Archive: January, 2009

How to get social media traction for your tourism blog

There's a lot to remember about effective blogging - use a checklist (photo courtesy mictlan at Flickr Creative Commons)

There is a lot to remember for effective blogging, so use a checklist (photo courtesy mictlan at Flickr Creative Commons)

One of the comments on my rant about social media foot-dragging by much of the tourism industry was left by Seattle-based writer/photographer Pam Mandel of Nerd’s Eye View. She’ll be my co-panelist at the Blog Highways travel blogging panel at this year’s South by Southwest Interactive tech conference in Austin.  We talk all the time about travel bloggers and tourism internet marketing.

The phrase she used in her comment is one that I hear a lot: “….we have a blog but no one is reading it.”

Well, why is that?

If your content is good, the problem is eminently fixable, but it takes work. Social media tools are (generally) free in monetary terms – good news in today’s economy – but they are NOT free in terms of the time needed to nurture and sustain them, which is true for any endeavor that involves human relationships and communication.

This is not something you toss over to the office intern for her/him to do in their spare time. Do not tell me you are “too old” to learn how to do this, either – I’m 47.  Nice try.

This is not your Web site, broadcasting pretty pictures and marketing-speak in one direction.

This is the “social” part of social media.  There’s a lot to it, but it isn’t rocket science; it’s building connections and relationships with prospective visitors to your destination.

OK, let’s break it down….why is “no one reading?”

  • Define “no one.” Are you a brand-new blog (less than 3-6 months old?)  You will not have soaring readership numbers (my benchmark, among others, is unique visitors) unless you represent a very popular, world-class destination.  Every blogger starts out with 2-3 unique readers a day, and yes, one of them is probably your Mom (ask her to leave a comment next time; lots of comments are an important metric, too, so please don’t make it hard to comment by requiring registration and other silliness.)  Do you have about 50 uniques a day stopping by?  What if 50 people physically showed up at your office wanting to know more about your destination – see them all lined up in the hallway? Feels pretty good, right?  Take what you can get in the beginning. As super video blogger Gary Vaynerchuk says, “Everything is better than zero.”
  • Is your content boring? Be honest – is it written by committee and vetted to within an inch of its life, then poked at by an “SEO expert?”  Gimme a break.  Readers connect with a lively human voice that has fresh news. Don’t waste their time with your recycled press releases – what else d’ya got?  I recommend the Philadelphia tourism blog UWishUNu or Experience Scottsdale (AZ) as examples of how to do it right.  If your content is boring because your destination is boring, then I’m sorry, I can’t help you. :)
  • Do you link OUT in your blog posts? That’s how we wave to people on the Web….links say, “Hi, I appreciate your content and consider it link-worthy.” No, you do not have to ask to link to someone’s site; that’s part of the fun. Do you see the hyperlinked (light blue) items in this post? Every one of those people will see me talking about them over here on UpTake, because they see the link coming into the administrative back end of their site. Most will come over to visit and see what we’re talking about. That means traffic for this blog. Sure, I planned it that way. So can you.
  • Do you surf over and check out the sites that link IN to your main Web site and/or your blog?  They thought you were link-worthy; isn’t that nice?  You always know when someone links to you, right? (meaning the data is visible to your entire marketing, public relations and communications teams, not just “the IT guy.”) Go look around on the site that linked to you, and maybe leave a comment on one of their posts in return; that’s how good link karma works, like any human kindness or courtesy. Some incoming links are from spammers/link farms – Boo! – so identify them as spam and delete.
  • Is your number of blog content subscribers (by RSS or email) moving in an upward direction?  Do you make it easy to subscribe and is it obvious how to do so on your site?  Do you periodically encourage subscription in your posts?
  • Is your blog registered with Technorati and lots of other blog directories?  Do you automatically or manually ping major search engines/directories after each post?
  • Do you highlight your best blog posts in your Twitter stream and your destination’s Facebook page, along with photos of your destination on Flickr and some videos on YouTube? Yes, I’ll wait here while you go set those up. To get the word out about a blog, you don’t just do it on the blog itself – you need outposts on the Web.  Go see the Twitter stream from the tourism people in Nova Scotia, or the 3 folks who do Hawaii tourism: DavidHTA, Michael Ni and Nathan Kam.  Go see the Facebook page for Iowa tourism. Go see what these tourism guys in the Amazon have done with social media – good for them!  There’s a lot of travel action on Twitter.
  • Ready to learn even more about successful blogging? Do what every other new blogger does – we all head over and read every word of Aussie Darren Rowse’s ProBlogger, a simply indispensable resource.

