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Social Media Marketing SHOULD THE HOTEL INDUSTRY EMBRACE SOCIAL MEDIA? SAADAOUI Ghizlane 0786724578 [email protected] Thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MBA in International Business Minor: International Hospitality Management March 2011

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Page 1: SHOULD THE HOTEL INDUSTRY EMBRACE SOCIAL MEDIA?

Social Media Marketing

SHOULD THE HOTEL INDUSTRY EMBRACE

SOCIAL MEDIA?

SAADAOUI Ghizlane

0786724578

[email protected]

Thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MBA in

International Business

Minor: International Hospitality Management

March 2011

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

AKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................................................................. 5

METHODOLOGY .......................................................................................................................................................... 7

INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................................................... 9

CHAPTER I: AN OVERVIEW OF THE NEW SOCIAL MEDIA CONCEPT ............................................... 12

1) What is social media and why do brands need it? .......................................................................... 12

2) What is the common thinking about Social Medias: Myth Vs truth ......................................... 14

a) Myth 1: Build social online accounts and your clients/prospects will come .................. 14

b) Myth 2: Social media will fade away in a few years ................................................................... 14

c) Myth 3: Social media is free .................................................................................................................. 14

d) Myth 4: With Social Media, you can’t measure the results ..................................................... 15

3) Where are we now: Projections of SOCIAL MEDIA (2010-2011 & progression) ............... 16

4) Change in marketing spending 2011: ................................................................................................... 18

5) What are the challenges for social media marketers in 2011? .................................................. 19

6) Where is social media headed? ............................................................................................................... 22

a) Social commerce ....................................................................................................................................... 22

b) Group buying ............................................................................................................................................. 22

c) Q&A sites (questions and answers sites): ...................................................................................... 23

d) Mobile: .......................................................................................................................................................... 24

e) Video .............................................................................................................................................................. 24

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7) What is the impact of Social Media on Consumer Behavior (The Funnel Metaphor &

consumer decision journey) .................................................................................................................................. 26

CHAPTER II: SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE TRAVEL AND HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY ............................. 29

1) How did the hospitality and travel industry get to Social Media? ............................................ 29

2) What is the impact of Social Media on the travel and hospitality industry? ........................ 31

4) Should the Hospitality Industry Take Social Media Seriously? ................................................. 40

Chapter III: what are the suitable social platforms for Hospitality Marketing? ............................ 41

1) The Twitter effect ......................................................................................................................................... 42

a) Marriott Hotels & Resorts ..................................................................................................................... 44

b) Ritz Carlton Hotels ................................................................................................................................... 45

c) Hyatt Hotels & Resorts ........................................................................................................................... 47

d) Joie de Vivre Hotels ................................................................................................................................. 48

e) Omni Hotels ................................................................................................................................................ 49

2) Facebook as a distribution possibility ................................................................................................. 51

a) Hilton Hotels & Resorts ......................................................................................................................... 53

b) Sheraton Hotels and Resorts ............................................................................................................... 56

c) Mandarin Oriental Hotel: ...................................................................................................................... 58

3) YouTube channel for online visibility .................................................................................................. 61

a) The Roger Smith Hotel ........................................................................................................................... 63

b) The San Juan Marriott Hotel ................................................................................................................ 65

4) Flickr for informational images .............................................................................................................. 68

a) Four Seasons Hotels (Denver) ............................................................................................................ 69

b) Hyatt Hotels & Resorts ........................................................................................................................... 70

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4) Foursquare: a location-based opportunity ........................................................................................ 71

a) Hotel Max (Seattle) .................................................................................................................................. 74

b) Wynn Hotel and Casino (Las Vegas) ................................................................................................ 75

CHAPTER IV: HOW CAN SOCIAL MEDIA NEGATIVELY AFFECT THE HOSPITALITY

INDUSTRY? ........................................................................................................................................................................ 77

1) Golden Beach Hotel ( Blackpool - England) ....................................................................................... 77

2) Hans Brinker Budget Hotel (Amsterdam) .......................................................................................... 79

3) Langham Hotels (Hong Kong): ................................................................................................................ 81

4) The Hotel’s Fake out photos: oyster.com ............................................................................................ 83

CHAPTER V: SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORING - TOOLS OF MEASUREMENT ..................................... 87

1) ReviewPro (case study: The Landmark London Hotel) ................................................................ 87

2) Klout ................................................................................................................................................................... 90

3) Socialmention ................................................................................................................................................. 92

4) Marginize .......................................................................................................................................................... 93

5) Addictomatic ................................................................................................................................................... 94

6) Google analytics ............................................................................................................................................. 96

CONCLUSION .......................................................................................................................................................... 102

BIBLIOGRAPHY ..................................................................................................................................................... 104

WEBREFERENCES ............................................................................................................................................... 105

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AKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to express my gratitude to Ms. Liz Craig who assisted me with the

variety of data analysis options and tools as they represented a beneficial part in

my thesis. I would like to thank her for her support and comments throughout this

work.

I also would like to thank all of my colleagues at Oneglobenetwork for all their

support during this process. I cannot fully express how fortunate I feel working with

such a wonderful team!

My warmest thanks are directed to my parents, my brother Khalid and his wife

Asmaa and friends, for being so understanding and supportive, even if I have not

been very accessible during the last year.

Finally this thesis would never have been accomplished without the huge

support of Angel and Maxime Ferri, to whom I dedicate this paper.

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“A not quite long time ago in a faraway land, there existed a feudal system of

Publishers who sought to control the largest number of Users as their loyal

subjects. (Archeologists would later refer to this prehistoric era as web 1.0.) Users

were happy for a while until one day they discovered that they, too, could

become Publishers – quite

They created a new land where content is democratized and where each User

could become their own king. New social websites and services soon enabled

them to publish royal decrees (called Blogs and Podcasts), vote for content they

Digg, discover old friends on Social Networks, Poke each other, become Internet

Famous, gain Followers, and in a few cases, become even larger and more

powerful than the great Publisher kingdoms of yore. They named this new utopia

Web 2.0 and immediately started to blog about how cliché the name was […]

Importantly, it’s not that any website or technology is enabling this change, but

rather that there’s a growing intersection of many different social websites and

services that are focused on making it easy for users to easily express themselves

(publishing), enabling them to rapidly connect with others and interact with

content (participation) and putting the user as the center of attention

(personalization). ”

Freddy Mini – Netvibes1

1 The internet case study book, ed Ford/Julius Wiedmann – Taschen, 2010 (p. 234)

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METHODOLOGY

Given the hotel industry’s continuing interaction with social media and other online

media, Liz Craig, CEO of Oneglobenetwork, strongly recommended me a research

goal of exploring different facets of social media as they evolve. During my

internship, I started examining how our clients used social media, tested different

tools and studied the traveler’s interactions online in order to discuss with our clients

what they really want to achieve using social media and what strategy can be

suitable for them. I began then my exploration of social media online by setting a first

experiment for our hotels http://ogn-hotels-social.blogspot.com.

Then, I decided to dedicate my thesis to the latter research effort and continue

delving in the hospitality social media era. I based my research on Cornell Hospitality

and Comscore recent reports regarding the US (my core focus) and worldwide travel

Market. CMO’s reports (cmosurvey.org) were also of a great help. The CMO Survey

collects the studies and opinions of top marketers in order to predict the future of

markets, and track marketing excellence.

More particular, the benchmarking approach I did for Oneglobe agency helped

me to evaluate the quality and the technological standards of different hotel Web

sites and social media channels used by the latter. I included in this thesis different

case studies to assess online strategies hotel companies have adopted to implement

their online marketing strategies.

Overall, the study has revealed that the level of awareness for both the online

marketing and the Internet usage among the French hotel market is a moderate one

with a very little improvement during the last two years. While the international

groups and USA travel market are moving very fast towards digital development and

social media accomplishment. Therefore, my research method was based on the

gaps observed and identified between different hotels in order to come up with a

fruitful approach for the hospitality industry:

Define and emphasize the benefits of social media

Determine the level of awareness, impact and usage of social media

Marketing

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Include interactive examples of successful hotel strategies as well as

unsuccessful ones

Identify main techniques and tools of enhancing Internet Marketing in the

hospitality industry

While recognizing the complexities and ambiguities surrounding social media data,

ratings and statistics, I have also set up for almost 10 months Google alerts and news

feed registrations in order to get the latest and updated information about my

subject and to be able to compare different surveys.

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INTRODUCTION

We have all heard about Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn, Viadeo and the

seemingly thousands of other social networks that are usually focused on connecting

people to people, involving people to causes, relating people to industries, brands

and businesses. It is widely agreed that Social media is a set of various online

technology tools and channels that allow massive community of participants to

productively collaborate, communicate and share information, perspectives and

experiences via internet (for more details please see appendix I and appendix II). It

can also include text, audio, video, images, podcasts, and other multimedia

communications that evolve day by day. According to Sham Hyder Kabani, author

of The Zen Of Social Media Marketing, social media is a ―multiple online mediums all

controlled by the people participating within them […] social media is full of constant

activity controlled by no one individual in particular.‖

The Universal Mc Cann’s wave 32 report (released in mid 2008) states that social

media is rising and will continue to increase more and more for the next years.

Among all Internet Users between the ages of 16 and 54 globally, the Wave 3 report

suggests the following:

394 million users watch video clips online

346 million users read blogs

307 million users visit friend’s social network profile pages

303 million users share video clips

202 million users manage profiles on social networks

215 million users download video podcasts

160 million users subscribe to RSS feeds

For online marketing, social media has become a process that empowers

individuals to promote their ideas, services, websites and products through online

channels and communicate with a larger community that may not have been

available by traditional advertising3. It also helps brands discover, in real time, who is

2 www.universalmccann.com 3 Wenberg , Tamar.The New Community Rules: Marketing on the Social Web , O’Reilly , 2009 (p. 3)

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saying what online and where the conversations are happening so they can respond

effectively. Thus with a well structured social and compelling internet strategy,

brands may lead customers to purchase the desired product or service or at least

talk about via internet. It has even become a major tool to famous political

campaign internet strategy; like Obama’s elections in 2008. ―Thanks to a

groundbreaking election strategy with the Internet and social websites such as

MySpace and Facebook being its center point, Obama’s campaign starts off

with only 21 million dollars in May 2007 and was able to collect over 150 million

dollars by September 2008 through small donations made via the Internet.‖

Moreover, the ―Neighbor-to-Neighbor‖ tool on My.BarackObama.com has enabled

supporting volunteers to reach far more people within their community in much less

time than before. This selective deployment of e-mails and text messages not only

turn him into the most innovative, but also the ―hippest‖ president.4

In fact, social media has played an influential role not only in politics but also in

business and marketing decision-making process to drive more visibility and more

revenues. With the arrival of Google in 1998, marketing teams started to focus on

search engine optimization, Adwords campaigns, pay-per-click, e-mail marketing,

organic and paid advertising to drive traffic to their business or website. After the

boom of Social Media in 2003, the traditional online marketing is still very much a part

of the marketing mix, but social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare,

YouTube and SlideShare drive a large share of interactions between companies and

their customers on the web.

Yet, any online marketer still asks the following questions before getting to the

online social environment on which I will base my research: How to target consumers

on location, and wherever they’re going to be next? What social media strategies

should we take? How can we engage and trigger conversation with clients online?

How can we protect our reputation online? What are the best practices, and what

are the tools to help measure and analyze the metrics? What is the future of social

media, and what will be the next evolution?

Indeed, Social Media is rising and includes many business fields including the

hospitality industry. In these difficult economic times when many hotels are left with

4 http://www.slideshare.net/samismail/oh-4507421

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empty rooms, the most successful ones will take the opportunity of social media

channels to create brand awareness, to grab the attention of new visitors, keep in

touch with their loyal client base and why not add a new source of revenue. Social

media is a must-have in any communication initiatives to boost business.

Until now, many hotel groups still have not jumped in to leverage the influence of

social media in order to engage and integrate it with the rest of their marketing

initiatives. For hoteliers and marketers that are unfamiliar with the social media

subject and who are willing to become part of the conversation, my research will

focus on how is the hospitality industry embracing social media.

My first chapter introduces the concept of social media marketing, explains its role

in today’s online marketing initiatives and discusses the challenges and hurdles

marketers will have to face. It covers also various 2010/11 key statistics and

projections regarding the role of social media and how it influences the consumer’s

behavior.

My second chapter is a further step towards the hospitality online marketing. It

discusses the impact of social media on the travel and hotel industry and how

travelers use online and social media channels to make hotel choice decisions.

The third chapter can be considered as a social media guideline in order to know

what platforms are being used in the hotel industry. It explains also the various ways

to leverage social media to achieve specific goals. This chapter is reinforced by

flourishing hotel case studies highlighting the success of small and large worldwide

hotels in the social media era.

Since social media does not only mean success, the fourth chapter covers the

negative aspects of social media and how it can be a double edged sword for

hotels. It also features hotel case studies of and marketers who failed to effectively

monitor the social media campaigns.

Last but not least, the last chapter outlines the effective tools for monitoring social

media strategies and explains the various ways of measuring brands’ online

reputation and their success online.

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CHAPTER I: AN OVERVIEW OF THE NEW SOCIAL MEDIA CONCEPT

1) What is social media and why do brands need it?

Before Google, marketing focused on brand building and awareness, using formal

mass advertising, newsletters, Press release distribution, print media, direct mail and

calling. With the arrival of Google in 1998, companies started to focus on search

engine optimization, pay-per-click advertising and e-mail marketing to drive traffic to

their website. The best marketers realized that their leads were often sent too early to

sales, and invested in lead scoring and lead nurturing to find the hot leads and

develop the rest.5 Today with the arrival of Social Media, people around the world

are transforming how news is broadcasted throughout the world. Social networking

sites, such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Digg, etc, are providing live exchange

and broadcasting personal opinions.

Those that are receiving the information can then disseminate the information

further to their own friends or followers, which has put a lot of financial pressure on 5 www.marketo.com/library/Guide-B2B-Social-Media.pdf

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traditional media market. In this way, social media becomes a huge opportunity.

From the time when clients define and distribute their own content, the marketers are

taking advantage of the situation to market their products using social networking

sites and get higher engagement. The latter ―informal‖ engagement as shown in the

graphic below is based on dialogue and interaction with client.

This is how social media penetrated the online marketing to be called Social

Media Marketing (SMM) which by definition connects a service provider, brands or

companies with a wide consumers or audience of influencers via different social

networks and platforms. Thanks to SMM companies can gain brand awareness, more

clients, loyal customers, traffic, etc

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) focuses on on-site factors including tags,

metatags, keyword research, etc; but still remains a basis of online marketing and

goes hand in hand with SMM. SEO is also a part of a larger picture of Search Engine

Marketing (SEM).

The latter (SEM) includes SEO components, social media campaigns, pay-per-click

and advertising campaigns. To summarize the three major components (SEO, SEM

and SMO) are highly interlinked, as shown in the graphic bellow, and empower

brands to promote their websites, products or services online.

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2) What is the common thinking about Social Medias: Myth Vs truth

Many companies still believe that social media is just a trendy way to chat and be

social with friends and that it will soon fade away with time. While in fact, it is a

fundamental approach to interact with clients, and can generate leads when it is

used effectively and strategically. In order to decipher fact from myth, we’ll uncover

some of the myths and truths that have been evoked by online marketers.

a) Myth 1: Build social online accounts and your clients/prospects will come6.

The truth is: achieving success in social media requires relationship building, which

takes time and energy. Moreover, finding the right attendees to build effective

relationships is a hard task. Thus, to be successful, social media needs to be aligned

with a company's strategic priorities and be taken seriously.

b) Myth 2: Social media will fade away in a few years.7

It is evident that the social media landscape is evolving and is a constantly

changing environment with new features and tools being added and developed

continuously. As a matter of fact, social networks ―will only grow in importance as the

millennial generation becomes 50 percent of the workplace by 2020‖. Brands will

have to get a better appreciation of what's really involved and how social media

can be integrated into their marketing plans.

c) Myth 3: Social media is free8.

