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IHG's 21st Brand Promises Independents They Can Keep Their Identity. They Can't.

IHG just launched Noted Collection, its 21st brand, targeting the 2.3 million independent upscale rooms worldwide with the pitch that owners can join the system and stay unique. I've watched this movie enough times to know where the "unique identity" goes once the standards manual arrives.

IHG's 21st Brand Promises Independents They Can Keep Their Identity. They Can't.

Every few years, a major flag walks into a room full of independent hotel owners and says some version of the same thing: "You don't have to change. We just want to help." The help comes with a loyalty program, a reservation system, a global sales engine, and... eventually... a standards document that starts thin and gets thicker every single year. IHG is making that pitch again with Noted Collection, brand number 21, aimed squarely at upscale and upper-upscale independents who want distribution muscle without surrendering their soul. The target? 150 properties within a decade. The addressable market they're citing? 2.3 million independent rooms globally. That's not a brand launch. That's a land grab with a velvet glove.

And look, I'm not saying the math doesn't make sense for IHG. It makes beautiful sense for IHG. Conversions accounted for 52% of their gross room openings last year and 40% of new signings. In EMEAA, where Noted Collection is rolling out first, 63% of room openings were conversions. This is their growth engine now, and it's a smart one... conversions are cheaper to sign, faster to open, and less capital-intensive than new builds when financing costs are what they are. IHG's full-year 2025 numbers tell the story: $35.2 billion in gross revenue (up 5%), adjusted EPS up 16%, and a fresh $950 million buyback that brings five-year shareholder returns past $5 billion. The machine is working. The question is whether the machine works for the independent owner who's being invited inside it, or just for the machine itself.

Here's where my filing cabinet comes in. I've tracked soft brand and collection brand launches across every major flag for years. The pitch is always the same: light touch, your identity, our platform. And in year one, that's mostly true. The standards are flexible. The brand team is accommodating. Everyone's in the honeymoon phase. By year three, the brand has enough properties to start "ensuring consistency across the collection," which is corporate for "you're about to get a standards update you didn't budget for." By year five, the owner who joined because they wanted to stay independent is getting emails about approved vendors, required technology platforms, and loyalty program assessments that have crept up 200 basis points since signing. I sat in a franchise review once where an owner of a collection-brand property pulled out his original FDD, laid it next to the current fee schedule, and said "find me the part where I agreed to this." The room got very quiet. (The brand rep changed the subject to "exciting guest journey enhancements." Naturally.)

The structural tension here is real and it's the part the press release will never address. IHG has 160 million loyalty members. That's genuinely valuable distribution for an independent owner who's tired of handing 18-22% to OTAs. But loyalty members expect loyalty benefits... upgrades, late checkout, points earning and redemption. Those aren't free. They cost the owner in room inventory, in operational complexity, in system requirements. And the "light-touch" collection model has to deliver enough consistency that an IHG One Rewards member booking a Noted Collection property in Prague has an experience that doesn't damage the broader loyalty brand. That tension between "keep your identity" and "protect our loyalty promise" is where every collection brand eventually breaks. You can be unique, or you can be consistent. Doing both requires a level of nuance that brand standards documents are structurally incapable of delivering. The brand will always, always choose consistency over uniqueness when forced to pick. And they will be forced to pick.

What I wish IHG would say (and what they never will): "We're launching this brand because the conversion economics are extraordinary for us right now, and independent owners who are stretched thin on capital are more receptive to flagging than they've been in a decade." That's honest. That's the real story. Instead we get "owner appetite for quality platforms" and whatever the brand deck is calling the guest value proposition this week. Elie Maalouf called it a "gateway to stronger performance." Maybe. But gateways go both directions, and I've watched families walk through the wrong one. The owner being pitched Noted Collection right now needs to do one thing before signing anything: find three owners who joined a similar collection brand five years ago and ask them what their total brand cost is today versus what they were told it would be at signing. Not the franchise fee. The total cost... fees, assessments, technology mandates, PIP requirements, vendor restrictions, all of it. Then compare that number to the incremental revenue the brand actually delivered. If the brand won't give you those owner references? That tells you everything. If they will, and the numbers work? Then maybe this is one of the rare cases where the collection model delivers. But you verify. You don't trust the pitch deck. The pitch deck is designed to get you to sign. The FDD is where reality lives.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd say to any independent owner being pitched Noted Collection or any soft brand right now. Before you sit down with the franchise sales team, pull your trailing 12-month total revenue and back out what you're currently paying in OTA commissions. That's your baseline... that's the distribution cost you're trying to replace. Now ask the brand for actual (not projected) loyalty contribution percentages at comparable collection properties that have been in the system for at least three years. If they can only show you year-one numbers, they're showing you the honeymoon, not the marriage. Calculate total brand cost as a percentage of revenue... franchise fees, loyalty assessments, technology mandates, marketing fund, everything... and compare it honestly to what you're paying Expedia today. This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap. Brands sell promises at scale, but properties deliver them shift by shift, and the gap between what you're sold at signing and what you're paying in year five is where owner equity goes to die. Get the real numbers. Not the deck. The numbers.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: IHG
🌍 EMEAA 📊 franchise standards 📊 Loyalty Program 📊 collection brand 📊 Hotel Conversions 🏢 IHG 📊 independent hotels 📌 Noted Collection 📊 soft brand
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.