If this all sounds like a lot of work, that’s because it is HARD to build a blog that draws a crowd, and don’t let some newly jumped-up “social media marketing expert” tell you otherwise.  I’ve been at it for three years as a blogger, and I’m still learning. The learning curve will only get steeper, so get hot.

In the long term, you cannot outsource social media and be particularly effective.  My consulting company Every Dot Connects, for example, just finished what we think was a pretty good marketing campaign contest with HomeAway vacation rentals. I wrote some blog posts for their new microsite as a part of that project, but the idea is that such content eventually moves in-house because you want your organization’s voice in social media, not mine. I’ll teach you how to fish, and all that….

While you’re at it, keep an ear to the ground about mobile content – my long-time tech mentor Dwight Silverman at the Houston Chronicle tells me that mobile devices (mostly because of the game-changing iPhone) are the next huge leap for the Web, social media and how humans connect.

Is your tourism organization thinking about mobile? Do you check your blog’s presentation on mobile devices?  Start now, because people are driving near/through/around your destination even as we speak, looking for guidance on their Web-browsing mobile device.  Make sure that your blog is easily findable and full of useful information for your visitors, just like that danged brochure that you still print for an ever-shrinking audience at the highway rest stops.

Sure, keep doing occasional print runs, but your focus should be shifting now, to the future and to the Web.

Hey, tourism folks: the social media boat is leaving the pier

Hey, we're out here, where are you guys? (courtesy foundphotoslj on Flickr Creative Commons)

We are out here in social media; where ARE you guys?! (courtesy foundphotoslj at Flickr Creative Commons)

After only a few meet-and-greet sessions into the Fall 2008 Travel Media Showcase conference in Kansas City, I realized that I was a wee bit out of step with most of the rest of the room.

I was a blogger, and they (generally) were not.

It made me crazy.

Frankly, I wondered when the mainstream travel and tourism industry would back off on printing brochures and rejiggering their Web sites (again) and really engage with the Web 2.0/social media world.

Many CVB and tourism bureau representatives said they were “considering” at least adding a blog to their main Web site, and when I invited their guest blog post participation on my Family Travel site (as the Iowa Tourism Office had already done) exhibitors were uniformly enthusiastic and interested in learning more.

My concern is that we are rapidly moving past the “I’m considering that” stage into the “this is a major way to engage with our travel customers right now” stage, but too many are dragging their feet.  Why?

There is an army of wildly enthusiastic travelers online.  When I began blogging on the BootsnAll Travel Network about family travel in early 2006, I was thrilled when a little community of readers magically appeared, leaving comments on my posts about places as disparate as Tokyo and Colonial Williamsburg. Some of those readers also blogged, and we read each other’s work, recommended resources and shared our passion for travel with many others in the ever-growing online world.

We gabbed together in person at fun blogging/geek conferences like BlogHer (which had a 2008 travel blogger’s meetup,) Austin’s South by Southwest Interactive, SOBCon (”Biz School for Bloggers”) and BlogWorld and New Media Expo, even Le Web in Paris and The Next Web in Amsterdam.  We exchanged ideas on Travelwriters.com. We started travel blogger forums.

We put our photos on Flickr and shot video for YouTube. We were thrilled when our favorite print magazines started blogs like Intelligent Travel (National Geographic Traveler,) the Perrin Post (Wendy Perrin of Condé Nast Traveler,) This Just In (by Budget Travel magazine) and for me personally as a Texas-based writer, the Texas Highways magazine blog.

We piled onto Facebook and put up links to our posts on our Facebook pages (and sometimes even on stodgy LinkedIn, where we joined Groups like Travel Media Pros and THAT’s Professional.) We bookmarked good posts on StumbleUpon and Delicious.  We were elated when we found lots of other travel enthusiasts on Twitter.