In fact, most of the platforms are free like: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Flickr,

YouTube, Ning, FriendFeed. But to create social online profiles, you devote a

substantial amount of time; and as time is money, there is a cost for integrating social

media work into your marketing mix. Therefore, it is interesting to note that ―A

significant 56% of marketers are using social media for 6 hours or more each week

and 30% for 11 or more hours weekly […] 12.5% of marketers spend more than 20

6 http://cgtmarketing.com/advertising-communications-blog/marketing/socialmedia 7 http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_6768/is_3_33/ai_n56219807/ 8 http://cgtmarketing.com/advertising-communications-blog/marketing/socialmedia

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hours each week on social media. The largest group was 1 to 5 hours per week. 76%

of marketers are spending at least 4 hours each week on their social media

marketing efforts.‖9

d) Myth 4: With Social Media, you can’t measure the results10

With the right social media strategy, the results can be delivered thanks

measurable metrics, ROI acronyms and Return on Influence tools that are set and

included in the SM plan before the campaign. Yet, it still depends on the social

media platforms that are used during the campaign and to whom it is addressed.

However, the problem with trying to determine ROI for social media is ―trying to put

numeric quantities around human interactions and conversations, which are not

quantifiable‖11 says social media strategist Jason Falls. This is quite true, but we all

wonder: is the number of tweets, Facebook likes, or friend requests enough to

measure success? According to Jacob Morgan, Co-Founder of Chess Media Group,

social media marketing can be measured and here are the elements that can be

considered during and after a SM campaign:

―Traffic to a site, there are many ways to measure this i.e. referral sites, organic

listings, etc.

Amount of conversation/number of comments that you receive

Overall brand image, if one month ago people were slamming your brand

and are now singing praises about it, that’s a success

Amount of times something is shared with other people

The number of sales or increase in revenue, you can track this by using

analytics programs and setting up funnels/goals to track conversion paths

Number of rss subscribers/followers/people that want to engage and interact

with you or your brand

9 http://socialmediadudes.com/social-media/myth-social-media-is-free/ 10 http://cgtmarketing.com/advertising-communications-blog/marketing/socialmedia 11 http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/is-social-media-marketing-measurable-the-big-debate/

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Number of inbound links to a page or site, which can subsequently affect the

search rankings‖12

3) Where are we now: Projections of SOCIAL MEDIA (2010-2011 & progression)

It is widely agreed that the web is undoubtedly changing the way we deal with

online marketing. From small corporations to big companies, every business seems to

be implementing the web for almost every step they take to promote their brands.

Yet, over the past 5 years the worldwide web has experienced the switch from

expensive and overpriced internet advertising and marketing to social media

marketing including Facebook, twitter and other social media major components.

We have officially entered the communication era of sharing good quality

content. SMO (social media optimization) has become a major component of online

marketing helping you rank well in search engines; achieve a long-term online

presence and thus taking complete advantage of the largest social network; going

above and beyond having a corporate page

Since Facebook has deepened its ties with a search engine like Microsoft's Bing,

SMO has reached a whole new level creating diverse web-marketing opportunities.

―So much specific content is now available on personalized pages, which is more

attractive to audiences that struggle to navigate a sea of information on Google.

This personalized approach to matching the right audience with the most interesting

content is changing the way information is placed on the web, and audiences like

it‖13.

Facebook 14 is now the third largest website in the world, according to comScore15.

It drew an estimated 648 million unique visitors from across the globe in November,

2010 and has shown an incredible run for the last 6 years:

12 http://www.jmorganmarketing.com/social-media-more-measurable-than-traditional-media/ 13 http://mediamarketing-news.blogspot.com/2011/01/why-social-media-optimization-is- new.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+media-and- marketing+%28media++and+marketing%29 14 http://www.seomoz.org/blog/social-media-marketing-facebook-twitter-arent-enough 15 http://www.comscore.com

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With the growing popularity of Twitter in mainstream, recent studies imply that 51%

of Twitter users reported that they follow companies, brands or products on social

networks16. With $360 million in total funding and a $3.7 billion valuation, a further

growth is expected. As stated in their blog and shown in the graphic below: ―Growth

is fun. In the past 12 months, Twitter users sent an astonishing 25 billion Tweets and we

added more than 100 million new registered accounts.‖17

16 http://mediamarketing-news.blogspot.com/2011/01/2011-year-to-evolve-or-become- extinct.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+media-and- marketing+%28media++and+marketing%29 17 http://blog.twitter.com/2010/12/stocking-stuffer.html

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4) Change in marketing spending 2011:

Since Social Media has delivered satisfying results, the spending and budgets

allocated on marketing campaigns has utterly changed. Previously companies have

consecrated thousands of dollars on organic and link building strategies or pay per

click strategies to have their brands well visible in the search engines.

Though constructing back links and organic plans remains an essential component

of online marketing, getting a well structured social media marketing strategy is now

a crucial component to ones companies success on the web. Brands are more

determined than ever to take advantage of internet marketing technologies such as

social media, video, email and search engine optimization.

As stated by the CMO Survey by Duke University, Internet marketing spending has

shown a growth from 12.2% on February 2010 to 13.60% on August 2010 and is still

increasing for the next coming years18 (US Market):

Concerning Social media spending, the growth is even more significant. Within one

year, it is expected to be 10% of all marketing budgets and 18% in 5 years19:

18 http://faculty.fuqua.duke.edu/cmosurvey/survey_results/ 19 Ibid

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5) What are the challenges for social media marketers in 2011?

As we have seen above, companies have started to allocate increasingly bigger

budgets to integrate social media into all aspects of their marketing campaigns and

customer service. According to a report by L2ThinkTank on GenY affluents’ digital

habits20: ―63% use social media to engage with brands, more than 50% say that

Facebook, blogs, and brand videos affect their opinions about products.‖ Hence,

from a business perspective, it’s exciting as well as crucial to keep pace with the

latest changes on the social media front.

Yet, with thousands of brands that are trying to communicate online, sale online,

promote online and engage with their clients online; clients become skeptical. The

plethora of social networks will not only confuse the consumer but will make it harder

for marketers to monitor content and find new ways to provide their customers with

appealing online experiences. As Don Harrill, President & CEO, Orange Lake Resorts

stated ―Making the decision as a company to enter into social media is not an easy

one. But when considering the number of conversations that are taking place and

the opportunity to be a part of them, then the value of engaging with social media

20 http://l2thinktank.com/?tag=gen-y

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becomes clear. Once a company decides to participate in these conversations, it’s

important that the organization as a whole is ready to embrace it, and that the

company’s voice will be both genuine and consistent‖21.

In a recent report ―2011: Now Social Media Marketing Gets Tough‖ achieved by

The Forrester team marketing team22, social media marketing won’t get any easier

for several reasons:

―New social spam filters will stop many of your tweets and status updates from

reaching consumers. Social networks will in fact implement and tighten social

spam filters. These won’t just filter marketer-to-consumer messaging but also

marketing messages passed peer-to-peer.

Growing mistrust will make it harder to gather friends and followers or get them

engaged in your social programs. With concerns growing about privacy and

companies’ access to personally identifiable data, marketers will have to work

harder to earn confidence, follows and involvement from consumers. It will

take more than a ―Like‖ or ―Follow Us‖ button on a website to get consumers

involved in brands’ social programs this next year.‖23

Moreover, marketers should take into consideration the influence factor of Social

Media on their clients. It is stated by Brian Solis that as 2011 progresses, influence

factors will become a very significant element to companies, as evidenced by the

recent growth in tools such as Socialmention, PeerIndex, Marginize and Klout.24 The

latter will make it difficult for brands to control their image online.

21 http://www.hotelmarketingstrategies.com/smartbrief-social-media-study-analysis/ 22 http://blogs.forrester.com/augie_ray/11-01-04- 2011_social_media_predictions_now_social_media_marketing_gets_tough 23 http://blogs.forrester.com 24 http://www.briansolis.com/2010/12/best-of-2010-the-year-of-understanding-influence/

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6) Where is social media headed?

Hundreds of bloggers and online marketing agencies are publishing diverse reports

about social media trends for 201125. Here are the four major trends that come up

several times during my research:

a) Social commerce: Many brands already rely heavily on online conversations to

drive sales. Marketers use Facebook as a dominant social platform to offer their

services and thus letting their customers or fans buy their products directly on

Facebook and share the products or appreciations with friends. That is the case of

Maxfactor, a worldwide makeup brand, which have set up a page on Facebook to

sell their products, keep their clients ahead of the latest trends and most importantly

get their feedback on their latest products:

b) Group buying: in which consumers efficiently band together to get better deals or

discounts when purchasing products or services. Sites like Groupon, LivingSocial,

YouSwoop, and ScoutMom tend to offer localized deals and discounts in specific

cities and for groups of people. Consumers should urge their friends via social online

platforms to register quickly since promotion only becomes valid if enough members

sign up for it.

25 http://www.spinsucks.com/social-media/eight-social-media-trends-for-2011/

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c) Q&A sites (questions and answers sites): customers will base their decisions on

recommendations from virtual users or friends. Sites like ―yahoo answers‖,

―JustAnswer‖, or ―wikianswers‖, that have grown quite popular over the past 3 years,

are the social Q&A websites where participants can post questions, answer other

members' questions, and rate other members' answers to their questions, or share

their appreciations on different social websites, as shown in the figure below:

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d) Mobile: In 2011, iPad sales are projected to grow by 127% and consumers are likely

to reach for their phones instead of their wallets when making payments. As the

mobile arena grows significantly, technology consumers will move toward

abandoning their laptops for smart phones and thus will probably come one step

closer to being frequently connected to communicate, connect with their brands,

share information or find locations. Thanks to that, local based services like Facebook

places, Foursquare and Gowalla will continue to grow and be adopted by a larger

audience of consumers. Social networking will also be on the go, out of the house, in

the subway or out of the office:

e) Video: Video will become a powerful tool to enhance content to consumers and

will naturally become a key component of social commerce to be watched and

shared. “Tools like video galleries not only keep visitors on sites an average of two

minutes longer than pages without video, they support inbound traffic efforts with

powerful SEO juice.‖26 By creating and sharing videos, marketers can significantly

grow the presence of their brands in the online arena. Due to its great potential, the

online videos have, for instance, reinforced the success of ―Blendtec‖, which

manufactures grade-blenders. They started their business by creating a channel on

26 http://www.reelseo.com/ecommerce-video-2011/

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YouTube with a mere 50$ marketing budget. Yet, by creating and sharing videos of

people blending toys and electronics to show how robust its blenders were,

―Blendtec‖ became the biggest presence among blender producers in the online

arena.27

27 Wenberg , Tamar.The New Community Rules: Marketing on the Social Web , O’Reilly , 2009 (p. 285)

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7) What is the impact of Social Media on Consumer Behavior (The Funnel Metaphor &

consumer decision journey)

The increasing usage of internet and social media networks has changed the way

customers engage with brands. Conversations have shifted online and people are

discussing about their brands via social platforms. They also rely on various types of

social networks that have become a serious information source before they make

their purchase decisions (including blogs, chat rooms, message boards or forums,

video sharing, etc). Thus, it becomes pertinent to delve deep to understand how

social media impacts the consumer’s behavior and in turn purchasing action.

According to the Harvard Business Review’s report by David C. Edelman28, today

consumers are ―promiscuous in their brand relationships: They connect with myriad of

brands – through new media channels beyond the manufacturer’s and the retailer’s

control or even knowledge‖. Indeed, to realign their strategy and budget with

where consumers are spending their time, marketers have identified different touch

points clients are most open to influence. To build the brand’s awareness, drive

consideration and inspire purchase, they used the very well known funnel metaphor

that highlights the fact that consumers would start at the wide end of the funnel with

many brands in mind and winnow them down to a final choice, as shown in the

graphic below:

28 http://hbr.org/2010/12/branding-in-the-digital-age/ar/1

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Nowadays, on account of the explosion of product choices, digital channels and

thus resulting well-informed consumer, the funnel metaphor theory fails to capture all

the touch points and key buying factors. In the June 2009 issue of McKinsey

Quarterly, David Court and three coauthors introduced a new approach of how

clients engage with brands that they named ―consumer decision journey‖29. What is

interesting in their new concept is the fact that it is applicable to any geographic

market and any field that has direct relationship with their customers. They stated

that ―rather than narrowing their choices, consumers add and subtract brands from

a group under consideration during an extended evaluation phase. After purchase,

they often enter into an open-ended relationship with the brand, sharing their

experience with it online‖.

That is to say, people form impressions of brands from touch points such as

advertisements, forums on product experiences and conversations with family and

friends on different social channels. Those accumulated impressions then become

crucial and they shape a more circular journey:

Consider: As shown by the graphic above, the journey begins with the

consideration set. From this starting point, brand awareness matters. Before making

his/her choice of purchasing, the consumer will immediately be able to name an

―initial-consideration set of brands to purchase‖ assembled from different stimuli like:

exposure to advertising, products displays, an encounter in the street, work place or

at a friend’s house, etc; ―with the proliferation of products have actually made them

reduce the number of brands they consider at the outset‖30.

29 http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/The_consumer_decision_journey_2373 30 http://www.docstoc.com/docs/8373901/The-consumer-decision-journey

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Evaluate: At that time, comes the evaluation or in other words: the consumer’s

information gathering step. The latter includes the consumers enlarging the number

of products and brands they might consider by reading web site reviews, consulting

forums or talking to friends and family. This step usually culminates in a decision to

buy. Consequently, the customers’ ―outreach to marketers and other sources of

information is much more likely to shape their ensuing choices than marketer’s push

to persuade them‖.

Buy: The Evaluation set is followed by the purchasing experience. According to

David Court at that moment consumers may be easily dissuaded at that point which

exploits ―placement, packaging, availability, pricing, and sales interactions‖.

Enjoy, Advocate, Bond: After the purchase, begins the loyalty loop experience

which is considered as a deep connection that begins when the consumer starts

interacting with the product and with new online touch points. As soon as the

consumers enjoy what they have purchased, they will advocate for it online or word

of mouth building expectations based on their own experience.

In short, consumers’ purchase decisions are increasingly being formulated by

exposure to different levels of experience and mostly driven by online

communication including: searching information, connecting with different brands, ,

reading reviews, consulting comments on brands, sharing content, experience and

opinions on a large panel of social platforms . Thus, understanding ―the consumer

decision journey‖ concept, marketers can take a great chance of reaching

consumers in the right place at the right time with the right message. It is no longer

sufficient to push aggressively the consumers into the purchase stage, since there are

so many different steps before and after the purchase that brands should take into

consideration and to exploit.

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CHAPTER II: SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE TRAVEL AND HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY

1) How did the hospitality and travel industry get to Social Media?

It all began in 2006 with the explosion of the online travel agencies. The core

business of the travel and tourism industry has utterly changed and increasingly

shifted to the Internet. A few years ago, families flipped through brochures at travel

agency offices, searching for guidance and personal advice. After 2006, an

estimated 70 million internet users went online to find good deals and gather

information about their next hotel stay or holiday trip.

Since then, with the rapid growth in usage of internet, it has positively affected the

online European travel and hospitality industry in terms of revenue generation.

Surveys show that online travel industry is growing since 2006 at an increasing rate:31

―Online travel sales increased by 24% from 2006 to 2007 and reached EUR 49.4

billion in the European market in 2007

Online travel market in Europe is expected to grow to about EUR 58.4 billion in

2008

The European online travel market is expected to reach EUR 67 billion in 2009

UK accounted for 30% of the European online travel market in 2007, with

Germany in second place at 19%. The direct sellers accounted for 65% of

online sales in the European market in 2007, intermediaries 35%‖

31 http://www.emarketingeye.com/online-travel-industry.html

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Further to the latter graphic, a large-scale of hotel and travel industry needed to

―embrace technology to keep up with consumer demand as it continues to lag

other sectors in terms of investment, says Deloitte, an international financial

consultancy‖32. Hundreds of Hotels and travel companies have turned to internet to

facilitate their clients’ life and used Social Media like Twitter and other related sites to

communicate about their properties/brands. In fact, the proliferation of social media

have captured the imagination of travel industry marketers who are now

experimenting with innovative ways to "join the conversation" and, where

appropriate, try to sell something in the process and reinforce their ability to reach

large numbers of travelers. In other words, hotels can interact with their customers on

websites such as Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Tripadvisor and YouTube, by sharing

information, watching for service failures to correct, and to look for a better way to

interact with their clients.

