The most effective hotel RFPs are specific, honest about budget, sent to 5-10 well-matched hotels, and give 7-10 business days for response. Avoid vague requirements, unrealistic deadlines, and sending to too many hotels. Score proposals using a weighted matrix, not gut feel.
After running thousands of hotel RFPs, experienced corporate event planners converge on the same set of working rules. These twelve practices consistently produce better proposals, lower costs, and stronger long-term hotel relationships.
1. Send the Same Brief to Every Hotel on the Same Day
Identical briefing is what makes comparison possible. If Hotel A gets one version and Hotel B gets a slightly updated one, you cannot fairly compare their responses. Draft, review, send in one batch.
2. Name Your Competition (Without Naming Names)
Tell each hotel “we are sending this brief to five properties in the area.” Do not name them. The competitive signal sharpens their proposal; anonymity prevents collusion.
3. Anchor With a Realistic Budget Range
“Our per-person budget is EUR 220-260 all-in” produces tighter, more creative proposals than no budget at all. Hotels without an anchor default to their rack rate.
4. Set a Firm Deadline
A hard deadline (e.g. “responses by 17:00 on the 12th”) triggers hotel sales teams to act. “As soon as possible” gets deprioritised behind hotels with deadlines.
5. Ask for an All-In Per-Person Figure
Request a final line item called “total per-person cost all-in” covering rooms, meeting space, F&B, AV, and service. This single number is how you compare across proposals that otherwise use different structures.
6. Force a Standard Response Format
Require hotels to answer in your template. Resist the temptation to accept their marketing-heavy brochure response. Standard format = standard comparison.
7. Always Ask for Contract Terms Upfront
Attrition, cancellation, and F&B minimums should be in the proposal, not revealed only at contract stage. Hotels that hide terms upfront always have the worst ones.
8. Shortlist to 2-3 and Say So
Telling finalists they are shortlisted triggers best-and-final offers. You typically unlock another 5-10% of value at this stage, plus soft perks like room upgrades or late checkout.
9. Do a Site Visit for Events Over 50 People
Photos lie. Site visits reveal natural light, meeting room acoustics, WiFi dead zones, and whether the breakfast restaurant can actually handle your group. Two hours of site visit saves days of rework.
10. Negotiate the Entire Package, Not Line Items
Hotels have more flexibility on bundles than on individual rates. “Can you improve this overall?” produces better results than haggling each line.
11. Build the Relationship with the Sales Manager
The sales manager is your advocate inside the hotel. A good relationship means faster responses, flexibility on terms, and better handling when things go wrong during the event.
12. Debrief After the Event
Send the hotel a short email within a week: what worked, what did not. This builds trust and improves your next RFP with the same venue. Most planners skip this. Those who do it get materially better treatment on repeat business.
People Also Ask
+What makes a hotel RFP effective?
Effective RFPs are specific, realistic, and competitive. They include exact dates and headcount, share a genuine budget range, go to 5-10 well-matched hotels, allow 7-10 business days for response, and clearly state how proposals will be evaluated.
+What are common hotel RFP mistakes?
The most common mistakes are: being too vague about requirements, sending to too many hotels (over 15), giving unrealistic deadlines (under 3 days), hiding your budget, and failing to score proposals using consistent criteria.
+How do I get better responses from hotels?
Send to fewer, better-matched hotels. Include your budget range. Be specific about dates and flexibility. Give adequate response time. Hotels invest more effort in proposals where they believe they have a realistic chance of winning and where the planner's requirements are clear.
+When is the best time to send a hotel RFP?
Six to twelve months before your event for large conferences, three to six months for mid-size events. Hotels offer better rates and more flexibility when they have empty inventory to fill. Last-minute RFPs (under 60 days) get worse rates and fewer responses.
+How do I evaluate hotel RFP responses?
Build a weighted scoring matrix covering price (30-40%), location and accessibility (20%), meeting space suitability (20%), F&B quality (10-15%), and contract flexibility (10-15%). Score each proposal independently before comparing. Never choose on price alone.