Title: IGE105
1IGE105 Communication Technology in a Changing
World
2Regulation
- In the Real World in Cyberspace
- Law
- Social Norms
- Market
- Architecture
- Architecture
- Control?
- Freedom?
3This Week
- ICT within the Tourism industry
4IT in tourism industry
- Tourism is an information rich industry.
- Tourists need information, as the product is
intangible, and therefore can not be tested. - Customers need information to help them plan
their trips - Tourism industry organisations are searching for
new means of distributing information about its
products - ICTs are providing new innovative ways of
satisfying both these needs
5Tourism Industry
- Tourism is an information rich industry
- Information is the lifeblood of the industry
- Tourists are unable to pretest an intangible
hospitality or tourism product - OConner, P. (1999). Electronic Information
Distribution in Tourism and Hospitality. Oxford
CABI.
6Tourism Industry
- Tourism industry operators depend on finding and
developing new means to distribute
information-based travel products and services,
marketing information to customers at their
convenience -
- Zhou, Z. (2004). E-commerce and information
technology in hospitality and tourism. Canada
Delmar. - Clearly the development of internet services by
players in the tourism industry assists with this
goal as e-tourism offers opportunities for speedy
communication and global access with minimal
expense - Buhalis, D. (2001). The future of eTourism
intermediaries. Tourism Management, 23, 207-220.
7Tourism Industry
- As well as providing an opportunity for the
tourism industry to market its wares, there is
substantial evidence to point to tourists
demanding access to travel information through
electronic channels. Trends point clearly
towards a changing face of the travel industry
for instance the opportunity of disintermediation
allows final product or service providers to
bypass the services of travel agents to directly
target their customers resulting in travel agents
being forced to adapt their business model from a
intermediary to an infomediary - Nadkarni, S. Peng, C. (2001). The relevance of
travel agencies in the era of e-commerce and
globalization. http//www.mca.org.mo/
8Tourism Industry
- Travel agents are repositioning themselves as a
consultant or trusted, independent advisor - Ching-biu Tse, A. (2003). Disintermediation of
travel agencies in the hotel industry.
Hospitality Management, 22, 453-460 - The nature of information provision, whether
through intermediary or provider, is also
changing as new communication tools are developed
and offered, with email, live chat rooms or
bulletin boards allowing asynchronous or
synchronous communication to suit the
circumstances - Cox, B., Koelzer, W. (2004). Stickiness
Internet marketing in hospitality. New Jersey
Pearson Education. - Picozzi, L. (2005). Understand Online Customer
Service. http//www.score.org
9Tourism Industry
- These quotes point towards 2 noticeable trends
- 1) Service providers (such as hotels,
airlines...) are using the internet channel to
directly target potential customers. - 2) Travel Agents are needing to change their
business model to still add value. - (And CRM is clearly an important system)
10Effect of Network on Travel Industry
- Changes in customer information search behaviour
- New communication means
- Email
- Chat
- Online booking as well as information
distribution - 24/7 reaching more potential customers than other
channels - Customisation of travel products
11E-Intermediaries
- Traditionally Travel Agents were the intermediary
between producers and customers - Now direct communication is possible
- Or through new e-intermediaries
- 94billion US online bookings from US
- European travelers use internet more for search
than bookings
12Web 2.0
- New age of participation
- More interactivity
- New threat to traditional travel agents?
- Information produced by other travellers
- Blogs
- Forums
- Tripadvisor
- Wikitravel
- Better quality and more reliable information
- New threat to producers?
- Loss of control over their marketing message
13ICT -gt Hotels
- To begin with assisting with inventory and asset
management - Integrate with tools for market research,
customer service improvements - Easily added to GDS (Global Distribution Service)
- Intermediaries such as Hotels.com have
revolutionised the way customers book hotels - Internet affords a direct channel to customers
- Marriott 75 direct through website
- Smaller hotels via an intermediary
14ICT -gt Hotels 2
- Customers are demanding more technology
- Wireless Internet Access now a standard feature
- Business suites / conference facilities with
modern multimedia - Virtual Teleconferencing systems
- Early adopters gain competitive advantage
15Video
16ICT -gt Airlines
- An industry of early adopters and technical
innovators - Oligopoly / Natural Monopoly leads to strategic
alliances which in turn leads to investment in
ICT - Surface air communication
- Navigation
- Airlines pioneered GDS to manage their supply
chain, now many airlines bypass intermediaries
selling directly online.
