Booking Holdings, Expedia Group and Airbnb all ramped up
their marketing spending in the second quarter of this year as the only travel giants tried to capture
attention and bookings from consumers eager to travel during the spring and summer
seasons.
But while overall marketing spending (reported by Airbnb and
Expedia Group as both sales and marketing) is up for all three online travel
companies, they all saw a decrease in the expense as a percentage of revenue –
a key indicator they tout to analysts.
Airbnb saw the most notable improvement in this metric, with
sales and marketing expenses of $380 million in Q2 this year coming in at just
18% of revenue ($2.1 billion). That’s compared to the second quarter of last
year when sales and marketing costs were 24% of revenue.
The company says growth in revenue outpaced the increase in
sales and marketing expenses “as a result of the significant increase in Nights
and Experiences booked combined with higher ADRs and cost-saving initiatives.”
In a call discussing the results with analysts, Airbnb CFO
David Stephenson noted: “One of the big strengths of Airbnb is our ability
to market to both guests and hosts at the same time, to be able to bring guests
with 90% of our traffic remaining direct or unpaid. And I think this brand
strategy, in fact, it's more of a product marketing strategy that we have, to
market the features and capabilities that we have at Airbnb and what makes us
different has been a huge strength for us.”
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An example of the brand’s efforts to capture unpaid traffic
is its twice-yearly product updates, most recently in May,
that attract attention from mainstream and social media.
Expedia Group saw its total (direct and indirect) selling
and marketing expenses increase from $1.2 billion in Q2 2021 to $1.7 billion in
the similar period this year, a 43% increase. But as a percentage of revenue,
these costs dropped from nearly 57% in the second quarter of last year to 54% in Q2 2022, as revenue in the quarter jumped nearly 51% from $2.1
billion in 2021 to $3.2 billion this year.
In the company’s call with analysts, CEO Peter Kern explains that
the company is focused on allocating its marketing spending to get “the right customers in the funnel and then
turning them in to loyalty members and app users” – because those customers
drive the most bookings and profit.
“To be clear, we have been evolving our consumer approach
from being largely transactionally focused ... to a future where we build
longer-lasting direct relationships with loyal high-lifetime-value customers. This
means that we have not chased all traffic available in performance marketing,
no matter the cost, and instead have focused on the pockets of consumers we
think will derive the highest long-term value and the best future shape of our
business,” Kern says.
“Our competition has been very promotional and highly geared
to performance marketing, but we are determined to build our business in a
better way. And we fully believe that as we build our base of high-lifetime-value customers, we will be able to buy the right customers more efficiently
and grow revenue and share far more quickly and profitably than we ever have.”
For Booking Holdings, revenue in the quarter nearly doubled
year-over-year, from $2.2 billion in Q2 2021 to $4.3 billion in the same period this year. Marketing
expenses in the quarter (reported separately from sales) were up more than 75% –
from $988 million last year to $1.7 billion this year – but came in lower as a percentage of
revenue, from 45.8% in Q2 2021 to 40.5% in Q2 of this year.
However, Booking Holdings considers marketing efficiency to
be expressed by marketing expenses as a percentage of gross bookings – not total
revenue. The company incurs performance marketing expenses at the time a
booking is made but does not recognize revenue until the traveler checks in, meaning cancellations can negatively impact marketing efficiency.
In the second quarter of 2022, marketing expenses as a percentage of
total gross bookings increased slightly compared to Q2 2021, from 4.5% to 5% year-over-year.
Says Booking Holdings CFO David Goulden in a call with
analysts: “We were pleased to see the ROIs better than our expectation in the
second quarter and to get some leverage on that marketing spend. It's obviously
the biggest single line in our income statement.
"As you know, the calculation
of ROI is based upon many, many different variables. Some of the ones that made
a difference to the positive in the second quarter - having a lower cancellation
rate helped with ROIs. We saw some strengthening in length of stays versus what
we were expecting and also versus 2019, and some of the ADR trends also helped
us. There are other factors as well, but I'd point out those three as ones that
certainly had a meaningful impact on the overall ROI environment.”