2
04
2009
[youtube width="325" height="244"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aKIqGYRuvbk[/youtube]
The Swiss Tourism Board posted a video announcing that it was seeking volunteers to join the Association of Mountain Cleaners. The video claimed, “The Association of Mountain Cleaners… makes sure that our holiday guests can always enjoy perfect mountains. Using brooms, brushes, water and muscle power, they clean the rocks of any bird droppings.”
At the end of the video, visitors to myswitzerland.com were invited to take a mountain cleaner aptitude test and submit their name for a chance to win a week’s holiday in Switzerland.
They got tons of media coverage around the world. No kidding. Simply smart!
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Categories : Condé Nast Traveler, CRM, Destinations, Hotels, News, NYC & Co., Switzerland
30
03
2009
[youtube width="300" height="230"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioiECWRcD68[/youtube]
Brand: Curaçao Tourist Board
Execution: A funny television spot of thirty seconds invites people to run away for a treasure hunt to Curaçao [pronunciation: kyur uh sow], the largest island in the Netherlands Antilles group. The Curaçao Tourist Board is giving away seventy trips and $500,000, a real travel bailout.
Description: The 30-second video has the format of a news broadcast with an anchorman. Suddenly, people flock in front of the camera to flee for the treasure hunt and the anchorman follows as well. The headlines at the end show a web site where to go and ask for information.
What We Like: The video is funny and looks like a consumer generated streaming video. It speaks to the harsh economic situation and introduces the topic of travel – a luxury during these times – ironically. We love the clear call to action at the end of the spot and that the video can be embedded for viral marketing.
What We Don’t: It misses a bit on the branding opportunity. There is brand interaction only if people go online to www.curacaotreasure.com and fill in the form for the sweepstakes.
Conclusions: A sticky, well-executed campaign.
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Categories : CRM, Curacao, Destinations, Hotels, Interactive Marketing
10
10
2007
According to a new study from Cornell University, the extent to which hotel guests accept and use technology both during a hotel stay and on their own can be a useful means of segmenting guests. One excellent mechanism for establishing segments based on customers’ inclination toward technology is the Technology Readiness Index (TRI), as shown by the study described here.
A test of the TRI with 865 business and leisure hotel customers in the United States revealed an approximate normal distribution that ranged from people who seek to use technology at every turn to those who essentially want nothing to do with it. Furthermore, a comparison of the travel habits of the high and low technology-ready guests revealed numerous differences that should be of interest to the hotel companies. For example, guests with a high TRI score tended to travel more frequently on business and were willing to pay relatively high room rates. A greater percentage of male guests were in the high TRI group than were in the low TRI group. The study also found that the hotel guests with high TRI scores were relatively young, more highly educated, and more affluent than the sample as a whole.
Read more at Cornell University – The Center for Hospitality Research
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Categories : CRM, Hotels, Interactive Marketing