20 August, 2008, 11:49:58 PM
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EventsGET a fix on the future at TRAVELtech, Australia's online travel marketing, distribution and tech event, which is being held in Sydney on August 26. The 2008 event is shaping up well with strong bookings, an excellent speaker roster and compelling theme: the open-ended Year of Living Dangerously? It can be taken a couple of ways ... the obvious: oil, inflation, interest rates and marketing costs up - challenges ahead. But it's also a question, and the good news is there's increasing evidence the online channel may be the place consumers turn at times like these. Confirmed speakers are listed below, while the latest program has just been posted - it's packed with industry leaders and topical content.
TRAVELtech, founded in 1999, focusses on the latest online travel marketing and web-based innovations. It has a well-established reputation for delivering relevant, high-quality content and excellent networking - see who is coming to TRAVELtech 2008 so far. If you have any questions, please call Martin Kelly on 61 2 9882-1575. Please visit the TRAVELtech photo gallery to see some photographs from the 2007 event. Sponsors include:
Bookings are now open for Australia’s original search marketing and optimisation event, Search Engine Room. Event highlights include:
Confirmed speakers include:
Search Engine Room an Australian-owned event that strives to reflect the market in which it operates while embracing international trends. It’s outward rather than inward looking, taking great care to incorporate consumer and marketing priorities into innovative and provocative programs. The program focus is on respected, well-connected speakers delivering topical, relevant information. Search engine optimisation and marketing is well-covered, while broader industry issues are also addressed through interviews with leading search industry figures. There are case studies, debates and panels. Audience interaction is encouraged and Search Engine Room always makes an effort to be forward-looking, tracking the latest search and digital trends. Consumers are also given the once-over, enabling delegates to gain a better understanding of their customers.
A RECORD crowd attended the second No Vacancy acommodation industry conference in Sydney recently. It was a great day featuring industry leaders, panels, case studies, presentations and debate. There was a touch of controversy with hard questions asked - and answered. Program topics included online distribution, consumer trends, channel and yield management, carbon offsetting, star ratings, modern marketing tactics, pricing, social media strategies and plenty more. No Vacancy will return in 2009 - please sign up for the TravelTrends.biz newsletter if you'd like further details. |
NSW Lets The Team Down - Cane Toads on Top
By Martin Kelly, Editor, Travel Trends Living in Sydney, NSW, is like supporting Collingwood. Everyone likes to see you lose, and that’s exactly what’s happening now. The state is in a state. It’s getting picked on, laughed at, and locals are beginning to question their commitment. In fact, many of them would rather stay indoors with their new plasma TV rather than get outside and see a bit of bit of their great state. The government is no help - it’s even more hopeless at tourism marketing than everything else. For years, Tourism NSW has had no real budget, leadership, direction or market presence. Kind of like your old Aunty Maude, there but not really there. NSW took more than a year to produce an events strategy – overseen by rugby boss John O’Neill - that could have been written in an afternoon brainstorm. Maybe it was. It featured cutting edge ideas like getting Tiger Woods to play in the Australian Open, boosting the Autumn Racing Carnival and hosting the FIFA World Cup. At least they’ve got a three-year budget of A$85m. So what’s brought on this rant? Well, apart from my love of Sydney and NSW, the answer is some research revealed by Andrew Maurer, who is speaking at No Vacancy, at a recent Property Council breakfast in Sydney. Maurer is Forecasting and Analysis Manager at Tourism Research Australia, and his research shows NSW is letting the Australian tourism team down while the Cane Toads are the star performers. (Nothing hurts a New South Welshman than getting beaten by Queensland). “There’s quite a contrast, NSW is faring nowhere near as well,” Maurer said, adding that over the past decade NSW bed nights were down 3% compared with a national rise of 10%. Overnight expenditure and day trip numbers also fell. But others shouldn’t gloat. Sydney is a trend setter. And this is one trend that could easily spread as other Australian cities get bigger and the recreational focus continues its shift to indoor electronic-based activities. Maurer said focus groups revealed “people are increasingly spending money on things that make them feel better now - instant gratification. “For most people this means tangible products, that new plasma TV for example. And financing makes the purchase easy. As a result domestic tourism is left out – the lack of tangibility is a competitive disadvantage.” People also want a value for money “experience” – local culture as part of the package - and the rise of low cost carriers means overseas trips are well-packaged, convenient and affordable. “Perceived poor value for money is making Australians resent the idea of domestic travel. In contrast to overseas, people felt there was very little (accommodation) product that combined moderate cost with character … and integrated with local life.” As for the outbound market, Maurer says over the next eight years Japan will stay negative while the strongest growth will come out of China and India. The United States also has potential with increased flights but the high Aussie dollar and US recession are potential impediments. “This good news because the Yanks are the biggest spenders on accommodation – about twice as much as Indians while Chinese spend less again.” Tourism Trends: March 17, 2008 Latest News
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