Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Wednesday, 04 April 2007

World Travel & Tourism Climbs to US$ 7 Trillion in 2007

World Travel & Tourism is expected to generate in excess of US$7 trillion in 2007, rising to over US$13 trillion over the coming decade according to the World Travel & Tourism Council's (WTTC) Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) research, sponsored by Accenture and prepared by Oxford Economics.

The new TSA results show strong performance for Travel & Tourism Demand in 2007, growing at a rate of 3.9 per cent. This forecast points to a mature but steady phase of growth for World Travel & Tourism in the short and medium term, averaging 4.3 per cent per annum, between 2008 and 2017.

Some findings summarised from the report are:

  • The US is still in number one position accounting for US$1,689,3 billion this year
  • China is going to gain ground and grow at almost 10% per annum over the next 10 years
  • By 2017 the Russian Federation will enter the top 10 countries
  • The world’s highest performers are Montenegro, China and India
  • Other high performers are Croatia, Romania, Namibia

No mention of South Africa… we ought to be there!

2007 US Business Travel Awards

The 2007 Business Travel Awards aren't based on a reader poll or an empirical ranking a la Consumer Reports. Instead, it's chooses companies that do a great job of serving the "road warrior" --and the CFO. Take a look at these award winners and the stories behind them:

  • Best Airline Value: JetBlue Airways
  • Best Budget Hotel Value: Microtel
  • Best Midprice Hotel Value: Hilton Garden Inn
  • Best Upscale Hotel Value: W Hotels
  • Best New Hotel Brand: Hotel Indigo
  • Best Car Rental Value: Enterprise Rent-a-Car
  • Best Site: Booking Buddy
  • Best Blog: Ellipses
  • Best Rewards: Rapid Rewards

Tuesday, 03 April 2007

Social networks for KLM passengers and business travellers

Loyalty programmes are invariably about a company trying to create a relationship with a customer, with the primary motivations being to secure repeat business and cross-sell services. That’s so web 1.0. These days, the objective is not so much to form a company-customer relationship as to facilitate customer-customer networking relationships with the company providing the context.

There is probably no industry in which loyalty programmes are so widespread as travel, so when a major airline starts trying to get social networks working for its frequent flyers, it may be the first sign of a significant evolution. Not surprisingly it is the Dutch, who gave us the compact cassette and the CD, who were the first to move in this innovative direction.

KLM is the first airline in the world to build online social networking communities for its customers. Aimed primarily at frequent business travelers, and currently centered on specific destinations and activities, KLM’s communities connect people with common travel interests. Its first two destination communities, KLM Club Africa and KLM Club China, and its first activity community, Flying Blue Golf Club, are at the moment available only by invitation.





The benefit of belonging is that members of the networks can get to meet and share experiences with people working in similar markets, facilitating connections that might otherwise never happen. Members also get access to services such as translation, travel advice, or legal assistance provided by KLM business partners. And the networks are not exclusively online: face-to-face networking events take place regularly in he destination zones, as well as back home in the Netherlands.

Members of the golfing network (ever meet anyone from the Netherlands who doesn’t love golf?) can use the community to create profiles of their playing ability, arrange to play with other members who are going to be in the same place, and even use frequent flyer miles to pay for games or buy golf equipment.

It is a fairly bold move by KLM to try to unite its customers. Most airlines prefer to keep customers at bay with a divide-and-conquer mentality. But KLM has a good product and an already very loyal customer base. What KLM has done is leverage and lock in that loyalty not by offering “me-too” benefits like more comfortable seats or better in-flight entertainment, but by offering a unique service of potentially great personal value which other airlines might find harder to mimic.

In a similar vein, a new company called PairUp is offering to help travelers (on any airline) to connect face-to-face with fellow travelers with whom they may already have an online connection. PairUp members uploading their contacts list (from Outlook, or whatever their e-mail or contact management tool is). When they schedule a flight or participation in a conference, they put their flight and accommodation information in the system.

The system shows them people in their list whose uploaded travel details coincide with theirs, and lets them pick the contacts that they are interested in getting together with. The system is not exclusively for use by vaguely connected people – it can be used as a coordination tool by colleagues who need to share travel plans.



PairUp also provides a version of its tool to event managers, allowing convention organizers to offer a pairing-up service directly to people who register for their event. Anyone who has participated in major conferences where you struggle to find out who is attending, then battle to track down the people you want to talk with, can see the benefits of such a tool.