In Brief: Paige Lopez discusses the importance of monitoring a business’s AI performance, akin to tracking Google rankings, to optimize its effectiveness in the hospitality sector.

  • You track your Google rank every week. Why aren’t you tracking your AI rank? – Image Credit Lighthouse   

If AI is recommending your property but routing travelers to an OTA to book, that’s a diagnosable content gap on your owned digital presence and it’s fixable. 

Hotel marketing teams have built sophisticated disciplines around search visibility. Position tracking, keyword movement reports, organic traffic dashboards: it’s part of the weekly rhythm for any team serious about digital performance. Most marketing directors can tell you exactly where their property ranks for their top ten keywords without opening a browser.

Now consider this: a traveler opens ChatGPT and types “best boutique hotels in Barcelona for a romantic weekend.” Your property either appears in that response or it doesn’t. It’s either described accurately, compellingly and with a link to your own website, or it’s described through the lens of whatever Booking.com and TripAdvisor have said about you, with a booking link that hands commission to an OTA. And right now, most hotel marketing teams have no way of knowing which of those scenarios is playing out.

That gap is what generative engine optimization (GEO) monitoring is designed to close. This article unpacks why tracking AI visibility deserves the same place in your reporting stack as organic search, and what to do with the data once you have it.

The channel shift hotel marketing teams can’t afford to miss

AI-assisted travel planning isn’t a future trend to monitor. It’s already part of how guests research and shortlist properties. AI travel search is growing 50% faster than traditional search, and two-thirds of travelers now use AI assistants at some point in their trip planning process. Among younger travelers, usage is even higher and increasingly extends into actual booking decisions.

What makes this different from other search channels is the nature of the output. When someone searches on Google, they get a list of links and make their own choices. When someone asks an AI assistant, they get a recommendation: a curated, opinionated answer that positions properties against each other, describes them in specific terms and, in many cases, includes a direct link to complete the booking. AI doesn’t just surface your hotel. It tells the traveler what to think about it.

That’s a fundamentally different dynamic, and it requires a different kind of visibility strategy.

The problem with searches you can’t see

Hotel marketing teams have spent years building their understanding of how travelers find them online. Session data, referral sources, keyword ranking tools: these create a measurable trail from search intent to your website. AI-assisted searches generate none of that trail.

When a traveler asks an AI assistant to recommend hotels, that conversation is invisible to you. You don’t know whether your property came up, how it was described or where the traveler was sent to book. The channel is growing, the stakes are real and most hotels are flying completely blind.

The risk isn’t only invisibility. Booking.com and Expedia have already established a strong presence in AI platforms. If a traveler asks for hotel recommendations and AI responds with your property’s name but routes the booking through an OTA, you’ve helped generate that demand yourself and handed the commission to someone else. Visibility without measurement makes that pattern impossible to detect, let alone fix.

What Google rank taught us about measuring to optimize

When Google search rankings became measurable, something important happened: hotels built strategies around the data. They tracked positions, monitored movement, identified which keywords drove qualified traffic and invested in the content and technical work that moved the needle. Optimization followed measurement. The discipline of SEO grew directly from the ability to see where you stood.

The same logic applies to AI visibility, and the parallel is closer than it might seem. Your AI rank isn’t a single position number. It’s a composite of several signals. How often is your property mentioned when travelers ask AI about your destination or category? Where do you appear in a list of recommendations relative to your competitive set? How does AI describe you, and which of your actual attributes does it reflect? When AI does recommend you, does it link to your website or to an OTA?

Understanding that composite is what turns AI from a channel you hope is working into one you can actively manage. And right now, the hotels that build this measurement discipline early are in the same position as early SEO adopters: they get to optimize while competitors are still figuring out the channel exists.

What GEO monitoring actually tracks

Generative engine optimization monitoring gives structure to the signals that matter. In practice, that means tracking:

Mention rate

How often your property is recommended when a traveler asks an AI assistant about your destination, category or travel type. This is your baseline visibility metric: the equivalent of knowing whether you’re on page one.