17ICT -gt Airlines
- Impacts on Customer service
- All customer facing employees have access to
customers itineraries - Real time flight rescheduling
- In flight entertainment systems
- 1.8Bln in 1998
- What about now?
- Shift from transactional marketing to
relationship marketing
18Video
19ICT -gt Tour Operators
- Backward Integration -gt Airlines/Accommodation
- Forwards Integration -gt Travel Agents
- Using relational databases and artificial
intelligence, tour operators could make real
time, on-site, recommendations or adjustments to
improve customer experience
20Video
21ICT -gt Travel Agents
- Traditionally an intermediary facing
disintermediation? - The internet offers a new distribution channel,
but - Customer fears regarding security
- Lack of social interaction
22Evolution of the Tourism Supply Chain
- As well as having an impact on individual firms,
ICTs have had an impact on the tourism industry
as a whole - The supply chain has changed
- Strategy of major players
- Selective introduction of technology
23Tourism SupplyChain
24Computerised Reservation Systems (CRS)
- Introduced by the Airline industry in the 1970s
- Simple database system managing seats on flights,
shared between partners - Terminals added to high volume agencies.
- Easy to manage inventory, and facilitate
distribution channel - Later hotels and tour operators also used similar
CRS
25Global Distribution System (GDS)
- With the networked economy the CRS could be
distributed more easily. - Applications with more sophisticated features
were developed - Sabre, Galileo International, Amadeus, Worldspan
- Originally intended as B2B, but with the internet
has turned to B2C too
26Video
27Porters 5 Forces
- Framework for analysing industries developing
business strategy - Threat of Substitutes
- Threat of New Entrants
- Bargaining Power of Customers
- Bargaining Power of Suppliers
- Competitive Rivalry
- Lets take a look at some of the forces having an
impact on the tourism supply chain.
28Threat of Substitutes
- This concerns whether a substitute product or
service exists which customers could be tempted
to use as an alternative. For instance, when a
traveler could travel by train rather than
airplane. The strength of this threat depends on
how well the current product is differentiated,
and how well the substitute product matches the
needs of the customer, as well as switching costs
involved.
29Threat of new entrants
- This concerns how feasible it is for more
competitors to enter the marketplace. Various
things can affect the likelihood of new entrants
emerging, for instance the capital requirements
for set up costs, any learning curve advantages,
government policy or access to distribution
channels. - If we consider traditional brick and mortar
travel agents, the capital requirements are high,
and access to distribution channels limited,
compared to online travel agents where start up
costs are minimal and access to distribution
channels universal.
30Bargaining Power of Customers / Suppliers
- This covers the balance of power in a
supplier/customer relationship. - For airlines operating in a natural monopoly, the
customer switching costs could be substantial,
leading to powerful airlines - The role of the GDS within the tourism industry
became increasingly more powerful as utilizing an
alternative distribution channel became
increasingly more expensive
31Bargaining Power of Customers / Suppliers
- Another important factor in this power
relationship comes from the potential to forward
or backward integrate. - Travel agents are generally unable to backward
integrate to their suppliers (i.e. a Travel Agent
is not able to start offering flights or rooms in
their own hotel). - On the other hand, airlines and hotel chains,
particularly with the affordances of the
Internet, are able to forward integrate and
develop their own distribution channels as
alternatives to using a travel agent. - This supports the idea that the balance of power
lies in the producers favour.
32Competitive Rivalry
- This concerns the intensity of competition within
the market, often influenced by the number and
diversity of competitors. In a saturated market,
many players will lose power, unless they can
differentiate their product offering from their
competitors. One popular means of
differentiation is through the integration of
ICTs, which could be as simple as adding a new
online distribution channel, or by setting up an
electronic booking system.
33Travel Agents
- If organizations, or certain business models, can
establish a means to radically affect their
strength relative to organizations around them,
then the supply chain can be revolutionized. - With the introduction of ICTs, and the ability
for airlines and hotels to directly target their
customers through the Internet, the tourism
supply chain was drastically altered. - And the role of the Travel Agent has changed
34The future of Intermediaries?
- Modern ICT infrastructure allows the creation of
extended global enterprises, where companies such
as airlines have the ability to vertically
integrate and directly target their end customers.
35Alternatively
- ICTs have afforded complex interconnections
between the firms operating within a supply
chain, and thus the creation of virtual
corporations or networked organizations. - Here each organization focuses on their core
competencies, be it operating planes and flight
schedules or distributing the product.
