VibeAgent (we interviewed Adam Healey, the founder, on indieHotelier #36) seems to be picking up steam in the world of travel sites. They're now the the 5th largest hotel site online in terms of bookable inventory. TechCrunch recently dubbed them..TripAdvisor 2.0. And, I hear they're about to launch a spiffy new map application. You might want to check them out if you haven't already.
Leveraging UGC
Very few hotels exploit the recent explosion of user generated content and social networking...not sure why. I've talked about this quite a bit on recent indieHotelier shows. Why not put links to your Tripadvisor reviews, Flickr photo's, etc., right on your home page, or the reservations page? It does two things...demonstrates transparency (important in earning trust) and starts/perpetuates conversations. You need both to do well.
indieHotelier Features Diva Marketing Tomorrow
Toby Bloomberg, president of Atlanta-based Bloomberg Marketing and author of the Diva Marketing Blog, joins us on the show tomorrow for perspective and comment on what's brewing in the hospitality world of social media and marketing.
Join us for the live show on Talkshoe at 11 AM EDT.
Luggage Lessons
A recent lost luggage experience with Express Jet reminded me why most companies fail when things go badly. First and foremost, they don't recognize the grand opportunity inherent with all mistakes...the ability to surprise people with immediate and unexpected results. Instead, they think average...offer an apology, maybe a credit voucher and try to do just enough to get the complainer out of your hair for the least amount of trouble and money. These are the companies that miss the point...and the chance to be much better than everyone else...and to win.
The key to all customer complaints, screw-ups and problems is to shock people with actions they don't expect (in a good way, of course). If you do anything less than that, you're mediocre. Here's more insight why it rarely happens...
Accepting Responsibility- Most employees are taught to apologize. Very few are given the latitude to say "it's our fault". Apologizing is important...it's expected. But, accepting responsibility is vital...it demonstrates a genuine interest to solve the problem and make someone happy...and, it's rarely done at the front line.
Front-Line Ownership- Almost every organization sets-up rules and policies which get in the way of efficiently solving problems at the point of customer contact, which is precisely when and where customers want action. Often, a lack of investment and trust in the staff sets-up a fear-based bureaucracy with layers of supervisory approvals necessary to get anything outside of the rule book accomplished.
Improv and Immediacy- Most employees are trained to follow rules and scripts which are developed around prescribed scenarios. The problem is that most customer issues don't follow the script...they happen because somewhere, someone colored outside the lines. And then, the system fails because there's no prescribed answer and time is needed to obtain blessings from bosses to move off the script. Customers don't have time or the patience for your system...they go somewhere else.
There are two objectives every company should put at or near the top of their strategic plan...1. Hospitality First- infuse your organization with a hospitality attitude...give people what they want, and deliver it in a meaningful way; and, 2. Trust- Allow every front-line team member to solve every problem. Find a way to do these two things well, and you will be way ahead of everyone else.
Oh...and as far as my luggage, After a dozen phone calls, three e-mails, two trips to get things I desperately needed, and a debate with the Albuquerque GM about receipts and audit policy (long story), my carry-on bag arrived a week later, albeit in a pretty rough state. The hassle factor is alive and well...just like I expected.
links for 2007-08-01
Sheep and Chicks
Last Friday's indieHotelier show with Patricia Brusha, A Couple of Chicks Marketing, turned out to be quite lively. She did a terrific job leading us through various social media topics including blogging, Facebook and the importance of conversations and two-way interaction with your guests. Her partner, Alicia Whalen, captured the program quite well in her blog (better than the show notes).
Click on the logo to go to the indieHotelier website. Or, on the podcast button to download or listen to the show now.
Podcast Recap
Alicia Whalen did a great job of blogging a recap of yesterday's live indieHotelier show with special guest Patricia Brusha. We had a great time discussing the finer points of social media, blogging, etc.,and what hotels are doing (or should be doing) to engage with their guests. I'll release the show by Monday. But, in the meantime, you should definitely check-out Alicia's post.
Oh, and as always, if you can't wait for Monday...you can listen to the raw version of the show on Talkshoe.
More Social Media on indieHotelier Tomorrow...
