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Posts Tagged ‘hotel mobile marketing’

2013 Hotel Mobile Technology Trends

Thursday, December 20th, 2012

This article was co-authored by Max Starkov and Mariana Mechoso Safer and is HeBS Digital’s contribution to HotelExecutive.com’s Hotel Business Review Feature Focus series. 

Mobile is an important travel planning and hotel distribution channel; a channel that hoteliers must embrace to be successful in 2013. One of the most notable developments this year is that the terms “mobile marketing” and “mobile technology” really evolved to include not just mobile phones. Tablet devices such as the iPad, Samsung Galaxy and Google Nexus quickly became a significant part of the travel planning and booking process. To make matters even more complicated, while mobile phone and tablet devices are considered “mobile” devices, they should be treated as separate distribution channels with their own respective marketing initiatives.  (more…)

Industry Pulse Poll Analysis: the Numbers Prove Hotel Mobile Websites are a Core Marketing Initiative

Friday, September 7th, 2012

By Asher Fusco

Smartphone use continues to rise this year, especially in regards to using smartphones to participate in social media channels. 2012 has truly been the year of SoLoMo and hoteliers are acting accordingly by focusing on mobile initiatives such as website development.

According to a HeBS Digital Industry Pulse Poll performed last month, hoteliers are more interested in mobile website development than any other aspect of mobile marketing, including mobile app development, mobile banner advertising and other initiatives. (more…)

Hotel Mobile Marketing & Distribution Do’s and Don’ts

Monday, June 18th, 2012

By Max Starkov

Earlier this month I presented at EyeForTravel’s Online Marketing Strategies for Travel 2012 Conference in Miami. The session, titled “Best Practices for Mobile Strategies in 2012 and Beyond,” focused on the expanding mobile distribution channel and explored tablets as a distinct digital marketing device. This article is a continuation of my thoughts shared at the conference, as well as an attempt to help hoteliers realign their mobile marketing strategies mid-year, by providing valuable action steps they can take now and beyond 2012.

The Mobile Marketing and Distribution Channel is Exploding

The mobile channel is not just a mere extension of the traditional “desktop” channel. Morgan Stanley projects that by 2014, mobile web users will surpass “traditional” desktop Internet users. This exploding distribution and marketing channel has its own rules and best practices, providing immense revenue opportunities and competitive advantages to smart hotel and travel marketers.

Hotel guests and travel consumers in general are already mobile-ready, and hoteliers and travel suppliers have to respond adequately to this growing demand for mobile travel services. Fifty percent of U.S. adults and 80% of business travelers already have smartphones. Twenty-four percent of leisure travelers and 36% of business travelers have already purchased travel via their mobile devices (PhoCusWright).

The mobile channel has become a real travel planning and hotel distribution channel, especially for drive-in and last-minute travel markets. The U.S. hospitality industry is experiencing staggering growth rates in leisure and unmanaged business travel bookings via the mobile channel:

2010: $99 million
2011: $753 million
2012: $1,368 million
2013: $2,155 million (PhoCusWright)

HeBS Digital’s own data shows that having a hotel mobile website generates incremental revenue through mobile and voice reservations which, without a well-optimized property mobile site with rich content, would have easily gone to the competition or the OTAs. In Q1 2012, more than 5% of website visits and 5% of online bookings came from mobile devices across HeBS Digital’s hotel client portfolio versus 4.5% of hotel website visits and 3% of online bookings in 2011. These numbers continued to grow in Q2 of this year.

Hoteliers must understand that in hospitality, the mobile channel provides three distinct opportunities to market to and service consumers:

  1. Mobile marketing and distribution, including the mobile website, focused on generating room bookings, RFPs and other group/event leads
  2. Location-based mobile services, typically focused on providing information like mapping and directions via geo-fencing and location-aware, or upselling services/amenities at the property to current guests, as well as check-ins
  3. Mobile CRM and customer service: resolving customer service issues at the property in real-time

The do’s and don’ts in this article focus exclusively on the first opportunity, mobile marketing and distribution.

 

Do’s of Hotel Mobile Marketing & Distribution:

1. Budget for Mobile Marketing Initiatives

HeBS Digital’s 6th Annual Benchmark Survey on Hotel Digital Marketing Budget Planning results demonstrate that mobile marketing is a very important tool in the hotelier’s digital marketing arsenal. This year, over a quarter of hoteliers fit a mobile site (26%) and a mobile booking engine (27.4%) into their budget planning:

What mobile marketing initiatives are you planning for?

2010

2011

2012

Mobile site

25.9%

37.5%

26.0%

Mobile booking engine

22.4%

37.5%

27.4%

SMS Text marketing

27.6%

25%

8.2%

Mobile banner advertising

19%

12.5%

4.1%

iPhone app

24.1%

8.9%

8.2%

Mobile Search

N/A

N/A

17.8%

I am not planning on mobile marketing initiatives for the year

32.8%

38.4%

11.0%

 

The results of the survey also identify a positive trend: fewer hoteliers (11% in 2012 vs. 38.4% in 2011) did not plan any mobile marketing initiatives this year.

