June 27, 2007

Travel search engine - India

A new Indian travel search engine, ixigo aims to furnish the huge Indian travel market with the best deals in airlines, hotels and other activities. India's megabillion travel market is all the more attractive because 95% of web transactions begun online are fulfilled online! (compared to 3% for China).

Another pioneer of travel search, sweetfare.com is looking to get a slice of the action by providing access to real-time rates and itineraries from the world's largest pool of airlines and low-cost carriers (including Indian price warriors like Spicejet and Jetairways).

India's online travel market is fast absorbing the trends from other advanced marketplaces. Will user-generated travel content take off in India too? Not far-fetched because sharing, collaboration, communities, forums and like stuff appeal to most Indians and the globe-trotting, tech-savvy, educated workforce is happy hunting ground for new, breakaway concepts!

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June 26, 2007

Out-of-the-world baths

Bathrooms can make or mar a traveler's hotel room experience and are often the subject of intense scrutiny in travel blogs and review sites! Now Concierge.com has compiled a collection of the world's most jaw-dropping and over-the-top restrooms. From embarrassingly opulent fixtures to quirky art pieces, here's proof that the bathroom has come a long way as a lifestyle amenity! (perhaps important enough to take pride of place in virtual tours on hotel sites?) In the US, the obsession with art in the bathroom is less pronounced than in other countries and with good reason - most people don't have the patience to deal with annoyingly inventive features (no tubs, no towels, glass walls!)

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June 25, 2007

Ponytails in India's Hotel Boom

That the hotel industry in India is in the midst of an unprecedented boom is painfully apparent to anyone looking for a hotel room in just about any Indian city - room rates seem to be on a relentlessly vertiginous rise including the most obscure third tier cities. Articles lamenting the seemingly outrageous hotel rates appeared around the world as recently as six months ago. While calls for a doubling of hotel inventory (from the current 110,000 rooms) have sparked a spate of foreign interest in joint ventures and FDI, there appears to be the first hints of a softening of rates and occupancies particularly in the most expensive Indian metro, Bangalore; a principal reason appears to be serviced apartments.

A larger problem for hospitality operators in India is the high rate of employee attrition. With attrition levels exceeding 30%, trained hospitality workers are fair game for retailers (reputedly the fastest growing in India) and the aviation industry, another boom industry in India. Old time majors such as the Taj group, the Oberois and ITC have long had their own training establishment and some newer entrants have also set up training institutions for their employees. Recent Indian entrants such as Lemon Tree hotels of New Delhi are not sitting back in their efforts at either training or in setting themselves apart from the others - the CEO of Lemon Tree, Patu Keswani's idea of motivating his managers is to allow them to grow a ponytail!

However, with interest in India spanning the globe as this report on Irish investment in Indian real estate points out, investors should be prepared for the inevitable troughs that come when supply starts to pick up over the next two to three years. In the end, a lot more than growing ponytails may be needed for the many new entrants to partake of the recent boom.

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June 18, 2007

The future not search?

In the tumultous world of online marketing, ideas matter only so long as they can be converted into liquid cash (preferably millions) in a short span of time (preferably months!). Nothing makes news faster than an upstart gathering eyeballs and revenues at the speed of light (thus catching the attention of the big 3) and becoming a ripe target for acquisition (read happy endings and private yachts for the young, smiling founders!).

If recent reports are anything to go by, the big future of the web does not lie in search. Personalization and behavioral targeting are the new buzzwords. Once upon a time, personalization was a big thing on the web and amazon was among the few companies that did a good job in using visitor behavior to present not alltogether irrelevant offers! Now "stickiness" through customized content is making a comeback and it's myspace and social networking sites that are ruling the game. It will be interesting to watch how companies use personal profiles to finetune targeting and help users get to their end-goals faster (whether it's information, purchase or entertainment).

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June 14, 2007

Happiness co-efficient?

The Financial Times (subscription needed) has an interesting article entitled "In the pursuit of happiness" that questions what has long been received wisdom - that happy employees make for happy customers - an axiom that has divine status in the hospitality industry. Rosa Chun, a professor of business ethics and corporates social responsibility at the Manchester Business School (UK) interviewed 10,000 people (half were customer-facing staff, half were customers) at 13 UK retail organisations in financial services, food retailing, telecommunications and insurance (interestingly she did not include the hospitality industry in her sample set) and asked "how satisfied they were, whether they would recommend a friend to work for the company or buy its products, and so on".

The FT article notes how "Some business units revealed a positive correlation between happy staff and happy customers. But there were others where staff were happy but customers unhappy, or where customers were happy but staff were not. "Most managers believe the link because they have read some books," Prof Chun says. "But when you dig into their actual experience, they have very little evidence." And then goes on to comment on how "Companies have invested vast amounts of time and money over the past decade on the assumption that it is true. Team-buildingexercises, employee empowerment initiatives, "live-the-brand" campaigns, culture change programmes and perks such asat-work massage or ping-pong tables - has all this effort and expense been squandered? . The cause-and-effect relationship between employee loyalty, productivity and customer satisfaction "was never as strong as we hoped", adds his co-author and fellow HBS professor James Heskett."

The research appears to stand on its end the old notion that employee satsifaction led to employee loyalty and then up the chain to customer satisfaction and loyalty - a nice linear relationship that fitted well with most managers across service industries.

All of the above appears to have hastened if not intensified the search for the link between employee and customer satisfaction with new research centered on how "Successful companies focus with "laser precision" on the staff behaviours that customers want and give their employees a sense of "ownership" (as distinct from satisfaction, loyalty, commitment or engagement) so they can demonstrate "latitude within limits" when dealing with customers". In other words, organizations are focussing on the process that leads to satisfaction of customers rather than merely making employees happy with a view to osmotically having that transmitted to the customer.

