Friday, June 17, 2005

We're not in Kansas anymore.....

OK here it is- the full transcript of the article that appears in this week's Travel Weekly (they had to cut it down quite a lot- (honestly,physical media- limited shelf space- I don't know...) This also contains most of the presentation matter from this week's Institute of Travel and Tourism conference. I'd be particulary interested to hear feedback from anyone who was there.

Simon Ferguson

Virtual Integration and the long tail– contours on a new landscape of travel distribution

Anyone heard of Pareto’s principle? Coined by an Italian economist it’s the maxim that 20% of a company’s products will account for 80% of their business, and basically eschews what has become a fundamental of market economics- that your big lines, will outsell your specialist/smaller ones. However in a landmark article in online magazine Wired, Editor Chris Anderson points out that this principle is being turned on its head, and replaced by the phenomenon of the long tail. Essentially, the advent of the internet and ‘virtual distribution’ is creating patterns where specialist/niche offerings are flourishing, and cumulatively, outselling the ‘big lines’. For instance, More than 50% of Amazon’s sales come from outside its top 130,000 titles, and internet music store Rhapsody streams more music tracks from outside its top 10,000. Under Pareto’s principle you’d expect the 20 % of Amazon’s top 10,000 titles would be regular sellers (i.e sell at least once a month), whereas in fact 99% of them sell regularly. Essentially, the combination of the internet, with its unlimited shelf space and the power of network consumers ( e.g online reviews, Amazon recommendations and the like) is turning conventional economic on it head. Online brands are able to sell products bricks and mortar couldn’t stock due to the requirements of getting a commercial return on limited shelf space- thus the availability of specialist/niche items is growing significantly. Similarly, market sectors are seeing new/niche entrants occupying a bigger share of the pie, and cumulatively driving larger growth than existing players Google and e-Bay are both ‘long tail’ businesses- deriving revenue from a large volume of small/specialist transactions. In Google’s case, the number of niche search terms entered (using multiple terms/longer strings of words) far outstrips the ‘big seller’ terms (e,g cheap hotels), allowing them an advertising model based around a growing long tail.

The significance? Exactly the same is happening in travel. Consider this- how many UK tour operator companies were there in 2004, licensed to carry over 4,000 passengers? Answer- 90. How many companies were there carrying less than 4,000? Answer 1,668 (Source, Travel Directory, DG&G Travel Information). Less than 4,000 is pretty specialist, and the tail is growing. In fact 2004 saw a record number of ATOLs issued, but, according to the CAA’s Richard Jackson: “There has been rapid growth by online specialists and smaller operators. In fact, the proportion of total authorisations made up by the top four groups has declined to 46 per cent, compared with a peak of 57 per cent four years ago”. This growing tail is likely to spawn increased choice in hotel availability- the top 90 operators contact, give or take, 15,000 hotels between them, whereas, there are some 400,000 hotels worldwide (Source Hotels magazine US). Indeed according to hotel industry site 4 hoteliers.com, over 60% of Expedia’s inventory is independent hotels. Expedia can afford to stock smaller hotels that don’t sell regularly, because, like Amazon, it has unlimited shelf space.

However scarier still is that, although the long tail phenomenon in travel is partly the effect of blurring in the roles of operators and agents, and the increasing ability of hotels, airlines and even tourist boards to become holiday providers, it goes way beyond ‘licensed operators’. On the day I wrote this article there were 1,006 ‘holidays’ being advertised on the UK e-bay site- consumers offering their, or their family’s holiday accommodation, often packaged with pre-booked excursions, for auction: Consumers themselves are becoming holiday providers, growing the long tail even further.

This is liable to increase with the growth of consumer weblogs or ‘blogs’. A blog is a website set up by an individual, usually as a forum for that individual’s opinions (just like this one!). They’re becoming increasingly influential- particularly in the US, where there are over 8 million such sites. Some US blogs sites now attract more traffic than regional press sites, and they generate revenue, through either advertising or e-commerce: The Drudge report, set up by ex-journalist Matt Drudge earns in excess of $1.5 million per year. A site called Blogshares lists the top blog sites in a virtual stock market- and assigns each blog a ‘virtual market capitalisation’, based on how many other sites a Blog has linking to it. Blogshares currently has over 750 travel blogs- a natural area as consumers like to log their holiday/travel experiences-and these are growing exponentially.

How long before blogs implement the new and growing travel ‘meta search’ tools, or dynamic packaging components, and become brands in their own right? Well just to show how easy it is.... at the top right of this page we’ve added the Kayak travel search tool, allowing this blog to compare prices across thousands of hotels, and refer through to a booking engine. With an hour’s work we became the latest addition to the online travel provider community, and have grown the long tail by one!

