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A. The number of rooms available
B. The amount of revenue generated per available room
C. The proportion of available rooms that has actually been sold
D. The proportion of total rooms that is actually available for sale

2006-07-24 17:55:49 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

4 answers

C is the only logical answer for me. It is the broadest indicator of how well you are filling up your location with paying customers. Other locations may have more total rooms and more total customers, but unless they are running at a high enough paid occupancy, there will be too large a percentage of investment that is not earning a return.

Airlines care about the same thing because the investment has been made, just like the hotels, and they are trying very hard to fill up the space and make money.

2006-07-24 18:05:29 · answer #1 · answered by Intelligent and curious 3 · 2 0

Paid Occupancy Percentage

2016-11-02 01:08:46 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It is simply the percentage of square footage that is producing a profit at a particular time or over a period of time. It can be a simple statement or graphed.

It allows you to get information and make decisions regarding all of your points and track the profitibility of your property. It is usually used to track area profitibility in multi unit or area based marketing of real estate.

2006-07-24 18:04:25 · answer #3 · answered by Zi 2 · 0 0

$50 bucks each

2006-07-24 17:59:06 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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