One good example is Hyatt group that is using Twitter as a concierge platform.

Gone are those days of making a single stop at the concierge desk to collect

brochures and ask for some tips. Clients could ask questions before their journey in

32 http://www.thenational.ae/business/travel-tourism

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the hotel, from their rooms, or while they’re out exploring. They would also have easy

access to the questions other guests asked and past recommendations.33

All in all, social media has changed the manner travelers determine where they will

stay principally leisure travelers and has created a new distribution channel.

Hospitality and travel marketers need to understand consumers’ position online, and

find ways to use the power of information available on social media sites; since their

impact on the travel and hospitality industry is very significant as we will see in the

next part.

2) What is the impact of Social Media on the travel and hospitality industry?

The growing importance and seemingly reliance on technology had marketers

wondering what role social networking played in the hospitality and travel industry.

Nowadays, they usually argue if social media and online communities are well suited

to the travel and hospitality industry. People usually share an experience or situation

and this provides a reason for them to connect and engage with each other or with

their favorite brands. In this way, social media becomes a great customer service

device since not only it allows travel brands to connect and engage with customers

online, but it also means that when they solve ones query, they do so publicly (for

instance on Twitter for all to see and for all to share).

33 http://mashable.com/2010/10/18/hotel-industry-social-media/

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The weather, the traffic, the good plans are good points for being able to transmit

information in real time .One good example to illustrate the latter statement is

Expedia which has a vigorous Twitter profile with over 9000 followers. Every client’s

query that is solved by Expedia on twitter can be seen and shared by all the

followers. It even appears on Google search results as a real time twitter feed, as

shown by the graphic below:

Secondly, social media can also be an effective tool for real time experience and

the perfect medium that allows clients to express their feelings in the moment. Usually

people share their holiday’s pictures on social networks such as Flickr or Facebook or

leave their comments either on review sites or directly on their Hotel or online agency

website. Here is an example of a luxury Hotel that takes advantage of people’s

comments as a tool for real time information sharing. The Landmark London Hotel is

effectively using ―ReviewPro‖, a web-based analytical tool that manages and

gathers updates daily from leading review websites directly on the Hotel website:

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Yet, social media is not completely about people and the information they

possess, it is also a way to engage with people and clients online to let them know

about your initiatives, recommendations and exclusive offers. In fact, social media

has helped in bringing customer base into business processes itself thereby

enhancing customer satisfaction and gaining consumer loyalty.34

The Ritz Carlton for instance launched a World-Class Loyalty Program Offering

Unique Global Travel Experiences. The Group’s executive explained that his guests

are rather looking for ―a meaningful experience and than an insignificant discount. In

their Loyalty Program they established value adds partnerships, such as a

complimentary access to the casino of Monte Carlo and the privileged use of a

luxury car or private jet charter. Through this program they created the unique

opportunity to create brand advocates and deepen relationships; bridging its

products or services and its customers by focusing on its guests’ lifestyle needs.‖35

Indeed, A hotel marketers’ ambition is not just aspiring for more bookings; it is mostly

about creating a meaningful correlation, engaging clients and so creating brand

loyalty.

34 http://www.businessreviewindia.in/business-features/operations/social-media-new-way-engage- customers

35 http://montesantoalgarve.blogspot.com/2010/12/can-social-media-be-useful-in-creating.html

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Yet, to what extent are travelers affected by social networks? Do they consult

the content of travel industries sites when evaluating their travel decisions? Do they

report the content of what they find on social sites? Does social networking influence

their actual behavior towards travel industries?

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3) How does Social Media Influence Travel and Hotel choice decisions?

According to Peter Yesawich, chairman and CEO of the Ypartnership, a major

industry research firm: ―Among all active travelers in the U.S. (those who took at least

one trip that required overnight accommodations during the previous 12 months),

just under half (an estimated 46%) have a page posted on a social site. Facebook

has achieved the highest rate of market penetration (91%), followed by LinkedIn

(24%) and MySpace (23%).‖36

However, the perceived credibility of the content of social media is low in

comparison with the degree of confidence ascribed in other sources of information

travelers on average seek advice from when making destination and travel service

supplier decisions or media sources as shown by the graph below:

36 http://www.realestatechannel.com/us-markets/vacation-leisure-real-estate-1/real-estate-us- hotel-trends-social-media-trends-facebook-twitter-myspace-social-media-travel-ypartnership- peter-yesawich-2011-tourism-trends-3561.php

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Whereas Sheraton Hotels & Resorts released a new survey conducted by

Studylogic37 which surveyed 4,204 people via phone in the U.S., U.K. and China and

that stated:

―More than 60% of respondents in the global social media study use social

media to stay in touch with family and friends while traveling; more than a

third (36%) say they’d rather log on than make a call to share good news‖38.

64% said they use social media to make their travel plans and within the 25-34

year old participant group, the number is even higher; 76% look to popular

social media sites to plan their next getaway.

Four-fifths of respondents said they access social networking sites throughout

the day, while 39% said they ―could not live without‖ social media sites.

According to a Cornell Hospitality Report (December 2010)39, that highlights a

survey conducted of a balanced sample of 4,000 business and leisure hotel

customers within the United States, the social media’s influence on travelers is very

significant. The report explores the impact of social media on evolving customer

preferences within the hospitality industry and presents selected results that are

associated to social media (pre-purchase and post-stay), and how customers look

for information related to hotels during their shopping experience.

The graphics below signify that individuals exploit different information sources

when planning travel for business and leisure reasons. What is striking is the difference

between leisure and business travelers when planning for a journey.

As suggested below, the leisure respondents look first to recommendations from

friends and family (or word-of-mouth) as the most used information source, especially

for female travelers. Moreover, a considerably higher number of travelers employ

search engines (notably, Google, Yahoo, and Bing), travel related websites, and

meta-search web-sites (such as Expedia, Priceline, and Kayak) as other possible

reliable information sources. In general, a leisure traveler regularly consults all other

37http://www.starwoodhotels.com/sheraton/about/news/news_release_detail.html?obj_id=0900c7b 980d2c439 38 Ibid 39 http://www.hotelschool.cornell.edu

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sources which also indicates that he/she on average uses many more sources for

hotel information than do business travelers.40

Regarding the business travelers, they visibly rely primary on their company’s

recommendations. It appears that approximately 40% of travelers select the hotels

recommended by their organizations. Then, many of them check with search

engines as shown in the graphic below. While there are minor differences between

the relative attractiveness of other sources, there is no other clear preferred source

for business travel information search.41

40 http://www.hotelschool.cornell.edu 41 Ibid

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The proliferation of social media has changed customer preferences in the

hospitality industry. The respondents were asked to indicate which social media

platforms or customer review sites they consult when searching for information about

hotels. As shown in the exhibit below, women are considerably more likely to read

reviews on TripAdvisor compared to men who rely more on the professional reviews42.

It is also important to note that Facebook is being consulted in the same frequency

as Forbes Travel Guide which is considered as a serious source of travel information

and that was launched 50 years ago. Unexpectedly, Forbes Travel Guide is about to

launch its Web 3.0 travel platform, which combines social media with search engine

optimized travel content. The new platform aims at bringing the voice of the

hospitality world back into the online conversation and place them as experts in

conversation about travel, rather than operating in a reactive mode.43

42 http://www.hotelschool.cornell.edu 43 http://www.hotelnewsnow.com/Articles.aspx/3651/Cornell-Summit-to-feature-social-media-tips

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It is evident that social media and customer reviews are an essential part of many

travelers’ information gathering process. Indeed, customers’ choices for hotels are

being influenced by information (both negative and positive) presented through

social network websites, hospitality rating websites, and internet search engines.

That’s the reason why the hotel industry must apply new thinking to the new online

media. Ironically, it is still far from being strategic in terms of social media marketing.

Looking at Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and YouTube, Peter O’Connor, professor at Essec

Business School, pointed out that in terms of the number of hits, none of the world top

fifty hotel chains was consistently strong in all four media sites; while Lady Gaga beat

them all in terms of mentions across the four sites.44

44 http://www.hotelschool.cornell.edu/research/chr/pubs/reports/abstract-15359.html

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4) Should the Hospitality Industry Take Social Media Seriously?

A significant number of hotels are still skeptical, viewing social media as just a

buzzword or a young generation environment which they think is not ideal to

represent their brands. The same scenario happened not long ago, most hotels

didn’t even have their own websites, but by 2008 nearly 70% of reservations were

booked online and hotels were urged to be online and adopt the new internet era.

Though relatively new on the scene, the statistics we have seen so far show that

social media is too big to be ignored. Consumers, fans and buyers are spending a lot

more time on the web doing independent research, getting information from their

brands or peers and experimenting with social networks, forums and microblogging.

In the past consumers would simply soak up what they read in print media or

watched on commercials and had limited ways to give feedback. This old way of

communication has changed and social media has facilitated two-way

conversation. Even if some hotel groups refuse to take part of the online discussion,

conversations are happening online regardless of whether or not hotels are

participating in them. Adopting the sit back method and waiting for the wave of

complaints to stop is not the right way.

The social media phenomenon offers a host of benefits for hotels and more touch

points to spread their messages and drive people to their websites. Social media has

also the potential to influence the clients long before the purchase deepening the

relationship with customers and their social connections on many levels and over

time at a remarkably little cost. Hotels will only have to seize the opportunity and join

the conversation.

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Chapter III: what are the suitable social platforms for Hospitality Marketing?

Since social media is ―a platform for the customer’s voice — and that voice can be

heard by anyone in the world‖45, the hospitality industry as a whole has understood

the power of the social network and embraced social media in a huge way. Not

only can hotels take full benefit of Social Media trends in terms of online placement

and revenue, but also they can get to customers and potential guests on a more

personal level than the traditional press. Hotels can for instance build a relationship

with guests before they arrive, find out what they need so as to meet their needs

effectively once they are at the hotel. But there are hundreds of popular networks as

you can see in the graphic below. Yet, many hoteliers still wonder what can be the

suitable social platforms to improve their customer service efforts and better meet

the needs of their guests. This is the question I am going to analyze in the next part.

45 http://mashable.com/2010/05/24/hospitality-social-media/

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1) The Twitter effect

Twitter is one of the fastest-growing social media networks that allows its users to

communicate with each other and make text-based posts to answer the question

―what are you doing‖ in 140 characters in length. Almost 5.5 million people now use

the service, with website traffic up 573% over the past years46. Twitter provides

vigorous tools for users to share their thoughts and feelings about their favorite

restaurants, their holidays or their favorite places to let their followers know exactly

what is important to them. At the very beginning, it was perceived as a boring tool

that served no purpose, and became later a real purpose in the business world.

46 http://www.hotelmarketingstrategies.com/twitter-hospitality-business/

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Customer service is the most obvious way for the hospitality industry to use social

media, and Twitter is the perfect vehicle to resolve clients’ issues, to improve the

customer service efforts to better meet the needs of guests or just make a client’s

day with a simple ―thanks for visiting‖ tweet. It has even become an online species of

word-of-mouth-marketing for the hotel industry. Ron Callari, a social media specialist,

has published an interesting article47 about the top ten hotel brands that excel at

Twitter, and that are doing the best job in providing customer service, building brand

loyalty and engaging their followers with appealing tweets. Let’s evaluate how some

of the Hotels of the list are engaging with their guests on Twitter.

47 http://inventorspot.com/articles/top_ten_hotel_brands_tweet_above_rest_30174

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a) Marriott Hotels & Resorts

Bill Marriott was one of the first CEOs to jump onto the Social Media era when

he started his 'On the Move' blog in 2007. In 2009 Marriott Hotels and Resorts

launched ―Deal of the Day‖ on Twitter with a promo accessible to their followers. The

core focus of the promo is to announce every day both on the Marriott Twitter and

on MarriottDealoftheDay.com a deal, for 24 hours only, offering up to 60% off at

resorts in the Caribbean, Hawaii and California48:

Since then, they have got a high number of almost 12,000 followers; they in

turn are following 9400 Twitter accounts and have computed 2162 updates on July

12, 2009. With the usage of Twitterfeed, Twhirl and other Twitter apps, Marriott's staff

48http://www.hotelchatter.com/story/2009/6/1/84144/74863/hotels/Marriott_Launches_Deal_of_t he_Day_Both_On_and_Off_Twitter

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invested and still invested more than just their time in communicating with their

guests. John Wolf, senior director of public relations for Marriott International,

highlighted the importance of Twitter for the hotel brand: "Creating brand awareness

and maintaining guest loyalty are the platform's most important purposes. It’s not

about return on investment—it’s about return on engagement.‖49

In 2009, the Marriott Hotels and Resorts recruited Loyal and high performing guests

on Twitter for new advertising campaign.50 ―We chose focused, demanding, on-the-

go professionals to tell their story of Marriott Hotels & Resorts because they represent

our core customer. No one can speak to the experience and benefits at Marriott

better than the customers themselves. That’s what this campaign is all about,‖ said

Deborah Fell, senior vice president, Marketing Strategy and Integration.

Though the use of real clients is an emergent trend in marketing campaigns, it is

still a rarity in the hotel industry, let alone via Twitter. The Twitter campaign included

fast-paced videos narrated by the featured guests who take viewers through the

changes occurring at hotels worldwide. The campaign went globally and allowed

guests to participate in future ads by signing up at yourmarriottstory.com.51

b) Ritz Carlton Hotels

With a start-up date of April 2009 and only 1148 followers and based on the quality

of its 179 updates, it is evident that the Ritz Carlton is a new comer to the Twitter

scene. As one of Marriott's most prestigious brands, the group has titled their Twitter

49 http://inventorspot.com/articles/top_ten_hotel_brands_tweet_above_rest_30174 50http://www.hotelmarketing.com/index.php/content/article/marriott_recruits_real_guestson_twitte r_for_new_campaign/ 51http://www.hotelmarketing.com/index.php/content/article/marriott_recruits_real_guestson_twitte r_for_new_campaign/

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profile: 'RitzCarltonPR.' While 'public relations' is not the most endearing of terms for

an account on Twitter, the brand does offset this corporate label with the

involvement of Allison Sitch, senior corporate director of public relations. She lends a

personal and hospitable touch as the account's spokesperson.52 While other hotels

are using Twitter as a second concierge, Simon Cooper, president and chief

operations officer of the luxury travel brand Ritz-Carlton, has a different vision of how

to use Twitter: ―I am looking forward to sharing my thoughts on how the luxury

hospitality sector is changing and shifting its point of reference. […]I will provide a

candid view of global travel today and observations about the trends that are

emerging.‖53

The group has also set up another Twitter profile ―RitzCarltonClub‖ not just

respond to customer queries but also to raise brand awareness and reach new

exclusive customers and potential members for their club. The Group visibly wants

also to base their Twitter profile on the client’s experience and loyalty, an

exceptional way to make it seem like a private club, as stated on their twitter page

―Latest news on the deeded, Ritz-Carlton Destination Club. As only The Ritz-Carlton

can, The Club is redefining the Member experience.‖54

52 http://inventorspot.com/articles/top_ten_hotel_brands_tweet_above_rest_30174 53 http://travel.latimes.com/daily-deal-blog/index.php/qa-with-ritz-carlton-4567/ 54 http://twitter.com/#!/RitzCarltonClub

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c) Hyatt Hotels & Resorts

"Hyatt Concierge", launched on 2009, has been considered in the hospitality

industry as the first global, 24/7 dedicated concierge service on Twitter. The account

is a ―service‖ platform designed to enhance the ability to deliver Hyatt’s very own

authentic hospitality. It is not a promotional vehicle, stresses Farley Kern, Hyatt's

director of brand public relations: "We wanted to have a presence on Twitter that

was about our guests and for our guests and designed around our guests, as

opposed to having a presence on Twitter just for the sake of being on Twitter"55.