Position

Where you appear within a list of AI recommendations relative to your competitive set. Appearing fifth in a list of six tells a very different story from appearing second.

Brand narrative

Which attributes AI associates with your property when it describes you, and which it ignores. If your spa is consistently referenced but your sustainability credentials never surface, that’s a content prioritization signal.

Source attribution

Which sites AI is drawing on to build its picture of your hotel. Is it pulling from your own website, from OTA listings or from review platforms? This tells you where AI’s version of your property is actually being constructed.

Direct vs. OTA link distribution

When AI recommends your hotel and includes a booking link, where does it send the traveler? This is the metric that connects AI visibility directly to revenue outcomes.

Turning your AI rank data into a content strategy

Measurement is only useful if it drives action. Here’s where GEO data translates into practical marketing decisions.

Diagnose your content gaps by source

If AI is consistently drawing from Booking.com or TripAdvisor to describe your property rather than your own website, your owned content isn’t structured or detailed enough for AI to trust as a primary source. The fix is concrete: build out property pages, sharpen amenity descriptions and add the kind of specific, well-organized content that AI can confidently pull from. This is content work marketing teams already own.

Find out which USPs aren’t landing

Mention rate by keyword or attribute tells you which parts of your brand story are getting picked up in AI conversations and which aren’t. If “rooftop bar” consistently appears in AI responses but “family-friendly” never does, you know where to focus your content investment, not based on gut feel but based on what AI is and isn’t finding.

Use competitor benchmarking to find your edge

Discover if your competitors are outranking you in AI responses. Equip your team to identify opportunities and create content to pull ahead of your competition. 

Track the impact of content changes over time

This is where the flywheel starts turning. Once you make changes to your owned content, GEO monitoring tells you whether mention rate, position or source attribution shifted in response. It turns AI optimization from a “make changes and hope” activity into a measurable content experiment with a feedback loop you can act on.

The direct vs. OTA link distribution signal deserves particular attention. If AI is recommending your property but routing travelers to an OTA to book, that’s a diagnosable content gap on your owned digital presence and it’s fixable. Closing that gap systematically is how you shift AI recommendations in favor of your direct channel over time.

The measurement layer hotels have been missing

AI Visibility Insights is now part of Connect AI, following the Hotelrank.ai acquisition, bringing GEO monitoring built specifically for hospitality into the same platform where hotels manage their AI distribution strategy. Tracking queries are auto-generated from each property’s own attributes (location, star rating, amenities, travel personas), so there’s no manual setup and no waiting to see data. It’s available to all Connect AI customers at no additional cost.

The Google rank analogy holds here too. You wouldn’t run an organic search strategy without knowing where you rank. Running an AI visibility strategy without the same baseline is the same gap, just in a channel that’s growing faster and where the competitive stakes are higher.

The hotels that establish that measurement discipline now are the ones that will be optimizing while everyone else is still catching up.

Paige Lopez

Paige is a content marketer with a passion for storytelling and helping hotel brands grow their direct channel. With a background in hospitality marketing, she explores how personalized messaging, guest-centric content, and AI-driven tools can boost direct bookings by optimizing every stage of the user journey.

About Lighthouse

Lighthouse (formerly OTA Insight) is the leading commercial platform for the travel & hospitality industry. We transform complexity into confidence by providing actionable market insights, business intelligence, and pricing tools that maximize revenue growth. We continually innovate to deliver the best platform for hospitality professionals to price more effectively, measure performance more efficiently, and understand the market in new ways.

Trusted by over 65,000 hotels in 185 countries, Lighthouse is the only solution that provides real-time hotel and short-term rental data in a single platform. We strive to deliver the best possible experience with unmatched customer service. We consider our clients as true partners – their success is our success.

Source: View the original article at Lighthouse.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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