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ADB Says Millennials Want their Own Content on Hotel TVs

ADB has released a white paper with the results of a survey on the guestroom TV experience. The study looked at the views of guests (2000 in luxury, upscale, midscale and economy tiers) and hoteliers.

The findings include:

Tier 1: The Hotelier Viewpoint

One of the first observations is that hoteliers and guests value IRE services differently. Hotel executives tend to weigh most services more strongly than guests. Hoteliers all rated Interactive Program Guides (IPG), Searchable IPG, Over the Top Services (Netflix, Amazon Prime Videos, Hulu, etc.) and Screencasting (the ability to show OTT displays and other services from guests own devices via the TV screen) highly. Hoteliers also see Video on Demand and Pay-Per-View programming to be of high importance.

Other strong hotelier opinions included:

  • A robust PMS interface is a must-have for many of these services
  • Guests want a home-like TV experience in the room.
  • Guests really want to stream their own content to the hotel room TV.

Tier 2: The Qualitative Guest Viewpoint

A key observation among guests is that the in-room TV experience is important, but not important enough to drive the choice of hotel by itself. While guests also put a high value on IPG (searchable or otherwise), OTT and Screencasting, they do not see it as important as hoteliers. The same holds true for VOD and PPV. On the other side, guests say that hotel and local area information channels are important, while hoteliers see less value. It’s important to note that guests, particularly Millennials, really do want to view their own content on hotel room televisions.

Tier 3: The Quantitative Guest Viewpoint

Guests were very vocal about what they want from an IRE experience. The following are verbatim quotes in response to open-ended questions on the consumer survey:

  • “Most hotels don’t have any good channels or any way to know what channel is what.
  • “More hotels should allow you to connect your own personal media device to the TV for viewing.”
  • “[IRE systems]need to be updated to reflect the changing tastes in TV (500+ channels as well as digital media receivers like Roku and Chromecast).”

Researchers learned that age groups prioritize IRE service differently. When compared to older age groups, 73% of Millennials consider TV “Very Important” vs. 54% of older guests.

They also discovered that Millennials assign a higher priority to almost all services compared to the other groups, with ‘boomers’ showing a pretty steep drop in preference compared to younger travellers. This insight shows that a hotel built to service the Millennial traveller needs a robust and feature-rich IRE offering.

Finally, “Guest Messaging” revealed itself as an emerging technology. The survey explored guest perceptions about (1) feedback on service requests and (2) the ability for a meeting planner to send targeted messages to their group members only. Survey respondents overwhelmingly said they want to be contacted. The preferred contact medium, especially for Millennials, was the hotel room TV and text message.

When it comes to mobile technology, guests carry an average of 1.71 smartphones and 1.49 laptops in the traveling party. Millennials, however, carry more devices than other age groups, an average of 2.48 smartphones and 2.22 laptops per travel party, pulling up the averages. They carry more tablets, too. When asked “Which, if any, of these devices do you connect to/watch over your hotel room TV?” the surprising finding was that 57.4% of guests are attempting to connect their own devices to the in-room TV (via a cable or streaming device).

  • Most guests, across all age groups, have accounts with Netflix, YouTube, Amazon Prime, and Hulu.
  • Currently, 62.1% of Millennials, 52.2% of Gen X and 17.2% of Boomers are using their own devices to stream media while at the hotel.
  • Guests would prefer to watch streaming media via the hotel room TV (Millennials more so than older guests): 37% of Millennials would prefer to enter a passcode into the TV; 23.9 % of Millennials would prefer to use Chromecast, Roku or a similar device; 26.2% of Millennials would prefer to use an HDMI cable or the like; and 27.6% of Millennials would prefer to stream their media wirelessly to the TV.

ADB said that it has used the findings from this study to reinvent its iTV platform called vuTyme.

The study can be downloaded (registration required).