Thursday, April 09, 2009
Reputation Management for Bed and Breakfast Inns
The first issue is really the essential one. How can you prevent a bad review from happening? Not possible is what most will say; eventually it will happen to you. However, perhaps prevention is the best advice. That gets us back to good old hospitality and superior service. The people at TripAdvisor told us at PAII that most adverse comments are really about the Innkeepers. Either they were grouchy, touchy, angry, or the like, or they were not present when guests had issues that were important to them. If it is all about the Innkeepers, then perhaps prevention can happen before a complaint is broadcast to the universe. Also, many bad reviews are about Innkeepers rigidly sticking to their policies, particularly their cancellation policies. In this connected world, it just may be good business to waive a cancellation penalty rather than go through the difficulties surrounding a bad review. We know of one very smart Innkeeper who has been at it for over 20 years without any kind of policies (no deposits, no cancellation fees, and money back for whatever reason if the guest is not happy with the Inn). In the long run, this may be the best policy for an Inn.
The next step is to make sure that you have the opportunity to intervene if there is a problem before the guest leaves. It just may not be sufficient to ask the guest at check-out if everything was OK with their stay. That question is better said the other way around, such as “Is there anything we could have done to make your stay better?” It is hard to get guests to tell you what you need to hear, especially when they are trying to check-out and anxious to get home. Comment cards no longer seem to work, because the guest perceives that it may be a waste of their time. Those guests that had a bad experience often find the anonymity of the Internet the perfect setting to wail away at the perceived treatment that they got at the Inn. Intervening at check-out, or better yet at breakfast before they leave, may be the better choice. At that point, if they are unhappy, you can take direct action to explain your side, and to try to resolve the issue before it becomes everyone’s issue. Also, you need to have a clear policy as to what to do with a guest who just did not have a good experience. It may not matter whose fault that was, but you need to do something about it. This may mean that you may have to give that guest something of value, particularly if it was the fault of the Inn and it was a serious issue.
Here is another suggestion that was a topic of discussion at PAII. Some really thoughtful Innkeepers mentioned that a follow-up email to all of the guests a week or so after they left was a really good opportunity to communicate. One Innkeeper even stated that they do two email follow-ups, one on check-out asking if they could have done anything better for the guest, and the second answering any responses to the first one. If the response is good, the Innkeeper will suggest a few websites like TripAdvisor where the guest could leave a hopefully positive comment. Where the response is bad, the Innkeeper would then take prompt action to try to remedy the problem before an adverse review is posted.
The next step is for Innkeepers to constantly monitor what the world is saying about them and their Inn. This is not as difficult as it seems. TripAdvisor has a service to email al reviews to the Innkeeper. There are meta search websites like Google Alerts and Technorati, which will also constantly search the web for mentions of keywords and advise you if there are any mentions. It is absolutely essential that you know immediately when a bad review occurs so that you can deal with it right away.
Finally, sites like TripAdvisor provide Innkeepers the opportunity to respond directly to a review by posting a management response. This is a really critical aspect of Reputation Management which should be done promptly and dispassionately. In other words, tell it like it is from the Inn’s standpoint, and hopefully the public will understand that not all issues reflect badly on the Inn. TripAdvisor stated at PAII that often a management response is very helpful to the Inn and can overcome a bad review with reason and particularly with a warm and frank answer. This is the hard part, because we all know how hurtful a bad review can feel to an Innkeeper.
This is a brand new world that will take time away from Innkeepers who do not really have time to spare. Our thought is that this area is going to become very important to all types of businesses, especially those in the hospitality world. It is not going to go away, and you need to gear up to handle these issues. We are currently developing an internet based consulting service to assist Bed and Breakfast Inns to handle the many issues present in Reputation Management. Let us have your thoughts about what type of service may be helpful to you.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Twitter for Bed and Breakfasts 2.0
In last weeks blog article, I described in general how Twitter works, but the simplicity of sending out very short messages belies the fact that a tremendous amount of information is being spiraled around the Internet in this fashion. By using one of many free services to shorten URLs, Tweeters are including references to blog articles and other websites within their Tweets. Once received, each person, if the information is deemed worthy, can then “Retweet” this information to his or her list of followers with a comment. It is this Retweet phenomenon which is the essence of viral marketing. It keeps the message circulating, growing and growing the number of people who ultimately see it. Just think of the possibilities. Imagine your Special Package description gets Tweeted to your friends (presumably your guests) who then spread the word to all their friends, who then send it to all of their friends, and so on. . . . This is the essence of the concept of Repeats and Referral, the two most important kinds of guests and prospective guests a Bed and Breakfast can have. In essence, the marketing potential of Twitter is endless.
