Technology of the Week – Electronic Market & Travel Industry

6

October

2016

5/5 (1)

Link video group 78: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXX7Ly2r0NY

 

Thomas Cook was was a baptist preacher who lived in the 19th century. In 1841 he made a deal with the Midland Railway to organize a trip for his society. After that, Thomas cook organized a lot of other transportation trips. He became the first recorded travel agent. Without making use of any technology, Thomas Cook organized travels for 165,000 people a year.

Nowadays, we can’t imagine the travel industry without technology. Firms just like Booking and TripAdvisor are online travel agents. Because of these firms, people don’t have to go to a physical store anymore.

TripAdvisor.com

TripAdvisor was founded in 2000. It started as a portal for professional reviews and by now it’s the biggest travel website. They search the cheapest trip for you. You can also write about your experience about a hotel, flight, restaurant, etc. and view comments from others. In this way you will be sure about your choice.

Besides their website, TripAdvisor also have different applications. They have TripAdvisor for both mobile and tablet and three application where you can see different  information about flights, weather and restaurants.

 The biggest strength of TripAdvisor is that they has a strong international presence with 300 million (unique) monthly visitors. Point that are less good are the controversies regarding the validity of the reviews and the chance of theft of email addresses.

Booking.com

Booking is an online accommodation booking website started as a small start-up in 1996 at Amsterdam. Now it has become the world’s number one online booking website. Booking has a similar but different value proposition to TripAdvisor: Booking is mainly focused on the hotels.

In contrast to TripAdvisor, Booking have their own online booking system, where people can directly pay on booking.com. As the biggest online booking website, they’re also able to connect the hotels around the world which is supported by rich resources and information.

Prediction

Because people prefer the cheapest price, the biggest success factor in the future is to build consumer habits and expectations that they will find the cheapest hotels at the right price when using the review sites.

Using the hype cycle, we believe companies like TripAdvisor and Booking.com are ‘at the peak’ and that the services are at the end of ‘at the peak’. The service will reach the stages where negative press begins. Media hype is currently building and with the brand expansion, supplier proliferation is increasing.

The review sites aim to handle users regardless whether they visit through its apps, or desktop. According to TripAdvisor’s CEO Steve Kaufer, people prefer Apps. The future for the online travel review industry is one with a greater emphasis on the helpful button as well as the ability to achieve higher overall expertise levels.

The future of creating an online community should encourage the forum posts, destination experts, seeing where your friends have been, giving the chance to directly ask other users about their reviews, and more overall social interaction.

Please rate this

Have printed travel guidebooks come to an end?

27

September

2016

No ratings yet.

Almost all travellers have them on their bookshelf: Lonely Planet, Rough Guide and many other travel guide books. These guidebooks have been important information sources for travellers all around the world. But with smartphones, tablets and websites such as Tripadvisor.com are printed travel guidebooks still relevant?

 

Up-to-date information

First of all, it is very costly for publishers to keep travel guidebooks up-to-date. In addition, in this fast paced world a travel guidebook is already outdated before it even hits the bookshelves (Hodson, 2012). As a traveller in a foreign country relying on the information in these books it is important to have up-to-date information. It is such a shame when you have travelled so far for a particular restaurant or sight mentioned in the book, only to find out it is not there any more. Sales of printed guidebooks in the U.S. have been declining since 2007 (skift.com, 2016). This is an indication that the demand for travel information is shifting from offline to online. On the internet you can find up-to-date travel information on tour operators, restaurants and hotels, because information can easily be edited. There is a growing amount of apps, websites and blogs filled with travel related topics. Also, the information you find on the internet is at no extra cost, while a guidebook can easily cost you a lot of money.

 

Opinions of hundreds of travellers

Furthermore, a problem with printed guidebooks is that only one writer or a couple of writes decide which companies make it into the book. Their opinion can be ambiguous. While travelling though South America, I have heard stories about authors writing about places they have not even visited. Whereas on a website such as Tripadvisor.com travellers can read reviews and opinions of hundreds of travellers. There is a shift in what is important for the travel industry. Before they had to focus on getting into a popular guidebook to try increase sales but now ratings and reviews are popular as ever. It is not uncommon that a tour operator or restaurant owner will ask you to please write a review for them on Tripadvisor.

 

In my opinion, the answer is no. Printed travel guidebooks are no longer relevant. You can find so much more information on the internet. It is easy, cheap and the information is up-to-date. Why would you still carry guidebook kilo’s in your backpack?

 

 

Sources:
https://skift.com/2013/03/04/lonely-planet-and-the-rapid-decline-of-the-printed-guidebook/

http://www.goseewrite.com/2012/02/guidebooks-overrated-travel-resources/

Please rate this