This illustrates a key point: Many travel agents lambaste Expedia, BA or Last Minute.com for cutting them out of the equation, blissfully unaware that e-Bay is teaming with consumer-originated holidays. It is the shift in the balance of power to the customer that threatens to dis-intermediate agents- not the online providers, who are merely positioning themselves to take advantage of this. Ultimately, the long tail phenomenon is all about a shift in the balance of power from supplier/producer to the customer. The de-regulation of airspace and resulting growth of low cost carriers has provided more capacity than ever before. The advent of the internet, and free flow of information facilitated by search engines and blogs, has made price and availability transparent and given customers the ability to dictate how, when and where they buy. The long tail is an example of how low the barriers of entry are.

However new entrants have impacted the top end of the market as well as the tail: Few would argue Expedia’s impact on the travel market, and yet it was Microsoft, a software company with no apparent interest in travel, that had the vision to launch it. There are currently only four travel-related entrants in the Financial Times Global 500 companies list: Carnival (107th), Cendant (225th), Interactive Corps now Expedia’s owners (351st), and Marriott hotels. Of these, Cendant and Interactive are comparative new entrants to travel- neither were in the 500 list in 2001. Similar stories abound in other sectors, where new players have sprung from obscurity to dominant positions- Vodaphone in Telecoms, and Google itself, which from being virtually unheard of a few years ago is now bigger in terms of market Capitalisation than AOL/Time Warner and some of the American TV networks.

So different is the travel landscape now, that arguably, a new paradigm is needed: Traditionally the travel supply space was a classic linear chain- airline/hotel distributing through GDS to agent, or tour operator distributing through brochure or agent. In this environment vertical integration made sense, as with regulated routes to market, owning the means of production and distribution gave control of the outcome. However now, if anything, we are in an era of virtual integration, where hotels, airlines, online aggregators, consumer brands like Tesco, and even consumers themselves are all capable of becoming providers. The hotel I’m currently in can be accessed directly via the web, but also via Last Minute.com. So it also appears on the Tesco website under the Last Minute.com white label deal. And LMDC have it through their acquisition of OTC...who also supply Thomas Cook. Oh, and the same hotel is available to be dynamically packaged by a host of agents, and specialist operators. Thus the traditional integrated supply chain is replaced by a complex network of relationships. Does the customer care? Not as long as they can buy how, when and where they want. In the Virtually integrated world, owning the relationship with the customer becomes the key.
Thus online travel suppliers will have to shift from enabling transactions- arguably the industry’s focus for the past few years- to building a sustainable brand relationship with the customer. By owning online aggregators (Expedia, Hotels.com); a search engine (Ask Jeeves) and trusted content (Trip Advisor), Interactive Corps have pursued virtual integration by acquisition- their scale has allowed them to acquire some of the key customer relationship points that underpin online travel.

At the heart of virtual integration is using your brand/assets/capabilities to develop new services, often by partnering with affiliates, and this is relevant to both large brands and small agents. Other sectors are embracing this strategy, in fact we increasingly live in a virtually integrated world: Supermarkets now sell 20% of petrol in the UK; Virgin has over 1 million financial services accounts; Amazon now sells more consumer electronics products than it does books. In the travel sector, 30% of Ryan Air’s revenue is from ancillary services, and Last Minute.com is increasingly leveraging its brand position to generate advertising revenues as well as e-commerce. Tescos, one of the doyens of virtual integration, not content with its non-food sales is prototyping an online property website, where consumer will be able to post their houses for sale for as little as £50.

Such strategies point the way for all sectors of travel: The competitors and partners of the future are liable to be very different to those of the past: Suppliers should look to new distribution partners such as financial services companies, mobile phone operators and e-Bay, if it’s the brand their customers respond to, and be prepared to position themselves as providing bullets to combatants by working with established consumer brands. Agents should take heart from the long tail phenomenon- there is clear room for them to occupy the provider role with the right mix of services and technology. They should also embrace a virtually integrated view of the world: If being dis-intermediated by a supplier is a concern, use your web brand to drive traffic to that supplier and charge a referral fee. Advertising is often easier to monetize than e-commerce- in fact Google’s $44bn market value rather gives the game away!

The shift from big sellers to long tail; from producer efficient to customer effective; from vertical to virtually integrated are contours on a new landscape of virtual distribution. At the end of the 20th century manufacturing accounted for 20% of UK GDP, by 2020 this is forecast to be displaced- 20% of GDP will be IT/technology related.

As Dorothy famously said in the Wizard of Oz, when confronted with a similarly bewildering landscape: ‘We’re not in Kansas anymore Toto’.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Dynamic!

With BA set to launch a dynamic packaging module the heat is on! Things only get better for the customer or do they? As a customer is dynamic packaging and the shift in the distribution chains what I need and want.