Now, does it work? First, there is an etiquette happening as well. If all that you talk about on Twitter is your business, your Twitter followers (i.e. your “friends”) will likely stop listening to what you say. This is a social media after all! They want to know you as a person as well as a business. Here is where all your Innkeeper hospitality comes into play. You can spend a good deal of time on Twitter talking about what is going on at the Inn. It can be as simple as a description of that fabulous breakfast that you just fed to your guests, a description of one of your best guest rooms, or a short note about what is happening in your neck of the woods this weekend. Pictures work great on Twitter, with a Flicr account and a shortened URL, you can include great photos in your Tweets. Again the marketing potential is limitless. The key is to convey the wonderful ambiance of your Inn in 140 characters. That is the Zen of it all.
So the overall answer to the question “does it work?” is a resounding yes! What amazes me is that there are so many bed and breakfasts out there, but only a relative few have caught on to Twitter. This is a missed opportunity. Right now, it appears that the overwhelming number of people on the Twitter channel are people who are into social media as a business. The bloggers and web developers are all there. Also, you will find every form of self help and technical gurus there, as well as some really smart people who just want to learn about the anything and everything of it all. These people are basically your guests or prospective guests.
So what is the first step after signing up for Twitter? You need to get a following that wants to hear your messages. What better way than to put out the word to your guest list that you are now on Twitter. Put the Twitter link on your website, and send an email notice to your guest list with your Twitter ID. Ask them to follow you. Make sure you have the link in all your marketing pieces and newsletters. Set a goal to get a good number of your guest list into following you on Twitter.
Once you have guests following you on Twitter, you can then have a look at who they are following and who is following them. You can elect to follow anyone who is interesting to you (i.e. a potential guest). If you follow someone, they get an email from Twitter advising them that you are now following them. Usually, they will look you up on Twitter, and if it interests them, they can elect to follow you back. This is the social networking feature of Twitter, and it allows you to expand your friends and make new ones. Many, many Tweople have thousands and thousands of followers on Twitter. It is word of mouth at its highest level.
So my advice is “what are you waiting for?” Get going and Twitter on. . . .
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Twitter 1.0 for Bed and Breakfasts
First, let’s define the process. Twitter is a free Social Media website that asks the simple question “what are you doing?” You have 140 characters to describe anything that you want. Sort of a brief haiku of what is going on in your head. A posting is called a “tweet,” and it goes out to all of the people who have signed up to follow your postings (they are called “followers”). You, in turn, receive tweets from all of the persons that you are following (i.e. your friends), hence the social nature of this new media. That is pretty simple in concept. What it is in reality is like a nuclear bomb on the web. Millions of people are all atwitter about themselves. Here is my own experience over the last week or so.
After I set up the account a few months ago, I shot off a couple of tweets about things that were bothering me, like the new LL Bean credit card. I stopped after a bit, because I wasn’t sure whether anyone was listening to my rants. I just did not get what this was all about. Well in fact, there were at least 8 people in the Twitterverse that must have felt the same way about LL Bean, because they signed up to follow the stuff that I was putting out. I didn’t do anything else, but they seemed to hang in there with me.
