Thought leadership

How to read between the numbers: why the same data tells different stori

Data
by
Julian Estores
Business Analyst
last updated on
5/1/2026

Greater performance visibility doesn’t always lead to greater clarity. In hospitality, it often adds noise. A general manager sees favorable metrics across multiple platforms. The booking engine shows strong production. The loyalty platform shows healthy engagement. The marketing report shows positive channel contribution. Each report suggests performance is moving in the right direction. But then the final result may not match expectations.

This is where definitions matter. Hotel performance can be measured by booking date or stay date. Some systems report gross revenue. Others report net revenue. Contributions can be attributed at the time of booking or during the stay. Invoicing systems and financial reports often use different criteria for recognizing revenue.

These systems may all be showing accurate data, but they measure different points of the same guest journey. When definitions are unclear, favorable numbers from one platform may not correlate with those from another. The overall business outcome a hotel expects may not materialize.

Marketing may show strong campaign performance based on bookings. Finance might record lower revenue in later periods due to cancellations, discounts, or stays. Both reports are accurate. Without a shared definition of success, teams reach different conclusions about the campaign's effectiveness.

The differences become clear in revenue. Hotels recognize revenue based on stays, not bookings. Many operational systems track activity at different points in the lifecycle, creating gaps between what was booked, what was stayed, what was billed, and what contributed to performance.

For hoteliers, the solution is not simply adding more reports. It starts with clearly defining each metric. For example, is the number based on bookings? Stayed revenue? Billed revenue? Once definitions are clear, teams can use the right source for the right question. Then, teams can connect platform metrics back to the outcome they want to measure.

To move toward clarity, hotels can bring revenue management, marketing, operations, and finance into the same conversation. These teams can review how performance is measured across platforms and create shared definitions for the metrics that matter most. The goal is not to force every system to match exactly. It is to make sure everyone understands what each number represents, how it should be used, and whether it reflects real progress toward the hotel’s business goals.

The value of data is not just visibility. The real value comes from understanding each number, its place in the guest journey, and whether it supports the business decision at hand. To put this into action, establish a regular process for teams to align on metric definitions and review performance outcomes together. Make it a priority to ensure every team knows what each metric means. Use these shared definitions to guide business decisions. By consistently applying this approach, hoteliers can move from data noise to meaningful, actionable insights.

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