In 2012, based on the property’s concrete feeder markets and key customer segments, hotels should be spending at least 10% of their overall digital marketing budgets on mobile marketing initiatives, including on optimization and upgrades to the mobile website, mobile SEO and SEM, mobile display advertising, SMT text marketing initiatives, etc. In 2013, hotels should allocate up to 15% of their overall digital marketing budgets for mobile marketing initiatives.

2. Focus on the Hotel’s Mobile Website

The question of whether a hotel or a travel supplier needs a mobile website has already been categorically answered: mobile sites generate serious incremental bookings. The mobile web adheres to different rules than the conventional desktop Internet. Mobile users have even shorter attention spans and less time to browse than traditional desktop users. The mobile web features a number of limiting factors, such as slower speeds, yet-to-be-perfected mobile browsers, smaller displays, multi-step booking and more.

The biggest mistake hoteliers make is not having a mobile site at all. Today’s hyperactive travel consumers rely on mobile sites that download quickly, provide short and concise textual content, minimalistic visual content and easy-to-use booking engines.

In June of 2012, more than 85% of desktop Internet users had a screen resolution of 1280×1024 pixels or higher. Trying to squeeze your wide-screen “desktop” hotel website onto the tiny screen of a mobile device is a futile exercise that inevitably destroys usability and conversion rates. Our analysis shows that more than 90% of mobile users access the hotel website via mobile devices with screen sizes of maximum 320 pixels wide by 480 pixels high. Accessing a “conventional” website via a mobile device, even the iPhone (320 x 480 pixels), often results in an undesirable user experience (the inability to find information needed), and a predictable outcome (abandoned websites and reservations).

To solve this issue, hoteliers should offer a mobile website specially designed to provide an excellent user experience in a mobile environment. At the very least, the mobile website should offer the following capabilities/functionality:

  • Navigation: Easy-to-use navigation, optimized for an optimum mobile user experience
  • Content: A minimum of 10-15 pages of unique and engaging content that is relevant to people on-the-go and addresses the hotel’s main customer segments and attributes of the hotel product
  • Content Management System (CMS): The mobile site’s CMS should be part of and synchronized with the hotel desktop website CMS and the hotel tablet website CMS. The CMS should be able to simultaneously “push” all of the latest special offers, packages and promotions, as well as events and happenings at the property and the destination, to the hotel’s desktop, mobile and tablet websites
  • Booking Capability: Mobile-enabled booking engine with real-time feed of specials, packages, promotions
  • SEO: Website optimized specifically for mobile SEO
  • Location Aware/GPS capabilities: Deliver relevant information based on the user’s GPS location
  • Interactive Capabilities: Real-time event calendar, mapping and directions, interactive contests, sweepstakes, SMS Marketing, real-time customer service, to name a few
  • Mobile Web Analytics: Track performance and conversions from the mobile website

Content quality is the biggest “must-have” for a mobile site. The Google Panda algorithm updates favor mobile websites with richer visual and textual content that is not only deep and relevant but also fresh, engaging and optimized for the search engines.

There is a growing need for a centralized digital content depository as hotel marketers are challenged to create and manage content through three distinct channels: desktop, mobile and tablet. HeBS Digital’s proprietary CMS Premium acts as a centralized digital library that services all three channels by pushing content to the property’s desktop, tablet and mobile websites simultaneously, as well to the property’s social media profiles on Facebook and Twitter.

3. Engage in Hotel Mobile Marketing

Having a hotel mobile website – even if developed according to industry’s best practices – is only the beginning. Just like with the mobile website, the mobile Web abides by different rules that require mobile Web-specific marketing initiatives.

Here are the top mobile marketing initiatives hoteliers should focus on in 2012 and beyond:

  • Mobile SEO
  • Mobile link building to the mobile site from mobile directories and sites
  • Mobile SEM (paid search) campaigns
  • Local Content Optimization: mobile search engines favor and predominantly serve local content, therefore hoteliers need to optimize their local content and listings on the search engines, main data providers, local business directories, yellow pages, etc.
  • Mobile banner advertising in main mobile feeder markets
  • Engage your customers via mobile contests and sweepstakes
  • Mobile promotions via SMS for local property deals to:
    • Generate buzz
    • Grow mobile list
    • Target customer segments
    • Integrate with Social Media

 

Mobile marketing should be an integral part of the hotel’s multi-channel marketing strategy. Its role has been growing exponentially over the past years and will explode over the next few years.

Any seasonal promotion (summer getaways, holiday specials, etc.) or customer segment campaign (e.g. family travel, leisure, weekend, etc.) should contain a mobile marketing component to reach the on-the-go travel consumer and drive-in markets.

4. Take Advantage of SoLoMo

This year, hoteliers have been hearing a lot of the buzzword SoLoMo (SOcial, LOcal, MObile). Meant to convey the convergence of these three major media, the term SoLoMo describes a “marriage made in heaven” between the three content and marketing platforms.

