Cornell Research Study Looks at ADR to Find Competing Hotels
Hotel research says ADR data are more effective than product tiers in determining hotel comp sets
ITHACA, NY, September 17, 2009 - While some hotel managers might simply look out the window to see their competition, new hotel research from Cornell's Center for Hospitality Research finds that the real competition is hotels that are charging similar average rates. The study, "Product Tiers and ADR Clusters: Integrating Two Methods for Determining Hotel Competitive Sets," by Jin-Young Kim and Linda Canina, compared two different ways of identifying a hotel's competitive set. The report, which examined competitive clusters of 49 hotels in a single geographic market, is available at no charge at www.hotelschool.cornell.edu/research/chr/pubs/reports/2009.html.
"First we grouped the hotels according to their nominal product tier, such as luxury, upscale, or economy, and then we used cluster analysis to group the hotels according to their ADRs," explained Canina. "In the product-tier grouping, we found substantial differences in average rates, which means that hotels in certain product tiers are not really competing directly with each other. Instead the hospitality research study found that when we clustered the hotels by ADR, the supposed luxury hotels were competing directly with midscale properties, based on their rates." Canina is an assistant professor at the Cornell School of Hotel Administration, where Kim is a doctoral student.
"Both competitor-analysis approaches are useful," added Kim. "The product-tier approach allows developers to identify gaps in the market, for example, while the ADR-cluster analysis reflects consumers' quality assessment of a hotel." Kim added that although this study examined just one market, she has repeated the analysis for several diverse markets, with the same result.
Kim and Canina explain that the ADR cluster analysis allows hotel operators to review their current operating strategy. For example, the hotel research suggests that an upscale hotel that finds itself in a cluster with economy hotels, a situation which occurred in this market, might consider a property upgrade or rebranding downmarket.
Thanks to the support of the Center for Hospitality Research partners listed below, all publications posted on the center's website are available free of charge, at www.chr.cornell.edu.




Marriott International, Inc. (NASDAQ: MAR) is a global leading lodging company based in Bethesda,Maryland, USA, with more than 4,200 properties in 80 countries and territories. Marriott International reported revenues of nearly $14 billion in fiscal year 2014. The company operates and franchises hotels and licenses vacation ownership resorts under 19 brands, including: The Ritz-Carlton®, BVlgari®, EDITION®, JW Marriott®, Autograph Collection® Hotels, Renaissance® Hotels, Marriott Hotels®, Delta Hotels and Resorts®, Marriott Executive Apartments®, Marriott Vacation Club®, Gaylord Hotels®, AC Hotels by Marriott®, Courtyard®, Residence Inn®, SpringHill Suites®, Fairfield Inn & Suites®, TownePlace Suites®, Protea Hotels® and MoxyHotels®. Marriott has been consistently recognized as a top employer and for its superior business ethics. The company also manages the award-winning guest loyalty program, Marriott Rewards® and The Ritz-Carlton Rewards® program, which together surpass 50 million members. For more information or reservations, please visit our website at