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Tracking Tourism: The Tourism Research Blog Archive for the ‘Tourism blogging’ Category

Thursday, 29th May, 2008

Striking a Travel 2.0 balance - how much time should a business commit? - 29th May, 2008

I’ve presented two eMarketing workshops in as many days this week (do feel free to peruse the slides here) and a head spinning seven in the last four weeks.

In those sessions I have talked about Web 2.0, blogging, web measurement, Travel 2.0 (click for a definition), engaging in the conversation with your customer and that fact that there has been a monumental shift in how potential consumers seek, evaluate and trust information.

But from San Francisco to the Scottish Highlands, London to Swansea - as businesses absorb the implications of what this means, they generally express with some horror the exact same question. “Just how long does all this stuff take?”

And of course, it’s an absolutely killer question, right at the heart of how successfully Travel 2.0 techniques are adopted by businesses. “Just how do I blog, Flickr, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Tripadvisor etc etc and still run my business…. How do I commit enough time to make this work, but not so much time that every other aspect of my business stops?”

Like any other marketing or business function, you should invest time according to how important the results are likely to be to your business. The Travel 2.0 space is a perfect one in which to experiment and keep experimenting as you maximise results. Yes it is time consuming, but that isn’t reason enough to not get involved. The internet is now absolutely critical to travel - it is mainstream, not niche as these statistics show:

Internet statistics slide

In terms of specific advice, I can only answer from my personal experience:

1) Narrow down the options:

Start with research (this post tells you how). You can’t be everywhere, nor do you need to be. Are there certain sites, communities, blogs or Flickr groups etc where your business, sector, interests or competitiors are already being actively discussed. Are there places where the key thinkers/players in your field are already meeting. Are there places you simply like to be?

You do not have to do this completely manually, as the above post shows, there are free technologies that will bring this information to you.

2) Understand your target market online:

Don’t assume that Travel 2.0 is only about young, trendy advance adopters of technology. Participation in social networking, for example, mirrors the age spread of the online population as a whole. Tripadvisor and to some extent Flickr are becoming a mainstream part of the travel selection process.

However, different sites, tools and communities do attract different profiles of people. Just as its worth paying attention to whether other people in your field are spending their time online, its also worth thinking carefully about where your potential customers are too. Hitwise, comScore and Alexa are provide some free information that help answer this.

3) Know why you’re there:

Are you there in order to create awareness of your business, demonstrate your expertise, deliver better customer service, spot opportunities and threats, learn from your peers, network, spy on the competition?

Understand the point of why you’re investing your time and just how important that is to the business. If you are driving new business and delivering better customer service, you may even be able to see quite quickly that this is so important an activity and delivery such results that you should shift resources (say a marketing assistant) away from off-line activity and into the Travel 2.0 space.

I am increasing coming across young marketing assistants for whom blogging, being active in MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, Flickr etc is a large part of their job. (Travel, public sector and charities are sectors where I have seen examples of this).

4) Assign a cash value to your time:

Engaging with the Travel 2.0 consumer is far higher in time costs than actual marketing spend. Whereas it easy to understand that a marketing campaign that cost £10,000 and drove £1,000 of business was not successful, you can’t make that correlation for time spent on MySpace until you understand the cost of what you invested.

I know, for example, how much running this blog costs me as a cash equivalent to my time - I also know that it represents a worthwhile use of my time (because I join up the dots and where possible track where new opportunities originated from).

5) Review regularly what is and isn’t working:

Web 2.0. Travel 2.0, social media - call it what you will, remains incredibly faddy at an individual site/community level. Facebook saw its first dip in traffic earlier this year and us travel bloggers, who move from community to community in pursuit of the best place to really interact with each other, are examples of how fickle visitors to individual communities can be.

There is no single best place to spend your energies - it should and probably will be a least a few sites/activities at any one time. But finding the optimum combination for you will be an ongoing experiment and will change regularly. Review frequently (using web analytics, research or good old fashioned talking to your customers and peers) and adapt!

Vicky's web 2.0 world

This is my strategy and it perhaps sounds excessively calculated. In fact, I enjoy investing my time and energy in the communities I participate in. I find it personally rewarding as well as good for business and I have made many friends and travelled to wonderful places (for real, not just virtually).

The reason I need a strategy to manage my Web 2.0 efforts is simply because the opportunities are endless whereas time and energy are not.

