NEW YORK, Aug. 31, 1999 - Great sleep beats great sex according
to a new survey studying travelers� sleeping habits on the road.
63 percent of travelers say that a good night�s sleep is the most important
service a hotel can provide according to �Sleeping on the Road.� A Sleep
Study by Westin Hotels Resorts. Sleep is so important that more than twice
as many travelers said they�d take a great night�s sleep over great sex.
So are hotels meeting the demands of their weary guests? Not always, say
the 600 frequent travelers surveyed for Westin by Guideline Research and
Consulting Corporation of New York City, a national market research and
public opinion polling firm.
To wit:
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Travelers say they get less sleep on the road as compared with home (49%);
sleep fewer hours (51%); and are more likely to wake up in the middle of
the night in a hotel bed (31%).
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The quality of sleep travelers receive on the road is worse (50%) and 31%
claim their performance on the road has suffered because of a bad night�s
sleep in a hotel room.
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Three-quarters of the executives surveyed said they�re tired when they
return home from a business trip and need to catch up on their sleep.
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On average, it takes a traveler 24 minutes to fall asleep in a hotel room
compared to 15 minutes at home.
�Hotels are in the business of selling sleep, but more than half of our
customers don�t sleep well and most of them go home tired�not a great report
card for the hotel industry,� said Barry Sternlicht, Chairman and CEO of
Starwood Hotels Resorts Worldwide, Inc., Westin�s parent. �But it�s really
no surprise. After all, a good bed is one of the most important components
to a good night�s sleep, and hotels have been neglecting their beds for
years.�
Well, no longer. Today Westin announced that it is putting 52,000 new
beds in its 39,500 guestrooms in 83 hotels in North America�a $30 million
investment. Called The Heavenly Bed, Westin�s new bed is a departure from
your typical hotel bed. Sumptuous, stylish and plush, the all-white Heavenly
Bed consists of a custom designed Simmons Beautyrest® pillowtop mattress
set; a cozy down blanket; three crisp sheets ranging in thread count from
180-250; a comforter; a duvet; and five of the best pillows in the business.
Hotel Beds And Westin�s research supports the need for better
hotel beds. For instance:
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Most business travelers (82%) dislike something about hotel beds as compared
with their beds at home. These criticisms center around the mattress being
too soft (27%) or too hard (21%) as well as there not being enough pillows
(16%).
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By far, travelers said that a comfortable bed is the most important item
in a hotel room (49%). All other hotel room items�including a fax, a good
shower, the TV, a large desk and a minibar�were mentioned by less than
10% of the travelers.
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The bed is seen as sort of a �mission control center� in hotel rooms. On
average, travelers spend more than half their time in the hotel room in
the bed itself (56%). When asked what activities they perform in hotel
beds, travelers said sleep (81%); watch TV (55%); read (44%); or make phone
calls (42%) and more than one in three (36%) do work in bed.
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Almost all the travelers surveyed (84%) said that a luxurious bed would
make a hotel room more attractive to them.
Men Miss Their Spouse While Women Miss Their Bed
Sleeping well on the road is more elusive for women than men.
And when women business travelers are tossing and turning in their hotel
bed, they�re more likely to miss their own bed than the man they�ve left
behind:
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9. 54% of women take more time to fall asleep in a hotel than at home vs.
35% of men.
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59% of women say the quality of sleep in a hotel is worse than at home
vs. 47% of men.
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And women are much more likely to return home from a business trip tired
(82%) than men (70%).
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When asked what they miss most about sleeping at home when they are sleeping
in a hotel, 43% of men will say their spouse/significant other compared
to only 22% of women who say they miss their spouse or significant other.
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So what do women miss most when they�re sleeping on the road? Their own
bed (37% vs. 22% of men).
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And while 66% of men say they�d like to bring their spouse or significant
other along on a business trip, only 52% of women said the same.
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Women more than men say a luxury bed makes a hotel room more attractive
(93% of women vs. 81% of men.)
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When it comes to wardrobe in the boudoir, women are much more buttoned
up than men. While 11% of men sleep in the nude or their underwear (42%),
only 2% of women shed it all in bed or strip to their skivvies (3%).
