Travel Bargains!
There are many ways to not only save money when travelling, but also save money and get a better hotel room, fancier cruise, newer rental car and other amazing bargains. Read about them here and save a lot on your next vacation!
Online Travel Bargains
Are travel bargains for real?
REMEMBER YOUR LAST CONVERSATION WITH THAT family relative
who couldnÕt talk enough of how much they saved on their last
holiday package deal? Or that colleague bragging about his
$59 round- trip flight to Las Vegas and his stay in a 5-star
hotel at $89 a night? Have you found yourself staring wistfully
(and suspiciously) at a $399 package deal for two for Hawaii?
Just because your email seems flooded at times with seemingly
impossibly priced travel offers, and you find Internet search
engines are flooded with 1000Õs of sites selling internet
travel besides big hotel brands and branded distribution sites
donÕt discount them all.
Who can you count on?
Just four or five years ago, when you looked for travel discounts
you could choose between a travel agent, the airline offices
and the hotels themselves, and maybe, if you were lucky, some
travel guru down the street. Today, thereÕs a massive range
of things you can do online, and a lot of them can save significant
amounts of money.
The reality is:
¥ Nine out of 10 online travelers now have some history of
shopping for travel online, and nearly 15% of all Americans
purchased travel online last year - thatÕs five times the
penetration rate of 1998. (PhoCusWright Consumer Travel Trends
Survey)¥ Nearly one-third of online travel buyers say the
Internet was responsible for their travel purchases last year.
¥ In 1998, six million consumers bought travel online in the
U.S. Jump ahead to 2002 when 30 million Americans purchased
travel online in the last year. Half of them only buy their
travel online. (PhoCusWright Consumer Travel Trends Survey)
¥ Online travel bookings exceeded $23 billion in 2001, and
are expected to reach $63 billion by 2005.
¥ Internet bookings in the first three quarters of 2002 accounted
for over 23% of rooms sold in New York, and over 15% in Los
Angeles, Chicago, and San Francisco. Anecdotally, for some
properties, hotel managers are reporting Internet bookings
ranging from 30% to 50% of all room nights in 2002. (Smith
Travel Research and TravelClick)
What does this mean?
This means that online distribution channel is extremely successful
in reaching buyers and buyers are finding it more confirmable
to shop online. They are seeing a broader range of travel
options and variety of products and packages. And its more
likely that consumer wants to control that transaction through
access to more competitive pricing. Pricing is becoming key
factor to determine the sale.
Key factors: Why travelers prefer to book online
¥ Competitive Price
¥ Ability to compare product and Prices
¥ Ability to plan last minute
¥ Availability of Range of options
Online travel shoppers are not very loyal on where they shopÑ65
percent of online travelers do not view themselves as brand-loyal.
As much as they love to shop online and spend their time researching
what suits their needs, they are not loyal to the companies
from which they buy.
The above scenario indicated that the travel suppliers have
no choice but to participate in this online distribution channel.
The suppliers are realizing that the traditional channels
like GDS (Global Distribution System)/travel agent and call
center/reservation office is somewhat inefficient and expensive,
especially when the economy is weak. Ignoring online distribution
channel and concentrating only on traditional distribution
channels will result in lower occupancy, and higher distribution
and operational costs for travel suppliers. As online channels
become more popular among suppliers their participation is
increasing.
How Pricing and Distribution Become Key
9/11 caused a dramatic shift in how consumers booked their
travel. The instability caused a large drop in demand for
airlines, hotels and car rentals leading to ever-lower prices.
This low demand factor forced travel suppliers to introduce
unprecedented discounts. Travel suppliers struggled to sell
seats, rooms, car rentals to a significantly shrunk leisure
and business travel market. Every air seat, room and auto
not booked cost their companies money. Better to sell dirt
cheap than not to sell at all. But how to get the word out?
Smart, proactive suppliers adopted the Wal-Mart business modelÑsell
low and distribute inexpensively and efficiently. But how?
The Internet allowed them to reach consumers, sell inventory
outstrip their less progressive competition. Those suppliers
who had no clear Internet strategy or understanding of how
the Web and online distribution works suffered.
Discount hotel sites attract millions of buyers with their
special rates leading to stratospheric sales through these
channels. They thrive on hoteliers selling their distressed
inventory at a fraction of their normal rates. Occupancy is
the lowest its been in years, hoteliers continue to work with
leading online retailers to move inventory at lower price.
The $6.3 billion in online hotel sales (2002) with are split
roughly evenly between discount agency sites and hotel Web
sites. PhoCusWright projects that around 75% of discount agency
hotel site sales are via the merchant model, where the agency
typically takes a 20-30% ÒmarginÓ on the hotel net rate (instead
of the usual 10% commission). This approach has helped profits
at Expedia and Hotels.com, who have roughly 60% of online
discount agency hotel sales. Travelocity and Orbitz are instituting
the same successful approach. Other notable players thriving
in this arena are Hotwire.com, http://www.hotels-and-discounts.com
, Lodging.com and Travelweb.com.
What is the Future?
Online travel growth will continue to grow in 2003-2005, but
it will slow down year by year compared to the record gains
see so far. However millions of travelers havenÕt yet made
their first purchase so the market is not near saturation.
Technological improvements will soon make it possible to more
easily dynamically package vacation deals including air, hotel
and car leading to even lower prices but higher average sales.
So growth is projected to come from customers buying more,
higher-ticketed products online.
The growth of the online distribution channel will prove beneficial
to the end user when the suppler finds it easier and more
cost-effective to distribute their inventory there than over
the traditional distribution channels. As technology becomes
mature in the online distribution sector, it will become more
effective and user friendly for the Buyers and thus will attract
more Suppliers. Due to its low cost of distribution and emerging
ability to package and cross sell inventory, prices will be
attractive for years to come, until this channel eventually
becomes a commodity.
By Yatin Patel
Published in http://www.siliconindia.com
July 2003
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