Calling those juggling champions

I know for a fact that there are a number of people out there who successfully juggle running travel and tourism businesses with maintaining blogs, leading great industry discussions online, while answering the needs of their own and a broader swathe of potential customers in a range of communities. Guido, the Happy Hotelier is one, Rene at Greater Speyside another, so is Claude Bernard and Don at Get a Room.

There are more of you than I can mention and most of the blogs I link to on the right of this page provide examples of fantastic time and Travel 2.0 gymnastics.

Perhaps you will share with us how you do it?

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Friday, 1st February, 2008

Top picks from the travel blog fiesta - 1st February, 2008

This week I have been invited by Darren Cronian of the TravelRants blog to pick my favourite posts in the Travel Blog Carnival. A virtual fiesta of travel themed blog content if you like!

I really enjoyed reading all the posts that were submitted and I’m pleased to be able to share my top-picks here - I hope you find them as interesting as I did.

Always the last to know…

This is a great post from the Get A Room Blog (or should that be a great plea?) for hotel guests to talk the hotel itself when there is a problem, before talking to the whole world.

As Don writes: “Just give them a chance. The last thing they want is for you to be unhappy… After all, the hotel’s goal is to welcome you back again.”

While I’d disagree with Don that it’s not the raves that make it on to online consumer sites like TripAdvisor (see this recent Tracking Tourism post) – I do otherwise completely agree with Don’s thinking in his post. As Rene Looper, a former hotelier, recently said in a comment here: “If you had a great time, tell TripAdvisor – but if you had a problem, tell us”.

Shock horror, a consumer-to-consumer site makes it to the pages of this decidedly b2b blog!

Scotland from the airAside from the fact that I like this post and Barbara’s Hole in the Donut blog generally, I’ve chosen this as I think it embodies consumer thinking in these hardening economic times.

Read how a devoted traveller, who has literally travelled the world, discovers for the first time the attractions that are right on her doorstep.

And as we’ve highlighted in this blog previously, all the statistical evidence coming in from the US suggests that in these times of potential recession, it is not just Barbara who will be looking at the tourism opportunities in her own back yard this year!

Social media sites, hype and non-takeover stories. Surely not?

Kevin May, editor of the Travolution blog, ponders just why it is that WAYN (The Where Are You Now community that claims to be the fastest growing travel and lifestyle social networking community website in the UK) seems to attract a disproportionate amount of attention in the travel industry for a site of its size.

Read Kevin’s post to see if some of that hype is justified.

Space Tourism in Cape Breton?

Finally, for those of us in Scotland who’re hoping that space tourism will have its birth here, Kim Kinrade reports in the White Point Manor blog that the Canadian government is still looking into the funding $45 million as its share for a rocket launching facility in Cape Breton, which would see the birth of “Space Tourism” in the province of Nova Scotia.

Mmm – does this mean Scotians old and new will be duelling in their spacesuits at dawn?

Previous picks from the Travel Blog Carnival

If you’re interested in reading more from the Travel Blog Carnival, see Darren’s carnival pages over at TravelRants.com. You can also find out how to submit your own posts for review.

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Thursday, 10th January, 2008

Travel industry bloggers summit comes to Europe - 10th January, 2008

News about the PhoCusWright Bloggers Summit at ITB Berlin

Bloggers panelAfter the great success of the first ever travel industry bloggers summit, at the PhoCusWright Conference in November, the next PhoCusWright Bloggers Summit will be taking place at ITB Berlin, March 5-6, 2008.

With 10,000 exhibitors from 180 countries and regions, ITB Berlin represents the full spectrum of global tourism at all levels and a great location for the first Europe-based travel industry blogging summit.

PhoCusWright is currently inviting applications from qualified (see details) travel industry bloggers to participate in The PhoCusWright Bloggers Summit@ITB Berlin. More information about the program can be found here.

Even if you don’t blog yourself, or you’re still thinking about how blogging might help your destination or business, the PhoCusWright Bloggers Summit is worth checking out if you are planning to attend ITB.
One of the best parts of the Bloggers Summit in Orlando - which I am thrilled to see will be repeated in Berlin - was the panel based workshop which brought travel suppliers, DMOs and other travel and tourism companies together with the blogging community for a direct and lively discussion.

The room was packed to bursting point in Orlando, so in Berlin there will be two workshops. These will be open to all ITB Berlin attendees and I believe will also feature a panel made up of Tips From The T-List bloggers (we are very pleased thatour blog, Tracking Tourism, will be able to take part in this).

The PhoCusWright schedule gives the following details about the workshop:

“Workshops: Blogging With the Long Tail of Tourism
Presented by Tips From the T-List
Wednesday March 5: 2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.

