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tourism advertising consultants

Nicole Wagner

Resort Subject Lines of the Month:

Celebrate the Fourth with Destination Delivers

Summer’s Best Spa Value!

Reconnect with Nature this Fall

July Is Just Heating Up At Eagle Ridge

More of Summer’s Best Golf Value

Summer Never Looked So Good

Summer Fun Summer Values at The Abbey

Great Fun, Food, and Entertainment  at The Waterfront

It is All About the Values

An Exclusive Preview of our NEW Premier Magazine Just for You

Incredible Values and Great Summer Fun at The Abbey Resort

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EyeforTravel, a web site filled with travel distribution news, events and analyses, has recently published an interview with Robert Hamilton, the Project Manage of Google Mobile.

The scale and the pace of technological advancement in mobile continues to present today’s consumers with new offerings, taking their experiences and personalization to unprecedented levels. In the U.S. alone, there are more than 280 million mobile subscribers. By the end of 2011, more than half will be smartphones.

In an exclusive interview with EyeforTravel, Google recently told them that mobile hotel queries have grown almost 3000% in just three years! Travel marketers should consider how the information from a mobile phone can more fully inform them about their users. They need to use the location functionality of a phone to provide relevant, location-based ads and information about their company. 1 in 3 queries on a mobile phone has local intent, indicating a powerful desire on the part of consumers for location-specific information. Focusing on location is just one of the ways to best use mobile capability to drive optimal consumer response.

With the changing media landscape, the behaviour of consumers has undergone a dramatic change. It is imperative for the travel industry to continuously embrace change and speak the language their customers understand. In order to assess the current sentiment in the marketplace, EyeforTravel’s Ritesh Gupta spoke to Robert Hamilton, Project Manager: Mobile at Google. Excerpts:

What do you see as the most significant development in terms of the way consumers consume content or engage for travel requirements?

Robert Hamilton: The rise of smartphones with browsers which can both display desktop sites and make it easy for users to interact with them has been significant and we expect mobile usage to continue to increase as the browsers get better.

Research has indicated that an increasing proportion of online time is spent browsing content, communicating and networking, rather than buying things. Is there anything which travel companies need to take note of while assessing their customer’s buying behavior?

Robert Hamilton: Consumers are spending longer researching their travel purchases online, especially last year in the recession there was a greater emphasis on consumers searching for the best value.

Browsing content is a critical part of the research phase, however travel businesses must get better at communicating their unique value proposition or generating urgency in the buying process.e.g. the number of seats left at this price, last seat sold 2 hours ago etc.

Considering the duel between the search sites and social media platforms for traffic, how do you think this battle is expected to shape up? What does this signify for travel companies who at the moment are increasingly shifted towards tracking all marketing touch-points and monetizing across all online channels?

Robert Hamilton: We don’t see this is a duel – users are choosing to get different services from different places and that’s always been the case.

Search is a great way to understand users’ intent and it’s still the start of many online behaviors.

Social media is continuing to evolve with Twitter ads, booking engines on Facebook pages, etc. further helping advertisers engage their audience in the right way. How significant are these developments as far as travel companies’ marketing budgets are concerned?

Robert Hamilton: I’d expect travel companies to continue to focus on those channels which offer a trackable return on their spend.

All forms of media will clearly be important in building brand awareness and driving direct response actions – however, those channels that are measurable and can easily demonstrate a positive ROI will win the budgets of marketeers.

Location is the holy grail of the mobile experience. One of the major developments this year has been the availability of free navigation systems on mobile handsets. And the way applications are mushrooming around location-based services, one can only expect more excitement in this area. What do you make of such developments from the travel industry’s perspective?

Robert Hamilton: It’s an exciting time, and users are responding by generating more and more geo-tagged content across all kinds of services.

The chance to include location information when commenting via services like Google Buzz and Twitter makes it easy for travelers to share experiences in situ – surfacing this kind of immediate word-of-mouth reviewing will become increasingly important.

1 in 3 queries on a mobile phone has local intent, indicating a powerful desire on the part of consumers for location-specific information. Has the industry realised that focusing on location is just one of the ways to best use mobile capability to drive optimal consumer response?

Robert Hamilton: I think there’s still some way to go here – there is enormous potential for travel businesses to upsell, improve check in services, sell post purchase ancillary add ons or give greater relevant information all linked to location specific information.

This whole area is largely untapped and will be an enormous opportunity for brands to create differentiation in the immediate future.

Which major trends do you foresee as far as customer engagement via various devices or web platforms are concerned? What should travel industry look-out for?

Robert Hamilton: Customers will increasingly demand an end-to-end engagement across a range of platforms, and to be able to research, consume and share travel information on whichever device they find most useful at a particular stage of their decision-making process.