The new HyattConcierge strategy is to use Twitter as a service channel where

guests will ask questions, book spa appointments or dinner reservations, and make

special requests; in a way that enables them to be more responsive, enrich the guest

experience and deepen guest preference for Hyatt: 56

―Visible in the public stream at HyattConcierge are endless examples of

purposeful tweeting in action. A guest with a complaint, earlier this month, received

this brief tweet response: ―I spoke to Clifford, the front office manager, and he will be

contacting you shortly.‖ Another guest, perhaps newly arrived in town, learned from

the virtual concierge that, ―There’s a number of restaurants less than a mile from the

hotel. They have a courtesy shuttle that can take you to them.‖57

The number of updates that they address to specific followers using the @reply

greeting and then following up with an ongoing dialogue is impressive and requires a 55 http://inventorspot.com/articles/top_ten_hotel_brands_tweet_above_rest_30174 56 http://travel.usatoday.com/hotels/legacy/2009/05/66927973/1 57 http://www.hotelinteractive.com/article.aspx?articleid=19224

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great effort and a big number of staff. Any inquiries involving further follow-up are

taken to direct messaging or offline, knowing in advance that the brand reaches

their clients by answering their questions 140 characters at a time. ―The tweeting staff

at each of the three central locations reaches out to the hotel in question, doing the

local research and relaying the questions on behalf of each inquiring guest‖58. Their

actual stats show they have displayed almost 4 051 Tweets and are following 7 443

members and have 13 867 followers:

d) Joie de Vivre Hotels

Joie De Vivre’s Twitter strategy is to communicate exclusive last minute deals and

time limited offers to its Twitter followers (for instance: luxury rooms for less than $100

per night). Every Tuesday, the company, that operates 33 luxury hotels in California,

Tweets an exclusive deal to its approximately 10,000 followers on Twitter providing a

promotional code to book the deal on summercalifornia.com during a specified

hour.

Joie De Vivre claims that its social media strategy has generated in bookings for

more than 1,000 room nights, and ―despite the heavy discounts, Joie De Vivre says

that, given the current economic conditions, those rooms would have otherwise

58 Ibid

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remained vacant.‖59 In fact the twitter strategy efforts have demonstrated to be a

great way to both drive sales and build loyalty.

It is important to note that Joie de Vivre group has won in 2009 the eMarketer of

the Year award thanks to its success on twitter and a creative combination of social

and online marketing development, including ―integrated brand campaigns,

alternate channels, social marketing, search engine optimization, and pay-per-click

advertising—coupled with an enhanced web platform and booking engine, and

strong relationships with third-party sites—Joie de Vivre has demonstrated

extraordinary success in driving demand and converting bookings online‖60.

e) Omni Hotels

Omni Hotels are using Twitter as a focus on the customer service driven culture

and as a tool to engage customers on a proactive level from brand offers to limited

time sales conveniently in one place. As stated in their website, twitter will be the

ideal platform to make it easier for clients to find fabulous packages available from

coast to coast:

59 http://www.kikabink.com/news/twitter-facebook-social-media-drive-bookings-for-california luxury-hotel-chain-joie-de-vivre/ 60 http://hsmai-europe.com/2010/02/02/joie-de-vivre-hospitality-as-2009-emarketer-of-the-year/

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Buy two nights and get the third night free at the Omni Houston Hotel with the

Red, White and Cool Package starting from $99 per night.

―Enjoy your choice of 18 holes of golf or a 50-minute spa treatment at the

Omni Interlocken Resort in Denver with the resort’s Links or Leisure Package

starting from $195 per night.

Stay two nights and enjoy a second room for 50% off at the Omni Orlando

Resort with the Orlando Family Escape Package starting from $299 per night.

Stay three nights and save 30% off the best available rate at the Omni

Bedford Springs Resort in Bedford, PA when you book the property’s July

Fourth Package.‖61

The group wants also to meet the needs of guests staying at her hotel before

their arrival. The latter can follow the group updates and see how they engage well

with their audience "Thanks! We are looking forward to your arrival!‖ or ―Let us know if

we can help you further!" demonstrates again that hotels can use Twitter as an

extension of their customer service desk.

We have seen so far that the Hotels’ Twitter goal is not just aiming for increasing

revenues or getting more bookings a reservation; it is about making an appealing

connection, earning the guests’ expectation and so creating brand loyalty. Indeed,

there is no specific recipe to establish a successful Twitter account and attract more

clients, as we have seen above, in the Hospitality industry Twitter has been used for

different goals, values and priorities:

61 http://www.omnihotels.com/AboutOmniHotels/Press/PressReleases/090629PressRelease.aspx

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Given the rapid growth of Twitter, it is no surprise that Hotels are striving hard to

have an active presence on Twitter and monitoring it effectively. Getting customer

service, satisfaction, and loyalty and thus increasing revenues and profits is a hard

task, since the service became saturated with hundreds of Hotel brands. The most

successful Hotel Twitter users are those who in-depth engage in innovating and

constantly making a difference in comparison with their competitors. They also

actively monitor the conversation, show concern for the well-being of their guests,

provide quick customer service and thus create a value to their brands. On top of

that, when hotels provide value to followers, guests become systematically aware of

them and this can utterly help hotels to be successful in Twitter.

2) Facebook as a distribution possibility

While Twitter seems to be one of the favorite popular networks for hotels, in

terms of traffic, Facebook reaches four times as many people as Twitter. Hotels that

take advantage of this emerging trend are seeing significant benefits in terms of

online placement and revenue. Facebook has become known as an exclusive

community, presenting authentic audiences and viral marketing opportunities for

those willing to promote their hotels. In a recent report about Facebook Statistics,

Twitter

Solve customers

query

Share quality content

Extending concierge services

Last minute deals

Promotes services

Reach new

members (e-club)

Build Loyalty

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Stats & Facts For 2011, it is stated that over 700 Billion minutes a month are spent on

Facebook, almost 20 million applications are installed per day by the users and over

250 million people interact with Facebook from outside the official website on a

monthly basis (mostly from mobile devices). Moreover, in just 20 minutes on

Facebook over 1 million links are shared, 2 million friend requests are accepted and

almost 3 million messages are sent.62

Contrary to Twitter that is limited to a certain number of characters, Facebook

offers diverse options to hotels to customize their page. In fact, the Facebook tabs

can be tailored by hotels to their specific needs: integrate reservation widgets,

create event pages, share photos and videos, share hotel information, grow a fan

base, offer multimedia content, invite clients to share their experiences, create

custom tabs to highlight hotel specific items such as meetings and conferences,

import news feed, promote services, etc. Hotels can also gain loyal fans to the point

they create fun, positive and engaging application experiences. Several Hotel

groups knew how to benefit from Facebook pages as promotional and operational

channels to win and retain clients, in different and innovative ways.

62 http://www.digitalbuzzblog.com/facebook-statistics-stats-facts- 2011/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+DigitalBuzzBlog+% 28Digital+Buzz+Blog%29

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a) Hilton Hotels & Resorts

Prior to their June 2009 international development, the Hilton relied exclusively on

traditional marketing mediums such as: radio promotions, Web and print

advertisements. But as the property expanded, their management teams realized

that if the Hilton didn't develop a social media presence to engage their clients,

comments and complaints in online conversations would happen anyway and there

would be no way to control what is said about the property.63 Twitter, Flickr, youtube

and Facebook profiles were all set up and increasingly provided exciting and

engaging content which brought them a considerable number of fans and followers.

For instance, it seems that Hilton's Facebook presence is largely driven by their fans:

almost 80,369 who are free to post their comments, experiences and even their own

photos. The statistics64 about the fan growth regarding the Hilton group is impressive

and demonstrates that the group has an affluent Facebook page:

63 http://hospitalitytechnology.edgl.com/case-studies/Social-Media-Savvy-Helps-Hilton-Hotel- Convert-Facebook-Fans-into-Brand-Ambassadors54765 64 http://www.socialbakers.com/facebook-pages/125762892900-hilton-hotels-resorts

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Up till now, the only place to book a hotel room online was at the hotel's official

website or via online travel agencies. Now hotels can engage customers via several

Facebook applications that can be included to bring more sales and revenues to

the properties. In the graphic below, we can see that the Hilton group has also

developed a Facebook booking widget as a way to extend reach beyond their

Websites, and where customers can actually book their rooms without ever leaving

the page.

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When it comes to online exclusive contests and promotions for different properties;

the Hilton group usually creates diverse Facebook pages which allow them to

determine what is successful and what isn't. Like the campaign HiltonGardenInn

Facebook sweepstakes that gave to loyal fans a chance to win a free-two-night

weekend stay at their choice of more than 510 locations globally. To be a member

of the competition, Facebook users must click on the ―like‖ Hilton Garden Inn button

and be older than 18. The five winners were chosen at random; which has been

considered as a great online success for the group.

It is important to note that to monitor their social media activities, a monthly

productivity report is delivered, with areas of improvement highlighted and

addressed prior to the next month's outreach. The group recognizes that social

media is an ever changing and a fundamental part of their overall marketing

campaign. It is the online relationships that they cultivate, which transform fans and

followers into ―much-coveted brand ambassadors‖. Based on current momentum,

Hilton group is continually supervising TripAdvisor reviews, blogs and any additional

online social media conversations. As a result of their social network engagement,

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the group has become increasingly visible, they're able to identify problems or

concerns and address them almost immediately.65

b) Sheraton Hotels and Resorts

Sheraton Hotels & Resorts has launched in 2009 a new social media platform

"Sheraton Shared Moments". The new site is the first Hotel website to feature

Facebook connect in a whole new way. The new site enables Facebook members

to interact through sheraton.com over travel experiences by sharing stories, tips and

photos about their best travel finds, destination favorites and passion for travel. Those

who sign up to the portal and share their moments also have the chance to win one

of five week-long stays in a Sheraton hotel best suited to their travel preferences.

Susanne Barfoed, Vice President Brand Management, Sheraton Hotels & Resorts

explained:

"Today's traveler is part of an online digital community and Sheraton is

committed to helping guests stay connected to friends, family and

colleagues whilst on the road. Sheraton has launched a range of

initiatives including a lobby-based signature communications hub,

Link@Sheraton experienced with Microsoft(SM), which provides internet

enabled PC work stations and free WI-FI so guests can remain fully

productive and connected to what matter most to them whilst away

from home. In addition, through Facebook Connect and now Shared

Moments, Sheraton is empowering travelers to share and inspire each

other in a new and exciting way."66

65 http://hospitalitytechnology.edgl.com/case-studies/Social-Media-Savvy-Helps-Hilton-Hotel- Convert-Facebook-Fans-into-Brand-Ambassadors54765 66 http://blogit.realwire.com/?ReleaseID=14648

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The Sheraton social network experience is still a great success and has added

another important element, to clients: ―All of the stories are also searchable across 9

different categories, including sports, business, family or weddings, and there’s a

keyword search to help further pare down the posts.

There are three different ways to submit stories, all of which can be searched

individually or together: stories logged directly from Sheraton hotels, community

stories, and stories filed through Facebook Connect integration. Icons appear on the

map to denote each story type.‖67

The ―better when shared‖ strategy has allowed the Sheraton group to bring a huge

traffic to their website and gather all the Facebook fans and guests reviews in one

place in order to better control their image and interact effectively with them. As a

result, clients can be able to make connections with each other and with the Hotel

group at more than 400 hotels in 75 countries around the world. By sharing their

experiences, the guests become in a way the brand ambassadors.

67 http://hospitalitytechnology.edgl.com/case-studies/Social-Media-Savvy-Helps-Hilton-Hotel- Convert-Facebook-Fans-into-Brand-Ambassadors54765

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c) Mandarin Oriental Hotel:

Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong is one of the group’s hotels that have built an

appealing Facebook page. By continually updating the page, and introducing new

content and updates such as photos and videos concerning different subject

matters (not necessarily about the hotel), the group is keeping its clients engaged.

Their Facebook profile is also highly interactive enabling the community to offer

direct free feedback. Facebook allows the group to gain a deeper understanding of

how the hotel is perceived online in order for them to build better relationships with

target audiences and current customers. Not only users can comment on or share

content with other friends, but they are invited to leave their reviews directly on

TripAdvisor; which can represent a risk to the brand to manage their image

effectively:

Due to the variety of features and available on Facebook, the Mandarin Oriental

Hotel, Hong Kong is actually using its Facebook page to launch an exclusive offer

regarding Valentine’s celebrations and is looking for submissions with the theme of

"Most Romantic Place in Hong Kong". Indeed, international travelers and

photography enthusiasts can show off their skills to the hotel during their Facebook

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Valentine's Photo Competition. All the photos selected will be uploaded to the

Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong's Facebook page photo album and the entry winners

will be determined by the total number of "likes" received for each photo. The

contest runs until February 11, 2011 at 5pm and the group is giving away a number of

prizes, including a romantic two-night stay.

―Hong Kong is our most favorite city in the world and one that people love to

photograph, which is why we have introduced this photography contest to

showcase some of Hong Kong’s most romantic places.‖ says General Manager,

Jonas A Schuermann . ―The growing importance of social media in Asia is on a rapid

rise, and without doubt this will be a fun-filled competition on our Facebook page

whereby anyone with wonderful photography skills can win our spectacular prize

offerings this Valentines.‖68

In fact, the group’s benefit from this competition is to engage with the Facebook

community certainly after realizing that there is a whole advertising potential on this

valentine’s campaign. Knowing that the best-performing Facebook Pages are those

that provide compelling and engaging content (the Valentine’s campaign) in order

68 http://www.examiner.com/international-travel-in-national/mandarin-oriental-hong-kong- launches-facebook-valentine-s-photo-competition

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to increase the group’s exposure on Facebook in particular and on the web in

general.

All in all, the most successful hotel pages can not only be measured by the number

of fans they have got but also by their level of interaction with the Facebook users

and the quality of content they monitor; mainly regarding the hotels that successfully

cultivate and encourage customer comments as a way to monitor their online

visibility and reputation. We all know that the Facebook’s members are a dynamic

audience that can influence each other on how they make their travel decisions.

Facebook represents a part of their life; where they express their opinions, talk about

their favorite brands and share interesting content. That’s the reason why Facebook

is key to engaging with travel consumers in different manners to sum up what we

have seen so far in this chapter:

Facebook

Offer a special

deal

Launch online

competition

Convert fans to

ambassadors

Get clients'

feedback

Drive webtraffic

Interact/ engage guests

Introduce new

content/

news feed

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3) YouTube channel for online visibility

According to ComScore, a leader in measuring the digital world, YouTube is still in

total command of video watching on the internet. YouTube is the second largest

search engine–second only to Google and achieved ―record levels of viewing

activity in May 2010 with an all-time high of 14.6 billion videos viewed and surpassing

the threshold of 100 videos per viewer for the first time‖ 69. Moreover, YouTube still

leads when it comes to uploading and watching videos. Which means that video is

starting to increasingly take an important place in the online community, as shown in

the graphics70 below:

69 http://techcrunch.com/2010/06/24/comscore-youtube-reaches-all-time-high-of-14-6-billion- videos-viewed-in-may/ 70 http://www.website-monitoring.com/blog/2010/05/17/youtube-facts-and-figures-history- statistics/

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After Google acquired YouTube in 2006, it was evident that video was on an incline

level. People watch an average of ―two hours a month online and referrals from

YouTube to the online travel channel are up 84% on 2010.Most importantly, 72% of US

Internet users view video online on the same scale as network television and 89% of

users surveyed said video influenced their booking decision (PhoCusWright).

No wonder almost all major hotel brands, OTA's, luxury hotel and resort brands

have invested heavily in the creation of online videos about their product and

services and created YouTube and Facebook video channels‖71. But much like

Facebook and Twitter, YouTube has always posed the question: How do you use it

effectively and make it profitable? How can you leverage your YouTube Branded

channel, and increase your online visibility?

