The Lights On Podcast
Rodger Wada is the Senior Regional Director of Revenue Management at Springboard Hospitality, a leading third-party hotel management company that specializes in driving revenue and operational success for independent and branded hotels across the US. With nearly two decades of experience in hospitality, he has built a strong reputation in the Hawaii market, leading revenue strategy across prominent Waikiki properties. Rodger has held leadership roles with companies such as Highgate, Kokua Hospitality, and Outrigger Resorts, working across both branded and independent assets. His expertise spans pricing, distribution, and commercial strategy, with a focus on aligning revenue decisions with operations to drive sustainable performance. In this episode… What separates a hotel revenue manager who runs the numbers from one who actually moves the bottom line? For Rodger Wada, the answer comes back to the same place every time: operations. Rodger Wada is Senior Regional Director of Revenue Management at Springboard Hospitality [https://www.springboardhospitality.com/], a third-party hotel management company that runs independent and lifestyle properties across the US. He started as a concierge at Sheraton in Waikiki, moved through front desk and guest service at Outrigger, and got pulled into revenue management almost by accident when his assistant general manager noticed his civil-engineering background and said, "You must be good at math." Today he leads commercial strategy across some of Waikiki's most prominent hotels, and that operations background still shapes how he reads a P&L. In this episode of The Lights On Podcast, Kin Sio talks with Rodger about the practical side of hotel revenue management: how to rebuild ADR after a renovation without breaking rate integrity, why guest service scores (not occupancy) should trigger your next rate push, and where GDS costs hide inside branded P&Ls. They walk through the three-step playbook Rodger uses when he steps into an underperforming hotel, dig into why "every channel has a cost, including direct," and make the case that finance needs a seat at the commercial table alongside revenue, marketing, and sales.
11 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Lights On Podcast!