Ultimately, the customer doesn't care if it's dynamic packaging , a package, Taylor-made or any other combination as long as it delivers quality, choice, and value in an easy, understandable and secure manner. The issue is BRAND, do I trust the brand I'm purchasing from to deliver on these. What values do I associate with the brand - quality, flexibility and security or is it a brand that simply implies bargain basement prices.

Dynamic packaging through the Internet will soon mean any site with traffic and a trusted brand can effectively sell holidays. Who knows - Tesco's, Barclays, Amazon, e-Bay?

Where’s the wow?



I recently bought a laptop online and I was thrilled! The process was quick, simple and all round fantastic experience. By the time I came to put my credit card details in, I was convinced that this was the laptop for me -the spec was right, other users thought it was great, I was confident I was getting great value, and I was sure that the support would be brilliant. A few weeks later and I’m still boasting to people and urging them online.

Funny thing is when every I have booked holiday products my reaction has been the opposite. By the time I come to pay, I’m exhausted. I have trawled the depth and breath of Google and Yahoo convinced there is a better option out there and concerned the one I have chosen is not going to deliver what I want.

So what would make me go “WOW”? I’m not sure exactly, but I do know that once I’m ready to book I want to feel convinced. I want to know that this is the right holiday for me; I want to be sure that the value is superb, the accommodation will live up to expectations and that any problems will be quickly resolved. I want to be able to put my head on the block and say to my friends and colleges this site is fantastic, you well get what you are looking.

I want the booking to be part of the holiday experience; I want to be inspired and excited by the potential. I want to feel that this holiday is going to be the best of my life. I want to know what I can, can’t, should and must do.

Can it be done? Of course it can – if a site can get can me so attached and so excited when buying a laptop, surely a site can thrill me when booking 10 days at the beach.

Friday, June 03, 2005

Transparent


Price comparison has arrived in travel. At the click of a mouse the traveller has the ability to compare on price across 100 of online travel sites. The power has shifted and the average web user is aware. What does the future hold if it does become so easy to compare prices, if a user is at the click of a mouse able to find the cheapest hotel, car, flight, package holiday?

Despite some scepticism over meta search engines at the eye for travel conference, time well tell if this does change travel distribution. The internet has a funny knack of allowing customer (users) to operate in completely unexpected ways. Who would have predicted people would happily, indeed proudly auction all types and values of things on the Internet and trust someone miles way to pay for the Good! E-Bay must make us rethink some if not all assumptions we make.

One thing is clear price is becoming transparent and if you driven by price than there are tools out there. These tools will become more easily available and already they can be integrated very easily it sites as we have done in this blog. The form below allows you from this blog to check price and availability for Hotels anywhere in the world. Alternatively it is a simple a link in text. Hotels in London for the 6 June until the 12 June. This is also true of flights and car hire. Suddenly an opionated backpacker with a blog can become a power sells point for travel goods and services!

In the end it will come down to trust- Brand!

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Searching Questions

A small test for the office; ask some people in your office sitting at their desk what’s the speed of light? Nobody knows.

Chances are that ask the same question five years ago and still nobody would have known. So what’s the difference? Ask someone today to find out and no doubt within a couple of minutes Google would have supplied an answer. The Internet has changed our lives forever and search is now the key driver.

People still catch plains, stay in hotels, go on tours, hire cars and enjoy cruises but now they have power of information unlocked by search.

Search makes the Internet a true meritocracy. The best will win, if you have the best site, with the best content you will be at the top of the pile (list in most cases). Reassuring for those who live in a free market economy and thrive on competition. Not so reassuring is the fact that the ground rules of this competition are closely guarded secrets of the mega search engines.

Before locking some techies away in windowless basement with the task of
understanding the rules and unlocking the complex and ever changing algorithms of the search engines there are a few important considerations to make.

Firstly, if getting to the top of the list is determined by being the best then be the best, deliver your users the ultimate experience; give them the answer they are looking for. At the heart of this experience is content, rich, unique quality content is the ultimate prize of the user. Your online brand is build through the users experience. Search patterns in travel show that brand related keywords account for a huge proportion of all searches. Give an unforgettable experience and users will be searching on your brand; a search you should be guaranteed to be at the top of the results list.

Secondly, aiming to be the best for a search on ‘cheap hotels New York’ maybe a hard task. Rather consecrate on your unique areas of expertise ensuring you have complete and detailed coverage of an area. This content will stand a better chance of being at the top of search results than generic content in mass-market. Consider using multimedia content; images, 360 IPIX and videos, up to 10% of Google searches are done on their image library.


Thirdly, being the best is not just about getting the traffic its about engage it and holding it. Switching cost are low and users tolerance levels are diminishing. Don’t give users the opportunity to leave because you’re a missing simple content or giving a poor experience. Find out were you are leaking users and plug these gaps. This may present an opportunity not only to convert more users and sell additional services!

So, now that you are ready to let your techies back into the light, they will be undoubtedly brimming with ways to opertimize your pages.