Hoteliers need to be there right away for their customers where they are since

clients won’t necessarily come to hotels directly with their questions and

appreciations. The most popular videos are the ones that are informative, engaging

or funny. Creating an appealing content and video on YouTube is like creating an

appealing content on Facebook or Twitter. Hoteliers need to create a following of

people where exclusivity may be king.

Hotels thrive on displaying videos no one else has done before; that help them

become more interesting today than they were yesterday. Some small hotels, for

instance, have used YouTube in a whole new artistic way to reach their customers

without a national advertising budget; and here is an example of a boutique hotel

located in Midtown Manhattan (New York) that has been nicknamed ―the social

media hotel‖ due to its proficient use of online social platforms like YouTube.

71 http://hotel.ibooking.com/product/2010.asp

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a) The Roger Smith Hotel

In an interview with Bizsugar72, Adam Wallace, the Director of Digital Marketing at

the Roger Smith Hotel, has stated that the social media program at the Roger Smith

Hotel started in 2006 with a video based website that they built called Roger Smith

Life.

The latter is a new live broadcasting and blogging platform based out of the

Roger Smith Hotel. He explained that: ―this project brought a new element to the

marketing of the hotel that was not focused on product, but rather stories and

identity. From this we built a network on Facebook and Twitter, which allowed us to

communicate directly with current and potential customers and provided a venue

for others to share stories from our hotel‖73. Here is a graphic that shows the social

network platforms and accounts the Roger Smith are using for their hotel:

72 http://www.bizsugar.com/blog/2011/01/26/social-media-with-the-roger-smith-hotel/ 73 Ibid

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The Video strategy was their core strategy that they used to get into social media

and attract more and more clients. If we take a look at their YouTube Channel, their

videos (with a total of 335954 views) focus essentially on stories, people and

relationships rather than just talking about their hotel; this is the reason why they

named them ―the Roger Smith Shorts Series‖. This makes their position much more

fun, more interesting and in many ways more effective than a traditional

advertisement that costs thousands of dollars:

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As stated on their YouTube profile, ―The Roger Smith Shorts Series started in 2009 as

a short film festival was designed to facilitate filmmaking opportunities for up and

coming directors‖. Thanks to that, the hotel has not only attracted more guests but

has become the ideal setting for filmmakers as they put their creative talents to the

test74.

After their online great success, the hotel shared compelling early ROI statistics

(2010):

―Food and Beverage Sales, up 32%

Event revenues, up 37%

Estimated 75 – 175 rooms per month filled directly due to social media efforts.

Yes — small compared to the 3 – 4000 usual room bookings, but these 75-175

tend to be social media enthusiasts who then talk about the hotel to their

audience — either on blogs, Twitter, Facebook, photo sharing platforms,

YouTube, or other channels. Even when they aren’t comped.‖75

Roger Smith is attracting a significant bunch of new clients who have raved about

the hotel’s environment and the company’s video accessibility online. The Hotel has

successfully taken social media to the next level to amplify brand awareness and

offer enhanced customer service. By using a range of video channels, including

YouTube to propose a real picture about the hotel's culture, it has proven that small,

independent businesses have the power to compete with bigger corporations.

b) The San Juan Marriott Hotel

In fact, many big Hotel groups consider YouTube as a video site where they can

upload their videos without reaching out users with appealing and entertaining

video content. It is important to recognize that YouTube is a social networking site

that big chains and Hotels can exploit to their advantage and use it wisely and

properly. Let’s take for instance the San Juan Marriott Resort & Stellaris Casino that

74 http://www.youtube.com/user/rogersmithnews 75 http://blog.businesssocialmediasolutions.com/roger-smith-hotel/

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launched in 2009 an outstanding service gathering their clients’ vacation videos (or

YouTube postcards) that are available on their YouTube Channel76.

The hotel has even introduced a new position to the hotel industry that they called

―the YouTube Concierge‖. The latter will roam the property selecting ―willing

participants to smile for the camera, show off their tan and tell friends back home

just how much fun they’re having – in 30 seconds or less. The YTC will then take the

footage back ―behind the scenes,‖ format it with an opening, closing and music and

post it on the San Juan Marriott You Tube Channel (after participants have provided

written consent.)‖77

―Take a look at the video we shot poolside on our last day‖, this is how can clients

share the Hotel’s videos with friends and relatives. In fact, The hotel’s YouTube

Concierge offers guests a chance to star in a ―30-second video postcard‖. The latter

is then uploaded to YouTube and available for guest to share with friends and family

back home. The free service allows them to avoid worrying about buying postcards

or stamps, or whether bringing a camera to the pool or beach.

76 http://www.youtube.com/user/sanjuanmarriottlive 77http://www.hotelchatter.com/story/2009/10/8/234650/979/hotels/The_San_Juan_Marriott_s_Yo u_Tube_Concierge_Makes_Virtual_Bragging_Easy

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―Most of us have posted a picture to Facebook with a camera phone or recorded

a quick video on their digital camera while on vacation to show family and friends,‖

commented Director of Marketing Julian Cable-Treadwell. ―We wanted to find a

way to help guests chronicle the great time they are having without having to worry

about bringing a camera to the pool or the beach and make it simple for them to

share this experience through the popularity of an on-line web channel.‖78

All in all, as the Internet continues to evolve and grow, YouTube stands as one of

the most popular social networks platforms in the hospitality industry. Hundreds of

humorous, intriguing or appealing videos are uploaded, hosted and viewed million

of times. Hotels start to recognize the advertising potential of YouTube. Yet, many of

them promote themselves in a traditional way and do not really exploit the viral

marketing potential offered by YouTube to their hotel’s fullest advantage: promote

and develop your business, enhance your brand awareness, attract new guests and

catch the attention of an tremendously large number of people through well-

produced and creative videos covering major events at your hotel.

78 http://www.prlog.org/10368978-san-juan-marriott-introduces-youtube-concierge.html

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4) Flickr for informational images

Social media empowers pictures and can turn them into content creators. With

tagging, commenting and embedding capacities, photography sites are emerging

as social communities and can help build awareness of your hotel. Flickr, for

instance, is an online photography community, and is built as a photo sharing social

platform; a place for people from all over the world to upload and share their

pictures. This focus on sharing and distribution makes it ideal for hotel marketers

looking to build their web media presence. With simple features and remarkable

flexibility, Flickr is a great place to store, share, and showcase your hotel.

According to Josiah Mackenzie, a Hotel Marketing publisher, the five most

compelling reasons for hotels to use Flickr in their web marketing are:

1. ―Flickr increases your web presence, building awareness among potential

guests and travel planners

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2. Flickr can link back to your hotel website, encouraging direct bookings and

helping your search engine position

3. Flickr hosts your images for free

4. Flickr syndicates your photos across other websites (important in Google’s

universal search – which includes media)

5. Flickr provides the opportunity to build relationships in your online

community‖79

Others use Flickr to generate buzz around a new product, service or property.

a) Four Seasons Hotels (Denver)

The Four Seasons Denver is using a Flickr group ―Denver's 1111 Tower‖80 in August

2010 to create a pre-opening buzz for its luxury hotel and private residence. The 45-

story tower is scheduled to open this fall as part of the Four Seasons Hotel and Private

Residences, 1111 Tower combines active urban vibrancy with kaleidoscopic views

and the youthful culture of the Rocky Mountains. The 45-story tower comprises 102

private residences and 240 guest accommodations. At $350 million, it the most

expensive privately-owned building ever constructed in Denver.81

Amateur photographers have been invited to take pictures of the construction and

to post them to the 1111 Tower Group photo pool on Flickr. In this case, the photos

represent a kind of feedback displayed by the users and also a way to spread the

word about the new hotel in Denver. Giving the chance to amateurs to display the

photos regarding the construction of the hotel is a clever way to urge them to talk

about, share their work of art with other users and thus build a community around the

new Hotel and create an effective crowd sourcing.

79 http://www.hotelmarketingstrategies.com/hotel-guide-for-using-flickr/ 80 http://www.flickr.com/groups/1111tower 81 Ibid

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Crowd sourcing illustrates the practice in which the purpose is to motivate people

in order to ensue on actions that finally serve promotional needs. Photo contests and

other types of contests in general are less aggressive forms of advertising that can be

very valuable in social media and that can bring results in a short period of time.82

b) Hyatt Hotels & Resorts

It is well known that a picture is worth a thousand words, some hotel groups

basically turn Flick to an open travel book where clients post photos about their

travel experiences. Others use Flickr in a whole different manner; flick represents a

platform where they can organize the photos in diverse categories in order to

enhance their brand visibility; which is the case of Hyatt Hotels and resorts. The latter

have collected all its properties under one Flickr account. The photos are also

themed around different categories or topics so that when the Flickr members can

relate to a certain property or topic and participate in relevant discussions. This Flickr

strategy exposes the group Flickr users and provides useful content to external

people researching a trip in a definite destination and that might end up choosing

one of the group’s properties.

82 http://www.webseoanalytics.com/blog/social-media-case-study/

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Being one of the popular online image platforms, Flickr has enabled Hotels to

monitor and share digital photos easily and thus enhance their online visibility. Yet, if

Flickr is used effectively it becomes more than a basic image management website.

It’s a basis of creativity, and fun and interesting place for hotels to reach a huge

community of photographers (amateurs and professionals). The latter can provide

(for free) great photos concerning your hotel or property for the world to see and

share. All in all, Flickr offers the ability to engage clients, add notes to pictures and

form groups based on a multitude of themes/topics that provide discussion forums.

By monitoring the Flickr platform, hotels learn how to be more personal with customer

interactions and to get information out there that maybe doesn’t have a place on

their official website.

4) Foursquare: a location-based opportunity

"Location is a key factor in the future of search, social, commerce, and media,

among a lot of other things," Federated Media founder John Battelle has said. "Local

is the most important signal to emerge in the database of intentions since the link."83

Since location has become one of the major components of social networks, it is

important to analyze how Location-based social networks (like Foursquare) have

83 http://battellemedia.com/archives/2010/10/mayer_to_location_big_

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been used by Hotels as an opportunity to develop their online presence and brand

awareness.

To begin with, Location-based social networks are social networks that use GPS

features to locate their members and let them broadcast their location and other

content online (for a top tier location based platforms please see Appendix III).

Usually, users checking in when they arrive in a place to reveal their location to their

network contacts and let them know where they are and what they are doing.

Location-based services have been a popular topic lately, as Twitter enables geo-

location features and Facebook announces Facebook places.

Foursquare, another location-based tool, encourages users to communicate

their locations and the places they’re visiting or activities they’re doing in specific

neighborhoods. Users can coordinate their journeys, meet-ups, recommend

restaurants, and find out what their friends or relatives are exploring. Here are some

remarkable statistics84 about foursquare (USA 2010):

84 http://foursquare.com/2010infographic

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It is also important to note that the main source of traffic to Foursquare is Facebook,

which accounted for 33% of the upstream visits. Google and Twitter followed with

22% and 8%, respectively; knowing in advance that those top 3 websites are

accounting for nearly 2/3 of all traffic. Users are able to link both Facebook and

Twitter to include check-ins in updates and tweets.85

For businesses, Foursquare has launched a free analytics tool and dashboard

giving business owners access to a variety of information and statistics about their

visitors. With the new tool, businesses are able to see a range of real-time data about

Foursquare usage, including ―who has ―checked in‖ to the place via Foursquare,

when they arrived, the male-to-female customer ratio and which times of day are

more active for certain customers‖. Business owners will also be able to offer instant

promotions to try to engage new customers and keep current ones. ―If a restaurant

can see one of its loyal customers has dropped off the map and is no longer

checking in, the owner could offer them incentives to come back,‖ said Mr. Walker.

86

85 http://weblogs.hitwise.com/heather-dougherty/2010/03/1_year_anniversary_for_foursqu_1.html 86 http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/09/foursquare-introduces-new-tools-for-businesses/

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Ultimately, hospitality businesses can easily exploit the vigorous information

available about their customers and competition on Foursquare. Some Hotels, that

are actively engaged in Foursquare loyalty programs, propose deals, discounts and

even award their guests for using the service for real-time check-ins without filling out

a form containing personal information in order to get their room’s key.

a) Hotel Max (Seattle)

The Hotel Max, an artistic boutique hotel located in Seattle, offers gift cards to

people who check-in on Foursquare. When a client shows the front desk that he/she

checked in on Foursquare, they offer a $20 gift card to use during the stay as well as

be entered in a contest to win a free room. This is a great strategy for the hotel to

build its online community and engage with their customers.

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b) Wynn Hotel and Casino (Las Vegas)

In Las Vegas at the Wynn Hotel and Casino, Foursquare is considered as another

tool for building a "positive community base around guests' experiences" according

to Jade Bailey-Assam, the e-strategy development manager for Wynn. Thanks to

Foursquare, a highly engaged user could be rewarded with a complimentary room

for participation or an on-going promotion. Foursquare represents for the hotel more

than a reward for a client who simply check-in on Foursquare, but rather an efficient

tool that helps monitor the resorts' reputation and encourage guests to interact with

each other.

Also, they have recently started a promotion that offers their Foursquare guests an

even more luxurious experience. A recently launched special prompts checked-in

guests with a chance to enjoy a glass of champagne at the Blush Boutique nightclub

on the house:87

87 http://mashable.com/2010/04/02/foursquare-brands/

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All in all, with the goal of spreading word-of-mouth exposure, hotels can persuade

their clients to promote for their brand or property by encouraging Foursquare

participation: like offering discounts for loyal customer. Foursquare has become a

viable tool for business to redefine guests’ loyalty and engagement towards a brand.

"We, as an integrated resort, have an advantage in that we have a variety of places

and amenities for guests to explore," Bailey-Assam says. "Encouraging guests to

check-in and write tips to each other will hopefully get the guest to be more

engaged. The great thing about a supportive user community is that there is an

inherent level of trust between the users. " 88

As we have seen so far the most successful hotels are involved in social

initiatives. This means real people interacting with customers in real time in the digital

world. Active participation in social media not only helps in building brand

reputation, but helps in gaining links and visibility. Mastering social media requires a

special creativity set and a dedicated focus and hotels need to develop a strategy

to deal with social media and dedicate the necessary resources to effectively

implement their strategy. The goal is to generate content that compels users to

tweet or write about, a photo to share on Facebook or Flickr, a place to check-in or

a video to show how creative the Hotel’s marketing are. Unfortunately, Few hotel

groups truly understand how to effectively leverage social media and often make

big mistakes as we will see in the next chapter.

88 http://www.hotelchatter.com/special/foursquare-3

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CHAPTER IV: HOW CAN SOCIAL MEDIA NEGATIVELY AFFECT THE HOSPITALITY

INDUSTRY?

The growing level of maturity in the world of social media doesn't mean that

mistakes are uncommon. To the contrary, many hotels have engaged social media

in a wrong way and without a well structured strategy. Social media is not just about

broadcasting like traditional publishing. Entering a social network and only pushing

out marketing messages will cause some hotels to be ignored and could ultimately

lead them alienating their fans and causing negative word-of-mouth. Others do not

stay true to their organizational culture or do not make social media the company’s

wide collaborative effort and thus do not effectively interact with clients.

Here is an extreme example of how a hotel responded to a negative comment

on a review site: Tripadvisor.

1) Golden Beach Hotel ( Blackpool - England)

The Golden Beach Hotel threw a couple out of their hotel after accusing them of

leaving a bad review on TripAdvisor. According to the Blackpool Gazette, the

manager of the Hotel asked Adrian Healey and his girlfriend Sherrie Andrews to leave

two days into their paid, three-night stay, after ―storming‖ into their room and

accusing them of writing an online review on Tripadvisor. The manager then called

the police to escort the guests off the property.89 The client confirmed:

"We had been there a day when they said we couldn't get back in our

rooms because they were recarpeting, and we didn't complain – all we

asked was if we could have an extra towel. […] Then, on our second

evening, he banged on the door and told us to get out, accusing us of

writing a review on Trip Advisor, and said he would call the police."90

Indeed, with the increasing popularity of reviews platforms, hoteliers may lament

the loss of control over what is being said about them online. However they should

89http://www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk/news/local/man_thrown_out_of_hotel_for_writing_review_1_29 95711 90 Ibid

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be in full control of how they react. In this latest article, the hotel failed to use

negative reviews to effect positive change in the hotel. Not only they have collected

more negative reviews regarding this incident, but also they have got their hotel’s

name stigmatized in all online news feed and shared in many social networks

platforms.

