Abstract
This paper compares the determinants of guest experience at luxury hotels in Mainland China before and during the pandemic—COVID-19. In particular, 740 Chinese reviews posted before the pandemic outbreak, and 1283 reviews posted during the pandemic were collected. Text analytics were applied to segment and count the frequency of words in these online reviews. The results show that the core dimensions of guest experiences at luxury hotels include services, room quality and settings, hotel facilities, dining, location, and environment. These core dimensions do not change regardless of the period before or during the pandemic. However, guests have higher expectations on hotel services such as late check-out and delivery service of takeaway during the pandemic. Online reviews amid-pandemic also contain words related to pandemic prevention and control measures, such as guest traffic and body temperature. Suggestions on operations and management are provided for hotel practitioners to improve their services during the critical period.
You have full access to this open access chapter, Download conference paper PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
1 Introduction
Most, if not all, industries have been facing unprecedented challenges since the outbreak of the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19), and tourism has been the hardest hit among all [11]. The United Nations World Tourism Organization [20] estimated a 98% drop in international tourist arrivals in May 2020. According to STR [19], China has experienced a slump in tourism demand and a 20.6% decline in domestic tourism revenue in year 2020. Besides, the overall hotel occupancy in China has decreased by 89% from early to mid-January and the overall revenue per available room witnessed a year-on-year drop of over 85%.
Crisis affects the macro-environment and brings about changes in customer behaviors and hotel performances [3, 18]. The outbreak of COVID-19 may have brought about changes in guest experiences at hotels [8, 25]. Customers normally describe their experiences and emotions after their hotel stay in the form of user-generated content, such as online reviews [1]. Therefore, online reviews are frequently used by practitioners to understand the nature and structure of guest experiences, thereby devise useful reactive strategies [20].
Hotels are customer-centric that should keep up with customer preferences and requirements. Thus, it is essential to track the potential changes of guest experiences caused by the impact of COVID-19. In view of that, this study seeks to reveal the differences in guest experiences at luxury hotels before and during the pandemic as reflected in the online reviews posted in those two periods. A text analytic approach is used to transform unstructured data and identify factors in online reviews to compare the determinants of hotel guest experiences before and during the pandemic. The results of this study will offer practical suggestions to hotel managers to develop effective operational and marketing strategies to improve guest experiences at luxury hotels during the challenging situation. Future research opportunities are also provided.
2 Literature Review
2.1 Hotel Guest Experience and Online Reviews
Guest experience refers to the cognitive and affective responses derived from the interactions between the guest and a product or service [10, 21]. It is co-produced by service providers and consumers [5]. Xiang, Schwartz, Gerdes Jr, and Uysal [22] identified 80 guest experience-related words, including room, quality, and service. Knutson, Beck, Kim, and Cha further identified the guest experience dimensions by developing a four-factor model of Hotel Experience Index (HEI) [14]. The 18-item index consists of four dimensions, namely environment, accessibility, driving benefit, and incentive [14]. According to Xiang et al. [22], guest experience is used to measure hotel guest satisfaction. Satisfaction with and repurchase of a hotel product may be driven by a set of attributes, such as staff service quality, room quality, amenities, value, and security [6].
With the popularity of sharing experiences through online platforms, online reviews represent a legitimate source for hotel managers to understand customers’ evaluations of hotel service and products [15, 22]. Research on textual reviews in hospitality mainly focus on identifying the hotel attributes and sentiments expressed in the reviews [e.g., 7, 12] and examining the relationships between specific attributes in the textual reviews and the overall review ratings [15, 16]. Comparisons of hotel attributes and guest experiences are mainly done among different hotel guest segments [12] and hotel types [1]. Hong et al. [13] found out that guests placed more emphasis on natural and safe experience associated with the bed & breakfast (B&B) after COVID-19, and provided practical suggestions for the industry to survive the disaster, such as avoid using central air-conditioning and adopting semi-self-service technologies. The current study contributes to existing literature by identifying the changes in hotel guest experience and its determinants before and during a pandemic situation.
3 Methodology
3.1 Data Collection
Online reviews were collected from the luxury hotels in Shanghai for two reasons. First, Shanghai is one of the top destinations in Mainland China, with 8.94 million tourist arrivals in 2018 [4]. The large number of visitors fueled the development of the hotel industry in the city [24]. Second, Shanghai has swiftly overcome its semi-lockdown amid the pandemic, unlike the other worst-hit cities, which was under full-lockdown for over one month, such as Wuhan. As a resilient tourism destination, Shanghai shows signs of recovery in March 2020 and has even become the most popular destination in Mainland China after going through the peak of the pandemic in May 2020 [17]. Thus, data before and during the pandemic are more readily available for luxury hotels in Shanghai, considering that travel activities are still present during the pandemic.
