All about family travel and family vacations at bargain travel deals
- tips and tricks to save

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 holiday bargains for true or have
catches hidden?
REMEMBER YOUR LAST CONVERSATION WITH THAT family
relative who couldn’t 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 1000’s of sites selling
internet travel besides big hotel brands and branded distribution sites
don’t 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,
there’s 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 - that’s 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 shop—65 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 model—sell 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% “margin” 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 haven’t 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
About
the Author
None
Written by: yatin patel
|