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Online reservations continue to increase in importance as more
and more consumers demand real-time, instant reservations. This
page will keep you up to date on industry trends and online
reservation news; if you'd like us to address a particular
topic, don’t hesitate to
contact us.
Tip of the Month
Announcements from BedandBreakfast.com
Online Reservation Trends
Tip of the
Month
Are you missing out on international business? If so,
the reason may be that you're not bookable online. With
different time zones, your guests won't be able to call you
during regular business hours. Let them book a room on their
time at the push of a button! Don't miss out on the entire
overseas market--take reservations while you sleep with
BedandBreakfast.com Online Reservations.
Questions? Contact Online Reservations Support at
800-GO-B-AND-B (800-462-2632), extension 4; 512-322-2700,
extension 4 or
Reservations@BedandBreakfast.com.
Announcements from BedandBreakfast.com
Good news! BedandBreakfast.com Online Reservations is now
available to properties worldwide!
How does it work? The function is exactly the same as it is
for U.S. and Canadian properties. All payments are made in U.S.
dollars, and international properties must have a PayPal account
in order to receive payment.
Read more.
More than 1,500
innkeepers in the United States and Canada have signed up for the BedandBreakfast.com Online
Reservations program, which includes placement on industry
leading sites like Expedia, hotels.com, SideStep.com and
Kayak.com. This is a highly effective tool for helping you
increase your occupancy during the times you need it. Call
1-800-462-2632, extension 4, or email
Reservations@BedandBreakfast.com to learn how you can
participate in this program and fill your unsold/empty rooms.
Get started today!
"The program is easy to learn and to use on an everyday basis.
The Online Reservation Manager screen has a lot of
helpful features. We have been very pleased with the amount of
business we've received from BedandBreakfast.com, hotels.com and
Expedia through this program." -- Tangi Pina, The Mary
Prentiss Inn, Cambridge, MA
Trends in Online Reservations
One-third of German tourism revenues generated online:
“Nearly one-third of total German tourism revenues were
generated via the internet in 2006, a new study revealed.
Online revenues rose to €12.9 billion in 2006 compared to
€9.45 billion the year before. In contrast, offline distribution
through travel agencies or direct sales channels such as call
centers dropped from €28.1 billion to €27.7 billion, according
to the study by research organization Ulysses Web Tourismus. The
study predicts online travel sales will grow to €16.2 billion
this year and to €19.3 billion in 2008, which would be 42% of a
total market worth €45.5 billion.
"The major development last year was the rapid growth of online
sales for major tour operators, who now generate about 10% of
revenues through the internet, the study said. Specialist
operators have even stronger online sales, with nearly 15%
online. The study’s results were based on interviews with 357
tourism managers."
Expedia launches in Spain: “Expedia, Inc. announced the
launch of its Spain website,
Expedia.es, a
full-service travel booking site designed specifically to meet
the needs of Spanish travelers. It marks the company’s first
Spanish-language Expedia-branded site, and its ninth Expedia
point of sale in Europe, bringing the international total to 13.
Spain is the fourth largest online travel market in Europe. With
more than 50 million visitors each month to its international
websites, and hundreds of staff throughout the world dedicated
to working with hotel partners in local markets, Expedia is the
global leader in online travel. (If you participate in
BedandBreakfast.com Online Reservations, like The Chanric
Inn below, your inn is available on expedia.es.)

Expedia No. 1 for customer experience:
Expedia was ranked as the No. 1 site in the Keynote Customer
Experience Rankings in each of the three studies – airline,
hotel and rental car – with the best overall ranking across the
250+ customer experience metrics measured in each study.
Online travel sales up: “Sales of
online travel services could reach $146 billion by 2010, but
year-to-year growth rates are cooling, according to a new
research report from eMarketer. The online industry researcher's
forecast includes all leisure and unmanaged business travel
sales, including sales of airline tickets, hotel rooms, cruises
and rental cars, but not meals or event tickets.
“For the first time, eMarketer noted that online travel bookings
in the U.S. will surpass offline bookings in volume this year,
according to PhoCusWright. In 2007, eMarketer estimates that
41.3 million U.S. households will book travel online,
representing 53% of all U.S. online households. This year, U.S.
online consumer travel sales will reach $94 billion, up 19% over
2006, according to eMarketer estimates.
“The report also noted that in 2006, an estimated 37.1 million
households booked travel online, which is 50% of the total
online households in the U.S. In 2010, eMarketer estimated there
will be 51.1 million households booking travel online,
representing 55% of online households in the U.S.”
Why people book last-minute: A new
priceline.com survey of consumer trends finds that
many short-notice travelers are just too busy to
book their vacations any further in advance.
- 30% said they were overscheduled and can’t plan more
than seven days in advance
- 13% said that concern about personal finances was behind
their procrastination
- 27% believed they could find better travel deals by
waiting to make their purchases
How long do they stay?
- 70% of survey respondents said that they stay three
nights or fewer when they take a short-notice vacation
- 30% said they will vacation 4-7 nights on a
spur-of-the-moment whim.
- 4% would book a trip of eight nights or longer on short
notice.
What do they purchase last-minute?
- "Most consumers (59%) were inclined to buy hotel rooms
on short notice, followed by airline tickets (36%) and
rental cars (35%). Only 10% of respondents would buy a
vacation package on short notice, and 7% would buy a cruise
on short notice."
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