Showing posts with label “user generated content”. Show all posts
Showing posts with label “user generated content”. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 March 2017

#Travel, Tourism Companies promoting their brands on Instagram


We have all heard about Instagram, followers, hashtags and so on.
Today, the social network is approaching tourism companies, as the latter can use it to communicate, promote their brands and target new customers.

Indeed, the largest sharing photo platform, launched in 2010, has reached a total number of 600 million monthly active users, and half of them are even considered as daily active!
More than 40 billion photos have been shared on the platform since its creation; and 75% of the most famous brands already use it, on a basis of almost 5 posts a week. Tourism brands use this network even more than other brands, and are for this reason, considered as the best Instagram presence at the moment.


But everyone can wonder, why tourism brands should communicate via this specific network?

Society has evolved; people and travellers want to be inspired and inspire others. They changed their way of discovering, consuming and sharing experiences. Indeed, 35% of Instagramers use the platform to discover new places and 48% to choose their travel destination. Statistics are even higher for Millennials who, for 89% of them, plan their travel activities according to fellow travellers’ content. 
Before booking any trip, travellers have the need to look at online reviews but also get “real” feedbacks. Millennials are aware of this new trend, as 97% share content of their travels.

Figures show that 75% of Instagramers act after seeing a post of a brand. They visit the website, research the brand’s products or even purchase it. They engage 10 times more than with Facebook! And the fact of having an active online presence, increase the brand perception up to 20%.

All in all, what tourism brands have to do, is:
  • Create a brand identity and build positive brand awareness, by showing followers they are valued.
  • Engage with users: communicate with them in real-time, encourage interactions, react to their complaints, and create significant relationships. It will humanize the brand, which will then be more appreciated and visible. 
  • Use the network to build databases of consumers and keep widening it.

How to use Instagram?
  • Be consistent: use high resolution images, and keep the same design (style or color). The objective is to create recognizable posts to represent the brand’s value and ideas; but also favor a long-term strategy by sharing posts frequently. (1/day or 5/week). Cross post pictures with other social media networks and marketing channels to drive people to the company’s Instagram page.
  • Keep sharing relevant content: be informed about the latest news, but do not use clichés or fads.
  • Think about Followers first: encourage interaction with them (comments), value followers generated content (pictures submission, photo contests), use influencers to boost the volume of users and enhance the brand (with the same values as the brand’s). Brands’ goal is to create a close relationship with its followers. All in all, tourists will become the brand’s promoters.


We can finally agree that this method is successful, as #Travel counts up to 162 million posts, so the market does exist.
Good examples of this success are: the official Tourism New Zealand account which has one of the biggest databases with more than 581K followers; but also, Fjord Norway, which succeeded in bringing the Natural Wonder Trolltunga to the world stage with Instagram.


Hurry up! Create your account and start positioning your brand! :)


References:




Tuesday, 22 February 2011

Event planning 2.0



Event planning 2.0

We chose this recent article 2-2010 (latest version) because it deals with the sensible and clever use of social media strategy among the MICE INDUSTRY. Indeed, even if Internet and digital communication have been used in events since 2004, this industry just began to use the social media to improve their communications, to create new distribution channels and finally to allow interactive communication and networking. The Gesellschaft für Marketing GmbH in Berlin has its own definition for this new phenomenon, they define it as the “user generated content” (UGC). Nicole Simon, a web 2.0 expert from Lübeck, compares this progress from Internet to the web 2.0 as from static to dynamic. The German digital economy association – Bundesverband Digitale Wirtschft (BVDW) distinguishes between 4 different ways of using the social media: Networking; Contribution; Sharing; Messaging. Facebook has already more than 500 million active users; Tweeter counts about 750 tweets/second and 112 million active blogs with 120,000 new ones every day.

How can marketing departments use these trends in order to provide new tools to the event planners? Surveys have shown that in the USA spending in social marketing will increase by 34 %/ year until 2014. The event and meeting industry has to take advantage of this situation.

The new ROI stands not (only) anymore for Return on Investment but for Risk of Ignoring, which empathizes the importance for event planners to care for these new trends, vital for the successful survival in the MICE domain. Only organizers who will be able to adapt to the challenges, which present the new technologies, will be able to correctly exploit the new opportunities.

Event planners will still use predominately traditional tools to communicate as telephone, e-mail etc., nevertheless they cannot ignore the current trends in order to hit new target groups. Interactive tools enable event planners to communicate and share information about for instance good speakers, venues, former events and latest event information. It is therefore important to integrate social media at each stage of the event planning: before (social media monitoring: to benchmark the competitors and to analyze the environment), during (to share content and allow UGC) and after (to spread feedback to the attendees as well as the prospects for future events).

Some other examples could be easy communication about the event program and program changes via Twitter in order to keep all participants updated, setting up a help desk via a blog, it will present technical support for registrations and assure that everybody has the same knowledge level before attending an event. Furthermore, the new technologies enable sharing, networking and voting during the event. Thanks to these tools the so far passive audience can be turned into active participants. Moreover, tools as Skype will enable the integration of far away speakers to the meeting.

As a conclusion we can say that the article shows the importance of staying updated with the current technologies for all members of the MICE industry. A refuse could result in important losses of performance for the event planners. Nevertheless, we all have to keep in mind that these changes require a large amount of expenditures, know-how and man power. Constant monitoring, technical infrastructure and support need to be provided. Social media consultants and specialists can provide their help.

Resources: http://issuu.com/germany-meetings/docs/gcb-mag-1002-en issuu?mode=embed&layout=http://skin.issuu.com/v/light/layout.xml&showFlipBtn=true

image : http://www.markevanstech.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/social-media-consultant.jpg