Why should hoteliers bring social, local and mobile marketing initiatives to the forefront of their hotel digital marketing plans this year? Hotel guests are avid SoLoMo services users. Most social network engagements by travel consumers are done via mobile devices. Consumers perform more than 3 billion local searches every month, and one in three mobile searches have local intent vs. one in five desktop searches [Google].

Unlike the desktop Web world, SoLoMo allows hoteliers to combine real-time customer geo-location with their demographic and psychographic information and time- and location-relevant promotions. Hoteliers need to consider how to best utilize SoLoMo to engage their guests and generate incremental revenues.

By focusing efforts on social media, local marketing, and mobile marketing, hotel marketers have the ability to deliver more personalized, relevant content and engage existing guests and potential customers like never before.

It is important to understand that local content means mobile content. Google has amassed the most detailed library of local content via its Google+ Local (formerly Google Places) and Google Maps. How optimized are your property profiles in the main data providers – such as Localeze – which feed many local directories and geo-social sites? How optimized are your property local search listings on Google+ Local, Yahoo Local, and Bing Local? What about all the local online business directories and yellow pages? Do you have a local citation listing program in place?

One of the best examples of SoLoMo is the recent move by Google to “marry” its local content listings (Google Places) with its social network (Google+) and making this content the default in its mobile search results. By converting more than 80 million Google Places listings to Google+ Local pages, Google achieved an unprecedented level of dynamic, social content vs. static directory content. For example, Google+ Local includes integration of a circles filter to find reviews or recommendations from friends/family/colleagues.

Once you take care of your local content, it is time to enhance your mobile marketing presence. How deep, relevant and engaging is the local content on your mobile site? Do you have automated push of specials, promotions and local events from the property “desktop” website to the mobile site to keep your mobile presence “fresh?” Do you use micro-formats and Schema codes to relay the time- and location-relevant nature of these promotions and events to the search engines? Does your property take advantage of coupon promotions through Google?

Other recommendations include engaging your local customers via time- and location-relevant check-in promotions and rewards, launching social media promotions, contests, and post series via Facebook and Twitter, and blogging. Geo-social marketing initiatives allow hoteliers to integrate with consumers’ lifestyles and connect (and stay connected) with them in ways that were not previously possible. Social, local and mobile marketing are great for time- and location-sensitive promotions.

5. Align the Official and Unofficial Content About the Hotel

A very important consequence of the convergence of social, local and mobile is the fact that today’s SoLoMo-enabled travel consumers have immediate 24/7 access to all types of content about your hotel: the “official” content about the hotel e.g. hotel website, Facebook pages, Google+ Local descriptions, etc. and the “unofficial” user-generated content on the social networks and customer review sites.  This convergence of local content, social media and mobile allows potential customers to quickly check reviews on sites like TripAdvisor or Yelp, see the Google+ Local listing of the hotel with all of its user-generated content and reviews, and/or communicate with friends via Facebook or Twitter about their experiences at the hotel.

Now, more than ever, you need to align the official and unofficial content about your hotel. Example: You cannot claim your property offers luxury accommodations if reviewers on TripAdvisor or Google’s Zagat Reviews describe your rooms as suited for the budget traveler at best.

The bigger the discrepancy between the two types of content, the less credible the official content is since people trust user-generated content more. Avoiding major discrepancies between these two kinds of content leads to  higher website conversion rates and more mobile bookings.

6. Consider a Major Push in the Tablet Channel

Tablets are rapidly emerging as a separate device/channel category from desktop and mobile. According to eMarketer, global tablet sales are projected to exceed 232 million in 2016, growing from 64 million in 2011. Next year, there will be 75.6 million U.S. tablet users vs. just 13 million in 2010.

Search engines and many major media sites already consider tablets as a separate, distinct device category, characterized with its own unique user behavior and best practices for user experience and content delivery.

For all practical purposes, the desktop, mobile device and tablet address different needs at different times of the day and week. According to Google, users searching Google utilize:

  • Desktop during the day (office)
  • Mobile during lunch break + happy hour
  • Tablet later in the evening when lounging i.e. the tablet is a “lounging” device

According to Google’s company data, 7% of all searches already come from tablets vs. 14% from mobile devices and 79% via desktops (Q1, 2012). Google also reports different search dynamics across the three device/channel categories and a dramatic increase in hotel queries in the mobile and tablet channels on Google in Q1 2012:

  • Overall (desktop + mobile + tablet): +34%
  • Mobile devices: +120%
  • Tablet devices: +306%

Hotel and travel marketers should consider either enhancing their desktop website for the touch-screen tablet environment or build a tablet-only version of their website, in addition to their desktop and mobile sites, all managed via a single digital content depository-enabled CMS.

 

7. Improve the Mobile Booking Process

Many reservation technology vendors do not have mobile-friendly versions of their booking engines. The three main issues as far as usability in the mobile booking process are:

  • Mobile-enabled booking engine: You cannot use your desktop booking engine on your mobile website or app. Employ a simplified booking engine with step-by-step processes, touch-screen interfaces, easy drop-down menus, shorter product descriptions, thumb-nail images, etc.
  • Real-time feed of specials, packages and promotions: Your mobile booking engine should feature all of the hotel’s or travel supplier’s special offers, packages and promotions.
  • Mobile-friendly payment system for the travel or hotel booking: The booking process on your mobile website or app has to allow for simplified reservations without the need to enter a credit card. This could be done by entering and storing the credit card information in advance via the “desktop” website. Since the mobile channel is a last-minute booking channel, another approach is accepting mobile reservations and holding for a set number of hours (e.g. 4, 6 or 8 hours), or taking “no guarantee” reservations.