Two workshops will show how an active, content-producing network of bloggers can have a growing influence on your customers’ online spending habits. The workshops will give valuable tools to travel suppliers, DMOs, OTAs, and other travel and tourism companies that are looking to engage the blogging community and help focus user-generated content for their benefit. New innovations in blogging will be covered as well as a number of user-generated content trends. There will be an expert panel of travel marketers and technologists from around the world providing two interactive sessions.”

Get more details on The PhoCusWright Bloggers Summit@ITB Berlin here.

Read more about ITB Berlin

Finally, a revised version of the Tips from the T-List Book which will be updated for ITB Berlin and available for download at www.tipsfromthetlist.com.

 

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Thursday, 6th December, 2007

The influence of social media buzz in action - 6th December, 2007

Internet Marketing ConferenceI’ve been travelling non-stop for the last week and part of my time was spent in Stockholm, where I was speaking at the Internet Marketing Conference.

Naturally, this trip involved hotels, planes (and in my case trains). And as I recently wrote here about how social media sites like Flickr and You Tube are changing the behaviour of visitors and I thought I’d share this classic example from my own experience, because I think there are lessons to be learned for tourism businesses.

When I was invited to the Internet Marketing Conference, I started my search for a hotel at the recommended conference hotel’s website. I wasn’t overly impressed, so next stop Trip Advisor.

A mixed bunch of reviews, but with a recurring theme – bad bathrooms. I really hate a dingy hotel bathroom and the hotel had done nothing to reassure me the fears were needless, so clearly the conference hotel wasn’t for me.

And so I started a search for my perfect hotel in Stockholm, beginning with scanning the reviews in Trip Advisor. In just a few moments, one hotel with great reviews caught my eye – the Hotel Rival. hotel rival lobby3

Here are some examples of the comments:

“Just returned from a 2 night stay at the Hotel Rival in Stockholm, chosen largely based upon reviews in Trip Advisor. It was just as nice as we had anticipated.”

“My husband and I stayed here for two nights at the end of September. We loved it and my husband said it was his favorite hotel ever!”

“Just returned from a stay at the Hotel Rival. It’s every bit as hip, cool and luxurious as everyone says.”

“I chose this hotel because it is the No1 most popular on Trip Advisor and I was so pleased I did.”

Notice a theme? People are mentioning in their review that they chose the hotel because they read the reviews. Then they are validating their decision by informing others that they made the right choice. Without realising it, I did exactly the same thing when I added my own review earlier this morning.

Super-charged word of mouth

Hotel Rival is getting great reviews, because people booked on the strength of the great reviews and are “passing it on”. Supercharged word of mouth in action – and despite the fact that none of these people are likely to ever meet.

Once I’d read the reviews, I was excited – maybe this was the hotel for me. Could I afford it? Next stop Expedia, where there was a great deal.

Did I book? No – not yet.

Next I visited the hotel website – music (a big minus point for me – I’m at work, people will be wondering!) but excellent apart from that and lots of information about the practicalities I needed to know.

So, did I book? Again, no – not yet.

I thought I’d get some independent views from my trusted community on Flickr, the photo sharing site. Even before I added my own shots, there were a massive 132 pictures of the Hotel Rival – reflecting its photogenic-ness and quality of product. I looked at a selection of pictures from different photographers, showing different rooms and aspects - clearly, this place was something special.

Decision made. I went back to Expedia and booked. And over the coming weeks before my trip, I continued to look at pictures on Flickr and read reviews on Trip Advisor – even though the decision was made and I had pre-paid via Expedia.

Do I do this for every hotel? Of course not – a Travelodge (which I frequent regularly on business trips) is a room by the right road and not something I fret over for longer than it takes to print directions.

But this was different; it was turning into a quest for an experience. In my scouring of info about Hotel Rival, I was turning into a tourist, not a business traveller. I was enjoying the anticipation before my stay had even begun.

Because of its great product, social media sites are generating vast amounts of word of mouth for Hotel Rival and are driving business.

Is this online buzz being harnessed?

So, is Hotel Rival (and potential other sites lucky enough to be in this position) really doing enough to capitalise on this online buzz?

hotel rival lobbyI don’t think so. (But if you’re reading, please feel free to disagree!)

While Hotel Rival has hundreds of blog mentions, it has no blog of its own where I can continue a dialogue with it and happily act as a champion.

It has some of the best reviews on Trip Advisor, but has not taken advantage of the free feed that Trip Advisor offers, to import these into its site and share them with pride to potential customers.