Meanwhile, TripAdvisor has shown to users to be open and communicative with the

hotel community so that they can effectively manage their online reputation.

According to TripAdvisor, seven percent of negative reviews now receive a hotel

response. It’s still a paltry amount, but a promising increase over last year’s four

percent.91

What people say about a Hotel influence the potential guest’s decisions about

their stay in a particular hotel. Whatever the hotel pays in advertising, a negative

review will always affect their reputation. Here is an interesting definition about the e-

reputation that has been given by Bertrand Cesvet in Conversational Capital92

91 http://www.danieledwardcraig.com/2010/11/a-positive-spin-on-negative-reviews. 92 http://www.mrmlab.net

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According to TripAdvisor, a property’s reply to a negative review can have more

influence on traveler decisions than the review itself. Hoteliers have a chance to

redeem themselves, since many review sites allow hotel response. Yet the vast

majority chooses to remain silent, willfully allowing their reputation to suffer.93

2) Hans Brinker Budget Hotel (Amsterdam)

Ironically, here is an example of hotel that has been classified ―The Worst Hotel

in the World‖ and stated being Proud of it. The hotel has gained worldwide

recognition, bad reputation and press attention thanks to an advertising campaign

celebrating its awfulness. In fact, the Hotel’s brand is based on being the ―worst hotel

in the world‖ and ―its campaigns take honesty to the extreme. Most hotels compete

on features like cleanliness, service, comfort, and amenities, but in an effort to

differentiate, Hans Brinker has positioned itself as the complete opposite‖94:

93 http://www.sinotechblog.com.cn/index.php/consumer-strategies/40-social-mediamarketing/600- best-practices-for-responding-to-online-reviews 94 http://www.creative-brand.com/advertising/hans-brinker-budget-hotel-builds-brand-on-being- awesomely-bad

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The latter advertising campaign has been truly a differentiation strategy based on

negativity. Travelers came to Hans Brinker for almost 15 years thanks to the hotel’s

brand and outrageous advertising. According to Erik Kessels (founder of

KesselsKramer–a communication agency), paid nights at the hotel have ―risen from

60,000 to 145,000 per year since Kessels took a sledgehammer to the Hans Brinker’s

reputation.‖95

When Kessels was initially approached by the hotel manager, his single demand

was not getting complaints anymore. It soon became evident that the only privilege

the hotel had was honesty. The ironic advertizing campaign celebrating the hotel’s

weakness has given birth to a book called ―The Worst Hotel in the World―.96

The method has been triumphant enough for the Hans Brinker to follow the theme

for ten years. Still, ironic humor only takes the Hotel so far, and recent guests have not

been too impressed if comments on TripAdvisor are anything to go by:

95 http://www.creative-brand.com/advertising/hans-brinker-budget-hotel-builds-brand-on-being- awesomely-bad 96 Ibid

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3) Langham Hotels (Hong Kong):

Social media can be a double edged sword, as it is the case for Langham

Hotels. It’s regrettable that the group’s Big Deal social media marketing campaign

was supposed to generate a positive buzz (2009) but gave way to catastrophic

results and a big online storm. ―Initial reaction was good, as claimed by organizers,

but turned sour and generated uproar among certain groups in Hong Kong, claiming

the campaign was executed to promote the hotel at the expense of Hong Kong’s

local people and culture.‖ 97

The whole online storm and negativity started when Langham Hotels posted a

series of videos putting accent on the value of staying at Langham Hotels. Ironically,

the videos portrayed the need to be within the hotel premises so guests can avoid

the locals who were utterly caricaturized: ―One was trying to sell fake watches,

another was bringing chicken feet in a bowl of congee. That’s a given in Mong Kok,

home to many stalls peddling bootleg products and dai pai dongs. It just so

happened that Langham Hotels is located in the neighborhood.‖98 All the videos

described Rude and frustrated travelers looking to escape a world of madness

97 http://www.seo-hongkong.com/blog/learning-from-langham-hotels-social-media-experience- 1754.html 98 http://www.seo-hongkong.com/blog/learning-from-langham-hotels-social-media-experience- 1754.html

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around Hong Kong streets for the safety of Langham Hotels, where they can then

have a true oriental experience.

Not without a day passes by, that on blogs, e-news and twitter that the

Langham hotels’ campaign is not mentioned. Many internet users expressed disgust

over how the campaign progressed. Brian Koroll, director of electronic marketing &

revenue management at Langham Hotels International, didn’t anticipate this would

be the outcome. ―Such marketing campaign was aimed at reaching segments in

the market that traditional advertising cannot reach. Instead, the campaign

spawned new Langham Hotels slogans such as ―Langham Hotels: where white

people go to pretend they’re not surrounded by filthy Chinese‖‖99.

Indeed, the campaign failed because of a lack of cultural and emotional

sensitivity. Many clients understood the videos in a wrong way ―Avoid the locals, stay

in your hotel room!‖100 In fact the group failed to take the cultural consideration into

account. Social media means being social and human. Whereas in this case, the

campaign was unintentionally anti-social and the group failed to understand and

appreciate how their clients interacted and as a result received a bad criticism to

their campaign.

All in all, even though the videos have been removed and the campaign

cancelled, hasty marketers risk the reputation of a brand which took years to

establish and cultivate. There are faithful guests hurt, egos touched and plans

derailed, but the group learned some valuable lessons in the subject of social media

99 Ibid 100 http://observers.france24.com/content/20090604-avoid-locals-stay-hotel-room-langham-hotels- advert-debate

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using the outcome of this campaign. Langham Hotel is today rethinking its approach

to marketing in the social media space.

4) The Hotel’s Fake out photos: oyster.com

It is well known that Hotels and resorts strive hard set up compelling advertising

campaigns to attract new travelers to their properties, as it is the case in the last part.

Several hotels show off on their website and different social networks photos of

appealing pools, stunning white sand beaches, lush palm trees and striking

waterfront locations. Guests are usually lost between advertising fantasy and the

harsh reality, especially when they get to a hotel and it is not what exactly they were

waiting for. Here is a new travel weapon I would like to discuss in this chapter in order

to highlight the discrepancy between some hotel’s photos available online and the

reality.

Oyster.com, the first hotel research and shopping website dedicated to

publishing the 'hotel truth'. This website is entirely set up to show people what they're

getting into and help them make smart choices. In fact, hotel investigators visit every

property in person and take hundreds of honest photos so that travelers know what

to really expect when they arrive. The website’s unbiased reviews analyze every

facet of the hotel, from the beds of the pools, to determine how each property

stands against its competition, in different popular destinations like New York, Las

Vegas, or Miami.101

The website show different ―fakeouts‖ featuring what hotels have on their website

and the same photos taken by Oyster’s investigators. If we take for instance the

Runaway Bay Heart Hotel (Jamaica) that has published a photo (bellow on the left)

of three women who are quite thrilled that they happened upon a gym at the hotel

with three elliptical machines in a row. Ironically, Oyster’s photo shows a different

reality, claiming that ―nobody smiles at the gym. The gym is a No-Fun Zone. People

don't go to the hotel fitness center to chitty-chat like that; they go to the hotel

bar.‖102

101 http://www.oyster.com/about/ 102 http://www.oyster.com/hotels/photo-fakeouts/jamaica-runaway-bay-resort/

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The second misleading Fakeout concerns JW Marriott Ihilani Resort and a photo

that was on the hotel's website showing a loving couple walking on the beach with

the hotel in the background. Yet, according to a photo by an Oyster reviewer, two

construction cranes next to the hotel ruins the view. In fact, a Disney Vacation Club

Resort is being built next door, a fact clients might want to be aware of before

booking.

Last but not least, Here is Hyatt Regency Hotel (Washington) highlighting their

proximity to the Capitol Hill and gives the impression that the hotel practically stands

in the shadows of the U.S. Capitol. Oyster reviewers states that ―Take a look at this

photo that we snapped last week during a hotel-reviewing trip to the city and that,

we think, more accurately reflects the distance from the hotel to the Capitol —

which is, in fact, about a third of a mile. That’s close, just not reach-out-and-touch-it

close […] The hotel’s marketing photo is probably the well-intentioned work of a

skillful photographer using a telephoto lens, not a more devious case of digital

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manipulation. Still, you don’t have to be too great a cynic to see this as evidence

that, in Washington, things aren’t always what they seem‖103.

It seems like numerous hotels and advertising agencies will do anything in order to

go viral, including misleading their customers through tricky and fake photos or viral

video campaigns. From hiring models to using special effects in order to create

unbelievable hoaxes, the art of modifying the reality has become a very popular

advertising method.

Although Internet has certainly provided many advantages in regards to

publishing, finding or sharing content, it has also introduced a number of challenges.

Sometimes, despite the well-intentioned efforts of hotel marketers, some negative

social media effects did occur and caused reputation damages for a number of

brands. Guests can relate to a bad video campaign and in some cases, it may

move in a really unfounded, often unfair, direction.

As we all know, forums, review sites, blogs, and social networking websites are

all places where people feel free to express both their positive and also negative

opinions that can be considered factual by other users. In this case, being violent or

attacking a client who has written a bad review is not the right solution as we have

seen with the Golden Beach Hotel. Social media, unlike traditional forms of

marketing, is a two-way conversation: hotels can communicate with their guests but

the latter are also able to communicate with their brands and share what they have

got with other users. Social media makes it very easy for customers to communicate

negative feedback and for hotels to adopt a smart approach to criticism. How

hotels monitor the feedback is most important and is often well perceived by clients.

103 http://www.oyster.com/hotels/photo-fakeouts/dc-hyatt/

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There are many ways and tools to effectively respond constructively and

appropriately to clients and still continue to build credibility and trust.

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CHAPTER V: SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORING - TOOLS OF MEASUREMENT

Client’s feedback exists in all businesses. The stronger your hotel becomes, the

more subjected it may be to clients’ feedback (both positive and negative). The

most important thing is how you supervise your online presence, how you deal with

the feedback that you receive and monitor social media to gain your client’s

respect and loyalty. With powerful tools you can judge the effectiveness of your

social media efforts and keep track of what clients are saying about your brand or

hotel. There are countless ways to track and manage your hotel’s commitment and

reputation on the social Web (appendix IV). Here are some useful social media tools

usually used by flourishing hotels to monitor their brand’s performance and results

across multiple social media sites.

1) ReviewPro (case study: The Landmark London Hotel)

ReviewPro104 is a technology based start-up with headquarters in Barcelona,

Spain. The group offers original products and services aiming the hotel sector that

deliver a clear and compelling value proposition for hotel operators. Like US-based

Review Analysist and Brand Karma, Germany’s TrustYou, and Escuchatucliente

(Spain), ReviewPro provides hotels and chains with an innovative platform analyzing

what customers are saying about them and helping then to react strategically. It’s

existing system indexes 60 million guest reviews on online travel agencies and review

websites. ReviewPro strongly believes that both the number and the type of hotel

reviews directly impact revenues.105

The ReviewPro dashboard is very useful for hotels, since it has a number of useful

features that helps analyzing and interpreting over 11.000.000 reviews, videos and

images from over 50 relevant sources, being able to gather and filter your

establishments’ reviews by rating classification in all sources and languages and

benchmark your direct competitors:

104 http://www.reviewpro.com/index.htm 105 http://eu.techcrunch.com/2010/01/05/hotel-reputation-management-service-reviewpro-has- big-international-plans/

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The Landmark London Hotel, a five star hotel in the Marylebone district in

London, is one of the ReviewPro clients that has been using ReviewPro's Online

Reputation Management solution to enable them to manage online reviews more

efficiently on a daily basis and to get a full picture of their online reviews.

According to a ReviewPro case study 106, the Landmark London Hotel is

situated in one of the difficult competitive hotel markets, the hotel endeavors to

distinguish itself with an excellent level of service and thus needed one tool to see

the latest individual reviews across all review sites, along with the guest satisfaction

rating for all reviews and the source they came from.

Sally Beck, Director of Marketing at The Landmark London, says it is important

for the hotel to know what guests are saying about the hotel online. ―Our guests are

sharing their experiences on sites like TripAdvisor, Booking.com or Expedia whether

we like it or not. We started looking at TripAdvisor a few years ago, but it was not

feasible for us to manually track the dozens of other relevant sites where clients were

talking about us online.― The hotel was looking for a solution to automatically

aggregate and analyze the review data. ―We needed someone to do the hard work

for us‖, Sally explains, ―We evaluated several other potential providers, but most were

either too generic for us or did not offer the possibility to increase direct bookings on

106 http://www.reviewpro.com/blog/my-blog/case-studies/

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our website. We had trial accounts with two other companies, but then a colleague

recommended ReviewPro to us.‖107

According to ReviewPro, TripAdvisor is one of the largest source of reviews for the

Landmark hotel, less than 30% of the hotel’s over 420 total online reviews in the last 12

months are on TripAdvisor. The Global Review Index™ tool tracks the latest individual

reviews across all review sites, along with the guest satisfaction rating for all reviews

and the source they came from. The Landmark’s team also receives daily email

alerts delivered directly to their inboxes, showing them the new review activity and

enabling them to react immediately where needed. Joi Chuku, Marketing Manager

at The Landmark London, says ―ReviewPro is an invaluable product that enables us

to rapidly respond to issues that previously we would not have even known about.‖108

Delivering real transparency to its guests, the hotel decided to embed ReviewPro’s

Quality Seal on its website and publish online reviews from a number of review sites

and OTAs alongside it and available to all users online.

107 http://www.reviewpro.com/blog/my-blog/case-studies/ 108 http://www.reviewpro.com/blog/my-blog/case-studies/

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2) Klout

It seems that Klout is receiving a lot of attention and buzz recently, and especially

after HootSuite added a filter by Klout score tool to its dashboard and

that ReviewPro have united with Klout to help hotel owners develop their presence

online. In fact, Klout is a social measurement metric that provides a way to measure

a person’s or a brand’s influence on the social web. The scores range from 1 to 100

with higher scores representing a wider and stronger sphere of influence. Klout uses

over 35 variables on Facebook and Twitter to measure: 1) True Reach, 2)

Amplification Probability, and 3) Network Score:

1- True Reach is the size of your engaged audience and is based on those

of your followers and friends who actively listen and react to your

messages.

2- Amplification Score is the likelihood that your messages will generate

actions (retweets, messages, likes and comments) and is on a scale of

1 to 100.

3- Network score indicates how influential your engage audience is and is

also on a scale from 1 to 100. The Klout score is highly correlated to

clicks, comments and retweets.109

Here is a Klout summary for the Mariott Internat’l (Bethesda, Maryland) for their

performance and influence on social networks:

109 http://klout.com/kscore

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The value of using influence scoring measurements such as Klout when

managing a social media campaign is not only to provide different quality levels of

service but also to know deeply your guests (who is talking more about your brand

for instance). As the Klout website advises: ―Find and engage these influencers and

they can become evangelists for your brand.‖ According to an online press

release110, numerous hotels and clubs in Las Vegas (like The Venetian and The

Palazzo in Las Vegas) admit using Klout scores when putting together VIP lists; which

demonstrate that leading measurement tools such as Klout are being increasingly

seen as a good way to prove success in the social field. While the Klout metrics and

methodology is not that much sophisticated, it does measure how people react to

social media activity, which is a big benefit to the hospitality industry.

