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Radisson Just Hit 100 Hotels in Africa. The Conversion Math Is the Part Worth Watching.

Radisson's 100-hotel milestone across Africa sounds like a victory lap, but 3,000 rooms added through conversions in five years tells a different story about what "growth" actually means when new-build financing has dried up and the real test is whether the flag delivers enough to justify the fee.

I sat across from an owner once... independent guy, 140 keys, secondary market in a developing economy... and he told me something I never forgot. "The flag called me three times in two months. Not because my hotel was special. Because my hotel was THERE." He flagged. He got the reservation system, the loyalty program, the brand standards manual. What he didn't get was the occupancy lift the franchise sales team projected. Eighteen months later he was paying brand fees on revenue he would have generated anyway.

That's the story I think about when I read that Radisson has crossed 100 hotels across Africa, with a target of 150 by 2030. Look... this is genuinely impressive on a map. More than 30 countries. Fifteen new hotels signed in the last 12 months. A reported 15% annual net operating growth across the African portfolio. They ranked first in W Hospitality Group's report for actual hotel openings on the continent. Those aren't vanity metrics. That's execution. But here's the part that made me sit up: more than 15 hotels (nearly 3,000 rooms) joined through conversions over the past five years. Conversions have been, by Radisson's own positioning, a "key growth driver." And that tells you everything about the strategy and its risks.

Conversions are fast. Conversions are cheap (for the brand). Conversions let you plant flags in markets where new-build financing is scarce or non-existent post-pandemic. I get it. I've been on the operator side of three different conversion deals, and here's what I can tell you... the economics work beautifully in the pitch meeting and get complicated at property level. The building wasn't designed for the brand. The systems weren't built for the PMS. The staff wasn't trained for the standards. You're essentially asking a hotel that's been operating one way (sometimes for decades) to become something else overnight because you changed the sign. The sign changes in a week. The culture change takes a year if you're lucky and 18 months if you're honest. And the gap between those two timelines is where owners get hurt.

The African hospitality market is real and it's growing. Infrastructure improvements, urbanization in key cities like Lagos and Casablanca, and a genuine tourism runway in places like Zanzibar and Namibia. I'm not questioning the demand thesis. I'm questioning whether the brand delivery matches the brand promise in markets where staffing infrastructure, training pipelines, and supply chains operate on completely different rules than what most global hotel companies are built for. Radisson says they're focused on "talent development and workforce building." Good. Because a 469-room resort opening in Egypt in 2029 and a 120-room property in Nigeria targeted for 2031 are going to need hundreds of trained hospitality professionals who don't exist yet. That's not a criticism. That's the operational reality of building in emerging markets, and anyone who's done it knows the gap between announcing a pipeline and actually opening doors with trained staff and functioning systems.

Here's what I keep coming back to. Radisson is playing a land-grab game in Africa, and they're playing it well. First mover advantage in emerging markets is real. But land grabs have a shelf life. At some point, the conversation shifts from "how many flags did you plant" to "how are those flags performing." That 15% net operating growth number... I'd love to know what's underneath it. Is that same-store growth or is it just more hotels entering the denominator? Because those are two very different stories. The owners who converted into this brand over the past five years are the ones who'll answer that question. And they're the ones Radisson needs to keep happy if they want 150 to be anything more than a number in a press release.

Operator's Take

If you're an independent owner in an emerging market and a global flag is calling you about a conversion... slow down. Ask for actual performance data from comparable converted properties in similar markets, not projections. Get the total brand cost as a percentage of revenue (franchise fees, loyalty assessments, reservation fees, marketing contributions, PIP requirements, mandated vendor costs) and run it against the incremental revenue you're actually likely to see. Not what they project. What comparable hotels actually delivered in year one and year two post-conversion. If they can't give you that data, that's your answer. The flag is buying your location. Make sure you're getting paid for it.

Source: Google News: Radisson
📊 Brand standards 📊 Loyalty Programs 📊 Net operating growth 📊 Reservation systems 🏢 W Hospitality Group 🌍 Africa 📊 Franchise Fees 📊 Hotel Conversions 📊 New-build financing 🏢 Radisson
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.