Archive for the ‘European Destinations’ Category

Social media and the self-proclaimed expert

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

I came across this very interesting article on BusinessWeek, and it brings up a good point about social media’s popularity.  Overhype of the importance of Twitter and Facebook accounts, along with the self-proclaimed gurus out there who act like “snake oil salesmen,” to quote the article’s reference.

With so much instantaneous information on Twitter and Facebook, traditional marketing can suffer… promotions within the same company can collide, communication withing a company’s employees breaks down, and I think we’re in the process of bursting the bubble of too much information.   There was a cool Duran Duran song years ago about the media exploding with info overload, and with social media, we’re certainly reaching that point.

Social media also affect productivity of traditional 9-5 workers, who log on several times a day.  Some companies encourage social media as part of the job, but the lines are blurring as to what is part of a job’s scope, and what isn’t.

While my motto is that all good things are best in moderation, with Twitter and Facebook I have seen probably so many PR/Marketing/Communications/Advertising professionals with their main credential being their ability to Tweet amazingly fast, and their ability to have thousands of followers and several hundreds of fans on FB.   However, I hardly find good information through their tweets and their fan pages, plus I can’t find published articles or case studies, so I can’t help but question their “expertise.”

Who benefits from social media, and how are we contributing to a better society in the process?  Is the social media hype just breeding conceited wannabe professionals?

Joining the right collection of hotels

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Take your pick:  Small Luxury Hotels of the World, Preferred Hotels, Luxury Hotels of the World, Relais & Chateaux, Conde Nast Johansens and more.  There are several prestigious collections of properties that are designed to fit your hotel’s needs.

Is the expensive membership worth it from a PR perspective?  I vote yes only when you have done your research as to which hotel family will yield the most benefits.  It’s easy to fall into a box or category, but important to maintain the unique characteristics that make your hotel stand out.  Generally, most hotel collections require a set of standards to be met by your property.  Even if you meet them, sometimes down the road you might find that joining it wasn’t the right fit, and your membership did not yield the expected benefits.  In other cases, you might choose to spend the time to shop around until you find the right hotel collection.

From a PR standpoint, the branding acquired by joining a hotel collection membership can help with recruting additional press inquiries, tours, and other media initiatives. 

Remember, it is also up to you to get the benefits by joining a hotel family, so make sure you do your share of announcements and marketing about your membership to print/web/social media and guests, too.  It is important for you to do your share of the work  in order to get the word out to the right audience.

The new retweet feature

Monday, December 14th, 2009

With the new retweet button on Twitter, I’ve noticed more and more messages going viral, and starting even conversations.   By just clicking on retweet, an updated is immediately viewed by all your followers.

For PR purposes, this is a helpful tool to share good quality information.  However, adding a brief comment to the tweet that helps your communication fit your followers is very effective.  Also remember when you retweet, it eats up some additional characters, so you need to adjust as needed to avoid sending a poor tweet.

New Year’s resolution: luxury travel minus excess

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Prevalent in the news is the topic of luxury, how it was defined just two or three years ago, and if it was just a fad of the early/mid 2000’s.  As we enter a new decade, with many lessons learned through the downturn, and a hope for a gradual yet steady economic recovery, I wonder how luxury will be redefined.

As a hospitality communications professional, I find that luxury is in the memories we create when traveling, and not so much in the amount of money we spend.  In 2004, for instance, hotels were all about comfort and pampering and ridiculous excess packages that left guests with a hefty bill at the end of a long celebrated weekend.

Do guests miss that excess now that they can’t afford it?  Should it be redefined as the trend shifts with the economy?  How will hotels adapt to the changing dynamic of luxury?  Somehow, even in affluence, all things in moderation make sense now. 

Somehow, I think in terms of hotel experiences that personalization, genuine service and thoughtfulness will go much further in offering luxury rather than over-the-top excess that can be viewed as fake and impersonal by guests.

Guest loyalty programs in hotel survivor kits

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Interesting article in the New York Times over the weekend, exploring how hotels are coming up with ways to brand themselves through guest loyalty programs.  A clever solution in these times, as hotels are starting to think outside the box to survive 2010.  

Is the loyalty program for branding, to build business, or maintain business?  Hopefully, it is creative and rewarding enough to do all of these, because hotels who serve the business traveler in particular will need it.

Choosing the right guests to introduce the loyalty program is another story.  Questions to ask often include:  What do my highest paying guests want?  Who is the hotel trying to attract?  Who is likely to return and stay?  Who is worth earning loyalty from? 