110 http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/12/prweb4875974.htm

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3) Socialmention

Socialmention is a free Social Media Alerts tool and real-time social media

search and analysis which resembles Google Alerts but for social media. Social

Mention is a search and analysis platform that aggregates users generated content

from across the universe into a single stream of information. It allows brands to easily

track and measure what people are saying about their company, a new product, or

any topic across the web's social media landscape in real-time. Social Mention

monitors more than a hundred social media properties directly including: Twitter,

Facebook, FriendFeed, YouTube, Digg, Google etc.111

Social Mention is an excellent real-time search engine for hotels to grasp what is

brand new about their properties from all across the Web. Marketers can track their

hotels easily online by setting up a Social Mention breaking news alert, a real time

buzz widget or RSS feed (as shown in the graphic above), which could be very

accommodating to help hotels control their image online. As well as displaying the

latest results, it also provides a sentiment score (positive, neutral and negative),

related keywords, and many other useful metrics (the graphic bellow). ―Passion‖ is

another measure of the likelihood that individuals talking about a brand will do so

repeatedly. For example, if there is a small group of passionate advocates who talk

about a product or brand all the time, a higher Passion score appears. However, if

111 http://www.socialmention.com/about/

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every mention is written by different authors or users, the brand will get a lower

score.112

Social mention offers some appealing statistics that are more functional for

directional purposes than absolute measurements. It helps also collect information

via the CSV/Excel export function, test keyword popularity for future SEO purposes

and track the sources of the brand’s social mentions. This could be a valuable

method to avoid a crisis before it spreads.

4) Marginize

Marginize is a browser plug-in that augments every page on the Web with a

sidebar enabling users to see what the world is saying about the page on Twitter,

Facebook and Google Buzz, and interact with each other through comments and

check-ins.113 Already available as a browser plug-in for Chrome, Firefox and Safari,

the tool allows the users to see what others think about these particular websites.

Users can also share their own thoughts and opinions about any web page.

112 http://socialmention.com/faq 113 http://www.marginize.com/faq.html

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Once the browser plug-in is installed, users can see a tab displayed on the right

side of their browser and a button at the top of their toolbar that allows showing or

hiding the tab. The tab will also have a number displayed on it, which represents the

number of people who have commented on the same page:

Marginize attracts causal users who frequently share web content with their friends

and followers who want to observe what the world is saying about the sites they are

browsing. But it can be also very useful to hotels interested in enabling the social

conversation about their content directly on their own pages, and taking an active

part in it. Hoteliers can even view all the people who have been leaving comments

about their webpage via different social media platforms. Users will be ranked by

number of visits to the page and thus hotels will be able to see their existing curators.

5) Addictomatic

Addictomatic searches the best live sites on the web for the latest news, blog posts,

videos and images. It's the perfect tool to keep up with the latest topics. After you

search, you can personalize your results dashboard by moving around the source

boxes. When you're done, bookmark the page and keep coming back to your

personalized results dashboard for that search. The news pages, displayed by the

website, provide the latest headlines on topics such as entertainment, politics,

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shopping, sports and more. You get all the feeds from the best sources in each

category and you can personalize the layout of the headline boxes.114

Addictomatic took off in 2008 which makes it less than 4 years old. Dave Pell,

founder of Addictomatic created this site for people like himself who are addicted to

the internet and their internet social life.115 Addictomatic pulls the results via RSS from

the news and search sites on the web including Google, Yahoo, Technorati, Ask,

YouTube, Truveo, Flickr, Blinkx, Ice Rocket, Digg, Topix, Newsvine and Tweetscan and

shows the results in a single page. It also allows you to rearrange the different boxes

and then bookmark the page to save the settings.

However, if we compare socialmention with Addictomatic (as you can see in the

graphic bellow), it is evident that the latter is not very powerful. For a quick review of

social media buzz, it is a useful tool but it does not provide enough depth to make it

a strong social media monitoring tool. All in all, it can be considered as a new

concept of social search and can help brands in checking their reputation and

popularity using some key words related to their brand or particular search query in

different social media sites and blogs. This is certainly useful for hotels that regularly

114 http://addictomatic.com/about 115 http://www.appappeal.com/app/addictomatic/

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use different social media sites and are in the habit of surfing through these sites for

different reasons.

6) Google analytics

It is well known that Google Analytics shows users and brands how people found

their site, how they explored it, and how they can enhance their visitor experience.

Thanks the information given by Google Analytics, brands can improve their website

or advertising campaign’s return on investment and marketing effectiveness.

―Powerful, flexible and easy-to-use features now let you see and analyze your traffic

data in an entirely new way. With Google Analytics, you're more prepared to write

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better-targeted ads, strengthen your marketing initiatives and create higher

converting websites.‖116

According to an analysis of 4 million websites done late last year by Factual, 28%

of all websites are being monitored by Google Analytics. As of 2007, 108,810,358

websites existed; the number has almost certainly more than doubled by 2010. Using

the year 2007 numbers, Google Analytics was likely to track about 29 million websites

then, and tracks probably closer to 60 million sites which include social media

platforms.117 But how can we monitor social media using Google Analytics?

Here are some simple steps which any hotel or company can use to monitor their

social media performance. To begin with, for a simple overview, users can compare

visits from social networks side by side next to other referral mediums:

Yet for more details, on any Google Analytics account, users can notice this

window on their dashboard which usually includes the traffic sources of a company’s

official website.

116 http://www.google.com/analytics/ 117 http://www.mycustomer.com/topic/customer-intelligence/big-brother-and-google-s-entrance- social-media-monitoring/102757

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Because social media websites traffic is included in referral sources, Google

Analytics dashboard shows each referral websites traffic details (dig, google,

facebook, twitter, etc):

For any specific details about a website, users can click on any website in the list.

Let’s take Digg.com for instance: as shown in the graphic bellow, we can get all the

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details regarding the total of visits, the number of pages visited, the average time on

site, etc:

To get more concise information, users can track the referral site according to

source, landing page, country etc:

Yet, there is no way with Google analytics to know if links that are being shared via

social media are positive, or negative, or to figure out if it contains influencers.

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Thankfully, there are a lot of tools available, as those we have reviewed so far, to

watch these conversations as they occur, both commercial and free.

In the loosest sense, social media can be a very valuable keyword research source

to increase sales, decrease complaints, increase customer satisfaction, increase

referral rates, etc. Indeed, companies engage in social media to increase their

influence and reach. Yet, there is no consensus yet on what a "successful" social

media campaign is or what it achieves in terms of sales. What is measurable differs

from company to company.

There are some hotels for instance that have their own way of measuring social

media success: they apply 10% discount for twitter’s users, a breakfast free for

Foursquare check-ins, and special offers for Facebook fans, etc (all is included in

their booking system). But despite the broad adoption of social media, measuring its

effectiveness lags behind, eMarketer reported on September 2009 that 84% of

worldwide professionals do not measure ROI for their social media programs. 118This

means that companies are jumping into the social-media era without actually

establishing a strategy of how it will impact their business :

118 http://www2.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?R=1007506

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Moreover, marketers believe that measuring ROI for social media is difficult,‖ said

Geoff Ramsey, eMarketer CEO ―There are so many metrics available that it is difficult

to choose which ones are the most important. In addition, marketers do not start with

clear objectives for using social media.‖119

All in all, social media marketing still has a lot of measurement issues to solve and at

the same time, there is an opportunity for marketers to take a step back and ask the

right questions: What was the business goal for the social media campaign? Did the

campaign video reach customers and influencers that could result in business

outcomes? How can we use other social media communications to?

119 http://www2.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?R=1007506

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CONCLUSION

The influence of social media is so significant that, according to the US Interactive

Marketing Spend, 2009 to 2014 (Forrester)120, interactive marketing spend will near

$55 billion and represent 21% of all marketing spending by 2014. Social media will

comprise 3% to 6% of the interactive marketing spend. Moreover, companies can

spend much less money than with traditional marketing along with generating an

extensive web presence, engendering a large amount of web traffic and creating

valuable and relative content to clients interests, that they can talk about and share

with other users.

As we have seen so far, the purpose of this study was to determine the level of

awareness of the latest performances of social media in the hospitality industry and

to assert that YES hotels need to embrace social media. We now spend more time

connected than ever before to make our travel decisions which has created a

challenge for those in traditional marketing roles. Online communities exist in

abundance and will, sooner or later, create content about your brand and share it

with other users. So, why not join the online conversation and meet your clients

where they are?

Various leading hotel companies, mentioned in this paper, regularly interact

online with their clients and post relevant information regarding their products and

services that can draw the attention and be more accepted from various groups.

Additionally, the benefits of social media are enlarged by encouraging the clients

who habitually made bookings only through other intermediaries, to use social media

channels in order to make their online bookings and receive good deals and

discounts, collect relevant information regarding the hotel, and become informed

via the online concierge platform for any upcoming events at the hotel or in the

area.

It is also important to note that the statistics used in this research show how

powerful and persistent social media is today. We have explored how customer

120http://www.forrester.com/rb/Research/us_interactive_marketing_forecast%2C_2009_to_2014/q/ id/47730/t/2

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preferences for information search sources for hotels are evolving due to introduction

of social media and customer review websites. The results demonstrated that on the

one hand, social media have created a new distribution channel and utterly

changed the way we deal with online marketing research; on the other, social

media have distorted the way travelers determine where they will stay.

Hospitality firms need to understand consumers’ attitudes toward social media,

and find ways to use the depth of information available on social media channels.

Mistakes can also be made when hotels want to interact in a whole new way with

their customers on websites such as Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, and YouTube. Social

media marketing is a comprehensive effort that requires an online experience. As we

have seen in chapter 4, the online community needs to be understood and

followed. Those who promote but do not understand the feelings of clients will not

see a great success. Social media is not only a best utilization of free advertising

online, It is an effective blend of different elements like watching for service failures

to correct and to improve the online brand awareness.

The bottom line is that what we witness today is just the beginning of the digital era.

Social media is a huge research area media where countless of new success models

are tested every day. There is still no universal rule or formula for success within the

world of social media. Like any marketing channel, it takes time and effort to

research and yield the best results and success will come from continued effort of

research and dedication to the task.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Gillin, Paul. Secrets of Social Media Marketing: How to use Online

Conversations and customer Communities to Turbo-charge your business,

Qill Driver Books, 2008

Kabani, Shama Hyder. The Zen of Social Media Marketing: An Easier Way

to Build Credibility, Generate Buzz, and Increase Revenue, BenBella Books,

2010

Poynter, Ray. The Handbook of Online and Social Media Research and

tools and techniques for market Researchers. Hoboken: NJ: John Wiley &

Sons, Inc

Wiedmann, Ford/Julius, ed. The internet case study book, Taschen, 2010

Wenberg , Tamar. The New Community Rules: Marketing on the Social

Web , O’Reilly , 2009

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WEBREFERENCES

www.hbr.org

www.mckinseyquarterly.com

www.hotelmarketingstrategies.com

www.briansolis.com

www.reelseo.com

www.spinsucks.com

www.emarketingeye.com

www.thenational.ae

www.mashable.com

www.businessreviewindia.in

www.montesantoalgarve.blogspot.com

www.realestatechannel.com

www.hotelschool.cornell.edu

www.hotelnewsnow.com

www.hotelmarketingstrategies.com

www.inventorspot.com

www.hotelchatter.com

www.inventorspot.com

www.hotelmarketing.com

www.inventorspot.com

www.travel.latimes.com

www.travel.usatoday.com

ww.hotelinteractive.com

www.hospitalitytechnology.edgl.com

www.socialbakers.com

www.examiner.com

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www.techcrunch.com

www.website-monitoring.com

www.hotel.ibooking.com

www.bizsugar.com

www.battellemedia.com

www.reviewpro.com

www.prweb.com

www.appappeal.comw

www.mycustomer.com

www2.emarketer.com

www.forrester.com

www.blogs.forrester.com

www.digitalbuzzblog.com

www.pamorama.net

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APPENDIX I

The social media an immense landscape, presenting numerous tools and

platforms offering different services. Here are some important definitions of the

different platforms (http://eatsleepsocial.com)

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Appendix II

The technology timeline that shows how the web and social networks have evolved

Through time

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APPENDIX III

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APPENDIX IV

There has been an explosion of elaborate social media tools of measurement. Here is

a chart of tools available online. Services marked with a $ are not free, but many of

them offer free demos. Read more: http://www.pamorama.net/2010/10/12/100-

social-media-monitoring-tools/#ixzz1EDnMeus2

Addictomatic

Addictomatic searches the best live sites on the Web

for the latest news, blog posts, videos and images. It’s the

perfect tool to keep up with the hottest topics, perform

ego searches and feed your addiction for what’s up,

what’s now or what other people are feeding on.

Alterian

Alterian’s social media engagement solutions make it

easy to listen to the conversations taking place about

your company and brand on the Internet.

Analytic.ly

Analyticly is a data mining, DIY analytics, and brand

engagement service provider for enterprise brand

managers, advertising agencies, social media strategists,

and hedge fund managers. $

ASOMO

ASOMO helps interpret and understand spontaneous

opinion. Discover which topics and sub-topics are being

discussed, the volume of comments, themes, and the

relationships between them. $

Attentio

Right now, millions of people all around the world are

discussing a multitude of topics, including brands and

products that matter in their lives. By continuously

monitoring what is written in blogs, discussion forums and

other social media, Attentio provides organizations with

the ability to listen, analyze and react to what is

happening in the ―webosphere‖. $

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Awareness Networks

The Awareness Social Marketing Hub provides

marketers with the information they need to measure

success and direct future marketing investment. Track

the effectiveness and reach of published content across

social media channels with one simple view of activity

across your social marketing campaigns and drill down

to see the details of how a particular piece of content is

being consumed, shared, commented on, and favorited.

$

Backtype

Backtype is an analytics platform that helps

companies understand their social impact and make

sense of social media so they can make better

marketing decisions.

Bantam Live

Bantam Live is an online service for business teams to

collaborate in a workspace and build relationships across

the Web. With integrated applications for microblogging,

CRM, and project management, Bantam Live is

centered around a real-time stream, where people,

applications, and data come together. $

Beevolve

Track consumer-generated media, understand

sentiment, identify emerging trends and use the resulting

insights to improve products, marketing, sales and

service. $

Blog Grader

Blog Grader measure the marketing mojo of your

blog and makes suggestions to help you improve it.

Blogpulse

BlogPulse is an automated trend discovery system for

blogs. It applies machine-learning and natural-language

processing techniques to discover trends in the highly

dynamic world of blogs.

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BoardReader

BoardReader was developed to address the

shortcomings of current search engine technology to

accurately find and display information contained on

the Web’s forums and message boards. It uses

proprietary software that allows users to search multiple

message boards simultaneously, allowing users to share

information in a truly global sense.

BoardTracker

BoardTracker is an innovative forum search engine,

message tracking and instant alerts system designed to

provide relevant information quickly and efficiently while

ensuring you never miss an important forum thread no

matter where or when it is posted.

Brandchats

Brandchats picks up the chat about your brand. You

tell it what to look for and it will find it, whether it’s in

Facebook, Twitter, a blog, or any other source. Slicing

and dicing your data, Brandchats will instantaneously

visualize the results. Powerful unique analysis and

graphics capabilities support you to make sense of the

―chattering‖. Is it good news or bad news? Does it come

from blogs or Facebook? Is it increasing or rather

decreasing? $

BrandsEye

BrandsEye protects your brand from attacks, allows

you to tap into key insights which are integral to making

the right decisions and harnessing positive word-of-

mouth. $

Buzz Manager

Buzz Manager constantly searches the Internet for

information about your organization or specific individual

subjects. It measures and analyzes the ―Buzz,‖ and then

accurately presents the results in time saving, easy-to-use

reports. $

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Buzzcapture

Buzzcapture monitors places where opinions are

exchanged to provide insight into how often companies

and their brands, products, and competitors are

discussed, what the sentiments are, and where

discussions are taking place. $

BuzzGain

BuzzGain is an online service for discovering and

engaging with the people who will help your business

thrive in today’s social economy — where attention is a

precious commodity. $

Buzzient

Buzzient provides a next-generation solution for social

media analytics and integration of this valuable content

with enterprise applications. $

BuzzPerception

BuzzPerception provides comprehensive blog

monitoring and analysis to help clients better understand

and manage their brand perception online. $

BuzzStream

How do you build credibility online? You do it by

cultivating quality relationships with influencers across the

Web. Until now that process was time-consuming and

resource-intensive. BuzzStream simplifies this process,

allowing you to efficiently cultivate and manage these

relationships. $

Chartbeat

Chartbeat is a revolutionary real-time analytics

service that enables people to understand emergent

behaviour in real-time and exploit or mitigate it. $

Cogito Monitor

What is being said online about my company? Why

do people like my competitor’s product better? How is

our new marketing campaign going? My reputation has

been damaged: why? These are a few of the questions

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that Cogito Monitor can answer. $

Collecta

Collecta is a real-time search engine bringing content

to you as it’s posted.

