Motel 6 is an American chain ofmotels with locations in the United States and Canada. The chain was founded inSanta Barbara, California, in 1962 byWilliam W. Becker and Paul Greene, and derives its name from the fact that rooms initially cost only six dollars.
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Company type | Private |
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Industry | Hospitality |
Founded | 1962; 63 years ago (1962) inSanta Barbara, California |
Founders |
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Headquarters | , United States |
Number of locations | 1,430 (2018) |
Areas served |
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Key people | Sonal Sinha,CEO |
Brands |
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Services | |
Owner |
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Parent | G6 Hospitality |
Website | motel6 |
Motel 6 also operatesStudio 6, a chain ofextended-stay hotels. Since 1986, the chain has also run radio advertisements narrated byTom Bodett and featuring the slogan "we'll leave the light on for you".
In 2012,The Blackstone Group acquired the hotel brand fromAccor Hotels, and began managing it as part of its real estate business. In September 2024,Oyo Rooms, an Indian hospitality chain, announced an agreement to acquire Motel 6 and Studio 6 in an all-cash transaction valued at $525 million.[1]
On December 17, 2024, OYO's parent company, Oravel Stays, announced that it had completed the purchase of G6 Hospitality, which until then controlled hotels under the Motel 6 and Studio 6 brands.[2]
History
editMotel 6 was founded inSanta Barbara, California, in 1962, by two local building contractors:William Becker and Paul Greene.[3] The partners developed a plan to build motels with rooms at low cost rates. They decided on a $6 room rate per night (equivalent to $62 in 2024[4]), which would cover building costs, land leases, and janitorial supplies.[5]
Becker and Greene had specialized in building low-cost housing developments,[6] and they wanted to provide an alternative to other major hotel chains, such asHoliday Inn, whose locations were becoming increasingly upscale in quality and price in the 1960s, after starting out with a budget-oriented concept. Becker and Greene spent two years formulating their business model and searched for ways to cut costs as much as possible. During the chain's early years, Motel 6 emphasized itself as a "no-frills" lodging chain with rooms featuring coin-operated black-and-white television receivers instead of the free color televisions found in the more expensive motels, along with functional interior decor, to reduce the time it took to clean the rooms.[6] The first location in Santa Barbara had no restaurant on-site, a notable difference from other hotels of the era. To this day, most motels have no on-site dining, though there is usually a choice of restaurants nearby.
As the 1960s progressed, the Motel 6 idea became very popular in the lodging industry, and other chains began to imitate the concept, as Motel 6 was slowly beginning to take a small share of the market away from the traditional hotels. In 1965, Motel 6 opened its 15th property, and first location outside California, in downtownSalt Lake City, Utah. Realizing the need to move quickly, Becker and Green set out on an ambitious expansion program and had opened its 25th location inGilroy, California, by 1966. The occupancy rate by then was about 85 percent, well above the industry average, and as a result of their success, Motel 6 became an attractive acquisition target. Becker and Greene sold the chain to an investment group in 1968.
In the early 1970s, Motel 6 opened its largest location, Motel 6 Tropicana, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Additionally, the chain moved east and opened a location in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in 1972. By 1980, Motel 6 had reached 300 locations. It was sold toKohlberg Kravis Roberts in 1985, who moved the chain away from its "no frills" approach and began including amenities such as telephones and color television.[6]
Market share declined throughout the 1980s, in part because of increased competition from other budget hotels. During this time, it bought out the Sixpence Inn chain in the western U.S., and Envoy Inn (formerly Budgetel and Bargaintel)[7] in theMidwestern United States andPennsylvania.[8] Regal 8 Motels were acquired in 1991.[6] In 1990, the company was bought by the French-basedAccor. In 1993, it opened its first high-rise location—Motel 6 LAX in Los Angeles, California.
