Tuesday, 16 May 2017
Monday, 15 May 2017
Wednesday, 26 April 2017
Data Quality and Cleanliness the Biggest Challenge Reported by Travel Tech Professionals
46% of respondents to EyeforTravel’s industry-wide survey find that data quality and cleanliness is a challenge
EyeforTravel’s new State of Data and Analytics in Travel Report 2017 has identified data quality and cleanliness as the biggest challenge
facing the more than 450 travel data professionals surveyed for the report.
According to Alex Hadwick, Head of research at EyeforTravel:
“It is unlikely that this issue will diminish in the near future as the
potential universe of data available to the travel and tourism industry is
increasing exponentially. Travel brands will have to question whether they can adequately
put in place systems to monitor data sources and prevent pollution as the
potential universe of information expands way beyond what humans can respond
to.”
The next biggest challenge, noted by four out of ten
respondents, is creating a consistent data strategy. Travel brands need to make
sure that they are co-ordinating properly and communicating data strategies
across their organisations. This was reinforced when respondents were asked
whether they have a clear understanding of the Key Performance Indicators
(KPIs) they should be measuring and working towards. Here, a surprisingly high
percentage - 27.1% - said “no”.
Other major issues reported by the industry are data integration,
deploying analytics in a timely manner and skills and training. For the former,
38.9% said that integrating from external sources is a challenge and 31.1% said
that internal sources are an issue. For the latter, 31.7% of the panel felt
that getting adequate training was a concern and 29.7% identified finding
skilled people in the jobs market.
Click here to download the full report for free now. Or to
learn the best data and revenue management strategies directly, why not attend
EyeforTravel Europe on May 3-4?
Tuesday, 25 April 2017
Travel Industry Struggling with Attribution
More than half of marketing professionals report that they have limited visibility of their customers as they move across devices and touchpoints
Attribution continues to be an issue for the travel and
tourism industry as travellers hop across devices and sites during their
journey according to EyeforTravel’s State of Data and Analytics in TravelReport 2017. Of the marketing professionals surveyed, 54.3% reporting that they
could either track users to a limited degree (24.5%), just on their own domains
(16%) or not at all (13.8%).
For those companies that report that they can track users in
some detail, a quarter say they can track them across most devices and touchpoints.
A further 20.7% report that they can track users across touchpoints but not
across devices, illustrating that it is the cross-device behaviours prevalent
in travel that are the main challenge.
“I think attribution will be one of the big focuses for
travel brands over the medium-term,” said Alex Hadwick, Head of Research at
EyeforTravel. “Our consumer-focused research shows that travellers are
increasing their usage of mobile, especially in Asia-Pacific markets, but huge
numbers of consumers switch devices during their journey with desktop still the
main channel globally in terms of spending. With personalisation the primary
stated goal of the industry, brands will need to be able to track users more
effectively as they switch across sites but particularly across devices if they
want to truly understand the journey.”
The survey also found that out of the more than 450 travel
data professionals surveyed, just 30.9% are gathering geo-spatial and
geographic data and 30.6% are looking at mobile app data to get insight into
customers. This further supports the need for the industry to expand its
efforts into multi-channel data gathering. Investment into systems and skills
to do this should be forthcoming, as the report notes that three quarters
believe that their department will receive budget increases in 2017 against 4%
who expect a decrease.
Click here to download the full report for free now. Or to
learn the best data and revenue management strategies directly, why not attend
EyeforTravel Europe on May 3-4?
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
Facebook Has a Monopoly Amongst Travel Marketers
62% of travel marketers rate Facebook as the most effective social media network.
Facebook is peerless amongst travel marketers according to a
new industry-wide survey from EyeforTravel. The State of Data and Analytics inTravel Report 2017 found that 61.6% think Facebook is the best performing social
media network, leaving Instagram – also a Facebook company – a distant second
at 15.8% of respondents.
Twitter rounds out the top three at 10.3% of respondents and
is followed by YouTube at 6.2% of respondents. No other social media network
had a significant response rate.
