"Travel is a category extremely suited to the Internet due to [its] ability to provide efficient access to an extremely wide range of comparable information. Whilst certain areas of the travel industry were initially slow to utilize the benefits of the Internet, it is now one of the undoubted success stories of online, playing an integral part in the arrangements and experience of today's traveler," stated Jonathan Carson, president, International, Nielsen Online.
And it's not just big travel aggregators and discounters like Expedia, Orbitz and Priceline that are benefiting from the trend. It's everyone from your local travel agent to specialty tour companies. Indeed, if you are in the travel business and are not on the Web, your business is probably going nowhere.Optimizing Your Site to Attract the Right Customers
"The Web is a part of doing business now," said Jim Kackley, the general manager at Thomson Family Adventures, a 10-year-old tour operator which was recently named "Best Family Adventure Tour Operator" by National Geographic Adventure. "When I first started in the industry, all your advertising and your lead generation would be done through newspapers and magazines Travel & Leisure, Outside magazine, The New York Times," he recalled. "And you'd spend a lot of money to advertise in those magazines, to get a very low return." But now, thanks to the Web, "you can spend significantly less and get a whole lot more eyeballs looking at your Web site and hopefully ones that are interested in doing your kinds of trips."But just having a Web presence is not enough. To attract qualified leads, people who are likely to purchase a trip from you, you need to create a site that is not only visually attractive and easy to navigate but is properly optimized.
"When we first launched our site [in 1998], our net was rather wide," said Kackley. "And because of that we got a lot of fish in the net that really weren't qualified to do our trips. For example, we would get people getting married and planning a honeymoon and older people without kids. So over the years what we've done is refine the site, through pictures and the wording. As a result, the number of visitors continues to go up, but the number of leads hasn't that substantially, but we're getting more qualified leads." Bicycle Adventures, a 24-year-old bicycle/multi-sport tour operator out of Olympia, Washington, which launched its first Web site around 1997, has also worked hard to tailor its site to its audience, constantly improving the functionality, navigation, design and attractiveness of the site to prospective customers and the major search engines. "We really wanted our Web site to be easy to navigate, and clean, so people who come to the site are able to quickly find what they're looking for," explained Martha Travis, Bicycle Adventure's marketing manager. Bicycle Adventures also prides itself on its pictures (many taken and submitted by customers) and descriptive, engaging copy, which is written in house. And to keep the site fresh, the marketing team updates the home page a couple times a month, to showcase new or upcoming trips and/or specials.LATEST NEWS
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