8. Use Mobile Analytics

The explosion of social media and mobile marketing, along with channel convergence and multi-channel marketing, has made it imperative for hoteliers to track the effectiveness of hotel digital marketing initiatives and optimize returns from their limited budget resources.  The available analytical technology tools today offer cost-effective yet powerful ways to track results.

In the mobile channel, this technology allows us to track conversions from the hotel website and all digital advertising campaigns such as SEM, banner advertising and re-targeting. In addition, call analytics allows us to track the effectiveness of the voice channel, as well as the mobile Web and print ads.

  • Mobile Website Analytics: Using analytics on the mobile site is a MUST! Hoteliers may use a free tool like Google Analytics, or a more sophisticated and accurate analytical tool like Adobe® SiteCatalyst® . At minimum, hoteliers need to track:
    • Originating/referring channel (e.g. SEO vs. SEM)
    • Bookings, room nights, revenue, conversation rates
    • Visitors, pageviews, mobile devices vs. tablets, etc.
  • Mobile Call Analytics: Best practices require the use of a call-analytics enabled reservation telephone number or at least a dedicated 1-800 number on the mobile site. Remember, 6-7 of 10 reservations originating from the mobile site still come in the form of calls via the user’s cell phone.
  • Mobile Marketing Campaign Tracking: Hoteliers need to use campaign tracking analytics for all mobile campaigns. Track your SEM campaigns with Adobe or Google Analytics. For your mobile banner campaigns, use Adobe, DART, ATLAS, etc.

Don’ts of Hotel Mobile Marketing & Distribution:

1. Don’t Discount in the Mobile Channel

All travel suppliers – hotels, airlines, car rental companies, cruise lines, etc. – manage perishable inventory, so theoretically you would expect that these suppliers would be  launching last-minute promotions to unload at least part of their unsold inventory. Wrong! In the case of the airlines, the closer to the date of departure, the higher the airfare – not the other way around.

The most common mistake by hoteliers we are witnessing today is the urge to discount in the mobile channel. My advice is not to discount in the mobile channel!

The mobile channel is a last-minute distribution channel by default. In this hyper-connected social and mobile world, the booking window has shrunk tremendously over the past few years and travel consumers have embraced the mobile Web as a legitimate booking channel:

  • Typically, mobile bookings are for the next 48 hours [Google].
  • As already mentioned, many major hotel brands report that 65%-80% or more of their mobile bookings are for the same or the following day.

In other words, the mobile channel is a last-minute distribution channel by default. If hoteliers take all of the recommended action steps outlined in this article, these bookings would happen anyway without discounts. Hoteliers need to maintain rate parity at all times.

Since people are booking closer and closer to the day of their arrival, it is easier for them to wait and see what the last-minute rates are on the hotel’s mobile site, on an OTA site or on a last-minute discount site such as HotelTonight.com, as opposed to booking in advance via the hotel desktop or mobile sites.

In the age of social and mobile word of mouth, it will not take long for all regular and frequent guests at your hotel to hear about the lower last-minute rates offered via an OTA or a service like HotelTonight.com. What will be the result? The hotel will soon see that:

  • Booked guests are canceling existing reservations made via the hotel website, phone, GDS, and OTAs, and re-booking via HotelTonight.com using the lower rates.
  • Potential guests are waiting until the last minute to see what the last-minute rates are for the property and other hotels in the city/location they are traveling to and booking at the last minute.
  • OTAs are after the hotel for these last-minute deviations from contracted rate parity clauses.

If hoteliers do all of the ‘Mobile Marketing Do’s’ recommended above, these bookings would happen anyway without discounting.

  • Avoid the temptation to discount! Don’t discount via mobile discounters, OTAs and Flash Sales Sites.
  • Invest in your mobile website and mobile marketing to boost last-minute reservations.
  • Market your true best available rates last-minute.
  • Maintain rate parity and brand integrity at all times.

In the case of group cancellations or occupancy needs, launch a special promotion on the hotel website, send out an email spotlight promotion to the opt-in list, launch a paid search campaign on Google and Yahoo/Bing, as well as desktop and mobile banner campaigns via the Google Display Network, or do a SMT text marketing push promotion. If this is not sufficient, for additional same-day bookings and last-minute sales, use opaque sites such as Priceline and HotWire, which are preferable to flash sale sites as they maintain brand integrity until the booking is completed.

2. You Don’t Need a Mobile App

Here at HeBS Digital, we are constantly being asked by our hotel clients whether it makes sense for a hotel to develop its own mobile app or if the hotel should focus on developing and enhancing their mobile website. From the survey results table above, we can see the number of hoteliers planning for an iPhone app dropped dramatically: from 24.1% in 2010 to 8.9% in 2011.