“Facebook has numerous advantages above its rivals, but the
largest of these is the depth of information it has on its users,” said Alex
Hadwick, Head of Research at EyeforTravel. “Potentially Facebook has the
majority of a Millennial or Generation Z’s life recorded in detail, from their
interests and preferences, to the places they have travelled to. This gives
them enormous power that has been multiplied by the clever acquisitions of
Instagram and WhatsApp. In my opinion these acquisitions also help to
future-proof Facebook from potential downturns in usage of its original
platform.”
The survey also found that 78% of travel marketers are using
social media data in their marketing campaigns. This level of integration
illustrates the importance social now plays in marketing efforts, a position
that is likely to increase rather than diminish in the medium-term.
Click here to download the full report for free now. Or to
learn the best data and revenue management strategies directly, why not attend
EyeforTravel Europe on May 3-4?
Tuesday, 18 April 2017
Travel Industry Investment into Data and Analytics to Rise Substantially in 2017
Three quarters of travel professionals working with data believe that their department will receive budget increases in 2017 against 4% who expect a decrease
Travel is awash with data and companies are loosening their
purse strings to get to the insight this provides, according to EyeforTravel’s
new industry-wide State of Data and Analytics in Travel Report 2017. Amongst
respondents, who came from all verticals in the industry, 74.5% report that
they expect budget increases in 2017. Amongst the remained
For those looking forward to more cash to play with this
year, budgets are often increasing by a substantial amount. More than half of
the entire sample reports that they expect budgets to increase by 6% or more
and 30% expect it to increase by 11% or more.
However, part of this may be because travel companies data
efforts are coming from, in general, a relatively small base. Although 65% of
the panel reports that they have a dedicated data, analysis or insight team, they
are largely staffed by small teams. Two thirds of respondents report that their
team is less than 10 employees strong and 51.5% have a team of five individuals
or less.
“The travel and tourism industry has realised the importance
of strong data analysis and is manoeuvring itself into a good position,” said
Alex Hadwick, Head of Research for EyeforTravel. “We found that in terms of analytics,
data deployment and attribution, travel is relatively advanced compared to
other industries. These planned budgetary increases will help increase the
depth of talent and acquire the tools needed to get maximum value out of the
huge amount of data that already exists and will be generated in the future.”
The survey also found variation between the expectations of
data professionals for this year when it comes to where they are based. Respondents were most optimistic about budget
increases in Asia-Pacific, followed by Europe and then finally North America.
This geographic divide was reinforced in how respondents
view the coming year for the travel and tourism industry as a whole. In both
Asia-Pacific and Europe 16.3% of respondents are neutral or negative about
growth prospects for this year, compared to 23.3% of respondents from North
America.
Hadwick believes that this is reflective of wider industry
sentiment in the region: “With the WTTC warning of changing sentiment towards
the US and reports for Q1 indicating lower flight bookings to the US, there appears
to be a bigger story here that is reflected in our data.”
Click here to download the full report for free now. Or to
learn the best data and revenue management strategies directly, why not attend
EyeforTravel Europe on May 3-4?
Tuesday, 11 April 2017
China and India smartphone leaders
There is a divergence in the way consumers look for and book travel
between the rising economies of the East and the developed countries of the
West. This is all being driven by mobile, as consumers outside the West have
never associated the desktop or laptop as being their primary device to connect
to the internet or conduct digital travel purchases.
EyeforTravel, in conjunction with Jumpshot found that India was the
leading country for mobile visits to travel sites among the five countries that
were studied. There, two thirds of users
visiting travel sites were doing so from mobile devices. EyeforTravel has
also been studying Chinese consumers and found a very similar pattern amongst
Chinese consumers, with 67% reporting that they principally use mobile devices
to plan their trips and 50% use them to book accommodation.
You can download the white paper here and keep an eye out for our upcoming
Chinese Travel Consumer Report on our report page.
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