Starwood, Intercontinental, Hyatt and Kimpton seem to find that loyalty programs are the way to go as the industry is still in a slump.  Slashing rates is a no-no in 2010, so hotels will continue to throw in more amenities, and strive to personalize service in order to earn loyalty and repeat guests, especially with business travelers.  As business travelers are overall not very brand loyal, the economic downturn has presented a unique opportunity to explore this market segment, and shift its dynamic when it comes to booking a hotel.  This sounds logical as new, exciting loyalty programs sprout.

If you ask me, these loyalty programs must be outstanding to beat out competitors.  With business travel, traditionally at least, rate has usually been the deciding factor for a booking.  However, as most business travelers miss some luxuries in this economy, using loyalty points for upgrades and free breakfasts when applicable, is certainly a reason to be part of the program.

At the end of 2010, it will be really interesting to see how these programs have worked, and if indeed they have been able to succeed in maintaining a loyal guest base.

Hotels: The death of the minibar!

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

I was just traveling this past week, and due to my flight connection schedule had to make an overnight in London’s Sheraton Heathrow.  The hotel was very old, and the rooms are dire need of renovation.  The price of my room was a bargain through Priceline, but as dingy as the room was, the digitized minibar was luxurious: fully stocked with premium snacks, alcoholic beverages, mineral water, etc. 

Nearly all minibars have become digitized to prevent guests from replacing items in the cooler with the grocery store equivelant at a fraction of the price.  I am wondering if the minibar is indeed something that will phase out with the downturn.  It’s not just $5 for a Kit Kat bar, it’s also the fee you pay on top of that that makes it truly outrageous.

However, I was still amazed how the minibar was so well taken care of compared to the condition of my room overall. 

Will the minibar really survive, especially if there are elegant gift shops in hotels that sell a larger variety of snacks, and hotel bars that might offer a better atmosphere for the price?

B&B Trendspotting

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

This past week Michelle Higgins wrote a very interesting article for the Practical Traveler column in the New York Times about B&Bs becoming a guy thing.

Very interesting approach for B&Bs to stand out and become flexible with the market changes.  Kudos to inns and guesthouses for taking on this marcomm challenge and seeing it through.   From a PR angle, B&Bs are really just shaping perception.  It took investments in HDTVs, cable with enhanced sports packages, free Wi-fi, and even Men Only Packages that feature fishing, gold and BBQs. 

B&Bs already appeal to most women.  They are now working towards shaking off the old thinking that most guests associate with B&Bs: tea and sandwhiches, doilies and flowery couches with lace trimmings, and cozy little cloth lavender chairs you can read for hours in.  So, it will be interesting to see how this trends shapes out, what direction it will take, and if indeed it will become mainstream for men’s travel.

Hopefully, B&Bs have already established a social media presence that will assist in this major shift in perception.

Start “Unfriending?”

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Not long ago, I made a prediction that we’re nearing a social media bubble with fans, friends and followers.  In 2007 and 2008, even the better part of 2009, the more friends you had, the better it looked to your network.   Something had to give, though.  I see MSNBC  has finally defined this prediction with one word.

The reason why 668 friends do not look so good anymore is because too many people know about your business, who quite frankly you don’t talk to enough, or anymore.  Let’s face it, not everyone needs to know what you are thinking or doing - it’s a priviledge you provide.  Unfriending provides that control over your network, messages and content.

The same applies to business FB fan pages.  If competitors start stalking your page on FB and becoming fans just to see what you are doing, you have a choice to make.  The key is to monitor what conversations start on a page, or what feedback you’re gaining from your status updates, fan updates, comments, photo albums, etc.

My other favorite word lately in the Twitter sphere, is “hashtags.”  Their purpose is to enable Twitter users to search for tweets by placing a hash # next to a word phrase.  Especially good to know for hotels on Twitter, who want to search competitor’s deals, tweets, and trends.

Beyond overfriending on Facebook

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

As we evolve within FB, the social networking concept also grows.  I’m noticing more people comment or “like” status updates now, and depending on the nature of the update, several comments start conversations that keep going all day.  This is especially true when a friend posts an update that refers to a controversial subject, or a political topic, or declaring that a friend purge is about to happen. 

All interesting stuff, especially when you monitor the conversation and you happen to know some of the friends chipping in their two cents on a topic.  Beyond overfriending, how do you feel when all of a sudden you get friend suggestions and requests from your broader professional network?  I don’t mean people you work with, who generally know what you are up to, but others, such as vendors, or business acquaintances, or simply people in your field who you would only know and trust professionally?