36Intermediaries
- Add a significant cost to the value chain
- Leading to higher final prices
- Pressure to bypass intermediaries and internalise
their value added functions - This happened when airlines were under particular
pressure to reduce costs, due to rising oil
prices
37Disintermediation
- The role of travel agents includes
- Transaction processing
- Information provision
- Other industries (e.g. Banking) have shown these
functions are most readily replaced by technology - And that technology can be managed by the supplier
38Disintermediation
- Airlines capped / reduced transaction commissions
- And made more efforts towards direct sales
- E-tickets remove the need for physically based
transactions - Some travel agents reacted by recommending
preferred suppliers, based on commissions
available - This compromises the perceived independence of
the Travel Agent.
39Re-intermediation
- Its not all bad news!
- E-Ticketing has reduced the importance of the
ticket, and increased the importance of
personalised service - ICTs can capture, store and process information,
but they cant analyse the semantics of that
information - Human intermediaries are needed to assess the
quality and reliability of online information
40The role of intermediaries
- Lets extend the role of intermediaries
- Search and Evaluation
- Needs Assessment and Product Matching
- Customer Risk Management
- Product Distribution
- Product Information Dissemination
- Purchase Influence
- Provision of Customer Information
- Producer Risk Management
- Transaction Economies of Scale
- Integration of Consumer and Producer Needs
41The role of intermediaries
- Part of that role can be taken over by ICTs
- Some cant
- Needs assessment
- Product Matching
- Travel agents provide a neutral aggregation
service to reduce customers risks
42Reinventing the Travel Agent
- Before the internet
- TAs had exclusive access to information
- All the information to make intelligent travel
decisions - TAs were among the first small businesses to
install computer terminals - Airlines allowed access to CRS / GDS
- Wide range of tourism products
43Reinventing the Travel Agent
- With the reduction / elimination of airline
commissions - TAs have to cut costs (particularly Brick and
Mortar TAs) - The internet affords this
- Physical limitations removed
- Expanded potential market
44Reinventing the Travel Agent
- Inventories of accurate travel information in
databases - Databases of customers, complete with personal
preferences, used within CRMs - Diverse suppliers products combined to make
innovative packages - Golf Hotel Flight Golfing Holiday
- The travel agent becomes a trusted counsel for
the prospective traveler
45Reinventing the Travel Agent
- 4 key roles
- An information broker, passing information
between guests and suppliers - Processing transactions by booking rooms or
flights and then transferring money - Provide advice to customers, specific to their
requirements - Providing value added services by integrating a
wider variety of travel products
46Intermediary?
- Or reinvented as an Infomediary?
- But the infomediary product is easily copied and
redistributed - so new new ways to add value are needed.
- Previously TAs were agents for the
product/service providers - i.e. the airlines the hotels
- Now they are agents for the people
- i.e. the customers
47Cybermediation
- The opportunity for cybermediation exists in
markets where product/service bundling
opportunities exist, where the market is
fragmented with many different sellers and
buyers, markets with low barriers to entry and
where there is a scope for establishing novel
price discovery mechanisms - Giaglis et al.
- That sounds like the Travel industry to me!
48Cybermediaries
- Online travel agents
- The Click and Brick business model
- The virtual GDS
- New players in the market
49Online Travel Agents
- 29 percent of US travelers make all their travel
arrangements on the Internet - 52 percent of all travelers purchase more than
half of their travel online - Almost one third of the US citizens were planning
to increase their online travel purchases over
the following year - 17 percent of all online purchases in the country
were travel-related - The majority of online travel shoppers start
travel planning at an online travel website
because of the one-stop shopping convenience - 73 percent of respondents who purchased travel
online researched travel at a general site, but
then went to a specific company's site to book
travel, attributing their decision to lower
prices and special deals
50The future of Cybermediaries
- Persuading customers to click and close
- While customers are happy to look for
information, getting them to purchase online is
still growing - Why?
- Navigation difficulties
- Reluctance to rely on machines rather than people
- Mistakes are easy to make, but hard to correct
- Lack of personal approach
- Security safety
- When giving CC information.
51Cybermediary vs Intermediary
- The roles are in some way different
- Add web skills to destination knowledge and
access to tourism products - But, in someways the same
- The focus on customer service and CRM is
essential to success.