Google Analytics

Site Meter

Showing posts with label Local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Local. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Customer Feedback & Earned Media in the Travel Industry…

I travel a lot for business, and one of the things that is as predictable as the sun coming up in the East is the cards and letters you get as a guest of a hotel asking for your ‘honest and candid’ feedback.   Now this is not unique to just the hotel industry, it is across many industries, but is predominant within the travel space, for obvious reasons.

Next time you check into a hotel or airline look on the front desk for the postcard sized slip of paper where they are asking for your feedback on your experience ‘the good, the bad and the ugly’.   The feedback cards, letters, slips, receipts, stickers, etc… are all over the hotel, from your room to the restaurants to the room service tray, I have even found them in the bathrooms.  With most major hotel chains, at least Hilton and Marriott, they will follow-up with an email asking for you to give them feedback online via an online survey or just sending an email to the manager or the hotel chain corporate headquarters.

I have to be honest that I don’t take the time to fill these things out, mostly because I travel so much it would become a second full-time job.  Listen, I have a hard enough time doing my expense reports every month.  But one of the reasons I usually would never fill out one of these surveys or comments cards was they went into a black hole and I always assumed that no one was reading them.  The few times I did fill them out, mostly with good comments about the hotel or airline, I would never hear back and I would never know if the comments I was giving actually ended up in a place where they were useful.   Listen, I am more than willing to give a business real feedback if they honestly want the feedback and it will be put to good use and taken seriously.  I always got the sense the feedback cards were more of a tradition that something the staff wanted to deal with.

But recently I have seen a shift, albeit somewhat leisurely in nature, in the hotel industry.  I have seen some early signs where, though the ‘give me feedback’ theme is still the same, the vehicle and channel have shifted somewhat dramatically.   Over the past few months I have seen more and more signs that the travel industry is really interested in my feedback and they are willing to remove the black box and open up the kimono, which has to be driven by the amazing paradigm shift in the marketplace.   More and more I have experienced this shift in attitude and approach where I am being asked to share my experience on social networks such as Facebook and Twitter, but the most interesting is the introduction of Yelp into the review dialog. It is clear this industry has learned about the value of conversational marketing and earned media.

I have to admit I was a little shocked when I saw my hotel receipt from a recent stay at the Hampton Inn near the San Francisco airport where on the hotel bill they were asking for me to go on Yelp and give feedback to my experience.  The hotel room bill had a sticker that said ‘Yelp Us – review your stay on Yelp.com and receive a $5 Starbucks gift card on us!’   Wow, this is a dynamic shift from the black box and smoke and mirrors to letting it all hang out and asking customers to take their best shot, in the public square where everyone will see.


I guess I shouldn't have been shocked, I am in the industry and am a big advocate for businesses leveraging the collective intellect and experiences of their customers to help build and grow their businesses.   But I guess I was surprised because it did open up a different convention for me around a business asking me for feedback.

Now as a customer, when I give feedback to the hotel, I know there is real value being created, even if the hotel doesn’t see the same value, there is value.   Now, regardless of the $5 gift certificate for Starbucks, which I understand why the incentive is there, the true value is really three-fold.

The first value driver being the fact that I am able to make sure other people that might be interested in this business can get feedback from someone that has experienced the business first hand.   This in itself is worth me taking the time to write feedback on Yelp or other review sites.   It is the reason I go on Yelp to review a good or bad experience at a local restaurant or dry cleaner already, without someone asking me to do it.  This is the media portion of the Earned Media and conversational marketing I was talking about.
 
The second value is around the fact that I know if I write something the hotel is going to be compelled to read it and at least take it seriously.   The feedback is no longer behind closed doors or in a black box.  It is not hidden on a managers desk from their regional VP or for that fact other potential customers.   What I say has to matter to the hotel, because they know what I say is going to be read by others, especially by those people that know me or trust me.  This is the hook, and an important piece of earned media is the hook that gives both parties reasons to engage.

The third and maybe most compelling value is I am providing feedback in an open social environment where there is also a value to me directly, beyond the free cup of coffee.  By taking the time to share and review my experience on a site like Yelp, FourSquare or Facebook, I am able to build relationships with other people that might be on these social media outlets.  By taking the time to share with others, I gain social currency that today can’t really be measured, but becomes an intangible value to me and my personal brand.   People will review my feedback and I can build credibility of my own brand, versus just being a one to one transaction that gives me nothing back in return.  This is me building my own brand online, and though all earned media, as long as it is honest and open, allows for personal brand building, this is the true definition of an influencer driving earned media and getting value at the same time.

This is just the tip of the iceberg for the travel industry, and other service oriented industries, and I can see where this expands into scoring of customers to know who is more valuable in providing feedback or who is going to give a marketer real earned media value.  I also see the future where brands can leverage these touch points to build true online relationships with their customers and other online influencers, which could revolutionize the way these service industries operate.

