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Hotel Marketing Coach Neil L. Salerno, CHME, CHA Internet Marketing Articles |
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Building Traffic (SEO)
Featured Article "What the Heck is Hotel Revenue Management, Anyway?"
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Weighing-in On Hotel's Use of The TripAdvisor Tools By:
Neil Salerno – Hotel Marketing Coach Recently, I read an
article discouraging hoteliers from posting a website link to TripAdvisor or
posting TripAdvisor reviews via the TripAdvisor widget on their website. In
my opinion, making broad statements
like this, is absolutely absurd and demonstrates a lack of understanding how
and why people choose a hotel online. Posting a Link to Your Page on TripAdvisor The article states:
"Have you looked at your property page and your customer reviews on
TripAdvisor lately? Have you noticed that the page is full of advertisements
by all major online travel agencies (OTA's), all the major hotel brands, and
many of your competitors?" The article further suggests "By linking from
your hotel website to TripAdvisor, you are actively encouraging your
potential customers to book with the OTA's or someone else."
Get a grip! This is a naive and
silly statement. Do you think that maybe
one of the reasons for the number of ads on the TripAdvisor is due to the
tremendous popularity of the site? Does this mean that media advertising is
bad because there are ads by other hotels and OTA's in the same publication?
An ostrich hides by sticking his head in the sand; maybe we should just
pretend that OTA's and other hotels don't exist. Consider this: If
potential guests click to your hotel's TripAdvisor postings from your
website, could it mean that they really want to see how your hotel scores
among former guests? Do you think that the absence of a link on your site
will dissuade visitors from checking out your hotel on TripAdvisor? Experts
agree that the majority of travelers will checkout TripAdvisor before or
after making a reservation. Your "guest-record" of
facilities and service on TripAdvisor could be one of your hotel's best
sales assets. If your hotel's over-all record on TripAdvisor is very poor,
you have much bigger problems than having people viewing other ads on
TripAdvisor. Using the TripAdvisor Widget on Your Website I believe that this is
the better way to have former guests promote your hotel, but their article
discourages this too. The article states that
there is "official and unofficial" web content; what the heck is this? The
article states that official content is the "website's descriptions of the
hotel facilities and services". If hotel websites were considered fully
credible to site visitors, TripAdvisor would have no meaning or interest to
travelers. This is nonsense. The article further
states that "unofficial content are customer reviews and postings on social
media". Unofficial? My bet is that former guest comments have much more
credibility than hotel site content. That is one of the reasons why
TripAdvisor is so popular among travelers. Sticking your head in the sand by
attempting to "hide" sites like TripAdvisor just doesn't pass the marketing
smell-test. Lack of Control over Customer Reviews You have control over
customer reviews by providing clean facilities and excellent service. If you
stumble, as all hotels do from time to time, a well-written response to a
negative comment is your strongest sales tool. The article says " no hotel
will ever publish a negative customer review on its website" (by the way, in
the hotel industry, we refer to these as "guests, not customers").
In actuality, the truth will set you free. The fact is that most
comments are positive; negative comments with a well-composed answer can be
just as strong as a positive comment. Don't kid yourself;
TripAdvisor can be a strong sales tool for driving online sales. When some
people cease to consider TripAdvisor and similar travel social media as
evil, these hoteliers will begin to understand what powerful sales tools
guest comments can be. Third-party endorsements of your product and service
, on your hotel's website, are powerful; use them.
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