We continue our social media journey with special guest, Patricia Brusha, Co-Founder and COO of A Couple of Chicks, an internet marketing firm specializing in the hospitality industry. Patricia recently authored two fantastic articles on this subject, Sheep 2.0 and How Facebook will Impact The Summer Tourism Season. So, we'll start there...and see where it takes us.
Join the live show on Friday, July 27th, 11 AM EDT via Talkshoe.
Hospitality First
Technology is by most accounts wonderful. But, it also changes the game…radically. Internet and device advances have leveled the playing field and lowered the barriers to entry in almost every category. And along the way, the power of influence and control has shifted from the company…to the buyer. It’s easier than ever to create something remarkable and bring it to market. It’s also easier than ever for your product or service to be duplicated, made more cheaply or worse…obsolete. All of this happens at lightening speed, creating an environment of market confusion…lots of similar products. Just look at what’s going on in the new “lifestyle” hotel category or computers and pda’s. And, while most are so busy trying to outdo the other guy with better design, bigger buildings, more pixels, etc., we’re forgetting what most people really want…to be engaged.
Being different and remarkable isn’t a matter of having
the best product. It’s a matter of delivering the best experience. And, it’s
the delivery part that most companies don’t do so well…because they choose not
to. It’s easier to focus on the physical aspects of anything…once you make the
part, the building, the drapery, it’s done. No training, coaching and
counseling necessary. But, while design and function are important, the
delivery is often what makes an experience so interesting and memorable…or, when
executed poorly, doomed for failure. The artful and meaningful delivery of
anything, i.e., hospitality, requires engagement…people interacting with each
other. And, that’s complicated…lots of emotion to manage and many moving parts.
There are personalities to deal with, illness, varying degrees of aptitude and
a myriad of other issues out of your control…on both sides. No doubt about
it…it’s the toughest part of business. But, if you get this part right, you
win…every time. That’s what gets talked about, and, more often than not, that’s
what people want.
Your job (and mine) is to bring to light how important hospitality is to any business…to show examples of longstanding organizations who win because of people and service, not because they make something that’s faster or cheaper. Our job is to introduce ideas, processes and principles which bring hospitality into focus. Here are a couple of things you can start doing now to get ahead…
- Stop selling (what you make), and focus on the person
you’re dealing with…on the phone, at the counter, in line or whatever. Ask
engaging questions (other than, how are you?), make a kind remark about
something they’re wearing, etc. Show them you’re interested in them first, then
worry about what they want on their sandwich. It doesn’t need to take ten
minutes…thirty seconds will do. If your company doesn’t allow an extra thirty
seconds, find a new one.
- Listen and observe…everyone gives clues about what they want…if they’re in a hurry, had a bad day, etc. But, too often, we’re so interested in getting through our own script, we fail to pick-up the clues and to improvise…to take it where the customer wants it to go. Listen well.
Engaging with people is your best chance to be different. But, as is often the case with the best things, it’s the hardest part to get right. So, most companies fail. There’s your chance.
Maestro
This week's indieHotelier is up. Warren Dehan and Shelly Edwards of Northwind Maestro lead us in a stimulating conversation about the impact of social media, web 2.0 and the increasing use of the internet on hotels and their guests. We cover some interesting ground including the future of call centers and travel agent services and how hotels are challenged to maintain price integrity with so many distribution channels.
Click on the logo to go to the indieHotelier website. Or, on the podcast button to download the MP3 and listen right now.
Trivop
A new indieHotelier show is up.
This week's program features Thomas Owadenko, founder and CEO of the world's first video guide for hotels, Trivop. He gives us a behind the scenes look, including the history and inspiration behind this new new travel service.
Click on the logo to go to the indieHotelier website. Or, on the podcast button to download the MP3 and listen now.
Loden Vancouver
A nice use of blogging by the GM of the new Loden Vancouver, to keep interested people up to speed with pre-opening progress.
Thanks to VacantReady for the pointer.
indieHotelier Schedule Change
This week's live show has been moved from Friday, 11 AM EDT to Friday at 5 PM EDT. We'll be talking with Thomas Owadenko, CEO and Founder of Trivop, the first video guide for hotels. Should be interesting as we continue our social media journey.
Visit Talkshoe to join the conversation or just listen in.
The Middle
Seth writes...
"low expectations are dangerous, because if you fly too low, you're invisible. Worse, when people expect little of you, they often don't bother listening at all.