We’re looking forward to the 2009 travel blogging panels at South by Southwest Interactive (SXSWi) and at BlogHer….and we’re wondering why we still don’t have more company from traditional tourism organizations.

Next time someone like me says, “Do you have a blog?” you should be able to answer, “Sure, and here’s our Facebook page and here we are on Twitter and check out our Flickr photos and YouTube videos.”

Hey, your destination looks like a place that I’d like to visit!

(Ready to jump in? Don’t miss the post How to get social media traction for your tourism blog)

Travel Stories on Social Media–Weekly Winners

Social media sites are the ultimate in popularity contests. I recently checked three sites, Digg, Reddit and StumbleUpon to see what the most popular travel stories were for the past seven days. I am not on these sites often and I wondered if during a week’s time if the results were similar, if there were any striking differences or truly great discoveries were revealed.  Here are the results:

Digg’s Top Three for the Past Seven Days in Travel & Places

Courtesy of the New York Times

Courtesy of the New York Times

1. Crap works. Words an 8 year old boy think are really funny seem to take-off. This post is about towns called names like Crapstone and Penistone.  There is more of these playful names if you wish in this article is from the venerable New York Times.  I thought the ‘Times was stodgy. I was wrong. They are at the top of Digg because of this story.

2.  The possible re-opening of the beloved Statue of Liberty at the instigation of President Obama makes headline news and the top of Digg.  This is good news and it should be spread across the world.

3.  A striking image of a famous landmark, the Golden Gate Bridge is number three.  I wonder why this photo rose to the top over all the other millions of photos.  It is beautifully done but so are millions of other shots online.  I guess social media mavens like photography.

Reddit’s Top Three for the Week (search = travel)

1.  A very funny complaint letter to Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Air. This appears on Telegraph.co.uk.

Global Access Map, the darker the area, the more inaccessible it is

Global Access Map, the darker the area, the more inaccessible it is

2. This is an intriguing image. It is a map showing “Travel Time to Major Cities:  A global map of accessibility” by the European Commission on Global Environmental Monitoring.  Definitely deserves to be in the top of the site.

3. The popularity of this photo is perplexing.  It is a decent photo entitled ‘Chocolate Hills” from photographer, Richard Seaman. The photo is interesting, good, but not great. I went to his site, hoping to find a story to make it come alive to me and didn’t find anything.  The only plausible explanation is an obsession for chocolate amongst reddit types.

Stumbleupon (recently popular in Travel)

1.  Photos of the world’s most expensive island top the list. It is a mere $75,000,000 and is from the  Financial Times House & Home section. Why is it so high? Probably because wealth is fascinating and the island is stunning. Plus, stumblers seem to like photo essays more than lengthy,  thought provoking essays.

Wine Hotel

De Vrouwe van Stavoren Hotel lets you sleep in a wine casket.

2.  This photo gallery showcases an unusual hotel made from wine casks. It does look inviting but does it reek of spilt wine?  It is liked because it is unusual, it is interesting story and the photos illustrate the story beautifully.

3. Top Ten Destinations for Independent Traveller’s comes in at third and is from the staff at Boots-n-All blog.  I like the idea of encouraging travel with or without a companion.  This well written post is about the dream of travel. I understand its rise to the top.

In this short search, I discovered that what is first, second or third on one site varies from site to site. Reddit’s top three were diverse, StumbleUpon’s were uniformly beautiful and Digg’s were either funny or mundane.  The top media publications were represented  in the top three on all the sites.  I guess after years of  looking for news, they can spot a story.

I plan on continuing this search each week to find trends, see what is hot and what is not.  i will let you know what I find.

BBC Launches Lonely Planet Travel Module

Lonely Planet Travel Module on BBC.com Home Page

Lonely Planet Travel Module on BBC

The BBC has launched a Lonely Planet travel module on the BBC.com home page. The module provides Lonely Planet direct one-click acccess to BBC.com’s 26 million users around the globe.

