Tuesday, 25 October 2016

Been Busy

It has been a while since an update and the reason has been unprecedented work (from my day job). I promise to be back as soon as possible. Please bear with me.

Wednesday, 12 October 2016

5 Top Airports in Asia you must visit

Asia is commonly known as the budget or backpacking destination of the world. However, for those who have travelled in the region, even occasionally, it should come as no surprise that some of the transportation features and hubs available here are among the best in the world. Take Asian Airports for instance. Not only do they handle the world's largest passenger and cargo traffic, but some of them have been topping the list of best airports in the world for quite a few years now!

This list of the top 5 Asian Airports is collated from the The Skytrax annual rankings. These are based on the impressions of over 13 million flyers from 106 countries. More than 550 airports were included in the survey, which covers 39 service and performance parameters, including facility comfort, location of bathrooms, and the language skills of the airport staff. Not only do our Asian airports score high on all the essentials, they also have some pretty interesting additions of their own that will make visiting them a worthwhile experience. Without further ado, here goes the list:

https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6622688
# 5 - Central Japan International Airport
The Chubu Centrair International Airport is a D-shaped international airport that resides on a manmade island. Domestic flights are handled on the northern side of the airport, while international flights are handled on the southern side. It serves as a hub for all Japan Airlines and ANA. Among the noteworthy features of this airport is the 1,000-foot-long sky deck where passengers can watch ships sail into Nagoya Port. There's also a traditional Japanese bathhouse where you can have a relaxing soak while watching the sunset over the bay. But there's something about this airport that will warm the heart of the Green Brigade as well. The Centrair airport is built with a number of environmental protection measures. The artificial island itself was shaped like the rounded letter "D" so that sea currents inside the bay will flow freely. Its shores were partially constructed with natural rocks and sloped to aid sea life forms to set up colonies. During the construction a species of little tern occasionally came, so a part of the island was selected and set aside to aid nesting!

By Ken'ichi at English Wikipedia
# 4 - Hong Kong International Airport, Hong Kong
Hong Kong International Airport is the main airport in Hong Kong. It is located on the artificial island of Chek Lap Kok, which resulted in the colloquial name of Chek Lap Kok Airport. It is an important regional trans-shipment center and serves as a gateway to China. HKIA is an important contributor to Hong Kong's economy, with approximately 65,000 employees.
That doesn't mean it offers its visitors any less! Visitors and travelers ccan choose to play 9 or 18 holes of golf at the GreenLive AIR or at GreenLive AIR indoor golf simulator. They can also choose to watch the latest movies in multiple languages at the state-of-the-art IMAX Theatre (2D and 3D enabled!) And at the i-Sports section they can indluge in various sports like soccer, basketball, golf, boxing, skiing, car racing, shooting thanks to some awesome sports simulators.

By 梓設計 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
# 3 - Tokyo Haneda International Airport
Haneda, which is the fourth-busiest airport in the world is also known for its service efficiency, cleanliness and shopping options. But there are several typically cool features that you aren't likely to find in any other airport in the world. Consider these, Terminal 2 has a permanent art exhibition featured in a lounge-like setting with plush seating. Aviation-themed panels and model airplanes are on display in the TIAT Sky Road, a corridor that links Tokyo Pop Town, Festival Plaza and the observation decks on 5F. You can also try your hand at piloting an aircraft in a real flight simulator! You can pray at the airport's own Shinto Japanese shrine in Terminal 1.

T1 is also home to Juveniland Tokyo where you can experience what playtime was like before video games were invented! You can actually play with some of the antique and vintage toys on display. For those with pets that need pampering (small dogs, cats and other pets) there is a Pet Hotel in T1. Finally the Haneda Airport also has its own memorial stamp. It is a cool little reminder of your journey that you can receive as a souvenir rubber-stamped paper, or have them stamp your own paper or item. Which other airport can offer such an eclectic collection of things to see, do and experience?