Many of its customers made their decision on the web and like me were posting great images and reviews online before they’d even left the hotel – as a manager, I’d reconsider the 99Kr per 24 hours of Internet access (roughly £10) that is being charged to let them do this.

Because they have their product so very right, I came away wanting to tell the world how clever I was for having chosen this hotel. I know I am not alone.

Any tools (from a photo album uploader to a group on Facebook) that Hotel Rival chose to invest in would be utilised by its fans (sorry customers). The result would be that it could therefore use its word of mouth more strategically in supporting its business development goals, rather than being a haphazard beneficiary of good will.

The lesson for all businesses with a great (or even an improving product) is monitor this buzz and goodwill and thing how you can harness it. Understand where you are being talked about and what is being said. And good or bad, plunge into the conversation in an authentic way.

If, like Hotel Rival, you have real champions out there – work with them to achieve you marketing goal. They’re your fans and they want to have contact with you – and your potential customers will trust them more than they trust you!

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Thursday, 22nd November, 2007

Get your free tourism industry eBook - 22nd November, 2007

The Tips from the T List Book is now available and you can get a free download here

Tips From The T List Cover The Tracking Tourism blog is one of about thirty tourism blogs from around the world to be featured in a new book.

Tips From The T List Book brings together the collective intelligence of dozens of influential travel industry bloggers from around the World. The book was launched as a printed version in November 2007 at Canada e-connect and PhoCusWright, Orlando.

It is also available as an eBook which you can download for free from this blog.

Why an “offline” book comprised of the best “online” travel blogs?

As publisher and tourism technology blogger Stephen Joyce explains:

“Well, quite frankly, there is a lot of information about internet marketing and e-strategies in travel and tourism online, however it is very hard to find, especially when it comes to evaluating the source. Lots of great information is published by practitioners that write about their experiences on their own blogs - instead of academics writing about internet marketing concepts in textbooks that are very quickly outdated. Not to discount the value of textbooks and whitepapers, we felt a compilation of the best travel blogs and their best marketing-related posts would bring another dimension to this fast moving subject. In the end, we want this book to add some value to the global hotel and travel industry, but it should also be just a little bit of fun. Bottom line: it’s an experiment.”

Having now sat down and read the book myself, I’d like to add to Stephen’s comments by mentioning that a printed book is a perfect way to extend the knowledge contained within tourism industry blogs to a wider readership. The range of expertise and original thinking contained within the book is seriously impressive.

For example, want to know how hotel brands are using Facebook (or indeed what Facebook is)? Chris Clark’s post from the VacantReady blog is featured in the eBook and gives a great introduction to the subject.

Steve Wright from the Brand Canada blog talks about the two most important questions in evaluating a tourism experience - a great post on how quick and simple research can still benefit your business.

Tourism website optimization - making your site searchable and findable - is covered by Fabienne Rabbioso of Untangle My Web. While Claude Benard of Les Explorers covers everything from user generated content to blogging and online PR in his fascinating interview with blogging maestro Karin Scmollgruber of Passion PR.

So, get your copy of Tips From The T-List

These are just a few of the posts you will find contained within the Tips From The T-List Book.

As Tracking Tourism was a contributor to the book Stephen Joyce has given us permission to make the entire eBook available to our readers here, so it give me great pleasure to be able to share it with you:

Tips From The T List Click here to download the free eBook version of Tips From The List

It is a big file (A large PDF at 1.2mb, opening in a new tab/window) so if you do want to link to the eBook from Tracking Tourism - please link to this post so I can measure the traffic, rather than simply linking to the PDF direct.

Much appreciated!

The people that made the Tips From The T List book happen

Publisher is Stephen Joyce - blogging at: Travel and Tourism Technology Trends

Editor in Chief, Jens Thraenhart: Tourism Internet Marketing

Editor, North America, Mathieu Ouellet: Radaron

Editor, Europe, Kevin May: Travolution Blog

Editor, Asia Pacific: Yeoh Siew Hoon: The Transit Cafe

And or course, the 34 bloggers whose posts featured!

Interested in finding out more about the T List of tourism bloggers? If so I’d suggest a visit to the Facebook T List group

Other posts relating to the Tips from the T List Book:

Thoughts from the first ever travel industry bloggers summit

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Wednesday, 14th November, 2007

Thoughts from the first ever travel industry bloggers summit - 14th November, 2007

Why might a tourism business want to engage with blogging and how can it possibly help with marketing and customer research?