Last week, after the mighty Wall Street Journal said that Twitter was hot stuff, I decided to explore this further. What I found just staggered me! First, there are an absolutely amazing number of very interesting people who are talking to the world on Twitter. By doing a search of interests or subjects or anything else you can think of, you start to see the profiles (picture, website, and short bio) of vast numbers of people. By clicking a button, you add them to your “following” list, and, low and behold, some of them look at your profile and decide that you might be worthy of following. Basic networking is then happening, and the more you follow, the more that follow you in return. Then comes a daily stream of tweets about anything and everything, but you can look at what comes in and cull the interesting from those that you really don’t want to read. There is an etiquette to Twitter as well, and clearly if you tweet too much during the day without a whole lot of content and interesting stuff, then your followers are going to turn you off (remove you from their following list). Sort of like immediate feedback about your worthiness. The most “interesting people” are tweeting about things that they have found on the web, and include a URL in their tweet. Other software companies have even set up websites to compress the URL’s into tiny links so that they fit into the rest of the 140 characters that you have to tweet with. So, what is happening is that Twitter becomes an amazing information sharing tool that starts from a very simple premise, but unleashes the power of the Internet to get worthy information to you.
Yesterday, I added a tool called Twhirl that sits on my desktop and monitors the tweets that come in from those who I am following. It has all of the functionality of the Twitter website, and even some great tools like compressing URLs and filtering tweets. It signals each tweet as it arrives. There are numerous tools for Twitter, and I haven’t even scratched the surface of the amazing world of add-ons to make the process better. While the search feature in Twitter is good, there are third market search engines that are incredible in their ability to dig out of the Twitterverse those people who might be relevant to you and your business.
Now let’s talk about electronic marketing for Innkeepers. What most of these interesting people are doing on Twitter is promoting themselves or their products or their blogs or their websites. By creating a group of people who follow them, they are engaging their customers and those people who might be interested in their products or services. So they are setting up a network of people to talk with who might be their customers in the future. Now the tough part. Since this is a social media, the pitch may not be as direct as “I would like you to buy my product.” This is about people, and remember the premise is “what are you doing?” Perhaps you are writing a blog article about a great event to take place near your Inn. You could then tweet what you are doing along with a link to that blog posting. Or you could simply tweet about what his going on at the Inn or anything that makes you more human and likable to your guests and potential future guests. The subjects are unlimited. There are a huge contingent of people on Twitter interested in travel. That is because they first are interesting, very savvy, and literate people. These interesting people like to travel. How do I know this? It is simply because you selected them yourself to follow, and, by their selection, your followers are interested in some of the same things you are. It is elementary, but very, very powerful.
So, that’s all for this post. I will continue to update this subject as I get further into the Twitterverse. If you want to follow my tweets, check out InnConsultant on Twitter.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Blogging - A Must for Bed & Breakfasts Inns
So you may ask, how does Blogging affect my Bed & Breakfast? The bottom line is that now is the time to get on the social media bandwagon and start Blogging your Bed & Breakfast. Blogging is one of the most cost effective ways to market, but it does take time, energy, and CONSISTENCY! Marketing has always been a challenge for Innkeepers, and we believe that it will remain that way. There are only so many hours in the day, but this does need to get done. If you can not commit to the time, you need to hire someone to do it for you and we would be happy to assist. So, here are the basics:
- Blogging adds fresh content to your website and this is the key to search engines;
- Blogs provides the public with the current "happenings" in your area/Inn;
- Blogs need to be hosted on your website, so that the fresh content is associated with YOUR website and not Blogger or WordPress;
- Blogs need to be written with key word rich content;
- Blogs need to be updated at least once per week, and more is better.
Not sure what to do next? Call us and we can guide you through the process. We can assist with developing the Blog, working with your web host to install the Blog on your website, and work as a "ghost" Blogger to make sure that your content is fresh and up-to-date.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Operating a Bed & Breakfast - Complacency Spells Trouble!
We hear anecdotally that many Inns and Bed and Breakfasts across the Country have had good years in 2008, at least until the end of October. Now is not the time for Innkeepers to rest on their laurels. A sea change is coming, in the form of a recession, the likes of which we have not seen in our lifetimes. This is also not the time to just burrow in fear of what is to come. As we have said many times before, when there is a downturn, those Inns at the top of their game can improve market share as against the competition. A bigger piece of a smaller pie may save the day after all.
