Whether you call it the Internet or an electronic channel, it's still an inexpensive and effective means of promoting your hotel. There are some simple tactics which promote success in web marketing. Don't be fooled by those huge numbers of "hits" on your site. The true measure of your site's success is the number of reservations it generates.
The most important first step is to make sure your web site is designed for success. What is success? Success means attracting people to your site, then converting lookers to bookers.
Sometimes, web site owners, themselves, are the biggest obstacle to efficient site design; it's called human ego. Web sites are public instruments and the design or "look" of a hotel web site is often greatly influenced by everyone involved with the hotel. I call it "design by committee". Design-by-committee generally results in a confusing, difficult to navigate web site. Everyone has an opinion; often an uninformed one, based upon how good it looks versus how well it works.
The design of an effective hotel site involves much more than how it looks; and herein lays the problem. There are basic "rules-of-the-road" so to speak, which greatly affect how well a site performs. The first is its search ability. Techies love movement and flashy design; unfortunately, search engines do not. Savvy designers know how to fool search engines, but they spend more time trying to get around search engine parameters than they spend on the site's content; and content is king. Search spiders read copy, yet designers devote less time and effort to the "words" and concentrate on making a site pretty with photography.
Here's a news flash for owners, managers, and other interested parties; the site is not being designed for you. It is hopefully being designed to attract new guests. If you really need to be involved in your site's design, learn search engine parameters and the way they work, before you impose your will on the designer.
The next very important requirement is to create a simple navigation scheme. "Buried links", links accessible only from other links, are very slick looking, but confuse search spiders and, more importantly, they also confuse the site's users. Your site is not an online brochure; it's an online sales instrument. If an online brochure is what you want, be satisfied with mediocre sales results.
Content is king. It's still amazing to me how many site designers neglect the hotel's location information on their site. The assets of your location are the most important considerations for choosing a hotel. Your hotel's address is only a small part of your location. Distance to/from attractions, activities, and businesses play a major role in hotel selection. Accessibility is the next consideration. Accesses to/from major cities and/or airports are important considerations.
Content is king. We have all heard the old axiom "a picture says a thousand words"; in life this is very true; except when it comes to web sites. Good photography is important but search engines do not read photography. Carefully written copy on your site can boost your site's popularity by making it easier to find. For many sites, the copy appears to be written simply to fill empty space instead of actually providing important information.
Content is king. Reciprocal links are those which, by mutual agreement, reside on your site and, in turn, contain a link to your web site from the linked site. Reciprocal links can boost the overall popularity of your web site by borrowing the popularity of the linked site. Good examples are links to blogs, news articles, and attractions. But, caution, your home page should never contain an external link. Would you really want to entice someone to exit your site from your home page?
Content is king. The popularity of the Internet has also spawned a new breed of site designers eager to cash-in on this new income source. Web site designers are not necessarily good hotel marketers. It seems that everyone involved with the Internet have now become hotel web marketers; without ever spending two days in the hotel business. If necessary, hire a hotel sales person to oversee the building of your site. Make sure good basic principles of hotel sales are being utilized.
When shopping for someone to oversee the design and perform the marketing for your site, ask questions. Hotel sales and marketing experience should be a basic prerequisite. Choose someone who understands the principles and methodology involved with hotel sales and marketing. Choose someone who will utilize those principles to meld your Internet marketing effort into your hotel's direct sales program. Not doing so is sort of like hiring a plumber to fix your electric wiring. Selling rooms is not like selling widgets or designing technical web tools.
Contact:Neil Salerno, CHME, CHAHotel Marketing CoachNeilS@hotelmarketingcoach.comwww.hotelmarketingcoach.com