Yesterday I joined tourism industry bloggers from around the world as part of the first ever travel industry bloggers summit, at the PhoCusWright Conference, Orlando. Vicky with the new Tips From The T List book

The bloggers summit was an opportunity for those currently blogging and those destinations (and tourism businesses thinking about beginning blogging) to participate in workshops and discussions.

Tourism industry blogging is beginning to take off and can have powerful benefits for businesses. The well attended workshop sessions explored what those benefits are.

As Kevin May, blogger and editor of Travolution explained to workshop participants, “A blog is incredibly cheap to set up, if not free. If you are trying to differentiate yourself, for example with a niche or unique product, a blog becomes search engine friendly very quickly.”

Steven Joyce of the Travel & Tourism Technology Trends blog highlighted the communication opportunity that blogs offer for businesses. “Blogs are really story books. For small operators that do something unique, it is an opportunity for them to tell their story the way they want to tell it. A blog post is an individual’s perspective on their experience and a reader shares in that. Things that are interesting and engaging when they pull people in.”

There were some great examples of destinations and businesses that are really getting this right. William Bakker of HelloBC.com, British Columbia’s marketing board, gave a fascinating example of how they as destination marketers are tapping into the long tail of tourism experiences through blogs and user generated content.

William’s team has integrated first staff blogs and then public blogs into the main destination site, highlighting appropriate (moderated) blog content alongside their main site, as you can see in the example here.

William explains the benefits of the approach, “Now we can really tap into the tourism experiences that we don’t have the resources to cover ourselves. Incorporating the blog content alongside our site content gives a nice balance of official and user generated content and it allows us to really to represent tourism experiences that are off the beaten track.”

The way HelloBC has effectively recruited an army of unpaid fans to extend their content and marketing messages beyond the scope they could possibly deliver alone is a terrific example of the harnessing user generated content as part of an authentic marketing conversation. The blogger panelists at PhoCusWright

A major concern from the travel industry audience was how do you manage the potential negative aspects, such as those that appear on review sites – do you really want unfavourable comments or feedback appearing on your blog? The panel of bloggers agreed that transparency and authenticity is essential and that complaints have always existed and been managed in the hospitality industry.

Jens Thraenhart of the Canadian Tourism Commission and the Tourism Internet Marketing blog explained , “Every bad review is an opportunity. It’s the art of turning it around. If you have your blindfold on that is lost for ever. The same as you would manage a complaint at the desk, you manage it online and you commit resources to that.”

Steve Joyce agreed, adding, “Every comment is the start of a conversation. Every positive comment I thank the commenter. Negative, I thank the commenter and continue the conversation. It is an extension of the customer service that already happened in the travel industry”.

A final benefit about tourism industry business blogging (and this extends to engaging in social networks) is the free market research opportunities it offers. Ram Badrinathan, travel analyst with PhoCusWright in India commented that, “blogs are proving consumer to business feedback without conducting research. You get feedback direct to you. You can integrate that into your product.”

This is an interesting point. Blogging and activity in social networks is not going to replace the need for research, but it can enhance it, because it offers a direct opportunity to hear and participate in conversations about your business that previously happened behind closed doors. Encouraging these conversations into the open means you will learn more about your customer’s thoughts and their experiences of your brand and product than ever before. This knowledge gives you power to act as appropriate.

Do you have to blog yourself for your business to benefit?

Blogging takes time, requires passion and isn’t for everyone. How can tourism companies use bloggers without blogging themselves?

HelloBC shows that you can incorporate the blogs of others. It was also suggested that you encourage those taking press and familiarity trips to blog about their experiences, thereby dramatically increasing the content online about your business.

There is also clearly opportunity to engage with existing bloggers, though this has to be done with sensitivity due to the transparent and usually unpaid nature of blogs.

As Steven Joyce explains, “Integrity has to be a part of it. There are different way of approaching bloggers and leveraging coverage, compared to traditional travel press. How do you invite bloggers and get them involved? In most cases they’re looking to be appreciated for what they do. They’re looking for acknowledgment that its valuable.” Just like the press, they’re looking for original content, but press releases simply don’t cut it. Blogging is about genuine stories, not PR releases.

Understand what others are saying about you

To conclude this quick post from sunny Orlando. The way customers are consuming information and marketing messages is changing. Again and again at this conference, marketing is being described as a conversation, rather than the old one-way process of pushing information out.

Blogging and engaging with social media can enable tourism businesses to hear the conversation (market research), participate in the conversation (marketing strategy) and act on the conversation when required (customer service and general management). Powerful stuff.

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