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SiteMinder Wants to Be Your AI Booking Middleman. Ask Who's Paying for That.

SiteMinder just announced it can push your hotel's live rates into ChatGPT and Claude so travelers can "discover" you through AI. Before you celebrate a new demand channel, ask yourself who owns that guest relationship once the machines start negotiating.

SiteMinder Wants to Be Your AI Booking Middleman. Ask Who's Paying for That.
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I worked with a GM years ago who had a ritual every time a new distribution partner showed up with a pitch. He'd listen to the whole presentation, nod politely, then ask one question: "So you're going to stand between me and my guest, and I'm going to pay you for the privilege. What exactly are you going to do that my website and my sales team can't?" He wasn't being difficult. He was being an owner.

SiteMinder just rolled out two new capabilities... one called Demand Plus that pushes live hotel rates into AI platforms like ChatGPT and Claude, and another called Channels Plus that lets OTAs and intermediaries pull your inventory into AI-powered search and booking environments. The pitch is straightforward: travelers are increasingly using AI to plan trips (SiteMinder's own research says 8 out of 10 want AI assistance), so your hotel needs to be visible where that conversation is happening. They've partnered with a company called DirectBooker to make the connections. The underlying tech is something called Model Context Protocol, which is essentially the plumbing that lets AI platforms access your live rates and availability in real time.

Here's what nobody's telling you. Buried in SiteMinder's own data is this number: only 8% of travelers are currently comfortable booking directly through an AI platform. Eight percent. So we're building an entirely new distribution infrastructure for a channel where 92% of the potential customers don't trust the checkout process yet. That doesn't mean AI discovery doesn't matter (it does... this is where the puck is going). But the gap between "AI helps me find a hotel" and "AI books me a hotel" is enormous, and right now we're in the discovery phase. Which means you're paying to be visible in a channel that mostly sends people to Google or an OTA to actually complete the booking. Sound familiar? It should. This is metasearch economics all over again... another layer between you and the guest, another entity that needs to get paid for the introduction.

The 53,000 hotels on SiteMinder's platform processed over $85 billion in bookings last year. That's real scale. And when the CEO says hotels need to be "visible, competitive, and bookable" in AI environments, he's not wrong about the direction. But I want you to think about something. Every time we've added a distribution layer in this industry... GDS, OTAs, metasearch, now AI... the hotel's share of the guest relationship got smaller. The promise is always more demand. The reality is always more intermediaries. And somebody is always standing between you and the person sleeping in your bed, taking a cut for making the introduction. The question isn't whether AI will change how people find hotels. It will. The question is whether this particular moment... right now, April 2026, with 8% booking comfort... is the moment to start paying for that channel, or whether the smart play is to watch, learn, and let the early adopters figure out what this actually costs per booking.

I've seen this movie before. Multiple times. A new technology creates genuine excitement, vendors rush to monetize the distribution opportunity, hotels sign up because they're afraid of being left behind, and two years later we're all sitting at a conference asking "what's our actual ROI on this?" The technology is real. The timing is the gamble. And in my experience, the hotels that win the distribution game aren't the ones who jump on every new channel first... they're the ones who understand their cost of acquisition by channel and make cold decisions about where their marketing dollars actually produce margin.

Operator's Take

If you're running an independent or a small portfolio and a SiteMinder rep calls about Demand Plus or Channels Plus, don't say no... but don't say yes until you can answer three questions. First: what is my current blended cost of acquisition across all channels? If you don't know that number today, you have no baseline to evaluate a new one. Second: what does this channel cost me per completed booking, not per click, not per impression, per actual reservation that shows up and pays? Make them model it. Third: what happens to my direct booking strategy when guests discover me through AI but book through an OTA because the AI sent them there? That last one is the killer, because right now most AI-assisted "bookings" end up completing on someone else's platform. This is what I call the Vendor ROI Sentence test... if SiteMinder can't tell you in one sentence exactly how this hits your P&L, it's a story, not a solution. Watch this space, but watch it with your calculator open.

Source: Google News: Hotel AI Technology
🏢 Claude 🏢 DirectBooker 📊 Metasearch 📊 Model Context Protocol 📊 AI-powered hotel discovery and booking 📊 Hotel distribution economics 🏢 SiteMinder
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.