By Ken Eckert - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0
# 2 - Incheon Airport, Seoul
Seoul's Incheon Airport has consistently been not just Asia's, but the World's number 2 Airport! Located on an island just outside the South Korean Capital, this airport's accolades include being the world's cleanest airport as well as the best international transit airport. Apart from a  plethora of dining and shopping options, the Incheon airport boasts of an indoor golf course, spas, private sleeping rooms, an ice skating rink, a casino, several indoor gardens as well as a Korean Culture Museum! A number of cultural performances also enthrall travelers on a regular basis.

Coming to efficiency, airport authorities claim that average departure and arrival takes 19 minutes and 12 minutes respectively, as compared to worldwide average of 60 minutes and 45 minutes respectively, ranking it among of the fastest airports in the world for customs processing. Incheon International Airport also claims that it has only a 0.0001% baggage mishandling rate! That's efficiency for you!

 
By David., Public Domain
# 1 - Singapore Changi Airport
It is no surprise to find Singapore's famed Changi Airport at the number 1 position. After all, it has been here for the past three years in a row! Not only is Changi Airport Asia's best airport, it is also the Best Airport in the World! No mean feat considering the size of the island nation! Since the days of Terminal 1, visitors and transit passengers have constantly praised this airport for its architecture, convenience, facilities and luxurious amenities. The airport continues to raise the bar for all airports worldwide.

Sample this: Terminal 1 hosts the World-famous Kinetic Sculpture called Kinetic Rain, a Cactus Garden with over 40 varieties of cacti and succulents on display, a Swimming Pool with a Jacuzzi as well as a Waterlily garden. Raising the bar further is Terminal 2 with a light & sound enabled Enchanted Garden, an entertainment deck filled with XBox 360s and Kinect stations to movie theatres, an Orchid Garden with a colorful collection of rare orchids and a sunflower garden with 500 bright yellow flowers bring cheer to weary and expectant travelers!

Not to be outdone, T3 hosts a Butterfly Garden that is home to over 1,000 butterflies, Installation art like "Daisy" by Christian Moeller, The world's tallest indoor airport slide and a wine and spirits duplex store for a heightened, spirit-shopping experience. Truly, this airport is an experience in itself and worth visiting for that reason alone!

So there you have it - a definitive list of the best airports in Asia. We can surely take pride in the fact that our home continent has some of the best airports in not just the region, but the world as well! Even airports in the more developed parts of the world have a long way to go in order to catch up.


Monday, 10 October 2016

The truth about Global Distribution Systems

Global Distribution Systems, Travelport, Amadeus, Sabre

Not many of us, even frequent travelers, know much about what happens when we book an airline ticket. Irrespective of the airline or destinations you book a ticket for, what your online portal or travel agent is using in the background is what is commonly known as a Global Distribution System.

According to Wikipedia, “A Global Distribution System (or GDS) is a network operated by a company that enables automated transactions between travel service providers (mainly airlines, hotels and car rental companies) and travel agencies. Travel agencies traditionally relied on GDS for services, products & rates in order to provision travel-related services to the end consumers. A GDS can link services, rates and bookings consolidating products and services across all three travel sectors: i.e., airline reservations, hotel reservations, car rentals.

GDS is different from a computer reservations system, which is a reservation system used by the service providers (also known as vendors). Primary customers of GDS are travel agents (both online and office-based) to make reservation on various reservation systems run by the vendors. GDS holds no inventory; the inventory is held on the vendor's reservation system itself. A GDS system will have real-time link to the vendor's database. For example, when a travel agency requests a reservation on the service of a particular airline company, the GDS system routes the request to the appropriate airline's computer reservations system. This enables a travel agent with a connection to a single GDS to choose and book various flights, hotels, activities and associated services on all the vendors operating in the same route who are part of that GDS network.”