Some of the "new" findings may not be entirely new to the hospitality industry. The industry has, for long, focussed on guest needs as a basis for the CRM and then tailoring training programs for employees to optimize that - the issue always was how to make the employee gain the most of that and derive enjoyment while carrying out that process. Anticipating guest needs and communcating it to employees thereby, taking away the (nasty) surprise element surely brings about happy employees. At any rate, hotel companies too ought to take a look at the relationship to see whether there indeed is a link between a happy cow and high quality milk.

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June 13, 2007

Trivop

Trivop.com is an online hotel review portal billed as the as the first videoguide for hotels.

The site comes from Paris, France based VideoAgency and made the final five at the European Startup 2.0 conference in May.

We all know what it's like booking a hotel online. Imagery always shows the best side of the hotel but you often find yourself disappointed because the product isn't exactly like the description or pictures presented at the booking point.

At its core, Trivop.com allows consumers to start their hotel search by watching hotel videos, giving them richer data that can be used in making an educated choice when deciding upon a hotel to stay in.

The layout is pure mashup. Google Maps bis used as a base from which to add hotel or user submitted video, with hotel reviews pulled from TripAdvisor. Users can explore the hotels' surroundings, public facilities and all bedroom categories.

Trivop has launched covering Paris with plans to expand coverage across Europe later this year.

It's a clever idea. Mashing video with hotel review data and maps really does provide a useful service that potentially has broad appeal to travellers. Many a customer has booked hotels online before only to arrive on site and discover that they're only marginally better than a hovel so Trivop naturally has personal appeal as well. Definitely a site to watch in the next 12 months as they expand to cover more cities. With such a simple yet clever idea, Trivop.com is a site bound to be copied as well.

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June 12, 2007

Hotel customers at the receiving end

If consumer reports are any indication (as reported by Travelmole), travelers are not riding boomtime. While hotels are enjoying continuing positive indicators (healthy travel market and sturdy demand for rooms), the bargain hunters are not necessarily reaping returns on their intensive deal-hunting. A few interesting findings -


- Majority of respondents (70%) scored a freebie upgrade or rate reduction by haggling face-to-face! Guests who checked in without advance reservations saved more than those who had advance bookings!!
- As previously reported, luxury hotels are still charging an arm and a leg for what's by now a universal, basic demand - Internet access!.
- Budget chains are not necessarily living up to their value either with the least expensive ones giving their guests a poor night's sleep.

While most budget hotels do a good job of providing value, surveys like these show there's room for improvement in basic amenities . Consumers seem to judge their satisfaction by that yardstick rather than ipod-filled rooms and other fancy frills. Also, when will hotels wake up to the fact that 70% of America enjoys broadband and are not about to renounce the web when they check into their plush hotel rooms! Not having online access might seem like a good excuse to truly enjoy a vacation but most folks take comfort in being connected, one way or the other.

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June 11, 2007

Seniors - revving up travel #s

An emarketer report on travel highlights the growing clout of a group that has been around but somehow never got its due in the interaction-focussed, heavily youth-oriented travel sites of today.

Seniors show some serious good #s in the report. A quarter of visits to travel sites according to a Feb 2007 Hitwise report were comprised of those 55 and older. With time, savings, spending power and a new web-aware attitude, seniors are more adventurous and have a different outlook than those who spent their sunset days in quiet retirement years ago. Coming back to the youth, it's the really young (16-24) who are powering a healthy spike in international travel, making up 20% of visits according to a UNWTO report. How do travel companies go all out to market to groups outside the general market (the very young and the very young at heart!). Perhaps, websites with tabs for each lifestyle group (special events, activities and travel tips) are a start. More of outdoors, adventure tours and cultural exploration and less of stereotyped "golf and grass" vacations?

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June 06, 2007

Customized travel gets a new name

"Bespoke" travel is a fancy name for an old concept - customized travel packages for those with the spirit and willingness to enjoy unusual experiences and special requests (at an extra cost). Canada's Globe and Mail calls it a trend among the well-heeled. The price tag for the inticate planning and personal attention to the vacationer's plans can range from $300 a day to much more.

In today's global supervillage, travel has become a journey of unique experiences even for the non-millionnaires. It's becoming increasingly important for people to enjoy their much-deserved getaways and hard-earned breaks with an element of the unusual. Perhaps, hotels will take the cue and bundle room stays with unique, edgy activities that reflect the culture and character of a destination. How often have you heard people saying "I didn't see much as I was staying at the hotel most of the time." The hotel will need to change from a symbol of assurance (boring sameness and uniformity of service) to being an integral part of the adventure!


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June 04, 2007

Freeing email from abuse ....

No electronic communication medium is more widely used, abused or maligned than email. At once a superstar and a pariah of the Internet world, email has long lived in the sinister shadow of countless fraudsters and their thriving underground factory of scams. From spamming and phishing to pornography and international bank transfers, email's reputation crisis has gotten out of hand.

An end to email woes might be in sight if reports of a new technology are anything to go by. Domainkeys Identified email (backed by Yahoo, Cisco, sendmail and PGP among others) uses "cryptographically secure digital signatures" to determine if a message is legitimate. Hopefully, the new technology will do to email what secure technologies and authentication services did to e-commerce!

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ABOUT ME

  • President and COO of Apple Core Hotels- a chain of 5 midtown Manhattan hotels offering value and comfort in the heart of the city.

    Member of the board of Directors - Hotel Association of New York.



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