travel agency

Hotel reviews and ratings are a hot topic of discussion and it’s getting hotter. Recent PhoCusWright research finds 43% of travelers are influenced by social media and that two-thirds of hotel reviews are submitted on Online Travel Agency sites, with the remaining 34% posted on travel review sites. However, various groups are also accusing TripAdvisor of not doing enough to identify and eradicate phony hotel reviews.

Five-star Hotel Plaque
Creative Commons License photo credit: jcberk

Hotel ratings and reviews are an invaluable resource for travelers, but with no industry standards and a black-hat element of the industry transitioning from Online Reputation Management (ORM) to Fake Review Optimization (FRO) can they be trusted?

All of the action isn’t necessarily taking place online. Earlier this year, Forrester Research found 29% of leisure travelers would work with a traditional agent, if they could find a good one. That statistic is sharply up from 23% in 2008.

To make matters worse, there are no global standards for hotel ratings, subjecting the prospective hotel guest to a litany of rating scales, often graded by vague, inconsistent, and frequently contradictory measures.

Regardless, the stakes have now been raised dramatically. User generated reviews now factor into search engine results, so enterprising Search Engine Optimization specialists, perhaps recently thwarted by Google’s Panda updates to its search algorithm, have now turned their sites on exploiting the system by doctoring user reviews to enhance search engine rankings.

Some intrepid pioneers brazenly promote their ability to bury negative reviews with positive ones originating from 10,000+ IP addresses and thousands of email addresses. Not surprisingly, there is no mention of these reviews originating from actual guests, a blatant violation of US Federal Trade Commission official guidelines governing endorsements and testimonials. Similar rules prohibit such black-hat practices throughout Europe and elsewhere.

Google itself is also making waves in the review space as it solidifies its local strategy surrounding its Places pages – already a hotbed of activity with hotel price ads pitting hotels against online travel agencies, this time using context sensitive inventory and pricing as the weapons of choice. Simultaneously, with Google’s launch of Google Plus, the decision to require individuals to identify themselves only by using real names adds an additional method to structurally inhibit illegitimate reviews from anonymous sources.

Perhaps Google’s most bold move is its purchase of Zagat, and its highly curated, yet crowd-sourced review platform. With Google internalizing a respected review platform, undoubtedly with an idea of expanding it dramatically, it gets much closer to the deep content that drives customer engagement, validation and relevance. This is particularly important when leveraging semantic search technologies capable of introducing much needed context into travel search processes.

Who Do You Trust?

So, where do travelers look for recommendations regarding their lodging choices? The burning question is more importantly, whose advice do they truly trust and act on when making a hotel reservation?

Considering the fact that I interact with a large number of sophisticated travelers, I prepared a brief 1-page survey to find out whose hotel reviews and ratings the travel cognoscenti trust. The resulting 34 potential sources are roughly divided into three categories – types of individuals, prominent hotel review sites and general categories of sites hosting reviews.

The survey has been designed with a single question and should take only a couple minutes to complete.

Please Scroll Down to rate more sources of Hotel Ratings and Reviews.

Thank you for taking the time to complete the survey. I am expecting to see some surprising results.

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A few weeks ago, a coalition of travel and consumer groups took on the airlines, declaring “I’m Mad as Hell About Hidden Airline Fees and I’m Not Gonna Take This Anymore!

Mad as Hell
Creative Commons License photo credit: Ferdi’s – World

Blind Rage is a bit closer to the sentiment “Mad as Hell Day” should inspire. Perhaps “Confused & Mildly Frustrated Day” would have been better.

It all culminated Thursday, September 23: “Mad as Hell Day.” Considering my Catholic upbringing and familiarity with the 1976 film Network that popularized screaming “I’m Mad as Hell,” I was naturally anticipating disruptive actions of Armageddonal proportions.

Mad as Hell Day commemorated the deadline for public comment on proposed US Department of Transportation consumer protection rules outlined in docket number DOT-OST-2010-0140.

The combination of high rhetoric and selection of a baffling video spokesperson appears to have resulted in a considerable portion of petition signers whose stories oppose the airline fees or baggage policies themselves as opposed to the petition’s request that airlines display ancillary fees on web sites and distribute them through global distribution systems.

To set the record straight, for 30 years, I have been a strong proponent of providing consumers with clear policies and total pricing, upfront in the shopping process, inclusive of all mandatory taxes and fees – not just for airlines, but hotels, car rental, cruises, tours and event tickets. I completely agree that travelers should be able to easily compare product features and pricing.

Unfortunately, coalition founders American Society of Travel Agents, the Business Travel Coalition and the Consumer Travel Alliance, don’t provide sufficient detail regarding when and how these fees should be presented.

It would have been more beneficial if the petition provided specifics like presenting baggage fees prior to payment entry, on booking confirmations, etc. continue reading →

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Social media may be the rage, itinerary sharing web sites may be proliferating, and new online travel sites seem to be focused on advertising as their primary revenue stream, but the bottom line is that airlines, hotels, car rental and attractions rely on reservation sales conversion to generate the margin and profit required to continue operations.

This poll is designed to evaluate the most popular, IDEAL, method for booking leisure travel arrangements. The results will indicate the “Bookularity” of the preferred category comprising the booking method and type of travel seller that those surveyed feel provides the greatest value in the travel reservation process.

Ground Rules:

  1. Vote for the CATEGORY of Booking Method and Travel Seller you would ideally prefer to use for LEISURE travel
  2. Only One Category May be Selected – If you could only pick one, which one would it be? You would use it for all your reservations in a given itinerary
  3. You Destination & Itinerary May be Researched Using Any Other Methods – This question only pertains to your preferred method to make the purchase
  4. The Sites Listed are Only Examples for the Category – If you have a favorite site, find the most similar category
  5. The List of Categories is not Exhaustive – If you notice a major category missing, use the contact form link below to submit a suggestion

Below is a list of booking method categories summarizing both HOW you would contact & WHO you would contact to book leisure travel – if you had your choice, in a perfect world. The options range from online to telephone, supplier direct to travel agency, and mobile to specialize membership-only sites. Remember, if you could only select one type of booking method with one type of travel seller, which would it be?

continue reading →

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Mark Twain’s famous, “the report of my death is an exaggeration” quote certainly applies to the travel agent and the traditional travel agency business model. The retail travel agency community has sustained considerable losses due to the combined impact of the rise of the internet, industry consolidation and the economic downturn – 30% of retail travel agencies have closed since 2000. Despite the hardships, a new breed of smarter and more innovative travel agents is evolving.

Secret Agent
Creative Commons License photo credit: saikofish

Being a 'secret' agent in the age of social media could get your travel business killed

Forrester Research recently reported that there are 15% fewer travelers who enjoy using the Web in 2009 than there were in 2007. Many are seeking the expertise of offline travel agents able to provide relevant recommendations, expert validation and most importantly, a time saving rescue from the labyrinth of internet travel sites.

The challenges facing modern travel agents are not unique to the travel industry. The relationship between agencies and their clientele is under duress across all industry verticals. Avoiding the impassioned and emotional specifics that illustrate the travel agent’s plight, a slightly higher level perspective is required – how the internet impacts the Agency-Client relationship across all verticals – not just the travel space.

Traditionally, agencies have been required to provide specialized expertise in their respective discipline – travel, real estate, insurance, advertising, etc.

The best agencies always offered:

  1. access to information that was not otherwise readily available to the client, and
  2. the ability to both develop strategies and apply tactics that were tailored to the client’s specific future goals, available resources and current circumstances.

The internet has dramatically changed the environment and travel websites now compete (with a relatively good degree of success) with traditional travel agencies. continue reading →

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