Forrester Research just released an interesting report on hotel industry websites that damns virtually the entire industry as ante-diluvian in its approach to web marketing. The research giant reviewed the content and functionality of the four largest four-star hotel brandwebsites: Hilton Hotels + Resorts, Hyatt, Marriott, Hotels + Resorts, and Sheraton Hotels + Resorts. Though this report doesn't bode well for the industry as a whole, I think the signs are there that they are trying.  The report also taps into the idea that I am seeing around reviews being key to the conversational marketing strategy of the travel industry.

I am proud of the Hilton brand for investing in the social media channel and taking the risks to let it all hang out, and engaging in open and honest word of mouth marketing.  Though, as someone that has been in the space for years, and used to advise major Fortune 1,000 companies on why they should be using the internet for these types of investments and especially investing in earned media marketing and influencer marketing, I do recognize how hard it is to take risks within a large corporation today.

I am very confident that social outlets like Yelp will continue to grow and become more and more a part of the daily zeitgeist of our communities, the real question is how much will marketers embrace these changes versus fighting them, because we all know what happens when you try and fight the change.

Friday, April 15, 2011

The Alexandria Symphony Orchestra...

4/What a great local resource for the arts. I am proud to live in Alexandria because of the great culture that pours out of the city.

The Alexandria Symphony is known Worldwide for their compositions and amazing abilities. The ASO is Northern Virginias’s premiere fully professional orchestra, the Alexandria symphony Orchestra is entering into its 60th season.


A passionate advocate of arts education, Maestro Kluge has developed extensive programs for children and adults that have engaged the community in securing a strong future for the arts. Posted by Picasa

Friday, June 05, 2009

OpenCarry.org is my new favorite group!

I am not a big guy carrying guy, and have a tendency to be on the liberal side (though I do believe people have rights to own guns to protect themselves), but I always am a supporter of those with common sense. What I saw today from OpenCarry.org really made me a big fan of their leadership.

OpenCarry.org endorsed Brian Moran
for Governor in the Democratic Party Primary, coming up this Tuesday. This is probably not a big endorsement for Brian (he already has hundreds of endorsements), but there was something interesting about this endorsement that I have not seen in others. OpenCarry.org not only detailed why they selected Brian (which you can read at the endorsement page) but they also took the time to think through the endorsement and provide insights.

There are so many times you read an endorsement where the leadership of the organization that is doing the endorsement doesn't provide any detail behind their decision, and it is usually unclear on why they selected a candidate or not.

There are many classic cases of this in our home town of Alexandria.

I hope every Democratic voter in Alexandria does the research to decide on the best candidate this Tuesday. It isn't about just who spent the most on TV, but it is about the person that is going to do the best work for us, and who is the most dedicated to Virginia, and the children that live here.

In case you don't want to read the whole endorsement by OpenCarry.org, check out their statement on why they didn't support Terry McAuliffe...

The group calls McAuliffe...

"Terry McAuliffe is a man who is backed heavily by out of state money and interests and probably does not even know where the General Assembly Building is in Richmond."

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Alexandria School Board Special Election

There is a special election coming up for Alexandria School Board, due to the resignation of Claire Eberwein who moved out of the country, not a day too soon from my perspective.

I have been looking at local voting trends and have been trying to figure out how many voters are going to show-up to the polls in early August to vote. There are four candidates running, and the election does have a divided community, due to the early retirement of Superintendent Rebecca Perry.

I was trying to figure out how many votes any of the candidates would need in order to win the election. To figure this out we first need to figure out how many people are going to show-up. Well, if you look at historical trends on voting across all of Alexadria, by office, you see an interesting dynamic.


You see that local elections are the poorest performing in terms of total voters turning out. To me that is amazing, as the local elections are probably the most important and have the biggest impact to your immediate world. You can see from this chart that, within Alexandria City, the average turnout over the past 30+ years for local elections has been around 30%. Compare that to Congressional (60%), Presidential (58%), and Governor (52%), this is about ½ of the turn-out on a good day.

Even more alarming is the fact that the local election trends have headed south. Look over the past 30 years how the turn out was in the high 30%’s if not 40% range. By 1990’s the turn out started to hit around 30% to 28% and then most recently heading to low 20%’s, if not worse. Note, 2007 was a special election for the vacancy of a City Council seat when Andrew MacDonald realized that he could not fulfill all his promises to the 100’s of groups that got him into the Vice-Mayor seat (note – this is speculation on my part, but I have plenty of data to support the theory).