Online reviews for 20 luxury hotels in Shanghai that were posted from August 2019 to July 2020 were collected using Google Sheets in August 2020. These 20 hotels were randomly selected based on the list of luxury hotels in Shanghai that is available on Ctrip. Mainland China announced the lockdown measures to control the spread of COVID-19 around the country in late January 2020 [2]. Thus, online reviews posted from August 2019 to January 2020 are categorized into the pre-COVID-19 group (740 reviews), while those posted from February 2020 to July 2019 are in the amid-COVID-19 group (1238 reviews). There is a significant difference in the number of reviews between these two periods. A closer look into the distribution shows that a very small amount of reviews has been posted in September and October 2019 before the outbreak of the pandemic. However, a lot of reviews have been posted in June and July 2020 during the pandemic. This suggests that consumers have a higher motivation to share their experiences with and help the others amid-crisis.
3.2 Data Analysis
The online reviews were analyzed using the Chinese Text Analyzer software, which helps to perform segmentation and frequency count of the words. The authors then reviewed and verified that all retained words are related to guest experiences with hotel, i.e., both the tangible and non-tangible aspects of hotel products [22]. In the first step, frequency analysis using the Chinese Text Analyzer generated a list of words describing hotel guest experiences. In the next step, the primary coder reviewed each word and combine synonyms together (e.g., “writing desk” and “table”, “hygiene”, and “cleanliness”), so as to reduce the number of words. At the same time, words that are irrelevant to hotel guest experiences were eliminated. This iterative coding process seeks to establish a dictionary of terms relevant to hotel guest experiences. The manual coding was done with reference to other similar research [1, 23].
4 Findings
4.1 Comparison Between Pre- and Amid-Pandemic
A total of 3,558 and 5,034 words have been segmented from the pre-pandemic and amid-pandemic online reviews respectively. Table 1 shows the proportion of each identified determinants in hotel guest reviews both before and during the pandemic. The results show that the core determinants of hotel guest experience are the same in both periods, and they include services, room quality and settings, hotel facilities, dining, location, and environment. All these six factors have been mentioned more than 10% in the online reviews of the sampled luxury hotels in Shanghai.
The proportions for these factors are similar in the pre- and amid-pandemic periods, except for services. Hotel guests mentioned much more about services during the pandemic (21.8%) compared to the time before (17.3%). A closer look at the review content shows that the significant rise in the proportion of reviews describing the service dimension is mainly due to two items, including check-out time and takeaway services. A few reviews mentioned that the hotel actively offered late check-out during the pandemic. For example, “The hotel management is very nice, they extended the check-out time for us without extra charges. Superb!” On the other hand, some guests stated that the hotel does not help with delivering the takeaway that they have ordered. For example, one guest mentioned “Overall the hotel is nice, the facilities are smart, but they refused to help send the take-away up to the room. They should improve on this service.”
As anticipated, the proportion of reviews mentioning about health measures increases from 0.8% before the outbreak of the pandemic to 3.2% during the pandemic. Words that most frequently appeared in the online reviews related to this dimension include guest traffic (59 times), pandemic prevention and control (46 times), and the impact of pandemic (24 times).
5 Conclusions
5.1 Implications
The findings of this study reveal that most dimensions of guest experiences at luxury hotels, including room quality and settings, hotel facilities, location, environment, value/price, bathroom, amenities, and hotel design, show a minuscule decrease in frequencies, whereas the remaining determinants, conversely, show an increase. What is worth noticing is that “services” show an increase in proportions, indicating that hotel guests expect to receive additional services, such as delivery service of takeaway and late check-out services amid-pandemic. Besides, guests become more concerned about whether the hotel is taking preventive measures and control during the pandemic, such as controlling the number of guests at the hotel, measuring body temperature. This can be explained by the fact that people are more concerned about public health and personal safety during the pandemic. Social distancing prevents the virus from further spreading [9]. While it is important for hotels to maintain their standard quality of products and services as usual, hotel managers may provide more proactive or even extra services to guests during this critical period. As reflected in this study, offering late check-out and assisting with the delivery of takeaways may maintain customers’ perceived service quality of the hotel. In order to reduce interactions between service employees and guests, robots may be used to take and delivery takeaways and room services to guestrooms. Furthermore, self-service kiosk and express check out services may be offered to reduce the waiting time of guests, thereby avoid gathering large crowds at the hotel lobby. Any measures taken by the hotel in preventing the pandemic should be carefully communicated with hotel guests on the hotel websites or during the booking stage, so as not to create any inconveniences during the service experience.
5.2 Limitations and Future Research
The findings of this study are based on descriptive analysis of online reviews from 20 luxury hotels in Shanghai. The focus on luxury hotels and small samples size may limit the generalizability of the findings. Besides, ratings and sentiments in the online reviews have not been considered. Nevertheless, this study sheds lights on the potential differences in hotel guest experiences caused by the outbreak of the pandemic. Future studies may build on the idea of this study and expand the scope of the study to include all luxury hotels, or even all hotels across different categories in Shanghai and other cities of China. The dictionary developed in this study may be used for machine learning so that a larger amount of reviews may be analyzed. Analysis on the ratings and sentiments in the review text may be performed to reveal further insights into the differences in guests’ sentiments before and during the pandemic.