C-Span vs. Adult Entertainment? What Keeps Travelers Up and What
Puts Them to Sleep on the Road
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When asked what keeps them up at night, 73% of the travelers surveyed say
they miss their spouse or significant other and 59% say they worry about
what is going on back at the office.
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Nearly all the travelers surveyed miss something about sleeping at home.
37% say they miss their spouse or significant other while more than a quarter
(26%) say they miss their own bed.
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Most travelers (51%) would rather sleep in a hotel bed than in a bed at
their mother-in-laws house (12%).
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One in three travelers (33%) say they�ve had an alcoholic beverage to help
them fall asleep on the road.
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Travelers do many different things to fall asleep in a hotel room including
read (53%); call their family (47%); draw the curtains or shut the blinds
(43%) or leave the TV on (42%).
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If they wake up in the middle of the night, travelers are most likely to
watch TV (30%) or read (23%) to help them fall back asleep.
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Executives who watch TV in their hotel beds are a pretty serious lot with
CNN (79%), national network news (59%) and local network news (51%) being
their top tube picks.
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Perhaps because they depend on TV to put them to sleep, travelers are more
likely to watch thunderstorms and filibusters than adult movies in their
hotel bed. 42% of travelers say they watch The Weather Channel in their
hotel room, while 17% surf to C-Span and only 11% admit to watching adult
movies.
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Who tucks business travelers in at night? Most travelers say the last voice
they hear before going to sleep in a hotel room is their spouse or significant
other (46%). On a less romantic note, 18% of travelers say goodnight to
the wake-up service operator and 6% to the hotel operator.
The Heavenly Bed
Executives
from Starwood Hotels Resorts Worldwide, Inc. (Westin�s parent) spent
a year developing a new bed for Westin. They began the process by
filling a hotel ballroom with 50 beds from 35 hotel chains�representing
all the major chains plus luxury and boutique hotels around the world.
Their mission: to build the best bed in the hotel industry. After
months of testing hundreds of mattresses, pillows and bed linens, The Heavenly
Bed was born.
Sumptuous, stylish and plush, the all-white Heavenly Bed consists of
a custom designed Simmons Beautyrest® pillow-top mattress set; a cozy
down blanket; three crisp sheets ranging in thread count from 180 to 250;
a comforter; duvet and five of the best pillows in the business�a far cry
from your typical hotel chain bed.
�I could never understand why the vast majority of hotel beds were so
uncomfortable, unattractive and uninviting,� says Barry Sternlicht, Chairman
and CEO of Starwood Hotels Resorts Worldwide, Inc. �It was inconceivable
to me that hotels�in the business of selling sleep�paid so little attention
to their beds. It seemed to me that if we could offer a better bed�the
best bed�guests would be thrilled, and incredibly loyal to Westin.�
Research Supports The Heavenly Bed
�For 2000 years, hoteliers have ignored the most fundamental aspect
of our business: giving the traveler a good night�s sleep,� says Juergen
Bartels, CEO of Starwood�s Hotel Group. �Well no more. The Heavenly Bed
is a luxurious bed, superior to our competitors� beds. Our guests will
love The Heavenly Bed, and we think sleep better because of it.�
Heavenly Beds are rolling out in Westin hotels as fast as the looms
can make the linen.
Today, 10,000 Heavenly Beds are in 7,400 guestrooms in 20 Westin hotels
with more on the way everyday. By the first quarter of 2000, all 83 Westin
hotels and resorts in North America will have Heavenly Beds. Once the North
American launch is complete, Westin will begin introducing Heavenly Beds
in its international properties.
Heavenly Beds at Home
Sternlicht liked The Heavenly Bed so much that he took one home.
And so can Westin�s guests�or anyone that wants a really great bed.
Heavenly Beds can be purchased by calling 1-800-Westin1.
�Sleeping on the Road.� A Sleep Study by Westin Hotels Resorts was conducted
by Guideline Research and consulting of New York City, a national market
research and public opinion polling firm. The study is based on a nationwide
telephone survey of 600 business executives. Qualifying respondents took
at least one business trip totaling three or more consecutive nights in
a hotel during the past year. The executives ranged from sales managers
to presidents and chief executive officers in companies with annual revenues
of $50 million or more. Interviews were conducted between July 2
and July 23, 1999. The surveys averaged 20 minutes in length and have a
margin of error on the totals of =/-4.0%. |