To read this interview in its entirety, click here.

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Travel Spike recently published a few statistics regarding Facebook, Twitter and online marketing for the travel and tourism industry.

Facebook Facts:
The average Facebook user spends 55 minutes a day and becomes a “fan” of 4 Facebook pages a day.

People are 60% more likely to recommend your Travel Brand or Destination to their friends if they follow you on Facebook.

Consumers are 51% more likely to buy from a brand they follow on Facebook.

Twitter Facts:
Consumers are 67% more likely to buy from brands they follow on Twitter.

Consumers are also 79% more likely to recommend a company they follow on Twitter to their friends.

66% of Twitter users are over the age of 35.

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PR-Inside has published a press release this week that discusses the marketing work and new media strategies that Stevens & Tate and Endora Digital used while working with the upcoming Dover Days Festival.

To read the entire article, click here.

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Newswire Today has recently published the article about the marketing work that Stevens & Tate and Endora Digital did with the 77th Annual Dover Days Festival.

To read the entire article, click here.

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New Media tools, strategy promote 2010 Dover Days

One of the nation’s oldest annual historical celebrations is applying the advertising industry’s newest technologies to ignite interest in a taste of Americana.

Dover Days, Delaware’s longest running annual celebration and one of the oldest historical festivals in the country, has harnessed the Internet and adopted a fresh communications strategy for its 2010 festival, scheduled April 30-May 2. In the process, event organizers are broadening its reach and appealing to new audiences in spite of tighter budget restraints.

To market its first Dover Days in 1933, festival organizers, then the Dover Garden Club, used poster board and word-of-mouth to promote the event. Seventy-seven years later, the same event and flavor are being conveyed through social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, an Internet website and Search Engine Optimization.

“We’ve kept the flavor of Dover Days, but taken a completely fresh approach to the way we promote it,” said Cindy Small, Executive Director for the Kent County & Greater Dover, Delaware Convention and Visitors Bureau. “We wanted a more modern flair, while maintaining the allure of Dover Days’ glorious historical past. Our ultimate goal is to double the number attending the event and increase overnight stays in the next few years.”

To promote the 2010 Dover Days the Bureau collaborated with Stevens & Tate  Marketing /Endora Digital Solutions, a Lombard, Ill. based advertising firm, in the development, design and execution of an Internet marketing campaign to reach new audiences. The company is well experienced with its work in the travel, tourism and special events fields and, through its digital team, Endora Digital Solutions, fully capitalizes on the power of the Internet.

“Early on, it was determined that New Media could effectively communicate this unique event, including all of its charm and history. First, we worked closely with the Convention & Visitors Bureau team to create a microsite with a more festive look, including a new logo for Dover Days. The site also includes event highlights, great photos from previous years, lodging packages, a schedule of events and information for vendors,” said Dan Gartlan, President of Stevens & Tate, “For the first time in its history a website visitor gets the feeling of the event and not just the information.”

The microsite is designed to be search engine friendly, or easily found online. To achieve this Endora Digital Solutions optimized the site by analyzing key search terms and phrases and then writing content that incorporates these words. “It’s not just about being found by those looking for Dover Days, It’s about being found by larger new audiences looking for spring festivals,” Gartlan added. Small noted the new festival marketing will also help put the region on the map and attract more visitors to Delaware beyond the festival weekend. That in turn will generate more economic impact.

In addition, a Facebook fan page was launched. “An event with a strong following already will grow when the right media is used. As expected, the fan page attracted hundreds of fans right out of the blocks,” Gartlan reported. “This is a social event that steps visitors back to colonial America, attracting audiences throughout Delaware and the Mid-Atlantic states. By using a New Media strategy we’re modernizing the communications tools to grow the event in years to come,” Gartlan went on to add.

The Dover Days micro website can be found at: www.doverdaysfestival.com and on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dover-Days/366784888250.

“Dover Days is all about First State traditions. We’re proud of our heritage and make it the centerpiece of this annual event with Maypole dances, house tours, colonial artisans and period dress worn by men, women and children.  With our new communications approach we capture these sentiments, convey these messages and make them accessible to a wider audience than ever before,” Small said.

She added that this is being accomplished at a time when the Convention and Visitors Bureau’s overall budget is smaller than it was two years ago.  Faced with this reality, organizers sought a new communications campaign direction for maximum return on investment.

The strategy appears to be working. On April 7, after a favorable blog by writer Greg Coin was published by the Wilmington Examiner and posted on the Dover Days website, the response was immediate. “You guys must have a great social network going,” Coin noted in an e-mail to the Dover Days organizers. “The article went to the top of the readership board for all 140 Wilmington Examiners in 17 minutes.”

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