Flacks Group purchased the DoubleTree by Hilton Augusta from an undisclosed seller and immediately transferred management to StepStone Hospitality, ending the prior operator's run at the 214-room property near Augusta National Golf Club. The transaction closed without disclosed terms, though county records will surface within 30 days. StepStone now manages the hotel at 640 Broad Street, a location 2.1 miles from Masters Tournament gates and 8 minutes from the Augusta Convention Center.
The timing matters. Augusta's tournament-dependent revenue model delivers 40-50% of annual EBITDA during Masters week each April, when average daily rates breach $800 for properties within walking distance. The remaining 51 weeks require disciplined expense management and corporate transient capture to pencil. StepStone enters with a playbook: the firm added the 144-room Hilton Garden Inn Atlanta Perimeter Center in October 2024, giving it two Georgia Hilton-flagged assets within 90 days. Both properties sit in secondary markets where labor costs run 22-28% below gateway-city comparables, and where franchise-fee negotiations hinge on operational consistency rather than brand prestige.
Flacks Group's move extends a pattern. The firm typically acquires stabilized select-service hotels in convention-adjacent submarkets, then installs third-party managers with track records in revenue-per-available-room optimization. StepStone fits: the company operates 65+ properties across 20 states, with a portfolio weighted toward Hilton and Marriott flags in markets where corporate demand underwrites shoulder-period occupancy. Augusta delivers that profile. The convention center books 180+ event days annually, generating mid-week demand that blunts the tournament's binary revenue concentration. Flacks is betting StepStone can push 5-7% revenue-per-available-room growth by tightening labor schedules and renegotiating supplier contracts—standard levers in a market where most competitors still operate with pre-pandemic cost structures.
The operator handoff also signals capital-allocation priorities. Flacks could have self-managed or retained the outgoing operator; instead, it paid StepStone's management fees to access centralized revenue-management systems and purchasing scale. That trade makes sense when the alternative is hiring a 12-person on-site leadership team at fully loaded costs exceeding $900,000 annually. StepStone's regional cluster strategy—pooling procurement and revenue management across multiple properties—delivers those savings without sacrificing local responsiveness. The Augusta property will likely see property-improvement-plan capital within six months: Hilton's brand-standard refresh cycle mandates corridor updates and bathroom tile replacements every 7-9 years, and county permit filings will reveal whether Flacks plans a full public-space renovation before the 2026 Masters.
Operators and allocators should watch three markers. First, whether StepStone posts the Augusta management contract on its public portfolio page within 14 days—a quiet signal of confidence. Second, any Flacks Group debt filings in Richmond County within 45 days, which would clarify leverage ratios and refinancing timelines. Third, whether StepStone adds another Georgia asset before Q2 2025, cementing a regional hub that justifies dedicated revenue-management headcount. The firm's Southeast expansion has been episodic; three properties within 120 miles would shift that to structural.
The Augusta deal is not a headline transaction. It is a clean example of how select-service consolidation works in 2025: experienced buyers acquiring assets with predictable cash flows, then outsourcing operations to managers with enough scale to move RevPAR without moving staff counts. StepStone's Georgia footprint now includes 358 rooms under Hilton flags, a cluster large enough to negotiate zone-level purchasing and justify a dedicated regional director of operations by mid-year.