In addition to enticing visitors to visit Lonely Planet’s destination pages, there’s also a picture gallery and a ‘latest from Lonely Planet’ section which displays three editorially selected stories from the Lonely Planet website.

In a press statement, Kym Niblock, MD BBC.com, BBC Worldwide, said that “Broadening our already huge content offering to give our users access to the latest travel information will enable them to connect with the world and each other.”

Well, I tried to do a little connecting, and turns out the only connection the module facilitates is between the visitor and the Lonely Planet website. Anything you do – any click anywhere on the module – Will immediately result in you ending up on a page on the Lonely Planet website.

To be fair, BBC.com could do a lot worse than have Lonely Planet handling its travel section. The problem here runs a little bit deeper, and has to do with BBC’s aggressive promotion of Lonely Planet on its digital real estate.

BBC Worldwide owns Lonely Planet – a 75% stake, to be precise. To add to the confusion, BBC.com is a commercial for-profit site, while BBC.co.uk has to work under UK license-fee regulations, which prevents it from showing favoritism to any one travel content provider.

This faultline between the BBC and BBC Worldwide has been the subject of endless controversy, with accusations of lack of transparency in the commercial operations, and even a parliamentary committee formed to look into why the BBC purchased Lonely Planet, and the associated risks involved.

When the BBC tried to launch a Lonely Planet-branded magazine, lawmakers expressed concern that it would give the BBC an unfair advantage over other magazine publishers. There was a particularly big dust-up late last year with media and lawmakers piling on the BBC for providing Lonely Planet excessive coverage to LP editor Tom Hall.

Hopefully the BBC will do things properly this time round and U.K. residents will get to see the Lonely Planet travel module, same as the rest of the world.

Online Travel Websites & Hotel Tax Lawsuits

A decision against Pitt County, NC by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Raleigh in a lawsuit won by a bunch of online travel websites, is making waves in the travel industry and in the justice system, because of the enormous significance to other similar cases pending in dozens of courts, not to mention the millions of dollars involved, and the larger question of whether states have a right to tax internet companies which do not have a physical address in-state.                                                                                                   
Online travel websites which offer hotel booking make a profit by pocketing the difference between rates offered to customers and the discounted bulk rates offered by the hotels to these sites. The problem here is that the hotels, as of date, are paying occupancy taxes to local counties based on the lower discounted rate. The counties, on the other hand, want taxes for each room based on the higher rate the customer actually pays. The argument here is over who, if anyone, is going to pay the tax on the difference between the two rates.
 

And this untaxed difference pocketed by online travel sites has suddenly become as important as the abortion wars, with dozens of counties having filed lawsuits (some of them class-action) against online travel websites including Expedia, Travelocity, Priceline and Orbitz, among others. None of the lawsuits, until the Raleigh appeal case, had been able to win a definitive federal decision inspite of years of litigation and hearings.

And this is not just about paying more taxes in future. Lyndhurst County, NJ collects about $337,117 a year in hotel taxes, and they’re suing travel websites (including Expedia, Travelocity and Priceline) for 5 million dollars. This is just for one County.  They’re actively trying to rope in all 147 towns in New Jersey and make it a class-action. If that happens, and then the travel websites lose the suit, can you imagine the amount that they’d end up paying in back-taxes, damages and costs? And even this would be just for one state.

Hotel Occupancy tax Lawsuit

Hotel Occupancy tax Lawsuit

Throw in the dozens of other lawsuits in San Antonio, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Chicago, along with class-actions by smaller counties put together, and what you have is a disaster waiting to happen – If the travel sites start losing.

Which is why immediately after the federal Raleigh appeal went in favor of the travel websites,  both sides  are now rushing to lobby the new 111th Congress.

The travel websites want to add an amendment to the $850 billion economic-recovery stimulus bill which would ban local authorities from taxing the travel websites. The Counties and Cities, for their part, are putting pressure on their Congressmen to not support any such move, so they can continue their fight through the courts.

Photo by Phillip via flickr (creative commons).

