Posted: February 17th, 2010 | Author: Ed | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Even as a web professional with over ten years, staying on top of trends like the cultural impact of social media in marketing is amazing. Working with colleagues from an agency background and web based creatives, social media as marketing is another animal.
It’s a tricky marketing channel because we want the right people to endorse your brand to their friends.
Social media can amplify brand awareness, is a great way to source ideas and constructive feedback from your consumers, and can be cheap to produce and maintenance especially for more personalized messaging.
Clients get it, but they need answers to common questions about social media.
Posted: February 4th, 2010 | Author: Ed | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Good read on how to build your twitter profile for a tourist audience.
Check out the Tnooz article
Posted: February 3rd, 2010 | Author: Ed | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: future | No Comments »
This is definitely a cool concept!
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/02/03/future.travel.space.aircruise/index.html?hpt=C2
Posted: December 31st, 2009 | Author: Ed | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thinking about how a cruise company can use Twitter:
What kind of content would a cruise company publicize in real-time?
Rather than have deals, travel tips from a blog expert, or new ship/itinerary info — elevate the cruise experience form the perspective of your cruise fans and share it with fellow cruise followers. Cruise ships are always sailing with cruisers that want to share their travel experience in real-time. Even if it’s as simple as a roll call soap box platform, at least you capture the enthusiasm of individuals that want to celebrate with peers about your brand.

Sept 2009 survey: Brand monitoring was an important aspect of Twitter usage as well, among the companies surveyed, though publicizing new content was the top activity. About one-quarter of companies were using the microblogging site for customer service or gathering customer feedback.
Posted: December 27th, 2009 | Author: Ed | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: social media | No Comments »
If your friend is a travel expert that knows what you want and can find the best deal for you then game over, you win. For cruise companies, over 80% of their bookings come from travel experts giving advice and recommendations to prospects on how and where to cruise. Dedicated cruisers, folks that troll travel forums like Cruise Critic, can self-service their research and cruise planning needs without a travel professional easily. When it comes to price, a big driver for both first-time cruisers and veterans alike, there a lot of wholesale discount travel sites that offer compelling deals.
Putting price aside which is a big consideration factor when choosing a cruise from a set of variations such as number of nights, stateroom type and port types in a particular destination, how do you sell an experience? With storytelling of course.
The best travel agents understand what the customer needs and can pitch a cruise experience according to what is most relevant to that prospect. It takes time to get to know what the consumer wants and some travel agents have the skill to maintain long business relationships because of their tacit knowledge of the consumers’ priorities and preferences. This process to build trust with your client can take time. With social media becoming an online standard, the ability to share experiences and enable friends to tell their stories to other friends is a new dimension in marketing travel that cruise companies need to maximize.
There are a couple perspectives that make the leap of faith into social media a big challenge. From the corporate point of view, enabling part of your brand in the hands of the consumer requires new marketing tools that won’t be cost-efficient at first (although they are not that expensive) and the return on investment is a trial and error model that should be managed internally optimistically rather than risk-averse. In most cases, to do social media properly there are big budget related questions to clarify with corporate marketing executives such as:
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Upgrading site: How do I integrate social media into our current web booking flow?
- Inbound scenarios: Where is my target audience online and how do I maximize my online spend?
- Content moderation: What do we do with consumers that talk poorly about our brand?
- Coordinated marketing: When do you launch your PR tactics to build organic buzz with influencers and their social networks?
From a consumer standpoint, making it easy and fun to tell your cruise story is where post-cruise marketing becomes part of the guests’ total travel experience. It also is the hero that helps to build trust and confidence with peers that seek relevant touch points that match their research and planning needs when it comes to considering another cruise with your brand.
“Social media and travel are a perfect fit, because they both are built around this idea of sharing experiences and storytelling,” said Mary Madden, a senior researcher at the Pew Internet and American Life Project in Washington, D.C. “Content, whether that’s a blog post about your favorite restaurant or the story from your latest trip to Greece and photos of that trip, is a form of social currency that you share with other people who frequent your social media space.”
Social Networking Changing The Way We Travel
Both travel agents and friends you trust will help cruise marketing online grow, it is up to cruise companies to build the right web applications that enable both target groups to promote the brand in relevant ways. More importantly, social media solutions need to be created internally with all marketing channels in mind that include PR, print and web subject matter experts.