I believe that hotels do not need a mobile app if they are a single-property, independent hotel. Nor do franchised hotels and resorts or smaller and mid-size hotel chains and multi-property companies. These hotel companies are better off focusing on building and enhancing their mobile websites and promoting the mobile site via mobile marketing initiatives.

A 2011 study by CEM4Mobile Analytics, which used an actual sample of over 56 million mobile impressions from mobile services supporting both applications and browsing-based access, concluded that the vast majority of users (90.15%) prefer mobile browsing vs. mobile apps:

Access Type   
Sum of Impressions  
Sum of Visits  
Sum of Unique Users
Applications
34.61%
18.34%
9.85%
Mobile Browsing
65.39%
81.66%
90.15%

Another survey by Adobe and eMarketer found that users prefer a mobile app only in the following three categories: social networking, music and games. For everything else they prefer to browse (i.e. search for mobile websites). In every other category that pertains to travel research, planning and purchasing, mobile users prefer to browse or search relevant mobile website content. Eighty-one percent of users preferred browsing when researching products/services and price; 71% favored browsing when comparing products and services, and 68% used browsing when reading customer reviews.

There are several other reasons why hoteliers should focus on a mobile website as opposed to building a mobile app:

  • Apps are very expensive to build, maintain, and promote.
  • Apps are device specific – you need different apps for iPhone, Android, Windows Mobile, etc.
  • Apps are not indexable by the search engines.

Consider seeking advice from a leading mobile marketing and full-service hotel digital marketing firm to actively help you take advantage of the mobile channel one step at a time. Learn which mobile marketing formats make the most sense for your hotel and how to implement latest trends and best practices in your mobile marketing efforts so you can realize respectable ROI and incremental revenue growth.

 

About the Author and HeBS Digital

Max Starkov is President & CEO of HeBS Digital, the hospitality industry’s leading full-service digital marketing and direct online channel strategy firm based in New York City (www.HeBSdigital.com). Erica Garza, Senior Copy+SEO Specialist at HeBS Digital, also contributed to this article.

HeBS Digital has pioneered many of the best practices in hotel digital marketing, social and mobile marketing, and direct online channel distribution. The firm has won over 200 prestigious industry awards for its digital marketing and website design services, including numerous Adrian Awards, Davey Awards, W3 Awards, WebAwards, Magellan Awards, Summit International Awards, Interactive Media Awards, IAC Awards, etc.

A diverse client portfolio of top-tier major hotel brands, luxury and boutique hotel brands, resorts and casinos, hotel management companies, franchisees and independents, and CVBs are benefiting from HeBS Digital’s direct online channel strategy and digital marketing expertise. Contact HeBS Digital’s consultants at (212) 752-8186 or success@hebsdigital.com.

HeBS Digital Wins ‘Best of Show’ Mobile Website for Loews Hotels in the MobileWebAwards

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

New York, NY – May 29, 2012HeBS Digital, the industry leader in hotel digital marketing services, website design and direct online channel strategies, today announces it has received the ‘Best of Show’ award from the Web Marketing Association’s 2012 MobileWebAwards for the Loews Hotels & Resorts mobile website. The mobile site, viewable at www.loewshotels.com/m, also won for ‘Best Hotel and Lodging Mobile Website’.

The MobileWebAward Competition is open to any companies or individuals who create mobile sites and applications for businesses, organizations, and government entities. Entrants are judged in each of the 96 industry categories on creativity, impact, design, interactivity, ease of use, content, and use of the medium. Judging the competition are professionals who work with and understand the development and design of mobile branding.

Of all the entrants in the Hotel and Lodging Mobile Website category, the Loews Hotels mobile website was deemed the most exemplary of these seven criteria. Furthermore, of all category winners, the site was selected as the top overall mobile website. HeBS Digital and Loews Hotels worked together closely to match the brand identity and functionality of the full Loews Hotels website as well as to create a remarkable user-friendly interface that employs smartphone technologies, location-aware capabilities, and a mobile booking engine.

The Loews Hotels mobile website features:

  • A layout with optimal user experience in mind for those on a mobile device: textual content is short and concise, visual content minimalistic, and navigation is simplified and prominently displayed with universally recognized icons to guide users
  • Optimization for mobile search engines
  • A “location aware” functionality that enables Loews Hotels to provide a potential guest immediate information and data that enables them to know where the closest property is to their current proximity. A mobile device holder in New York City will automatically receive a prompt to book the Loews Regency Hotel and indicate location-specific special offers and packages
  • Call-tracking and smartphone recognition
  • Mobile-friendly booking engine
  • Touchscreen friendly design

 “The mobile channel is a legitimate hotel distribution channel. In 2011 alone, 2.4 percent of all U.S. online travel bookings ($2.6 billion) were made via the mobile Web. Hoteliers must understand that mobile sites generate serious incremental bookings” said Jason Price, Executive Vice President of HeBS Digital.  “The Loews Hotels mobile site is optimized for mobile SEO, enhanced with a mobile booking engine, GPS capabilities, and has become a significant distribution channel for the brand. We are extremely honored to have earned such prestigious awards for our valued partner, Loews Hotels.”

