2015. Its most recent round of funding came in the fourth
quarter of 2018 with $1 billion from SoftBank Vision Fund with participation
from existing investors Lightspeed Venture Partners, Sequoia and Greenoaks
Capital.