The visibility trap
Marketplaces solve one problem very well: discovery. A restaurant with no digital channel can quickly get visibility from traffic it did not build.
The tradeoff starts immediately. You do not own the customer relationship, your data is partial, and your margin shrinks every month.
That is not a temporary growth tactic if your direct channel never catches up. It becomes a permanent operating tax.
Where margin leaks happen
Most operators underestimate the compound impact of commissions and platform-driven discounting.
- Commission per reservation
- Paid promotion to maintain ranking
- Price pressure from comparability
- Higher no-show volatility with low-commitment users
What to build instead
The objective is not abandoning platforms overnight. The objective is shifting your best customers to direct channels you control.
That requires an owned booking flow, first-party CRM, and post-visit reactivation system.
- Frictionless direct booking page
- Email/SMS confirmation and reminder sequence
- Segmented reactivation campaigns for past guests
- Offer strategy based on margin, not just occupancy
A realistic transition model
Treat platforms as acquisition, not retention. Keep them for cold demand while building a direct retention engine in parallel.
Within 90 days, you should track direct booking ratio, repeat direct booking rate, and cost per direct booking by channel.
Bottom line
If your reservations come from channels you do not control, your business growth is outsourced.
Own the booking relationship and the economics improve immediately.
This article is part of ALL WAYS BUSINESS writing on digital products and infrastructure. If this is relevant to your project, reach out.