Unlike the majority of hotel chains, Motel 6 directly owns and operates most of its locations. To expand more rapidly outside its traditionalWestern United States base, the chain startedfranchising in 1994. Accor management also took over motels that had been franchised by other chains. Motel 6 began to renovate all bedrooms, sold under-performing locations, and upgraded door locks and other security measures. Newer properties, as well as acquisitions, have interior corridors. Its competitors includeAmerica's Best Value Inn,Days Inn,Econo Lodge, andSuper 8 Motels. In 1999, Motel 6 launched Studio 6 Extended Stay, hotels with suites that are designed for longer stays and feature kitchenettes.
In 2000, Motel 6 went international by opening its first location outside the U.S. in Burlington, Ontario, Canada. Then, in 2002, Motel 6 celebrated its 40th anniversary at its first location in Santa Barbara, California.
In 2006, Accor and Motel 6 invested more than $6 million in properties to help rebuild New Orleans and Gulfport followingHurricane Katrina. One of the Motel 6 co-founders, William Becker, died of aheart attack at the age of 85 the next year.[9]
The company was sold by Accor toThe Blackstone Group in 2012 for $1.9 billion.[10] Blackstone announced that Motel 6 would be operated on a stand-alone basis.[11]
In September 2017, immigration attorneys accused Motel 6 desk clerks at two locations in the area ofPhoenix, Arizona, of notifyingU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement when guests checked in with identification from Mexico.[12] The attorneys said court records showed that federal immigration agents arrested at least 20 people at the Motel 6 locations over the course of seven months in 2017.[13] Motel 6 said the practice was "implemented at the local level without the knowledge of senior management"[14] and every location had been given a directive that they were "prohibited from voluntarily providing daily guest lists to ICE." Motel 6 was sued for discrimination and privacy violations in connection with the case and on November 2, 2018, agreed to settle with the plaintiffs for $7.6 million.[15]
Additionally,Washington state filed a lawsuit in January 2018 against Motel 6 for giving the names of thousands of other motel guests toU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.[16] In April 2019, Motel 6 agreed to pay $12 million to settle the lawsuit.[17]
On April 24, 2018, the American Customer Satisfaction Index published a study of America's most popular hotel chains, placing G6 Hospitality's Motel 6 at the bottom of the category for the second year in a row.[18]
As of August 2022, the most expensive motel in the entire Motel 6 chain was the first one in Santa Barbara, California.[19] It had charged $6 per night before taxes for a room when it first opened in 1962.[19] Sixty years later, during the late summer of 2022, the first Motel 6 was reportedly charging $426 per night for a room, before taxes.[19]
In September 2024, Indian hospitality chainOyo Rooms agreed to buy Motel 6 and Studio 6 in an all-cash deal worth $525 million.[1]
Services
editMotel 6 locations offer guests free basic wireless internet access, and some locations offer an upgrade to premium wireless internet access with the charge not exceeding $4.99.[20]
In March 2008, Motel 6 began a system-wide renovation program called the "Phoenix Project" to update the look and amenities of all bedrooms.[21] Before the remodel, most rooms had colorful road-trip inspired bed covers, carpeted floors, shower curtains, CRT televisions and beige furnishings.[22][23] Stained carpets and dirty shower curtains were a common complaint on online customer reviews. The remodel was designed with an eye towards not only modernizing rooms but keeping room rates low for years to come. Designers accomplished this by making the rooms more energy efficient, easy to clean, and easier to keep clean in the long term (keeping housekeeping and maintenance costs low).[24] The remodel earned Motel 6 Travel & Leisure magazine's 2010 design award for Best Large Hotel.[25]
Advertising
editBeginning in 1986, Motel 6 has advertised through radio commercials featuring the voice of writer andNational Public Radio commentatorTom Bodett, with the tagline "We'll leave the light on for you."[26] The ads were created by Dallas advertising agencyThe Richards Group.[6] They feature a tune composed by Tom Faulkner, performed by him on guitar and Milo Deering on fiddle.[27] The first spots were conceived and written by David Fowler. In 1996, the ads won aClio Award. The campaign itself has won numerous national and international awards and was selected byAdvertising Age magazine as one of the Top 100 Advertising Campaigns of the Twentieth Century.[28]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^abKoblin, John (September 20, 2024)."Motel 6 Is Sold to Oyo, an Indian Hotel Company Expanding in the U.S."The New York Times.
