Case 2 Hilton Hotels
Case 2 Hilton Hotels
Case 2 Hilton Hotels
Hilton Hotels
Hilton Hotels Corporation owns, manages and/or franchises hotels, casino-hotels and inns; sells furnishings, equipment, and supplies to hotels, motels, and inns; and operates a computerized reservation system for the hotel industry. After two major takeover attempts in the early 1990s, Hilton Hotels decided that it had to change by becoming a more aggressive business operation. The result was the decision to move heavily into gambling. This change of strategic direction represented a signicant shift in Hiltons business focus and marketing objectives. Already the owner of four casinos in Nevada, the Los Angeles hotelier began pushing projects in New Orleans, Chicago, Egypt, Turkey, Uruguay, and Australia. While gaming accounted for about 34 percent of Hiltons overall sales in the early 1990s, its four casinos contributed nearly twothirds of Hiltons operating earnings. Nevertheless, Hiltons new emphasis on gambling carried a large element of risk. Competition for the gaming dollar is intense, and the degree of investment needed to be successful is high. Hilton has had to put more than $6 million into renovating the Las Vegas Hilton to keep up with such rivals as the Mirage and the Excalibur, and it has also renovated the Flamingo Hilton to keep pace with other new places. To lure high rollers away from other casinos, the Las Vegas Hilton has had to be more generous about extending credit, resulting in bad gaming debts and reductions in operating income from gaming.
1600 1400 1200 Millions 1000 800 600 400 200 0 1990 1991 1992 Year
FIGURE 21 Hilton Hotels Total Revenues Source: Hilton Hotels Corporation 1994 Annual Report
1993
1994
1993
1994
1994 compared with $502.1 million in 1993. Gaming operating income was $159.0 million in 1994, a 7 percent decline from $170.5 million in 1993. Excluding the results of the companys gaming facilities in New Orleans and Windsor, both of which commenced operations in 1994, revenue increased 1 percent and operating income decreased 12 percent from the prior year. For 1994, Hilton hotels showed system-wide occupancy of 70 percent, a threepoint increase over 1993, while the U.S. hotel industry as a whole had occupancy of 65 percent. Equally as important as the increase in occupancy was the signicant improvement in average daily rate. For the year, that rate jumped 7 percent over last year. As of the end of 1994, Hiltons gaming segment included ve wholly-owned Nevada hotel-casinos, equity income and management fees from partially owned hotel-casinos in Queensland, Australia and Istanbul, Turkey, and equity income and management fees from gaming operations in New Orleans, Louisiana and Windsor, Ontario, Canada. Its Nevada gaming operations offered a diversied product and service mix, which appeals to a broad spectrum of customers. The Flamingo HiltonLas Vegas caters to the broad Las Vegas middle market, while the Las Vegas Hilton caters to premium players and the convention market. The Flamingo HiltonReno focuses on middle-market activity, while the Reno Hilton targets both convention and middle-market activity. The Flamingo HiltonLaughlin targets the budget-market segment.
PURSUING MARKETS
What strategies would you advise Hilton to pursue in the hotel and gaming markets? What specic price, distribution, promotion, and product elements would you propose and why? How would you deal with the growth in competition from other gaming and hotel concerns? What balance would you strike between hotel and gaming operations and why?
Sources
Casper, Carol. Conrmed Reservations. Restaurant Business, 94, 17 (November 20, 1995): 104118. Christiansen, Eugene, Martin Brinkerhoff-Jacobs, and Julie Cornell. Gaming and Entertainment: An Imperfect Union? Hotel & Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 36, 2 (April 1995): 7994. Grover, Ronald and Eric Schine. Can Hilton Draw a Full House? Business Week (June 8, 1992): 8889. Gubernick, Lisa. Moving on Vegas, Forbes, 154, 8 (October 10, 1994): 116118. Hilton Hotels Corporation 1994 Annual Report. Hiltons Home Away From Home. Health Manpower Management, 20, 4 (1994): 1516. Machan, Dyan. We Sell Sleep. Forbes (September 14, 1992): 421422. Martin, Richard. Caesars, Planet Hollywood Bet on Casino Hotels. Nations Restaurant News, 28, 40 (October 10, 1994): 7. Rice, Faye. Competition. Fortune (October 4, 1993): 125128. Rice, Faye. Where The Bargains Are in Hotels. Fortune (April 20, 1992): 9198. Stone, Amey. Hotels With Corporate Room Service. Business Week (January 24, 1994): 110. Walkup, Carolyn. Cost-Cutting Hotel Chains Check in With New Brands, Value Formats. Nations Restaurant News, 29, 31 (August 7, 1995): 130134. Walkup, Carolyn. Hotels Key in One New Concept for Tired Restaurants. Nations Restaurant News, 29, 17 (April 24, 1995): 3740.