Collective Intellect

Collective Intellect’s Social CRM Insight platform

automates your ability to identify emerging consumer

considerations and preferences, and to track your ability

to change them. $

ContextVoice

Tracking millions of daily micro-conversations from the

real-time social Web, ContextVoice helps you get

business intelligence and real-time insights and analytics

about consumers. $

Conversation

eCairn Conversation is a SaaS application that

provides a cost-effective solution for marketing

professionals who want to leverage communities and

influencers. $

CoTweet

CoTweet is a comprehensive Web-based social

media engagement, management, and reporting

solution that helps companies of all sizes engage, track,

and analyze conversations about their brands across the

most popular and influential social communities today:

Twitter and Facebook. $

Crimson Hexagon

By leveraging the Crimson Hexagon ForSight platform,

customers can easily uncover consumer opinions and

insights about their company, products, industry,

competitors and more. They can then use that

information to make meaningful business decisions. $

Dialogix

Dialogix is a social media monitoring tool that shows

you exactly what is being said about your brand,

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industry, and competitors on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube,

Flickr, news Web sites, forums, MySpace, and more. $

Direct Message Lab

Direct Message Lab provides one central platform for

companies to effectively build, manage, and analyze

their social presence everywhere across social media,

social networks like Facebook and Twitter, plus other

popular user channels including mobile applications,

widgets, desktop applications, and video sharing sites. $

dna MediaVantage

dna13′s MediaVantage solution provides real-time

access to TV, print, online and social media content,

providing communicators the insight they need to plan

marketing strategies, securely align corporate teams,

synchronize the delivery of corporate messages, and

engage with key stakeholders. $

eWatch

eWatch is the fast, easy, and cost-effective way to

track what the media, investors, consumers, and the

competition are saying about your organization. It scans

hundreds of thousands of traditional print and Web-

based articles and postings each day and delivers its

findings back to you in an easy to read report. $

Facebook Grader

Facebook Grader is a free tool that measures the

power of a Facebook business page.

FollowThing

FollowThing is a powerful, Web-based professional

networking and media monitoring tool that informs

inbound and outbound marketing decisions.

Gnip

Gnip is a social media API aggregation tool

that streams social data from Twitter, Facebook, and

dozens more sources — all in one API. $

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Google Blog Search

Blog Search is Google search technology focused on

blogs. It enables you to find out what people are saying

on any subject of your choice.

GraphEdge

GraphEdge measures changes in your network. Your

first report is sent in 2-3 days. $

HowSociable

HowSociable provides a simple way for you to begin

measuring your brand’s visibility on the social Web.

IceRocket IceRocket is a real-time blog search engine.

iMooty

IMooty is a next generation media monitoring tool

that helps companies, PR professionals, and marketers

gain real-time insights on the latest news and trends that

matter to them and who the important opinion makers

are.

ImpactWatch

ImpactWatch is an easy-to-use online dashboard that

gives you the power to monitor and measure all of your

media coverage in real time. $

JitterJam

JitterJam helps your consumer-facing brand or

business capture relevant conversations on the real-time

Web and turn them into lasting and trusted customer

relationships. $

Klout

Klout tracks the impact of your opinions, links and

recommendations across your social graph. It collects

data about the content you create, how people interact

with that content, and the size and composition of your

network. It analyzes the data to find indicators of

influence and provides you with tools to interact with and

interpret the data. $

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Looxii

Looxii is a social media analytics platform. It enables

you to search for keywords on Twitter, Facebook,

blogs, YouTube, Flickr, and more. It stores the search

results and you receive easy to interpret, top-level insights

into what’s being said about your keywords throughout

social media. $

Maestro

The Cymfony Maestro platform gives you real-time

access to a comprehensive, custom-built archive of

traditional and social media, filtered and classified to be

relevant to your company, brand and business goals. $

MambaIQ

MambaIQ tells you where people are talking about

you, compared to your competitors, and segmented by

all the relevant concepts (themes, type of media,

sentiment, characteristics, reputation of the sites, and

even universes (groups of sites) defined by you. $

Market Sentinel

Market Sentinel has the technology to monitor,

analyse and measure online commentary to inform your

marketing strategy and help you make better business

decisions. It trawls the Internet to find discussions on

blogs, forums, in chat rooms, and on mainstream media

which mention your brand, and then accurately

calculates the sentiment, which provides you with a

profile of your brand as it is perceived online. $

Marketo B2B Social

Marketing

By integrating with social media solutions, Marketo

can help companies extend their marketing initiatives to

include B2B social media and incorporate the

conversations that happen on social sites. As a result,

customer conversations that influence word-of-mouth

opinion are responded to in real-time and relationships

are developed across a variety of channels. $

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Meltwater Buzz

Meltwater Buzz is an innovative social media

monitoring tool that enables comprehensive tracking

and analysis of user-generated content on the Web. It

enables users to monitor more than 200 million blogs,

micro-blogs, social networks, forums, video and photo

Web sites, product reviews, and other social media sites

to gain a better understanding about end-user sentiment

on hot topics, new products, companies, and the

competition. $

Monitor

Monitor is a social media monitoring platform with

support for 150 million blogs and thousands of news

sources including Twitter, Youtube, Digg, Flickr, and

Technorati. It is the only media tracking tool for

monitoring brands and topics, that connects social

media activities with financial metrics. $

Monitter

Monitter is a Twitter monitor — it lets you ―monitter‖

the Twitter world for a set of keywords and watch what

people are saying.

Newsdesk

Newsdesk is an easy-to-use business intelligence SaaS

application for intuitive mining, finding, and sharing of

real-time relevant information from a vast collection of

world-wide daily news, social media, and industry

publications. $

PositivePress

Now, more than ever, it’s essential to track what

people are saying about your brand online. PositivePress

makes it easy for you to track and measure online

coverage. It creates a complete historical archive so you

can make better decisions over the long run. $

PostRank

PostRank is the largest aggregator of social

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engagement data in the industry. Its platform tracks

where and how users engage, and what they pay

attention to — in real time. PostRank social engagement

data measures actual user activity, the most accurate

indicator of the relevance and influence of a site, story,

or author. PostRank offers both free and $ plans.

Radian6

The Radian6 dashboard is a complete social media

monitoring, engagement, and workflow management

platform created to help you aggregate and analyze

the comments people are making about your brand and

products on the Web. View trends and dig deeper into

specific posts to get a pulse on how your company is

faring online. $

Raven

Raven is an online software system that helps

customers quickly research, manage, monitor, and

report on SEO, email, social media and other Internet

marketing campaigns. $

RepuTrace

RepuTrace enables you to keep up on developments

that affect your company and your industry. It monitors,

analyzes, and measures intelligence from Web sites,

blogs, chat rooms, social networks, and other media

sources. $

RESONATE

RESONATE’s social media monitoring technology

helps your business keep up with social media

conversations. It analyzes content from over 200 million

online sources in real time, enabling you to better

understand and respond to customers, threats, and

opportunities as they happen. $

Revinate

The first enterprise-grade social media solution for

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hotels, Revinate brings order to the chaos of guest

reviews, online reputation, and social media marketing.

Hotels can now harness online reviews and social media

as the ultimate measures of guest satisfaction and drivers

of demand. $

RightNow Social Experience

RightNow Social Experience allows you to monitor

conversations on Twitter, YouTube, RSS feeds, your

Facebook fan page, and other social channels, and

then helps you respond quickly and appropriately. $

Samepoint

Samepoint is a conversation search engine that lets

you see what people are talking about.

SAS Social Media Analytics

SAS Social Media Analytics integrates, analyzes, and

enables organizations to act on intelligence gleaned

from online conversations occurring across professional

and consumer-generated media sites. It enables

organizations to attribute online conversations to specific

parts of their business, allowing an accelerated response

to shifts in the marketplace. $

Scanbuzz

Scanbuzz™ is the leading service for life science

companies to track mentions of their brands across social

media. With increasing numbers of physicians and

patients sharing their experiences online, Scanbuzz™

allows you to discover, listen, manage feedback and

develop relations with social network users. $

ScoutLabs

Scout Labs provides cutting-edge technology and a

collaborative platform for listening to customers and

engaging with them across the Internet. The Web-based

application tracks social media and finds signals in the

noise to help your team build better products and

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stronger customer relationships. $

Silverbakk Briefing Room

Silverbakk Briefing Room monitors and analyzes social

media

based on relevance, activity, and engagement. $

SM2

Alterian SM2 is a business intelligence product that

provides visibility into social media and lets you tap into a

new kind of data resource; your customers’ direct

thoughts and opinions. It allows you to easily capture

and analyze data from social media channels to monitor

your brands, identify key communities and influencers,

address customer service issues, and generate new sales

leads. $

Social Mention

Social Mention is like Google Alerts but for social

media. Sign up to receive free daily e-mail alerts of your

brand, company, CEO, marketing campaign, or on a

developing news story, a competitor, or the latest on any

topic you choose.

Social Radar

Social Radar allows you to track, measure, analyze,

and understand chatter from all over the Web in an

easy-to-use Web-based control panel. $

SocialToo

SocialToo helps automate the management of your

Twitter and Facebook accounts and unclutters your

stream and social graph so you can focus on building

relationships. $

Socialscape

There have never been so many ways for so many

people to say so much about your company, your

products, and your competition. Socialscape tracks and

analyzes all of that talk and turns it into actionable

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information that can improve your brand, your business,

and your customer relationships. $

SocialSense

SocialSense leverages social media conversation to

fuel insights that drive smart marketing decisions. $

SocialTALK

SocialTALK helps you better manage and measure

your social media presence and impact. It is an is an

innovative tool that allows brands to more effectively

create, publish, and measure their content strategy and

posting schedule. $

Spredfast

Spredfast is an enterprise-class solution that

empowers your company or organization to

communicate across all of your social media channels,

measure the effectiveness of each conversation, and

prove the value of social media. $

StartPR

StartPR helps you find, manage, and respond to

mentions of your company, your brand, your products,

your service, and your people online. $

StatsMix

StatsMix allows companies to easily build and share

custom dashboards for displaying and analyzing all the

metrics they generate. It provides an overview of all your

metrics and what drives them.

StepRep Reputation

Intelligence

StepRep Reputation Intelligence pokes an ear into

every corner of the Web to find out what your customers

are saying about your brand right now. These results are

analyzed to reveal trends and stats that you can use to

improve your marketing and customer service. $

SWIX Social Marketer

SWIX offers social media analytics applications that

monitor all of your social media properties (Facebook,

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Twitter, YouTube, +20 others). Each day, SWIX gathers

visitor and usage data for your sites, graphs it all over

time and puts everything in one convenient place for

you. $

Tealium Social Media

Tealium Social Media lets social media marketers and

PR professionals measure the true ROI of their activities.

You can measure the impact of your social media and

online PR using tangible numbers that make sense to

your organization. $

The Search Monitor

The Search Monitor closely watches your paid and

organic search keywords and trademarks on search

engines, Web sites, news sites, and blogs. It logs

competitor activity, affiliate activity, trademark use, and

who’s talking about you. $

ThoughtBuzz

ThoughtBuzz is a real-time platform for tracking,

managing, and engaging in conversations online,

helping companies make informed decisions to protect

their brand. $

Topsy

Topsy is a new kind of search engine that sees the

Internet as a stream of conversations. Topsy results are

the things people link to when they’re talking about your

search terms. Topsy ranks results based on how well they

match your search terms, and the influence of the

people talking about them.

TraceBuzz

TraceBuzz shows you what people say on the Web

right now about your name, brand, product, company or

competitor. $

Trackur

Trackur is an online reputation and social media

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monitoring tool designed to assist you in tracking what is

said about you on the Internet. It scans hundreds of

millions of Web pages — including news, blogs, video,

images, and forums — and lets you know if it discovers

anything that matches the keywords that interest you. $

Trendrr

Trendrr is a business intelligence Web service for

digital and social media. It allows you to listen, measure,

and respond to the conversation about a product,

service, or brand in real time. $

TRIBE Monitor

TRIBE MONITOR is a social statistics aggregator that

helps you find out where your fans are and where

conversations about your brand are taking place by

tracking your online presence once every hour.

Twazzup

Twazzup operates a leading real-time news platform

that enables users to filter the news out of live Internet

content.

TweetBeep

TweetBeep helps you keep track of conversations

that mention you, your products, your company,

anything, with hourly updates. You can also track who’s

tweeting your Web site or blog, even if they use a

shortened URL (like bit.ly or tinyurl.com). It offers both free

and $ plans.

TweetFeel

Tweetfeel monitors positive and negative feelings in

Twitter conversations about many things, including

popular brands, and displays the results in a clear and

simple way.

Twendz

The twendz Twitter-mining Web application from

Waggener Edstrom uses the power of Twitter Search,

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highlighting conversation themes and sentiment of the

tweets that talk about topics you are interested in. As the

conversation changes, so does the twendz application

by evaluating up to 70 tweets at a time. When new

tweets are posted, they are dynamically updated,

minute by minute.

Twitalyzer

Twitalyzer is the social media industry’s most popular,

most widely used analytics application. It offers both free

and $ options.

twitt(url)y

twitt(url)y tracks and ranks the URLs people are talking

about on Twitter.

Twitter Grader

Twitter Grader is a free tool that allows you to check

the power of your twitter profile compared to millions of

other users that have been graded.

Twitter Search

There is an undeniable need to search, filter, and

otherwise interact with the volumes of news and

information being transmitted to Twitter every second.

Twitter Search helps you filter all the real-time information

coursing through the service.

uberVU

uberVU is the complete social media platform that

helps your team collaborate on listening, reporting and

engaging in social media. Perfect for agencies or teams

inside businesses that want to deliver social media

excellence. $

Viralheat

Viralheat is a social measurement platform designed

with simplicity and ease of use in mind. Built from the

ground up to be timely and efficient, Viralheat allows

users to easily comprehend social media. $

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Vitrue Social Media Index

The Vitrue Social Media Index is an easy-to-use tool

designed to provide you a snapshot in time to help you

measure your brand’s online conversations.

Vocus

Vocus social media software enables you to listen to

customers and prospects, find influencers, and monitor

conversations, mentions and trends. $

WaveMetrix

WaveMetrix tracks online buzz for major global brands

around the world, using a unique methodology based on

human analysts reading each post. $

WebDig

WebDig is a next-generation business intelligence and

analysis engine that finds, aggregates, and interprets

digital word-of-mouth (WOM) content. Every study is

reviewed, analyzed, and reported on by assigned

industry expert analysts. $

Webtrends

Webtrends Social Measurement offers a self-service

platform for identifying and participating in conversations

related to your products and brands wherever and

whenever they occur on the social Web. $

White Noise

White Noise is a DIY tool that lets you monitor the Web

and understand what is going on without the need for

hiring outside companies to do the work for you. $

Woopra

Woopra is a desktop Web analytics tool designed as

a client + server application. It creates a one-stop service

for monitoring all your blogs and Web sites. $

Workstreamer

Workstreamer is a business listening platform that

delivers a competitive advantage to professionals by

providing real-time social updates on competitors,

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customers, prospects, partners and more.

Xinu Returns

Find out how well your site is doing in popular search

engines, social bookmarking and other site statistics.

Check PageRank, backlinks, indexed pages, rankings,

and more.

YackTrack

As a content producer, you can search YackTrack for

comments on your content from various sources or other

blogs that talk about your content. Another site feature,

Chatter, gives you a keyword search for the social media

sites — this allows you to see ―chatter‖ on various sites

that talk about a specific keyword.

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