Guest Experience Audit
See your property through your guests' eyes—every touchpoint, every emotion, every moment of truth.
What This Is
Guest Journey Map™ — a 3-week engagement that maps every touchpoint from OTA listing through post-checkout follow-up. We analyze 23 interaction points, scoring each for emotional friction, delight potential, and consistency. We mine your review ecosystem (Google, TripAdvisor, OTA reviews), measure your NPS baseline, and benchmark your experience against 3–5 competitive properties. Typical results: 15–20 point NPS improvement post-implementation.
The invisible friction shows up as soft metrics: reviews stay flat, return rates decline, ADR doesn't grow with the market. The Guest Experience Audit identifies the moments that matter—the moments your guests remember (or don't) long after they've left.
Unlike a Foundation Audit (which looks inward at operations), this audit looks outward through the guest's emotional experience. They complement each other. But if you have to choose, start with the Foundation Audit—operations fix first, then guest experience amplifies the results.
What You Get
Journey Map
40–60 identified touchpoints from first search result to post-stay email.
Touchpoint Scoring
Each moment rated for friction, delight potential, and consistency. Where do guests lose feeling?
Review Analysis
6–12 months of Google, TripAdvisor, and OTA review data mined for patterns and root causes.
Competitive Bench
3–5 comp-set properties analyzed for experience comparison.
NPS Baseline
Current Net Promoter Score with recommended architecture for ongoing measurement.
Prioritized Recs
Recommendations with effort/impact matrix. Quick wins identified. Structural improvements sequenced.
How It Works
Data Collection
We gather review data from all platforms, OTA comments, internal surveys, and staff observations about guest patterns and pain points.
Journey Mapping Workshop
We work with your team (front desk, housekeeping, F&B, management) to map every touchpoint from a guest's perspective.
Touchpoint Evaluation
Each moment is scored for emotional impact, consistency, and competitive positioning. We identify friction and delight opportunities.
Competitive Mystery Experience
If on-site component included: we shop 1–2 comp-set properties to deliver a side-by-side experience comparison.
Findings & Recommendations
Presentation and deck with prioritized recommendations, implementation guidance, and measurable targets.
Use Cases
The Dead Zone Problem
A coastal boutique hotel's TripAdvisor rating had been flat at 4.3 stars for 2 years despite significant property improvements. The audit revealed the problem wasn't the physical product—it was the "dead zone" between check-in and dinner. Guests had 3–4 hours with no programmed touchpoints, no welcome amenity timing, and no proactive concierge outreach. Adding three simple touchpoints (room delivery + personalized recommendations text + cocktail hour invite) moved the rating to 4.6 in one season and increased return bookings by 18%.
The Service Experience Gap
A fine dining restaurant's OpenTable reviews showed a pattern: 5-star food ratings paired with 3-star "overall experience" ratings. The audit traced it to two touchpoints: a 9-minute average wait between being seated and first contact with the server, and inconsistent wine list presentation. Neither of these issues would ever surface in a Yelp review—but they were suppressing return visits by an estimated 15%. Restructuring the server workflow and standardizing wine education reduced the gap and increased average check value by 22%.
Frequently Asked Questions
Reviews tell you what guests felt after the fact. The audit tells you why they felt it and where in the journey the feeling was created. Reviews are symptoms. The journey map is the diagnosis.
Yes. We supplement review data with OTA booking comments, internal survey data (if any), and staff observations. Even 20–30 reviews contain strong signal if you know how to extract it.
Absolutely. The restaurant guest journey is shorter but often more emotionally dense. Reservation → arrival → seating → first contact → menu → order → meal progression → check → departure—every one of those is a moment of truth.
The Foundation Audit looks inward at operations and SOPs. The Guest Experience Audit looks outward through the guest's eyes. They complement each other—but if you have to pick one, the Foundation Audit is the better starting point because it also surfaces operational issues that affect guest experience.
The remote version analyzes all available data and conducts virtual walkthroughs with your team. The on-site version adds a first-person guest experience evaluation. We always recommend on-site if budget allows—you can't feel a "dead zone" from a spreadsheet.
Most recommendations fall into three buckets: immediate fixes (0–2 weeks, often free), short-term improvements (2–8 weeks, modest investment), and structural changes (1–3 months, larger investment). We prioritize so you're getting wins fast.