Hotel website content and conversion consulting for independent hotels, so that every visitor who finds you has a clear reason to book, and a frictionless path to do it. Based in Vienna – made for the world.
Most hotels lose guests not because the price is wrong or the room is unsuitable, but because the website didn’t answer the questions the guest needed answered before they felt confident enough to book. Uncertainty is silent. It doesn’t send a complaint. It just closes the tab and opens Booking.com.
Looking at every point where a guest journey breaks down before the booking
Watching what makes guests book and what quietly makes them leave
Family hotel in the Austrian mountains. Hotel reception in Vienna.
Where You’re Losing Guests Right Now
This is not a rare scenario. It is the most common way independent hotels lose bookings — not to a better-priced competitor, but to a more clearly explained one.
The guest searches for a hotel. They find you through Google, through a recommendation, through an OTA that led them to your website. They arrived. You had them.
They like the look of the hotel. The photos are appealing. The location seems right. The price looks reasonable. They want to find out more before they commit.
They can’t find the answer to one specific question. Is breakfast included or extra? Is the room quiet? What’s the view? What’s the bed size? Can they cancel? It’s a small doubt. But it’s enough.
They go back to Booking.com. Not because they preferred it. But because Booking.com had the answer laid out clearly. They book there. You pay 15–20% commission on a guest who was already on your website.
The Business Case
Every guest who books directly instead of through an OTA is worth 15–25% more to your hotel, before you even consider the longer-term relationship. That is not a marginal improvement. On most independent hotels, fixing the content and booking journey is the highest-return change available.
Commission saved on every booking that converts directly instead of through an OTA
The time a guest typically spends deciding whether your homepage is worth reading further
Is often all it takes to send a guest back to a platform, even when they preferred your hotel
The most common objection I hear from hotel owners is “our guests just prefer to book on Booking.com.” In my experience, that is rarely the real reason. Guests book where they feel most informed and most confident. When a hotel website creates that confidence, the same guests book directly.
The Content Problems I Fix Most Often
These are not design problems or technology problems. They are content problems and they appear on almost every independent hotel website I review.
"Cosy room with elegant furnishings and modern amenities." A guest reading this still does not know whether the room has a double or twin bed, what floor it is on, whether there is a bath or shower, what the view is, or whether it suits two adults travelling together. Every unanswered question is a reason to go find the answer somewhere else and that somewhere else has a booking button. → Rewritten with specific answers to the questions guests actually ask
"Welcome to Hotel Sonnhof. We have been welcoming guests since 1987." This is interesting to nobody who has just landed on your website with a specific stay in mind. A homepage that immediately tells the guest who the hotel is for, what it offers, and why it is the right choice for them in the first five seconds keeps them reading. One that doesn't sends them back to the results page. → Structured as a clear answer to "is this the right hotel for me?"
Breakfast pages that list "fresh pastries and seasonal produce" without mentioning whether it is included, what it costs, what time it runs, or whether dietary needs are covered. Spa pages with no opening hours or pricing. Gym pages with no photo and three bullet points. Each of these pages was an opportunity to remove doubt and move the guest forward and it was left half-finished.→ Each amenity page rewritten to answer the questions that drive booking decisions
Guests do not want to know that the hotel is "centrally located with easy access to public transport." They want to know how long it takes to walk to the train station, whether the street is quiet at night, and how far the nearest supermarket is. Specific, honest, practical location content builds trust in a way that marketing language never does.→ Location pages built around the real questions guests ask about convenience
The guest selects a room, clicks "Book Now," and lands on a booking engine with no memory of the room they just chose. Or they reach a third-party engine that looks nothing like the hotel website, with no reassurance that they are in the right place. Each gap in the journey is friction. Friction means guests abandon and abandon rates on hotel booking engines are significantly higher than they should be.→ Booking path reviewed end-to-end and friction points identified and resolved
A guest about to spend €200–500 on a stay needs to feel confident the hotel is real, reputable, and that their booking is safe. Reviews, cancellation policies, and contact information should be visible and accessible, not hidden in a footer or a small-print tab. When trust signals are easy to find, hesitation drops. When they are hidden, the guest defaults to the platform where they already feel safe.→ Trust elements placed where they reduce hesitation at the moment it matters
What Good Looks Like
This is not about beautiful writing. It is about specificity. A guest who gets clear answers stays. A guest who has to search for answers leaves. Here is the same room described two ways:
Our Superior Room offers a comfortable stay with elegant furnishings, modern amenities, and a warm atmosphere. Perfect for couples and business travellers looking for a relaxing retreat in the heart of the city.
Superior Room · 22 m² · King bed · Quiet courtyard view · Rainfall shower · Works for: couples, solo business travellers. Includes: daily breakfast, free Wi-Fi, late checkout on request. Cancellation: free up to 48 hours before arrival.
The second version takes 10 seconds to read and answers the five questions a guest is actually asking. The first takes the same 10 seconds and answers none of them. That difference multiplied across every room page, every amenity page, and your homepage, is the difference between a website that converts and one that sends guests to the nearest OTA.
Welcome to Hotel Sonnhof. Since 1987, we have been welcoming guests from around the world to our charming property in the heart of Vienna.