Hmmm… I’m still unsure about that one.  As a PR person, I have an interesting mix of friends in my network that I talk to frequently, from high-school, to grad school, to past colleagues, and even reporters I’ve gotten to know over the years.  That way I generally don’t feel overfriended.  I guess it also depends on the profile you want to have, and if FB is used as a personal PR and marketing tool, instead of purely a place to connect with friends for the sake of sharing small, quirky everyday details.  If FB is clay, you can certainly mold it anyway you want.  That’s part of its attraction to millions across the globe. 

But do I want the same network of people on FB as I have on LinkedIn reading about how I fractured my toe last week, where I took my evening walk, or about my 3-year old’s attempt to a cupcake batter?  Definitely not.

Boutique hotel trends for 2010

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

We’re already noticing the prominent holiday decorations in department stores, the soft Christmas music playing  in the background, all signaling the beginning of another anemic holiday season in terms of consumer spending.

With regards to travel, air fares keep hiking, so holding your breath in hopes to grab a last minute deal is not the way to go.  Holiday surcharges on airfares have increased to $20, and fare costs keep going up.  Let’s not forget the ever so annoying baggage fee that adds to the overall cost of travel.   Already, 2009 taught us many lessons that will carry forward to next year.

Where do hotels fit in?  Unfortunately, the hotel industry has yet to show signs of recovery - forget growth.  Is 2010 the year of the deal?   Will luxury hotels slash their rates to put heads in beds?  Here are some of my own predictions for the boutique/luxury hotel industry:

- I think hotels have learned valuable lessons from this year, and will no longer cut rates to temporarily increase occupancy.  This strategy may seem a good idea in the short term, but in fact it decreased revenue and potential profit.   Especially the luxury hotels that will survive 2010 are not likely to drop rates.  Creating value should be the goal next year.

- PR and marketing budgets are no longer optional.   I’ve been saying this all year!  Invest in your hotel’s brand and start building a new client base.  Those who instinctively cut out PR, sales and marketing budgets may have survived the year, but now what?  They have no plan in place, so as the industry slowly recovers next year, those hotels will be way behind in communicating their brand and building new business.

- Business travel will continue to trim down to only necessary trips.  The 2009 downturn produced a huge opportunity for videoconferencing, and as much as face to face meetings are better, the truth is that we are learning to embrace an online community.  Business boutique hotels in particular will have to find a way to redefine themselves to include new market segments, and enhance the existing business travel segment.  

- Innovation.  For goodness sake, think outside the box.  If you can’t, hire someone who will.  Spend the money to innovate and stand out.   I believe 2010 will be a great year for quirky boutique hotels, or properties who develop a certain niche for their guests.  The word “experience” is no longer enough.  It’s about what stands out and makes sense to the cutting edge traveler who is looking for something new - not necessarily expensive or over the top.

-  Twitter/Facebook.  The hotels who came on board with a social media presence were so smart.  Hopefully, more will join the social media club.  Social networking is becoming a must-have, just like a website is no longer optional.  Using social media to communicate with guests and collecting feedback will be the challenge this year.  How social media are used by hotels will help determine how these networks will evolve and function in the industry.

- Fix your website.  In an SEO era, there’s just no excuse to have dysfunctional site.  Sadly, so many hoteliers have problematic websites and are not aware of it.  Copy is poorly written, the right messages aren’t in place, bad quality photos, reservation system isn’t working well, and the site isn’t optimized.  Terrific hotels, including great boutique hotels will start spending the money to make their sites golden this coming year. 

- Outsource specialized marketing and PR people.  If your P&L can’t absorb the cost of a full-time employee to handle marketing and public relations programs, hire a specialized contractor.  They’re out there, and they can work from anywhere, which is great.  Agencies are another option, but often times, they are much more costly than freelancers, and most times don’t have much time for small hotels.   If your budget is limited, then prioritize the areas that are worthwhile promoting.

- Amenities, enough is enough.  2010 will not be the year to have refreshing linen spray available in every room.  It’s important not to compromise on service, but the extras are not necessarily expected by guests at a time like this.  Prioritizing expenses is important.  Now is the time to focus on re-branding your message, figuring out next steps for your hotel in terms of business. 

Recovery is still months away.  If you set a plan now, and invest in effective and innovative marketing and public relations programs the further ahead your hotel will be come 2011.  The takeaway from this blog post is that marketing and PR budgets are not fluff or optional- they are essential to raising awareness and building business.  Period.