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There is a version of STR management that looks, from the outside, identical to the version that consistently outperforms it. Both operators have a pricing tool, both are listed on the same channels and both track occupancy and ADR. The difference is not visible in the tools they use or the platforms they are on, but in how they think about what pricing is actually for.

Setting prices is a transactional activity where you look at what the market is doing, set a rate that feels competitive and wait to see what books. The goal is to fill the calendar, occupancy becomes the measure of success and rate decisions are made reactively in response to what has or has not booked.

Managing revenue is a different discipline entirely, one where the goal is not to fill the calendar but to maximise the revenue the calendar generates. That requires understanding demand before it arrives, setting rates that reflect the commercial value of each night rather than just the competitive landscape, and making decisions that shape the booking pattern rather than respond to it.

The goal of revenue management is not to fill the calendar but to maximise the revenue the calendar generates, and those are not the same objective.

What the difference looks like in practice

The clearest way to illustrate the gap is through how each approach handles the same situation. Take a property with three weeks of availability in peak summer, where both operators want to maximise what those weeks earn.

Two approaches to the same three-week peak window
Setting prices
  • Rates set by looking at comparable listings on the OTA
  • Price reduced when bookings are slow to arrive
  • Minimum stays set once, rarely reviewed
  • No view of how current pace compares to last year
  • Success measured by whether the weeks filled
Managing revenue
  • Rates set against a revenue target for the period
  • Pace tracked weekly against prior year and plan
  • Minimum stays adjusted to protect high-value nights
  • Rate held or increased when pace is strong
  • Success measured by RevPAN against target

The reactive operator fills the three weeks. The strategic operator also fills the three weeks, but at a higher average rate because they held their position when demand was strong rather than discounting into it. The difference in outcome is not dramatic on any single week, but it compounds across a full season and across a full portfolio.

The role of the booking curve

The single most important tool in the shift from reactive to strategic pricing is the booking curve. Understanding how your property books, at what pace and how far in advance, gives you the forward-looking signal that makes it possible to hold a rate position rather than react to an empty calendar.

A property that typically fills its peak summer weeks eight weeks in advance, at a pace that is broadly consistent year on year, should not be reducing rates at six weeks out simply because the calendar is not yet full. If pace is tracking in line with last year the signal is to hold, if pace is significantly ahead the signal may be to increase, and only if pace is materially behind is there a commercial case for a rate adjustment.

Without a booking curve none of that reasoning is available, and the only information the reactive operator has is the number of empty nights on the calendar, which tells them nothing about whether demand is normal, stronger than normal or genuinely soft. The result is a systematic tendency to discount into demand that did not require a discount, which reduces RevPAN without improving occupancy in any meaningful way.

The performance gap between approaches
20-30%
RevPAN gap consistently observed between portfolios managed strategically and those managed reactively
8 wks
Typical advance booking window for peak summer weeks in established STR markets, the window where rate decisions matter most

Rate Capture Efficiency: the diagnostic metric

One of the most useful frameworks for understanding whether a portfolio is managing revenue or just setting prices is Rate Capture Efficiency. The concept is straightforward: of the rate the market was willing to pay on any given night, what percentage did the property actually capture?

A property that consistently books below the market rate for its category is not capturing the rate the market offered. That gap has two possible causes: either the property is genuinely underperforming on quality or positioning relative to its competition, or the rate was set too low relative to the demand that existed at that point in the booking window. In most cases it is the latter, a direct consequence of reactive pricing rather than strategic revenue management.

Tracking Rate Capture Efficiency over time, alongside RevPAN and booking pace, gives a portfolio manager a clear picture of whether rate decisions are consistently leaving money behind and in which part of the calendar the leakage is most significant.

Why this matters for owners and operators

The commercial case for making the shift from price-setting to revenue management is not complicated. In a portfolio of ten properties averaging £30,000 per property per year, a consistent RevPAN improvement from better rate management generates significant additional annual revenue without adding more bookings or new properties, purely from managing the commercial value of the inventory that already exists more deliberately.

For operators managing properties on behalf of owners, the case is equally direct. Owners who see their properties consistently outperforming comparable listings in the same market stay longer, refer more frequently and are less likely to take the property back to self-manage. Revenue management is not just a commercial discipline for the operator. It is equally a retention strategy for the portfolio, because owners who see consistent outperformance are far less likely to move on.

ISTRM Diagnostic

Where do you sit on the
pricing to revenue spectrum?

Five questions, no numbers required. Find out whether you are setting prices or managing revenue, and what that means for your portfolio.

Question 1 of 5
When a week is not filling as quickly as you expected, what do you do first?
Question 2 of 5
How do you set your rates at the start of a new season?
Question 3 of 5
What is your primary measure of success for a completed month?
Question 4 of 5
How do you handle minimum stay restrictions around high-demand periods?
Question 5 of 5
When demand is strong and bookings are arriving ahead of schedule, what do you do with your rates?
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Key takeaways
ISTRM Education

The CSRM teaches this framework across 16 modules

The Certified Short-Term Revenue Manager programme covers booking curve analysis, rate architecture, Rate Capture Efficiency and the full commercial framework for managing STR revenue deliberately, including a dedicated module on booking curves and pacing analysis.

Explore the CSRM programme