By Nora Macaluso E-Commerce Times
06/05/01 6:55 PM PT
Overall, one-third of the hotels surveyed said they connected with other businesses over
the Web - but more possibilities are out there if they look for them.
How Much is 'Free' Costing You? Learn how DaveRamsey.com saw a 567% uplift in ROI with Omniture. This complimentary guide and webinar cover the most important factors in selecting an analytics solution. Download Now.
Hotels and other businesses in the hospitality industry can make better
use of the Internet to market and manage their businesses, according to
a report released Monday by professional services firm
Andersen.
While the industry has been a "comparatively slow adopter" of
new technologies, the report found that executives do expect
over the next few years to increase their use of the Web for
sales and marketing programs like virtual property tours, as
well as for loyalty programs and guest-history management.
The hospitality industry also plans to "aggressively" adopt
online programs for reservations, data management and other
functions, said the report. A survey of hospitality executives
around the world found that most expect to take 15.4 percent
of their reservations over the Internet in three years, up
from 4.9 percent currently.
Sales, Marketing First
Sales and marketing are the first to be integrated into a
hospitality company's Internet operations, the report said,
followed by distribution, recruitment and procurement.
One-third of those surveyed said they had current or planned
distribution relationships with portals like AOL, Yahoo! or Amazon.
Those with arrangements in place said they had a "slightly higher
than average effectiveness ratio."
Said Andersen partner Roger Cline, a co-author of the study: "One
of the main attractions of online distribution for hospitality
companies is the opportunity to reduce the high costs of
distribution they have historically faced."
Travel agency commissions and other fees could be cut by up to
10 percent as businesses put their distribution systems online, the study found.
Plans in Place
Large organizations are more likely to use an extranet
to connect with other businesses, like suppliers or
customers, Andersen said. Overall, one-third of the
hotels surveyed said they connected with other
businesses over the Web, with 42 percent of large
chains and 26 percent of smaller businesses saying
they did so.
Fifty-eight percent of the hotels surveyed have
a "formal e-business strategy" in place, the report found.
Larger chains are more likely to have an e-business plan,
with those in the Asia-Pacific region "more proactively planning" for
the future.
More than 70 percent of the hotels in that region said
they had a strategy in place, followed by 66 percent in Europe, the
Mideast, India and Africa, and 55 percent in the Americas.
Tsk Tisch
The report was compiled in conjunction with New York University's
Preston Robert Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism and Travel
Administration, and trade association Hospitality Financial and
Technology Professionals.
The Tisch Center, part of NYU's School of Continuing and Professional
Studies, said the Internet is such a vital tool for the industry
that it will offer graduate students a four-course concentration in
hospitality e-commerce beginning in the fall.
Webvan Offers Same-Day Service in Seattle June 05, 2001
To qualify for same-day delivery from Webvan in Seattle, consumers
must have earned enough points in the company's
loyalty rewards program.
U.S. To Play B2B Matchmaker May 31, 2001
Though the government's foray into B2B would appear to put the U.S. in direct competition
with private industry, the initiative might simply be a new way for the U.S to continue
promoting business.
The Amazon Earnings Speculation Story January 21, 2002
For Amazon to break out of the box created by the competing objectives of boosting sales
and controlling costs, a pro-forma profit in the fourth quarter will be critical, a
Goldman Sachs analyst wrote.