Quiet boutique hotel in Vienna’s 7th district with individually designed rooms, breakfast from local suppliers, and a 10-minute walk to MuseumsQuartier. Check availability below.
Free Hotel Website Analysis
The analysis walks through your website as a guest would — looking for every point where clarity breaks down, doubt appears, or the booking journey creates unnecessary friction. You receive a prioritised list of what to fix first, with specific recommendations for each page.
Does your homepage immediately communicate who the hotel is for, what makes it the right choice, and what the guest should do next? I check whether a new visitor understands your hotel’s value in the first five seconds, or whether they have to work to figure it out.
I read every room page as a guest would, checking: Are the essential questions answered? Bed type, size, view, noise level, who the room suits? Is pricing clear or hidden? Is the booking path from this page obvious? Room pages are where most booking decisions are made and where most hotel websites fall short.
Breakfast, parking, spa, gym, meeting rooms, and pet policy, each of these is a question a guest will have before they book. I check whether each amenity has a page, whether that page answers the real questions, and whether it connects clearly to the booking journey.
I go through the complete booking path from homepage to confirmation to identify every step where friction, confusion, or missing information might cause a guest to abandon. This includes the booking engine hand-off, room selection, date picking, rate display, and checkout.
Where are reviews visible? Is the cancellation policy easy to find? Is it clear who is behind this hotel and that it is safe to book? I check whether the signals that give guests confidence to book are placed where they are needed.
The majority of hotel searches happen on mobile and a significant share of bookings do too. I check whether the content, layout, and booking path work as well on a phone as they do on a desktop. Mobile-specific issues are some of the most common and most damaging sources of lost bookings.
What questions does your website leave unanswered? I map the most common guest questions like cancellation, breakfast, parking, check-in times, accessibility, pet policy, local transport against your current pages, and identify where gaps are most likely causing guests to hesitate or leave.
You receive a specific, actionable output: the pages and content elements with the highest impact on bookings, in the order they are worth fixing. This includes specific pages, specific recommendations, specific next steps tailored to your hotel.
Send me your hotel website and I’ll show you where your AI visibility is strong, where it is weak, and what to fix first.
What the Hotel Website Analysis Contains
The analysis follows a structured process covering your Google visibility, content quality, technical foundations, and booking journey. You can read the full breakdown of what gets reviewed, how it works, and what you receive as an output.
How I Work
Every independent hotel has something that makes it worth booking. The job is to make sure the website communicates that clearly enough that a guest feels it.
Before I look at a single page, I want to understand who your ideal guest is, what brings them to your hotel, and what would make them choose you over the property next door. Content that does not start from the guest's perspective cannot convert them.
Every page on your website should leave a guest with fewer doubts than when they arrived. Clear room descriptions, specific amenity pages, honest location content, and a booking path with no surprises are the building blocks of a website that earns its bookings.
Generic content does not win bookings. The hotels that convert well have found the combination of features, atmosphere, location, and service that makes them the right answer for a specific guest and they lead every page with it. I help identify that positioning and build it into your content.
The warmth, character, and communication style of an independent hotel are often its strongest competitive advantage over large chains and OTAs. Good content work does not neutralise that personality, it gives it more room to breathe, more consistently, across every page.
Honest About What This Is
✕ Filling your website with keyword-stuffed text that ranks but reads like no human wrote it
✕ Writing generic “luxury” copy that could apply to any hotel anywhere
✕ A full website rebuild. This is about improving the content and structure of what you have, or creating new pages where they are missing
✕ A one-size package applied to every hotel regardless of their guests, positioning, or current starting point
✕ Promising a specific conversion rate. I can identify and fix every fixable problem, but honest results depend on the hotel, the market, and the quality of the experience itself
✕ Ignoring visibility. Content improvements on their own are more powerful when the right guests are finding the website in the first place. That is why the website analysis covers both content and visibility together.
The goal is a hotel website that works as hard as your team does by answering the right questions, in the right place, for the right guest, so that more of the people who find you become people who stay with you.
Is This For You?
✓ Independent hotels and boutique properties that get website visitors but see most bookings go through OTAs and suspect the website is part of the reason
✓ Hotels planning a website refresh or redesign that want to get the content right before investing in a new build
✓ Properties whose rooms and experience are genuinely good, but whose website pages don’t communicate that clearly enough for a guest to feel confident booking
✓ Hotels whose booking engine gets visitors but has high drop-off before completion
✓ Hospitality marketers or owners who want an honest review of where their website is creating friction, before deciding where to invest next
✓ Hotels that have invested in getting visitors to their website through SEO or ads, and now want to make sure those visitors are converting
This page focuses on website content and the booking journey. The same website analysis also covers Google visibility and AI search readiness, because bringing the right guests to a clear website is the complete picture. All three are part of the broader hotel consulting.
Why Patrick Lindbichler

Most advice about hotel website content comes from copywriters who have never worked inside the travel industry, or from OTA platforms with an interest in keeping you dependent on them. I spent eight years as Head of SEO, AI Search, and Content at one of Europe’s leading travel marketplaces, watching what converted and what didn’t, at scale, across thousands of hotels.