“Loews Hotels is committed to giving its e-commerce customers an exceptional experience on all fronts – on the desktop site as well as mobile and tablet devices,” said Jimmy Suh, Senior Vice President, Ecommerce & Distribution. ”With our ‘location-aware’ mobile website we have been able to provide an intuitive user experience for our guests.  The mobile site determines where the closest property is to their current proximity, and offers location-specific directions as well as special offers and packages most relevant to them. Our collaboration with HeBS Digital has made this possible.”

 

About HeBS Digital:

Founded in 2001, HeBS Digital is the industry’s leading full-service hotel digital marketing, website design and direct online channel strategy firm based in New York City (www.HeBSDigital.com).

HeBS Digital has pioneered many of the “best practices” in hotel digital marketing, social and mobile marketing, and direct online channel distribution.

The firm has won over 190 prestigious industry awards for its digital marketing and website design services, including numerous Adrian Awards, Davey Awards, W3 Awards, WebAwards, Magellan Awards, Summit International Awards, Interactive Media Awards, and IAC Awards.

A diverse client portfolio of top tier major hotel brands, luxury and boutique hotel brands, resorts and casinos, hotel management companies, franchisees and independents, and CVBs are profiting from HeBS Digital’s hospitality digital marketing expertise. Contact HeBS Digital’s consultants at (212) 752-8186 or success@hebsdigital.com.

 

About Loews Hotels & Resorts
Headquartered in New York City, Loews Hotels & Resorts owns and/or operates 17 hotels and resorts in the U.S. and Canada. Located in major city centers and resort destinations from coast to coast, the Loews portfolio features one-of-a-kind properties that go beyond Four Diamond standards to delight guests with a supremely comfortable, uniquely local and vibrant travel experience. For reservations or more information on Loews Hotels, call 1-800-23-LOEWS or visit:www.loewshotels.com.

Follow Loews Hotels on Twitter: www.twitter.com/lLoews_Hotels
Like Loews Hotels on Facebook:www.facebook.com/LoewsHotels

 

About MobileWebAwards:

The MobileWebAwards were developed in 1997 to honor excellence in mobile websites and apps and to showcase the best in award-winning mobile development. A panel of four judges reviews the submissions based on the criteria of creativity, impact, design, content, interactivity, ease of use, and use of the medium. The longest-running annual website award competition, MobileWebAwards selects the best in 96 industries each year. For more information, visit www.webaward.org.

 

 

Editorial Contact:

Mariana Mechoso Safer
HeBS Digital
Phone: 212-752-8186
Email: mariana@hebsdigital.com
Web: http://www.hebsdigital.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hebsdigital
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HeBS_NYC
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/hospitality-ebusiness-strategies
Google+: https://plus.google.com/107562536911518066194/posts

 

Hotelier’s 2012 Mobile Marketing MUST Dos and Don’ts

Monday, March 19th, 2012

Max Starkov, HeBS Digital’s President and CEO, was interviewed recently by Michelle Renn, Managing Editor of “Inside Hotel Online Today (Hotel Online)” on this year’s hottest topic: mobile marketing and mobile distribution channel in hospitality.

Michelle Renn: The mobile channel as a legitimate distribution source for hospitality is currently exploding. How does it differ from social media as a distribution channel?

Max Starkov:

For over 5 years now I have been arguing that social media is not a distribution channel in hospitality. Social media is a customer engagement channel and a customer service channel. It is an important component of any hotel’s marketing mix and part of the comprehensive direct online channel strategy for any hotel company.

The mobile channel is a legitimate hotel distribution channel. In 2011 alone, 2.4 percent of all U.S. online travel bookings ($2.6 billion) were made via the mobile Web. This is at least 100 times more than all travel bookings ever made from social media worldwide.

In 2011 over 4.7 percent of hotel website visits and over 3 percent of online bookings came from mobile devices across HeBS Digital’s hotel client portfolio. Recently IHG reported that in 2011 the brand generated $148 million in mobile bookings, ten times more than in 2010.

Just look at the staggering projections in growth rates of U.S. Mobile Travel Bookings (leisure and unmanaged business travel):

• 2010: $160 million
• 2011: $2.6 billion (2.4% of total online travel bookings)
• 2013: $8.0 billion (6.5% of total online travel bookings)
(PhoCusWright)

The mobile channel is exploding, indeed. Morgan Stanley projects that by 2014 mobile web users will surpass “traditional” desktop Internet users. Google reports that hotel mobile searches have increased by 3,000 percent from 2010 to 2011 and that now over 20 percent of all searches are conducted via mobile devices.
Hotel guests and travel consumers in general are already mobile-ready, and hoteliers and travel suppliers have to respond adequately to this growing demand for mobile travel services.
The most important statistic hoteliers need to follow is the number of smartphone users and tablet users. Fifty percent of U.S. adults and eighty percent of business travelers already have smartphones. Heavy usage of tablets like iPad has created a completely new category, which needs to be treated and marketed to separately from desktop and mobile devices. Overall, smartphones and tablets are changing how we do business in hospitality, how we market, how we service customers.