- ^"Global Travel Technology Company OYO Completes Acquisition of G6 Hospitality from Blackstone Real Estate".The Blackstone Group. RetrievedDecember 30, 2024.
- ^"History of Motel 6".www.fundinguniverse.com. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018.
- ^1634–1699:McCusker, J. J. (1997).How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda(PDF).American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799:McCusker, J. J. (1992).How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States(PDF).American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present:Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis."Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". RetrievedFebruary 29, 2024.
- ^"FAQ".www.motel6.com. Motel 6. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018.
- ^abcdeJakle, John A.; Sculle, Keith A.; Rogers, Jefferson S. (1996).The motel in America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 211–214.ISBN 0801853834.OCLC 34513125.
- ^"Bargaintel is now Envoy Inn".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. November 6, 1986. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018.
- ^Berg, Eric N. (November 26, 1989)."No-frills class gets crowded".Ocala Star-Banner. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018.
- ^McLellan, Dennis (May 12, 2007)."William Becker, 85; helped begin Motel 6, founded Arizona bank".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedAugust 20, 2015.
- ^"Accor: Motel 6 disposal completed".Accor. October 2, 2012. RetrievedAugust 13, 2021.
- ^"Sale of Motel 6 for $1.9 Billion Dollars".Blackstone. May 22, 2012. RetrievedAugust 13, 2021.
- ^Flaherty, Joseph;Farzan, Antonia Noori (September 13, 2017)."Attorneys Suspect Motel 6 Calling ICE on Undocumented Guests".Phoenix New Times. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2017.
- ^Sanchez, Ray; McLean, Scott (September 15, 2017)."Motel 6 says it will stop sharing guest lists with ICE". CNN. RetrievedOctober 31, 2017.
- ^"Statement Regarding Recent Media Reports on Phoenix-area Location". Motel 6. September 13, 2017. RetrievedOctober 31, 2017 – via Twitter.
- ^"Motel 6 to pay $7.6 million for giving guest lists to U.S. immigration". Reuters. November 6, 2018.
- ^Le, Phuong (January 3, 2018)."Washington state AG sues Motel 6 over giving ICE info on 9,000 guests".The Seattle Times. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2018.
- ^Andone, Dakin (April 7, 2019)."Motel 6 will pay $12 million after several locations gave their guest lists to ICE". CNN.
- ^"ACSI Travel Report 2018: With Little Competition, Airlines Squander Passenger Satisfaction".www.theacsi.org. April 24, 2018.
- ^abcGilbertson, Dawn (August 10, 2022)."What's It Like at the Most Expensive Motel 6? Actually, Pretty Nice".Wall Street Journal.
- ^"Hotels with free Wi-Fi".Consumer Reports=July 11th 20, 2015.
- ^"Motel 6 tries an environmentally friendly re-design".budgettravel.com. October 3, 2012. RetrievedAugust 20, 2015.
- ^Higgins, Michelle (March 30, 2010)."Motel Chains Redecorate and Add Amenities".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMay 4, 2017.
- ^Gardner, Terry (March 28, 2016)."Motel 6 changes it up with renovated rooms that make budget look hip".Los Angeles Times.ISSN 0458-3035. RetrievedMay 4, 2017.
- ^"Motel 6 Brand Fact Sheet"(PDF).
- ^"T+L Design Awards 2010 - Best Large Hotel: Motel 6".Travel + Leisure. RetrievedMay 4, 2017.
- ^Cross, Mary (2002).A Century of American Icons: 100 Products and Slogans from the 20th-Century Consumer Culture. Greenwood Press. pp. 188–190.ISBN 978-0313314810. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2020.
- ^Oakner, Larry (October 24, 2002).And Now a Few Laughs from Our Sponsor. John Wiley & Sons.ISBN 9780471263296. RetrievedAugust 20, 2015.
- ^Bob Garfield (March 29, 1999)."Ad Age Advertising Century: The Top 100 Campaigns".adage.com. Archived fromthe original on May 11, 2011. RetrievedAugust 20, 2015.
External links
editMedia related toMotel 6 at Wikimedia Commons