Social Media for Travel Conference Comes to San Francisco in March

Hotel Nikko San Francisco

Hotel Nikko San Francisco

I will be attending  Eye for Travel’s Social Media Strategies for Travel conference on March 10-11, 2009 at the sleek Hotel Nikko in San Francisco. This is my first Eye for Travel sponsored conference.

The conference is intended to deliver “best practices from innovative travel companies that have cracked the social media nut and have real case studies, best practices and analytics to discuss.” They make a convincing argument to attend the conference by promising we can learn how to measure and monetize social media.

After reviewing the conference schedule, I am most interested in four of the twelve featured sessions (and yes, the networking drinks receptions are 5th on my list):

Eye For Travel comes to San Francisco

Eye For Travel comes to San Francisco

1. Case Studies on Social Media: How to Measure and Monetize Your Campaigns

Like most conference attendees, I like case studies and the nuts and bolts of how to do something new. Invariably, I discover a nugget of an idea I can take back to my desk to build an idea or augment a marketing campaign.  I am interested in hearing how Intercontinental Hotels Group successfully (or not) incorporated social media into their marketing efforts.

2. Combine Search and Social Media to Drive Traffic to Your Site

This will be presented by Scott McNeely of Viator, Inc. and I hope he will discuss the positive and negative effects on their site from the multiple social media changes they made last year including the addition of  reviews and ratings, a blog and wish lists.  I want to know what worked, what did not work and how they plan to improve the results.

3. Of course, I will listen to the Spotlight on Semantic WebHow and When will your Business be Affected? This is being presented by Yen Lee, president of UpTake and Ken Leeder, CEO of RealTravel. I know our perspective, but I am curious about RealTravel’s take on the semantic web and how they will continue to use it to build their business.

4. The third session is Social Media Marketing: Why A Holistic Approach Pays Dividends with speakers from Marriott International, Southwest Airlines, Parker Hospitality Group and TravelMuse.   I hope they focus on how to determine the right combination of tools, UGC and blogging.  I am interested in finding right social media mix for the right effort and for the right investment.  I hope one day the ROI on social media will be as straightforward as the old traditional media buy (this much will get you X). But I don’t see that in the social media marketing future  yet.

I will be blogging about the conference. Please let me know what aspects of social media and travel you are interested in learning about. I can be your voice on the conference floor.

200+ Travel Twitterers I’m Following on #FollowFriday

image

UPDATED 1/20/09: see more travel Twitter people from the comments and responses, @wandermom and @wendyperrin. Thanks!

Are you in the Travel Industry and not yet on Twitter?

If so, read Travolution Kevin May’s post on why travel firms MUST take note and his experience with the Twitter Travel community at PhoCusWright this year.  Then join Twitter and follow @travolution.

Still not convinced?  Read “Changing travel, one tweet at a time” on MSNBC by Christopher Elliott (@elliottdotorg) and BELIEVE!

Are you on Twitter and looking for more Travel Tweeters (or is it Twitterers?) to Follow and Connect with?

Then this post is for you.  Today on Twitter, a meme called #FollowFriday was spreading like wildfire.  People would tweet about other Tweeters they enjoy following, and then add the hashtag “#FollowFriday” to their tweet.  Follow the #followfriday action via Twitter Search.

I tweeted about a few top-of-mind Travel Twitterers that I wanted to share.

#FollowFriday tweet

But there are so many more interesting Travel Tweeters that I’m following.  In fact, I counted 200+ Travel Tweeters that I’m tracking using a special group in my Tweetdeck browser.

Other Lists of “Top” Travel tweeters

There are a number of lists out there that have the “top” Travel tweeters, including:

The 200+ Travel Tweeters that I follow

Well, without making any strong recommendations on who YOU should follow, I thought I’d simply share who I follow.  I’m happy I’m following all 200+ of these Tweeters.  Mine these Tweeters for the ones with the same interests as you.  Happy Following!

There you have it.  My precious Travel Twitterer list!

UPDATED 1/20/09: Added some great adds from the comments below, @wendyperrin, @christinelu, and @wandermom.

