92,000 Jobs Gone in February. Your Summer Is Already in Trouble.
The February jobs report didn't just miss expectations... it missed by a mile, and leisure and hospitality led the bleeding. If you're not pulling your forward pace reports this morning, you're already behind.
I managed through the 2008 collapse. I managed through COVID. And the thing I remember most clearly from both is not the moment it got bad. It's the six weeks BEFORE it got bad, when every GM I knew was staring at the same softening pace reports and telling themselves "it'll come back." It didn't come back. It got worse. And the operators who survived were the ones who stopped hoping and started adjusting before the numbers forced them to.
That's where we are right now.
The economy shed 92,000 jobs in February. Not gained... lost. Economists were calling for a gain of 50,000 to 60,000. That's not a miss. That's a different universe. Unemployment ticked up to 4.4%. Labor force participation dropped to 62%, the lowest since late 2021. And our industry specifically gave back 27,000 jobs, with restaurants and bars going negative for the first time after eight straight months of growth. I want you to sit with that for a second. Eight months of momentum... gone in one report. Winter Storm Fern gets some of the blame. A Kaiser Permanente strike skewed healthcare numbers. Fine. But the trend underneath the noise is what matters, and the trend is pointing in a direction that should have every revenue manager in America awake right now.
Here's what nobody's talking about yet. Rising unemployment doesn't hit hotel demand the day the report comes out. It hits 60 to 90 days later, when the family in suburban Atlanta who was planning four nights at a beach resort decides to do two nights at a drive-to instead. Or cancels altogether. That 60-to-90-day window lands squarely on spring break shoulder weeks and early summer booking pace. I talked to a revenue manager last week at a 180-key resort property on the Gulf Coast... she told me April pickup was already running 8% behind the same point last year, and that was BEFORE this report dropped. Nearly half of consumers surveyed right now say they believe the economy is getting worse. Those aren't people booking five-night vacations. Those are people pulling back on discretionary spend, and hotel rooms are about as discretionary as it gets. If you're running a select-service property in a drive-to leisure market, this is a five-alarm fire. If you're running luxury urban with strong corporate transient, you've got more runway... but don't get comfortable. Companies in healthcare, construction, and manufacturing (all sectors that shed jobs last month) are going to start scrutinizing Q2 and Q3 meeting budgets. Your group sales director needs to be making calls today. Not next week. Today.
Now here's the twist, and it's an uncomfortable one. The same report that signals demand trouble also signals a potential break in the staffing crisis that's been strangling operations since 2022. The industry has been running with a projected 18% labor shortfall. If people are losing jobs... including hospitality jobs... your applicant pool is about to get deeper. HR directors at full-service and resort properties should be watching applicant flow over the next 30 days like a hawk. This might be the first real window in four years to fill chronic open positions without paying crisis-premium wages. I knew an HR director at a convention hotel during the last recession who told me "the only good thing about a downturn is you finally get to hire the people you actually want instead of the people who show up." She was right. It's a brutal silver lining, but it's real.
The performance gap is widening and it's going to get wider. Luxury and upper upscale are projected to outperform because high-income travelers don't cancel trips over a jobs report. Midscale and economy are going to feel this first and feel it hardest. STR is already calling for a negative first quarter. RevPAR growth industry-wide is limping along at 1 to 1.5%. And here's the number that should scare you... long-term unemployment (people out of work 27 weeks or more) jumped to 1.9 million, up from 1.5 million a year ago. That's not a blip. That's a consumer base that's slowly, steadily losing purchasing power. Your rate strategy needs to reflect that reality. Holding rate into softening demand isn't discipline... it's denial. I've seen this movie before. The GMs who adjust early, who capture volume through strategic yield moves before the hesitation deepens, are the ones who come out the other side with their RevPAR index intact. The ones who hold rate and watch occupancy crater end up explaining a 6-point index drop to their owners in July. Don't be that GM.
Pull your April through June forward pace reports today and compare them against the same pickup window last year. If you're down more than 5%, it's time to have the rate conversation with your revenue manager and your ownership group now, not after Q2 closes soft. If you run group business, get your sales director on the phone with every account in healthcare, construction, and manufacturing this week... those are the sectors bleeding jobs and they're going to start cutting meeting spend. And if you've been struggling to fill housekeeping or front desk positions for two years, talk to your HR team about refreshing job postings and reaching out to former applicants. The labor window that just opened won't stay open long.