Before that, I grew up in a family hotel in the Austrian mountains and worked at a hotel reception in Vienna. I know what questions guests ask before they decide to book. I know what makes them hesitate. And I know that the gap between a website that converts and one that doesn’t is almost always about content clarity.
In the last year, I reviewed 300+ hotel websites in Vienna, specifically looking at every point where the content fails the guest and fails the hotel. That research is the foundation of every analysis I do.
“Every hotel I’ve analysed had at least one page where a small content change would have recovered bookings they had no idea they were losing.”
If you want to understand how this could work for your hotel, we can walk through your website together and identify where you’re currently losing bookings.
One Offer, Three Entry Points
The website analysis covers content and conversion, Google SEO, and AI search visibility, because a great hotel website needs to do all three. The three pages exist because hotels search for each topic separately.
For hotels focused on ranking on Google, getting found for specific searches, and building organic visibility.
For hotels focused on being recommended by ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Google AI.
For hotels focused on turning visitors into guests with clear content, room descriptions, and a booking journey that works.
Free Hotel Content & Conversion Resources
Not ready to start a consulting project? These guides cover the full framework with real hotel examples and specific fixes you can apply immediately.
A complete walkthrough of the seven points in the hotel booking journey where most independent hotels lose guests with specific fixes for each. If you only read one guide, make it this one.
The most common and most fixable reason hotel websites lose bookings: room pages that don't answer the guest's real questions. A 5-step framework, a practical checklist, and real before/after examples.
Your homepage has eight seconds to convince a guest it is worth their time. This guide covers the exact structure that works, including what goes above the fold, how to lead with the right positioning, and where most homepages lose the guest.
Which pages does a hotel website actually need, and what should each one do? This guide maps the full structure of a high-converting hotel website from homepage to booking confirmation.
Breakfast is one of the top questions guests have before booking and most hotel websites answer it poorly or not at all. A practical guide to building a breakfast page that removes doubt and supports the booking decision.
The hotel gym page is one of the most consistently underbuilt pages on independent hotel websites. This guide shows exactly what to include and how to turn a thin amenity page into a real booking signal.
A practical guide to the full strategy behind shifting bookings from OTA platforms to your own website, which is covering content, pricing, trust signals, and the long-term approach to building a channel you own.
FAQs About Hotel Content And Conversion
In most cases, it is not because the hotel is the wrong choice. It is because the website did not answer the questions the guest needed answered before they felt confident booking like bed size, view, what breakfast costs, cancellation terms, whether the room is quiet. Uncertainty is the most common reason a hotel website loses a booking it should have won. And unlike a bad review or a high price, it is completely fixable.
A good hotel room description answers the questions a guest is actually asking before they book: How big is it? What kind of bed? What is the view? Is it quiet? Is there a bath or shower? Who is this room for? Couples, families, solo travellers? A room description that answers these questions removes the uncertainty that sends guests to an OTA where the information is already laid out for them. The full room description guide covers this in detail.
The booking funnel is the journey a guest takes from landing on your website to completing a reservation. Every step like homepage, room page, amenity pages, booking engine hand-off, checkout, is a point where a guest either continues forward or leaves. A well-structured funnel removes friction and doubt at each step so that more visitors complete a booking. Most hotel websites have at least two or three points in this journey where unnecessary friction is costing bookings every day.
Most guests who book on Booking.com or Expedia after visiting a hotel website do so because the platform gave them more confidence than the hotel website did. The platform has clear photos, standardised information, visible reviews, and a simple checkout. When a hotel website matches or exceeds that clarity with better content, specific room descriptions, well-placed trust signals, and a smooth booking path, the same guest will book directly. The shift is almost never about price. It is almost always about clarity and confidence.
Yes, significantly. Every guest who books directly instead of through an OTA saves the hotel 15–25% commission on that booking. When a hotel’s website is unclear, guests default to platforms where the information is laid out for them. Improving website content so that guests feel confident booking directly is one of the highest-return investments an independent hotel can make, because the cost of improving a page is a one-time effort, and the commission savings compound on every booking that results from it.
The homepage, individual room pages, and the booking engine hand-off are where most bookings are won or lost. After those, the pages that matter most are the ones that answer the questions guests ask before deciding — breakfast, parking, cancellation policy, facilities, and location. Each of these is a potential point of doubt. A dedicated page that answers the question clearly keeps the guest moving forward. A missing or vague page sends them somewhere else to find the answer.
The same website analysis covers content and conversion, Google SEO, and AI search visibility, because they are all connected. Content that is clear enough to convert guests is also content that search engines and AI tools can understand and recommend. The three pages exist because hotels search for these topics separately, but the underlying offer and the analysis are the same.
Read practical hotel website growth guides
I write about hotel SEO, AI search, direct bookings, website structure, room pages, breakfast pages, and the small content gaps that quietly send guests back to OTAs.
Navigate
Contact
I’m based in Vienna, Austria. You can connect with me on LinkedIn or send a message through the contact section.
© Patrick Lindbichler 2026 | Legal Disclosure (Impressum)