Travel Blog Exchange announces travel blog meet-up at Blogher ‘09

Chicago Skyline

Chicago Skyline

Travel Blog Exchange (TBEX) announced a travel blogger meet-up to coincide with Blogher ‘09 on Sunday,  July 26th, from 9am to 1pm in Chicago, Illinois. The meet up is hosted by Kim Mance, founder of TBEX and  GoGalavanting.com and Debbie Dubrow of DeliciousBaby.com. Here is how they describe the event:

All travel bloggers are welcome and the event will be free of charge to all attendees. The networking event will feature discussions on topics like:
◈ Keeping a blog alive when not traveling
◈ Attracting advertisers
◈ Balancing ethics with PR freebies
◈ Using video in travel blogging
◈ Blogging vs. Travel Writing

I attended a travel blogger meeting at Blogher in San Francisco, 2008.  It was fun, informative and offered the opportunity to connect with other travel bloggers sharing similar goals and problems. It was invaluable.  I highly recommend attending.

For background information about TBEX, go here and join the community. See you at Blogher.

Photo: Courtesy of theotherway.

Eternal gratitude, and a bonus, for referring us a software rockstar

image We need your help! We’re looking for a software rockstar, and we’ve yet to find the key next person we need that will help us build UpTake into a world-class travel information search engine.  Can you help?

Who we need

As a small startup, this person should expect to wear a lot of hats.  They will develop application features with a focus on the user experience.  This means that this person should be equally passionate about mid-tier Web technologies (XML, SOAP, SAX, Rails, Web Services, J2EE) and about interaction/visual design issues.  Add in business needs like search engine optimization, and multivariate testing and you get the picture of the breadth of what this person will be working on.  The full job description is here.

Referral Bonus – Weekend Getaway at the Ritz Carlton Half Moon Bay, or $2009 cash

In addition to the eternal gratitude that your friend will have for you referring them to us (yes we think we’re reasonably fun to hang out with), we’ll also give you a referral bonus for helping to make the connection.  Choose between a $2009 cash thank you, or a Weekend at the Ritz Carlton in Half Moon Bay, including:

  • 2 Nights in an Oceanfront One-Bedroom Larger Suite
  • $500 Hotel Credit
  • 2 Half Moon Bay Signature Massages – 90 minutes
  • Daily Breakfast for two
  • Complimentary Parking

Any applicant hired within 180 days of your referral makes you eligible for the reward.

My boss Yen is keeping track of who is bringing in the leads, so please contact me directly at elliott at uptake dot com with your lead since I get credit for your help!

World class hotel for sale

Hote Benbow is for sale

Benbow Inn is for sale for only $13.25 million

There is a small hotel…

in the far reaches of Northern California for sale for just $13.25 million. In the opinion of the San Francisco Chronicle, it ranks as one of the finest in the world.  In this beautifully written article, the Benbow Inn is described as an oasis from routine and a destination in itself.  Given the description, I am not sure if $13.25M is a bargain price, a sign of difficult economic times or if the current owner is just ready to retire from life as a hotelier.  What’s more, I was astonished at the room rates–they start at $125. That seems to be a true bargain. Can this be correct for a hotel that is in the same league as some of the most famous resorts in the world? Here is a brief description:

“Few hotels and inns rank as destinations in themselves: the Peninsula in Hong Kong, the Villa d’Este on Italy’s Lake Como, the Greenbriar in West Virginia, Claridge’s in London, the Ritz in Paris. They are grand, usually, and expensive. They demand that you live up to them. Cozy is not a term that suits. Historic they may be; homey and snug they are not.

In Northern California, there’s a destination place named Benbow: small (54 rooms) and comfy, with a welcome as warm as your grandmother’s and a setting so Victorian it brings tea to your eyes.

And, it’s for sale – along with a golf course and motor home park – for $13.25 million.”

I also looked at UpTake to see the reviews:

Collected Reviews on UpTake

Collected Reviews on UpTake

All were positive.

If you are looking to snap up the property, this may be an auspicious time or you may just want to book a room.

If the travel industry can deliver great travel experiences at a reasonable cost, we will weather the economic storm and do well in the upcoming months. After all, what else can so easily transport us from our economic woes but a little trip to a great hotel.

Page 1 of 212»
Custom Search

Travel Industry Bloggers

Meta