So this is the time to be countercyclical and increase your spending on marketing, especially electronic marketing through your website, blog, and by email. Create attractive packages rather than discount, and spend all of that extra time you have due to declining occupancies to come up with creative and imaginative ways to get your repeat and referral guests to the Inn. Most of all, just lowering the price will not work, and may make things worse in the long run (see previous article on Discounting).
Most of all, have heart. The biggest reason that they come back to the Inn is because your have created a refuge and a respite from all of the problems the guests face at home and in the real world. Remember that this is exactly what the guests need in these troubled times, and they will pay you for this experience.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Blogging Your Way to a Successful Bed and Breakfast
One key to success with Google, Yahoo, and the other search engines is to continually have fresh content on your Inn’s website. Having a Blog on your website allows you to constantly change the content, and particularly the links to and from the site, with new and relevant material. Remember, that for Google and the other search engines, the more relevant the material is to your website, the better. Thus, writing about all of the things to do and see in your Inn’s area, about the great restaurants, about the special events happening around you, all contribute to higher visibility in the eyes of the search engines. They also contribute directly to heads in beds!
At the PAII Conference this March, we heard many really great presentations on Web 2.0 and, particularly, Consumer Generated Media like TripAdvisor. You can play games with TripAdvisor to try to bury bad reviews or create your own reviews, but this will eventually come back to haunt you. Most Inns urge their guests to write their own reviews on TripAdvisor. Better than this is to open a dialogue with your guests via your own Blog. You can clearly respond to TripAdvisor via a Managers Comment, but why not explain yourself in detail on your own Blog. Ask for and respond to your guests’ concerns directly. It is much more powerful for your own website to be the place that guest concerns and critiques can be dealt with openly and without defensiveness on your part.
Finally, remember that hospitality and service is still the basic component of our Bed and Breakfast Industry. Having a Blog creates a new, electronic media to provide this hospitality and service to your guests and prospective guests. What better place than your Blog to show the world what a terrific concierge you are? You know your area better than anyone, and need to be its best ambassador. Don’t wait for the guest to arrive to provide this service. Make it an active part of your web marketing by putting it all on the Blog. Your Inn’s success will depend on it.
Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Innkeepers Responding to Trip Advisor
We went strolling amidst Trip Advisor and started reading reviews. A true telltale sign of an owner trying to bury a bad review is when you see five glowing remarks about the property followed by an unhappy guest rating their experience a “1” or a “2”. This trend continued as we read reviews, five glowing, one bad. All of this being done to push the bad comments below the fold with the hopes that the next potential guest coming to the inn wouldn’t see it. One inn in New England had a review which was written in November. It raved about the wrap around porch with flower baskets and spoke of having breakfast outside. I don’t know about you, but I live in New England and my flowering annuals are long gone and there is no eating breakfast on the porch until next Spring! This was obviously written by the owner of the property who happened to forget what month it was. Another example that I really loved was when the property was referred to by its initials. Guest don’t refer to an inn by its initials, they call it by name.
My only word of advice is to listen to your guests and try to adjust accordingly. By writing contradicting reviews to bury a bad review only reflects badly on you, the owner, as it is easily identified. The service industry is one of the hardest jobs to perform, so do it to the best of your abilities.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
PAII Conference
If you were not able to attend the most recent PAII Conference, we wanted to share our slideshow presentations with you:
Food and Alcohol Safety Issues for Innkeepers
Exit Strategies for Inns with Restaurants
Creative Electronic Marketing
Monday, April 16, 2007
E-Mail Address Are Important!
So our question today is: do people know how important it is to put an e-mail address on their business cards? By the look of this independent survey, I would say no. In the world of ever changing technology, an e-mail address is as important as a telephone number. So, if you don’t have an e-mail address on your business card, fix it! A guest may just want to drop you an e-mail to say that they had a lovely time at your innor they may have left something that they would like to have forwarded to them. Other situations could include wanting to purchase gift certificates, asking to send a brochure to a friend, asking to share a special recipe, and more! Guests aren’t the only receiver of your business cards. This could include business acquaintances (like us), vendors, local trade people, and more. It is much easier for people to keep a business card versus a brochure.
In closing, we encourage everyone to step back and evaluate your business cards…e-mail addresses are important!