References
Baek J, Choe Y, Ok OM (2020) Determinants of hotel guests’ service experiences: an examination of differences between lifestyle and traditional hotels. J Hospitality Mark Manage 29(1):88–105
BBC (2020) China coronavirus: lockdown measures rise across Hubei province. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-51217455. Accessed 29 Oct 2020
Campo S, Díaz AM, Yagüe MJ (2014) Hotel innovation and performance in times of crisis. Int J Contemp Hospitality Manage 26(8):1292–1311
CEIC (2020) China Shanghai: visitor arrival. https://www.ceicdata.com/en/china/tourism-shanghai/shanghai-visitor-arrival. Accessed 29 Oct 2020
Chathoth P, Altinay L, Harrington RJ, Okumus F, Chan ES (2013) Co-production versus co-creation: a process based continuum in the hotel service context. Int J Hospitality Manage 32:11–20
Choi TY, Chu R (2001) Determinants of hotel guests’ satisfaction and repeat patronage in the Hong Kong hotel industry. Int J Hospitality Manage 20(3):277–297
Dickinger A, Lalicic L, Mazanec J (2017) Exploring the generalizability of discriminant word items and latent topics in online tourist reviews. Int J Contemp Hospitality Manage 29(2):803–816
El-Adly MI (2019) Modelling the relationship between hotel perceived value, customer satisfaction, and customer loyalty. J Retail Consum Serv 50:322–332
Fong MW, Gao H, Wong JY, Xiao J, Shiu EY, Ryu S, Cowling BJ (2020) Nonpharmaceutical measures for pandemic influenza in nonhealthcare settings—social distancing measures. Emerg Infect Dis 26(5):976
Gentile C, Spiller N, Noci G (2007) How to sustain the customer experience: an overview of experience components that co-create value with the customer. Eur Manage J 25(5):395–410
Gössling S, Scott D, Hall CM (2020) Pandemics, tourism and global change: a rapid assessment of COVID-19. J Sustain Tour . https://doi.org/10.1080/09669582.2020.1758708
Guo Y, Barnes SJ, Jia Q (2017) Mining meaning from online ratings and reviews: tourist satisfaction analysis using latent dirichlet allocation. Tour Manage 59:467–483
Hong Y, Cai G, Mo Z, Gao W, Xu L, Jiang Y, Jiang J (2020) The impact of COVID-19 on tourist satisfaction with B&B in Zhejiang, China: an importance–performance analysis. Int J Environ Res Pub Health 17(10):37–47
Knutson BJ, Beck JA, Kim S, Cha J (2009) Identifying the dimensions of the guest’s hotel experience. Cornell Hospitality Q 50(1):44–55
Luo Y, Tang RL (2019) Understanding hidden dimensions in textual reviews on Airbnb: an application of modified latent aspect rating analysis (LARA). Int J Hospitality Manage 80:144–154
Mehraliyev F, Kirilenko AP, Choi Y (2020) From measurement scale to sentiment scale: examining the effect of sensory experiences on online review rating behavior. Touri Manage 79:104096
McKinsey and Company (2020) The way back: what the world can learn from China’s travel restart after COVID-19. https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/travel-logistics-and-transport-infrastructure/our-insights/the-way-back-what-the-world-can-learn-from-chinas-travel-restart-after-covid-19. Accessed 29 Oct 2020
Song H, Lin S, Witt SF, Zhang X (2011) Impact of financial/economic crisis on demand for hotel rooms in Hong Kong. Tour Manage 32(1):172–186
STR (2020) Chinese mainland hotel industry shows early signs of performance recovery. https://str.com/press-release/str-mainland-china-hotel-industry-shows-early-signs-performance-recovery. Accessed 29 Oct 2020
The United Nations World Tourism Organization. (2020) International tourism and COVID-19. https://www.unwto.org/international-tourism-and-covid-19. Accessed 29 Oct 2020
Wilkins H, Merrilees B, Herington C (2007) Towards an understanding of total service quality of hotels. Int J Hospitality Manage 26(4):840–853
Xiang Z, Schwartz Z, Gerdes JH, Uysal M (2015) What can big data and text analytics tell us about hotel guest experience and satisfaction? Int J Hospitality Manage 44:120–130
Zhang Y, Cole ST (2016) Dimensions of lodging guest satisfaction among guests with mobility challenges: a mixed-method analysis of web-based texts. Tour Manage 53:13–27
Zhang HQ, Pine R, Lam T (2005) Tourism and hotel development in China: from political to economic success. The Haworth Hospitality Press and International Business Press, New York
Zhao Y, Xu X, Wang M (2019) Predicting overall customer satisfaction: big data evidence from hotel online textual reviews. Int J Hospitality Manage 76:111–121
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Open Access This chapter is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license and indicate if changes were made.
The images or other third party material in this chapter are included in the chapter's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the chapter's Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder.
Copyright information
© 2021 The Author(s)
About this paper
Cite this paper
Chan, I.C.C., Ma, J., Ye, H., Law, R. (2021). A Comparison of Hotel Guest Experience Before and During Pandemic: Evidence from Online Reviews. In: Wörndl, W., Koo, C., Stienmetz, J.L. (eds) Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2021. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65785-7_52
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65785-7_52
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-030-65784-0
Online ISBN: 978-3-030-65785-7
eBook Packages: Business and ManagementBusiness and Management (R0)