Considering that there are so many airlines, hotels and car rental companies, it might come as a surprise that there are merely a handful of GDS companies. The market is dominated by just four: TravelPort, Amadeus, Sabre and Pegasus. However, some of the all of these also have a customer facing website. There’s really not much you can do on it except to check if your ticket is really confirmed or not or to view your itinerary. Only ViewTrip goes a little further to offer Passport and Visa information, Local Things to see and do as well as relevant travel advice. However they are worth checking out, if only for a peek into the system that runs global travel.







Thursday, 6 October 2016

5 reasons why mobile is critical to tourism marketing success

Mobile marketing, tourism digital marketing

It was in 2014 that mobile marketing became a mainstream marketing tactic. In 2015, it consolidated its position and started getting more preference (and advertising money). However, it is only in 2016 that mobile marketing has firmly come into its own. Nowhere is this more evident than in the tourism and destination marketing category.
In this post, we will attempt to understand how the humble mobile has come to become ubiquitous in the tourism marketing industry.

The possibilities of personalization
No other device is as personal as the mobile. For the majority of us, it is the first device we look at when we wake up and the last device we use before we go to bed. Through the day it dominates our life with constant updates, calls, messages, chats etc. It would not be an understatement to say that very few people can live without their mobile devices.

However, if you look beyond the near complete domination of our lives, you will notice that no other device is as personalized as your mobile. You have the ability to customize the home screen, add caller tunes to distinguish your callers, store your photos and videos, use apps that are meaningful to you and even link all your social media accounts to it all the time! What this personalization means for marketers is that it gives them a closest-to-reality picture of the real you. One peek into your mobile will help them identify and present options that resonate with you. And guess what happens when you get such options time and gain? Of course you succumb!

The rise of the ‘moment’
Mobile is truly instant. When you look for directions, or a restaurant, or even your friends, you are looking for them near wherever you happen to be at that point in time. Most searches have moved from generic queries to instant queries about the next few minutes. Most activity searches have moved from generic activities to activities near you. Because of the immense convenience it offers, users are more than happy to share their personal information in exchange for immediately useful information. Marketers can harness this to deliver custom services at specific moments in time.

Location, location, location
Think of the number of apps on your mobile device that ask for your location information in order to offer you the best results. The taxi apps need that information to find and send you cabs nearest to you. The food apps ask for that information to identify specific restaurants or cuisines closest to you. Even e-commerce apps ask for your address or location information in order to estimate the time to delivery! When consumer behavior is moving in this direction, should marketers be far behind?

Tourism marketers should include location information in every aspect of their online and mobile communications. With the right kind of tagging, it becomes easier for consumers to find and use that information – leading to greater visits and increased spends.

New lease of life for email marketing
There once was a time when every digital campaign worth its salt included an email marketing campaign. But as social channels arrived and people started spending more time on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and the like, email became less dominant. But does it have to be that way? Consider this: Nearly everyone who owns a smart phone has an email app enabled on it. This makes reaching out to them over email as instantaneous as say any other social channel. The mobile has actually resurrected email marketing by putting it right in the pocket of the consumer, 24/7. Use it wisely and you can gain incremental returns from it over time.

Free Wifi – the Holy Grail
Probably the one time consumers miss their internet connectivity is when they are travelling. The prohibitive roaming charges by telecom operators are just one reason. However, savvy marketers who are able to offer free Wifi can actually earn the gratitude and loyalty of these internet-starved travelers resulting in greater usage and repeated usage of their destination. Consumers will happily trade their email address, phone number and even a pay-with-a-tweet/post in return for temporary or longer term access to Wifi. And if your destination includes cafes, restaurants, libraries, museums etc, offering free Wifi should necessarily be a part of your digital strategy.

So there you have it. Just 5 of the many reasons why mobile marketing is critical for tourism marketers. Use these wisely and you will earn the gratitude and interest (not to mention business) of travelers to your destination.