Michelle Renn: We have seen that all major hotel brands and OTAs have come up with flashy mobile websites and mobile apps for iPhone and Android mobile devices. What should independent hoteliers and franchisees do in 2012 to take advantage of the mobile channel? What are the 2012 Must Dos?

Max Starkov:

Hoteliers are realizing the importance of the mobile web. According to HeBS Digital’s 5th Annual Benchmark Survey on Hotel Digital Marketing Budget Planning and Best Practices, more hoteliers are planning for a mobile site this year (37.5% vs. 25.9%) and a mobile booking engine (37% vs. 22.4%). Also of note, only 8.9 percent of hoteliers are budgeting for a mobile app vs. 24.1 percent last year.

Here are my 2012 Mobile Must-Dos, applicable to any independent or full-service franchised property, boutique and luxury hotels and resorts:

Property Mobile Website

In 2011, over 85.1 percent of desktop Internet users had a screen resolution of 1280 x 1024 pixels or higher. Trying to squeeze your wide-screen “desktop” hotel website onto the tiny screen of a mobile device is a futile exercise that inevitably destroys usability and conversion rates. Our analysis shows that more than 90 percent of mobile users access the hotel website via mobile devices with screen sizes of the iPhone is 320 pixels wide by 480 pixels high. Accessing a “conventional” website via a mobile device, even the latest iPhone (320 x 480 pixels), often results in an undesirable user experience: the inability to find information needed, and a predictable outcome of abandoned websites and reservations.

The question whether a property needs a mobile website has already been categorically answered: mobile sites generate serious incremental bookings. In 2012 hoteliers need to optimize their mobile websites with richer visual and textual content (minimum 10-15 mobile pages) that is “fresh and intriguing.” This content needs to be optimized for mobile SEO. Enhance the mobile site with a mobile booking engine, GPS capabilities, “What’s Nearby” walking tours and a local travel guide functionality.

The mobile site content, especially special offers and events, must be synchronized with the desktop website. HeBS Digital’s CMS Premium (Content Management System) provides this functionality in an automated fashion.

Track performance and conversions from the mobile website via web analytics (e.g. Adobe Omniture) and call analytics. Remember that approximately 6-7 of every 10 mobile bookings still happen via voice reservations from the mobile site.

Mobile SEM

Mobile search engine marketing works! Launch mobile paid search (SEM) campaigns via Google AdWords and Bing/Yahoo that link to special mobile landing pages on your mobile website with the latest promotions, offers and packages.

Your mobile SEM campaigns must feature mobile-specific ad copy and ad extensions. Manage separate ads for tablets and mobile devices, and track their performance and conversions separately.

Always maintain rate parity in your mobile campaigns!

Local Content = Mobile Content

Consumers perform more than 3 billion local searches every month, and one in three mobile searches have local intent versus one in five desktop searches (Google). Local content has become the foundation of mobile content for the search engines, making it extremely important to any hotelier’s mobile SEO strategy.

Local search and directory listings are extremely important for travelers in the same state or neighboring states during the research, planning and booking phases. Google, followed by Bing and Yahoo, have turned their local search business profiles from “list and forget” listings to business profiles that require ongoing management and enhancement. Google’s top priority over the past three years has been to compile the deepest and most relevant local content on Planet Earth, which automatically translates into the deepest and most relevant mobile content. Google Places has expanded its content tenfold since June 2010! Google Places Coupon provides an additional benefit: it helps the mobile search ranking for the property as well.

In 2012, optimizing and enhancing the property’s local search listings on the top 3 search engines (Google, Yahoo, Bing), as well as on the main data providers (e.g. Acxiom), online Yellow Pages and local business and leisure directories must become a top priority for hoteliers from independent or branded properties alike.

Align Mobile Website’s Official and Unofficial Content

The line between mobile and social is blurring: most social network engagements by travel consumers are done via mobile device. In 2012 hoteliers will be hearing a lot of the buzzword SoLoMo (SOcial, LOcal, MObile). Meant to convey the convergence of these three major media, the term SoLoMo describes a match made in heaven between the three content and marketing platforms.

What does it mean for hoteliers? Hotel guests are avid SoLoMo service users, which requires hoteliers to align the property’s mobile site content with the social media content and customer feedback from customer review sites. It is that simple: the bigger the discrepancy between the “official” content on the mobile site and the “unofficial” content about the hotel on social media sites, the less the credibility of the property mobile site. Less credibility results in less bookings and revenue.

This content alignment could be as simple as removing “luxury” from the description of your rooms, if users are openly questioning the luxury aspect of your accommodations, or removing “award-winning” from the description of your restaurant if it has generated a lot of negative reviews on Yelp.com.

Mobile Marketing & Customer Engagement

Mobile marketing has already become an integral part in the property’s multi-channel digital marketing efforts. Its role has been growing exponentially over the past years. Having a mobile site is only the beginning of mobile marketing. In 2012, from their overall digital marketing budget, hotels should spend 9 to 10 percent on mobile marketing initiatives.