So most of the time, you're challenged with this: high expectations that must be beat."
This is precisely why I think there is so much opportunity in the 3-4 star level in our business. It takes a tremendous act of brilliance for someone to rave about their Peninsula stay...expectations are already so high. On the other end is the highway motel, cutting costs just to stay alive...no expectation of brilliance there. And sadly, on the rare occasion that it happens...no one seems to care. In the middle, is a place where expectations are well...in the middle. Treat me well, and I'm happy. Make a few mistakes, and I'm still happy. But, do more....and I'm your evangelist.
Some people call the middle average. I call it a great opportunity...to be the best in your town, on your block or exit. The middle is a place that typically has enough resources to step on the hospitality gas...they just choose not to. All it takes to get people talking is passion, creative thinking and know-how....and the willpower to get started.
Marketing 101
Peel back the layers of your current marketing/strategic plan. If you can't find these points in there...please redo.
- Understand what your guest wants (listen and engage)...and give it to them
- Surprise people through meaningful delivery (hospitality)
- Chop Wood...focus on flawless execution, improve...then, repeat
If you do these things really well, spreading the word will almost take care of itself.
Yes...it's this simple.
Credit...inspired by this post.
links for 2007-07-10
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Spreadsheets, articles, guides and other resources to make your work life easier
Wiki Power
If you don't know what a wiki is...watch the video below for a really simple and fun explanation. Then, go to Chrispitality for a great hospitality example. Here's another one listing all of the things to do in different cities around the world if you only have 2 days to see the sights.
Here are just a few ways, hospitality professionals could make use of a wiki...
- Community Recruiting- Build a site for your town, county or island with all of the hospitality jobs available. Totally fluid and up to date.
- Workforce Resources- Again...for the benefit of your local hospitality workforce...everything they need to know from training, certifications, education, social gatherings, what to do after work, room mate searches, etc.
- Committee Projects- Safety, Employee Picnics or virtually any collaborative projects within your organization.
Oh, and all of this is pretty inexpensive. Here's a free wiki website maker called wetpaint.
New Marketing
It's been said about marketing that you are what gets published...and then talked about. At no time has this been more important to the hoteliers than now...for two reasons, control and access.
In the not so distant past, companies controlled their content (propaganda) via ads, advertorials, testimonials and to some degree, editorials written about them. Websites, cd's, sales presentations and brochures were the company mouthpiece to hype their offerings. And, there wasn't much a customer could do to challenge any of it...except maybe talk to a neighbor or colleague. And, even though digital cameras and video have been around for years, there was no practical way to share any of the creations...no social communities...no way to connect. Even though people had a story to tell, there wasn't a place or an easy process to make it available. Technology has changed all of that. Affordable, high-bandwidth internet connections have led to an outpouring of information. Sites like flickr, yelp and youtube have created a firestorm of user perspectives. Companies are no longer in control of the message. And, that's the part of web 2.0 that should get your attention.
Now, you can either see this new marketing as a threat, and continue to go down the traditional paths of publishing content, hoping to outflank and outshout a fast emerging group of individuals. Or, you could do the smart thing and join-in on the fun. You could find ways to initiate, participate and leverage conversations. You could build relationships with both your current and would be customers. You could engage with raging fans as well as complainers. You could learn from people that matter the most.
Chris shares some thoughts on what hoteliers can do to get started.
My point is...just get started.
Socializing
As a follow-up to my last post...
Erin points us to the Suites at 1 King West which proudly boasts TripAdvisor reviews on their website, although not on the home page.
Starwood Lobby is a new blog featuring "unofficial" reviews (are there really any official ones?) of Starwood properties. Interesting that to date there are no negative write-ups...just some mild issues sprinkled here and there.
Connecting
There's been a lot of discussion about connecting with guest networks, transparency, etc. Yet, I haven't seen one hotel website that posts a link to their TripAdvisor results...or to Yelp or Digg on their front page. I haven't come across anyone actively monitoring audio, blog or video channels and engaging with people who generate relevant content. I wonder why? Are we afraid of some dirty laundry that may be hanging out there? Are we still focused on publishing our own message?
Change is in the air...or, on the net. That's where people go to share and get information. And, the numbers are growing super fast. Better get there.