Mobile bookings for hotels are behind the curve: Almost two out of five mobile shoppers have abandoned a travel booking on a mobile device due to poor user experience. This figure comes as part of a study by US-based Jumio, which estimates that in the UK alone £2.7 billion in the travel industry was lost last year after consumers failed to complete a booking.
Usability on mobile is a core problems for hotels and users alike. One third of visitors report that apps or mobile sites are too slow to load. Navigation and payment process were also featured as reasons for abandonment, with screen size issues blamed by 21%.
These facts are all causing mobile bookings for hotels to lag far behind mobile traffic.
If mobile weren’t such a strong and growing channel, this might be a minor issue. However, with mobile traffic surpassing desktop for many hotels, it’s anything but minor. As of September 2016, our clients saw 51% of their traffic on average coming from mobile. So how do you reduce mobile cart abandonment to grow mobile bookings for hotels?
Here are our mobile experts’ 5 steps to success!
A 2016 Sales Cycle study found that 53% of travel bookings are abandoned when the full price is only revealed at the end of the booking process. When guests see all the add-ons and taxes included, they bolt. This is especially an issue for hotels that show their rates as per person sharing or per room per night for longer stay offers.
Some recent analysis conducted by Net Affinity has shown that, while showing a per person rate initially draws more users into the booking funnel, there’s an alarming drop off once they see the full price. Hotels that show a total price up front see 5-7% more bookings!
The bottom line: The data indicates that a total stay rate should be shown up front to increase mobile bookings for hotels. You’ll lose a few users up front, but in the end more will book, and there won’t be any confusion or lack of trust over price issues.
The constraints of mobile devices’ small screens and the actual conditions under which users are likely to be using their mobile (e.g. on the move and maybe in a moving vehicle) put strict limits on what you can expect users to do when they’re booking on mobile.
All mobile forms need to be as simple and straightforward as possible to help users focus on the specific task. Reducing unnecessary distractions increases mobile bookings for hotels.
One obvious solution for hotels is to omit optional fields. Do you really need the guest’s address? Is there an opportunity to get it when the guest checks in at the hotel? If you can, remove it from the form. It may be hindering your mobile conversions.
Skyscanner, the travel booking site, saw mobile web bookings grow by 24% from 2014 to 2015, with mobile accounting for 42% of all conversions. On top of that, mobile visitors grew 60% in that time period, representing 59% of total visitors.
Mobile commerce is big business for the travel industry. However, mobile sites that don’t offer a quick and secure payment process are losing out. Typing in card details is a hassle on a traditional laptop or desktop keyboard – on a smaller mobile keyboard, it’s much worse. So what’s the solution?
One option comes from our benevolent technological overlords. Google and Apple are constantly developing their solutions for mobile payments. Google has recently announced the launch of Chrome 53 for Android. This new version brings support for Android Pay (their digital wallet solution), and will allow customers using Android Pay to make online mobile payments in just one click. However, since it’s a phased rollout, the update will not reach all users and regions at the same time. Adoption of digital wallets has also been slow to date in areas across Europe, but this is one to watch for coming years.
So what can hotels do right now to reduce mobile cart abandonment at the payment stage? One option is to consider removing booking deposits. Typically hotels don’t ask users to put down pre-payments when they book with online travel agents, so it may not make sense to offer the same option on the brand site.
However, the flip side of that coin is that users may be more likely to cancel if they don’t have a deposit on the line – weigh up the pros and cons. Also, review any terms and conditions at the payment stage to make sure they are absolutely clear to the user and aren’t hindering bookings.
Mobile users want to browse quickly and buy quickly. If a mobile site is too slow to load, it’s going to push away a substantial base of your customers and net fewer mobile bookings for hotels.
Every second really counts on mobile. 79% of web shoppers who have trouble with web site performance say they won’t return to the site to buy again. 44% of them would tell a friend if they had a poor experience shopping online.
When you’re designing your mobile site, be absolutely sure that the information on that site is 100% relevant. Make sure the imagery and video you’re using aren’t affecting site speed. Otherwise, you might be doing your site more harm than good.
Google Analytics can help you to better understand how users flow through your site. Go to the ‘Behaviour Flow’ page in Google Analytics. At what point in the booking funnel are they leaving the site? When you know what pages you’re losing visitors at, you can examine those pages to try and find out what might be affecting their decision. Mobile cart abandonment is often hugely increased by one or two specific issues, like having too many rate plans loaded on mobile or not showing the full price up front.
Online usability testing is another option to take the guesswork out of the mix. Using these tools allows you to test precisely where your potential customers are experiencing friction. Companies like Hotjar provide options for heatmaps, scroll maps and user session video replays. If you take the data from these tests on board, they’re more than worth the investment.
Given most hotels’ traffic levels, A/B testing is not a feasible option. A/B testing, or split testing, requires huge amounts of traffic, and without that, the test isn’t statistically significance. How much traffic? Tools like this one from Evan Miller give a simple look, based on your conversion rate and how much of a change you want to be able to detect.
If you set the tool to calculate relative instead of absolute difference, that sample size jumps to 20 million per variation. A/B test simply require huge amounts of traffic, especially in industries that typically have smaller conversion rates and want to measure smaller changes.
However, a qualitative test could provide valuable insights for your business. Here are some possible options:
Serve an exit intent poll to users who leave the booking process without having completed a booking.
Here’s an example from CitizenM:
This one is for users who have completed a booking in the last 7 days. Surveys can be delivered as exit intent pop ups on the booking confirmation page and via email.
Research shows that, to get the highest response rate, the survey should include no more than 7 open-ended questions and response rate can be improved by adding an incentive, e.g. a complimentary welcome drink on arrival. Based on the answers you get from qualitative research, website content should be reviewed and any potential issues addressed.
Conclusion
These six tips are the first steps in a strategy to increase mobile bookings for hotels. Traffic on mobile is higher than ever, but desktops still generate more bookings. This is usually down to usability and trust issues – the 6 tips above are designed to fight those issues and get your mobile site the bookings it deserves.
What does you hotel do to persuade guests to book on mobile? Does it work? Share your best tips to improve mobile bookings for hotels with us below!