Here are the top mobile marketing initiatives hoteliers should focus on in 2012:

• Continued mobile website enhancements
• Mobile SEO
• Mobile link building to the mobile site from mobile directories and sites
• Mobile SEM (paid search) campaigns
• Mobile banner advertising in the main mobile feeder markets
• Mobile contests and sweepstakes

In 2012 hoteliers must become fluent in SMS marketing as a customer engagement medium. SMS is not email marketing and hoteliers should not be blasting text messages left and right. In other words, no “push” marketing campaigns! SMS marketing is best used as an optional “pull” campaign, where customers text a keyword to a short code to interact with the hotel to participate in mobile interactive contests, sweepstakes, specials & promotions, or to request real-time customer service.

Consider seeking advice from a leading mobile marketing and full-service hotel digital marketing firm to actively help you take advantage of the mobile channel one step at a time. Learn which mobile marketing formats make the most sense for your hotel and how to implement latest trends and best practices in your mobile marketing efforts so you can realize respectable ROI and incremental revenue growth.

Michelle Renn: These are all very practical recommendations. What are the 2012 Don’ts?

Max Starkov:

Don’t Discount in the Mobile Channel!

In this hyper-connected social and mobile world, the booking window has shrunk tremendously over the past few years and travel consumers have embraced the mobile Web as a legitimate booking channel:

• Typically, mobile bookings are for the next 48 hours (Google).
• Many major hotel brands report that 80% or more of their mobile bookings are for the same or the following day.
• Sixty-one percent of online consumers are willing to book travel via a mobile device (Google, September 2011).

In other words, people are booking closer and closer to the day of the actual arrival, meaning that it is easier for them to wait until the last minute and see what the last-minute rates are on the hotel mobile site, on an OTA site or on a last minute discounter site such as HotelTonight.com, as opposed to booking in advance via the hotel desktop or mobile sites.

In the age of social and mobile word of mouth, it will not take long for all regular and frequent guests at your hotel to hear about the lower last-minute rates offered via an OTA or a service like HotelTonight.com. What will be the result? The hotel will soon witness that:

• Booked guests are canceling existing reservations made via hotel website, phone, GDS, OTAs and re-booking via HotelTonight.com using the lower rates.
• Potential guests are waiting until the last minute to see what the last-minute rates are for the property and other hotels in the city/location they are traveling to and booking in the last minute.
• OTAs are after the hotel for these last-minute “deviations” from the contracted rate parity clauses.

The mobile channel is a last-minute distribution channel by default. Most hotel mobile bookings are for the same (65%-80%) or the following night. If hoteliers do all of the Must-Dos in 2012 as described above, these bookings would happen anyway without discounting.

Hoteliers need to maintain rate parity at all times.

You Don’t Need a Mobile App

Here at HeBS Digital we are constantly being asked by our hotel clients whether it makes sense for a hotel to develop its own mobile app or if the hotel should focus on their mobile website. From the HeBS Digital’s 5th Annual Benchmark Survey results, we can see that fewer hoteliers were planning for an iPhone app last year: 8.9 percent versus 24.1 percent in 2010.

In my view, hotels do not need a mobile app if they are a single-property, an independent hotel or resort, a franchised property, or a smaller and mid-size hotel chain and multi-property company. These hotel companies are better off focusing on building and enhancing their mobile websites and promoting the mobile site via mobile marketing initiatives, and here is why:

• Vast majority of users (90.15%) prefer mobile browsing vs. mobile apps (CEM4Mobile Analytics)
• Apps are very expensive to build, maintain, and promote
• Apps are device specific
• Not indexable by the search engines!
The Mobile App Check has identified the most popular mobile apps and how they are used in the United States. Excluding Google Maps, Weather.com and web search apps, the rest of the Top 10 apps were in the social media, entertainment and gaming realms. Not even a single travel app made it into the Top 10 list. Where is Expedia’s app? Hilton’s app? American Airlines’ app? A hotel company, be it an independent or franchised hotel or resort, a small chain or multi-property company, has no chance of creating an app that can squeeze through the mobile app clutter and find its way to the mobile user’s smartphone.

About the Author and HeBS Digital

Max Starkov is President & CEO of HeBS Digital (Hospitality eBusiness Strategies), the hospitality industry’s leading full-service digital marketing and direct online channel strategy firm, based in New York City (www.HeBSdigital.com).

HeBS Digital has pioneered many of the best practices in hotel Internet marketing, social and mobile marketing, and direct online channel distribution. The firm has won more than 180 prestigious industry awards for its digital marketing and website design services, including numerous Adrian Awards, Davey Awards, W3 Awards, WebAwards, Magellan Awards, Summit International Awards, Interactive Media Awards, IAC Awards, etc.

A diverse client portfolio of top-tier major hotel brands, luxury and boutique hotel brands, resorts and casinos, hotel management companies, franchisees and independents, and CVBs are benefiting from HeBS Digital’s direct online channel strategy and digital marketing expertise. Contact HeBS Digital’s consultants at (212) 752-8186 or success@hebsdigital.com.