Once again we are in the middle of the summer and are facing a special local election, though this one is only in the “B District” so the totals will be much lower. But looking at trends, and how people turn-out to local elections and special elections, I think we are in for a pretty low voter count, with even lower number of voters that will make the difference for the winner.

It is plausible that 10-20 absentee ballots or 5 rides to the polling place could actually make the difference in this special election. Note, last year Cleveland lost to Wilson by only 300 votes citywide, though had beat Wilson in Absentee turnout by 3x. The strategy did work for Cleveland, though not enough to get him into office.

Now, if we use the last special election as an indicator of what will happen this summer, we are going to have around 2,600 voters turn out to vote. The only kicker on this assumption is “B District” does have a tendency to turn out for School Board Elections. If you look at the past 10 local elections that were deciding the School Board seats and there was real competition, “B District” had a much higher turn-out than the rest of the city, as a proportion to their normal local voting behavior.


I have crunched the numbers, and with the different factors, such as summer travel, 4 candidates, hot topics/issues, and compressed election cycle, I think the final number of voters for this election will be around 3,500. Maybe I am crazy, because this would mean there would be almost 500 more than the Wilson/Cleveland campaign, and not everyone had kids (though this doesn’t preclude them from voting), I think it will be higher than the 2,600 or so that the data tells us.

Either way, when you split the vote between four highly qualified candidates, okay maybe three highly qualified candidates and one buffoon, someone could actually win the election with as little as 1,000 votes, though I think the winning number is actually closer to 1,250.

We will have to wait to see. Luckily we only have a few weeks to go. Then we can go back to enjoying our summer. Maybe the new school board member will run on the platform of longer summers.

Sounds good to me!

Friday, July 11, 2008

Alexandria eNews – A Great Service!

The City of Alexandria is great at keeping the internet at your fingertips and always providing information to the citizens. I have always been very impressed with the city and how the leaders have been so technology oriented. I sit on the Alexandria IT Commission and get a bird’s eye view of the upcoming plans for the city.

Between the free Wi-Fi internet in Old Town, to streaming the City Council meetings online, to having government services available on the city website, Alexandria is a great technology town.
One of the services that I think is really under publicized is the eNews service that has been built by the city staff and is a real goldmine of current information and news.

The eNews service allows for you to select from over 80 topics on information you want to track or be alerted to on your phone, email, blackberry, iPhone, etc… The messages are real-time so you are alerted for everything from power outages, crime updates, Amber Alerts, airport information, and so on and so on.

It is easy to sign-up, you just visit the Alexandria eNews site and register your mobile and email devices. You can scroll though the 85+ alerts to find what really interests you or concerns your life living in the city.

The top 10 alerts you probably want to subscribe to are ranked below:

10. Alexandria City Council Agenda – I like to keep track of what City Council is working on these days.

9. Amber Alerts – Whenever I see these I am always looking for that white Toyota Celica with rust on the tailpipe.

8. Consumer Product Safety Recalls and Notices – Always good to keep track of this as it is usually updated before CNN.

7. Severe Traffic Alerts from DC, Maryland, and NOVA – It is a busy list, but keeps me away from trouble.

6. Utility Outages – I like to know others are without power also.

5. Notices of City Government Meetings – These are the meetings around town.

4. Airport Delays for BWI, Dulles, and Reagan National – I travel a lot, so this is helpful, though I have found looking out the window helps also.

3. Daily Crime Report – A release on all the crime in Alexandria. Really good to keep track of what is going on in your neighborhood.

2. General City News Releases – A lot of great information on what is going on around the city, including events and special meetings.

1. ACPS Emergency Announcements – Find out if your kids are out of school during the snow or if you have to drive in the ice.

And for the paranoid in you, number #1a is - Emergency Management Tips & News/Emergency Alerts from Alexandria, the District of Columbia and Arlington, Fairfax County, Loudoun, Montgomery, and Stafford Counties.

The alerts are great (sign-up here), and if you manage them correctly they only come to you when you need them or in areas you are interested in. Beyond the top 10 (+1), here are a few others that I have found helpful that might be worth testing out. You can always unsubscribe if you find they are not as useful as you thought:

Boards and Commissions Vacancies
Election Information and Sample Ballots
Smoke Detector Battery Reminders
Personal Property Tax
Environmental Quality News
New Web Site Features
Food Safety Alerts
National Cyber Security Alerts
Pandemic Flu Information Alerts
East Cost Earthquake Alerts
Federal Government Closings
Metrorail Service Disruptions

Oh yes, and the best thing is this service is free! There is no cost to sign up for eNews, although your wireless provider may charge you to receive e-mail or text messages on your mobile device. If you already use e-mail or text messaging, eNews messages will work the same way. Contact your wireless provider if you have any questions about the fees they may charge.

Disqus for Cold Kiwi