Wednesday, 5 October 2016

Book an A380 Aircraft every time you fly

Fly A380

Most airline travel booking websites offer a multitude of options. You can filter by origin and destination airports, preferred airlines, class of flight, number of stopovers, lowest price etc. None of them however tell you up-front what type of aircraft you will be flying in. Until you are halfway through the booking process and go through the flight details link in detail. But that is about to change with the launch of a new website that caters exclusively to the A380.

Why is this important?
The A380 is not just the biggest passenger aircraft in operation. It has a host of other features that make traveling in it a true experience of a lifetime. Consider these: Quieter cabins, better leg room and comfortable features like double beds and spas! The catch: only 13 airlines offer A380 flights and the travel is restricted to about 55 cities worldwide.

The website exclusively caters to those who want to fly on A380s. Never before was this option available to most commercial travelers. Set up by the parent manufacturing company, Airbus, the logic is understandable. The site makes it easier to search for A380 specific routes and destinations. You are guided to a regular booking site to make the actual booking though. The website also provides a page with additional information about the A380 and a social wall featuring social chatter about the A380 as well. Interesting effort!


So the next time you are travelling to a destination that the A380 flies to you can check this site out. I know I will. Sounds like a filter that may soon catch on? Your guess is as good as mine! 

Saturday, 1 October 2016

5 ways influencers actually help your tourism brand

Influencer marketing for tourism

In earlier posts, we've seen how influencers have become an important part of tourism digital marketing efforts and  how you can reach out to engage with them. Today, we will take a look at the actual and tangible ways in which social media influencers can help grow your tourism or travel brand. The fundamental reason to reach out to social media influencers is well established - they have a unique and popular take on nice topics and enjoy a certain amount of clout in the online space. So reaching out to them has a very good justification. In addition to the bigger picture, here are some specific ways in which engaging with influencers can help.

1. Peer recommendations
Most followers of influencers follow them due to their own interest. As such, they view the influencer as someone who is a peer or a trusted friend. They follow the social feed of the influencer in order to gain access to curated and personal information, knowledge or entertainment. Hence, anything that the influencer recommends (in a natural, honest manner) serves as a positive reinforcement of your brand and its products/services. The more specific the recommendation, the better!

2. Influencer created content
While your brand may be creating, curating and collecting content on a regular basis, collaborating with influencers will give you more unique content you can use. Most influencers, especially in the travel and tourism verticals, prefer to experience the brand or destination first-hand. This will allow them to create blogs, photos, videos and other multimedia posts which are personalized and incorporate their unique perspective. This is something that can prove to be invaluable to the brand.

3. User generated content
Having your influencer promote a contest (centered around your brand) to their followers is a great way to not only encourage participation, but also to get hold of relevant user generated content. When the reward is a personalized travel experience, you can be sure that the number of participants will rapidly grow - as will the amount of usable content centered around your brand. Rather than using generic gifts and giveaways, it is better to offer brand experiences to winners. This will weed out the contest junkies while giving you high quality content.

4. Promotions and discounts
Giving your influencers the opportunity to offer their readers/followers with relevant promotions and discounts is a great way to create engagement. Not only does the influencer get the opportunity to reward their followers' loyalty - your brand also get deeply integrated with their audience reach. These promotions and discounts can be used in a multitude of ways. Probably the most effective are time-sensitive discounts which ensure that any unsold inventory you have is quickly disposed!

5. Newsletter Audience
Most influencers who have a blog have the ability to offer a newsletter service through subscription. Getting your brand message integrated into these newsletters gives you yet another way to capitalize on the reach of your influencers. Most subscribers read through the newsletters at their own pace which makes them ideal for reinforcement messages which are not time-sensitive.

These are just some of the tangible ways in which influencers can help your tourism brand reach a larger and more relevant audience. However remember the basic tenets of influencer marketing like allowing them their own tone of voice, giving them relevant inputs and rewarding their followers and you stand to reap great benefits. As digital platforms evolve and more come up every day you need to experiment in order to stay relevant. It is best to plan this as an activity for the longer term, not just as a one off to realize its full potential.