Monday, 23 December 2013
Hotels - a useful insight into your competition
You may not immediately see AirBnB as a direct competitor (if you don't we suggest you read this piece in the Guardian, it also details AirBnB's phenomenal growth), but they are filling hundred's of thousand of rooms a month, and we don't believe those travelers would have simply stayed at home without AirBnB.
No matter: you should be aware of the aspects of AirBnB's offer that attract; the video we have linked to above does have relevance (remember we visit hundreds of hotels a year ourselves), and we would be very surprised if there was absolutely nothing to be gained from viewing it.
And there are lessons for us in there as well: in 2014 we will be introducing a forum for our members. There you will be able to interact and discuss topical issues - including ways to get the very best from your membership of Dialogue.
While we're on - note that AirBnB has proritised 'reviews' over 'description' "because we think they're way more important": second only to images (see 55.15 in the video).
Meanwhile, please do comment on the posts in this blog!
Saturday, 21 December 2013
Wednesday, 11 December 2013
Google for Businesses - why it's SO important
We call it 'Google Denial'. It's where we Google a business and find they have no (or very little) presence on, and control over, their Google Business page.
Now, we know that Google for Businesses can be a trial if you aren't used to its idiosyncrasies, but this blog post is intended to show you just why it's so important to actively engage with it.
When did you last Google your own business?
First and foremost: Your Google business page is being shown to everyone who searches for your business. Like this...
To the right is the Google carousel (first introduced in the summer); you will notice that (apart from the business details and directions) the only other thing Google is showing there are (a) any reviews - on Google or anywhere else Google can find and (b) a button inviting anyone to write a review.
Here's a very interesting 'heat map' that shows just how dramatically user behaviour has changed since Google introduced their carousel:
Once you have 5 reviews Google introduces star ratings:
Which, if you haven't enagaged with Google is more likely to look like this:
Now, we know that Google for Businesses can be a trial if you aren't used to its idiosyncrasies, but this blog post is intended to show you just why it's so important to actively engage with it.
When did you last Google your own business?
First and foremost: Your Google business page is being shown to everyone who searches for your business. Like this...
To the right is the Google carousel (first introduced in the summer); you will notice that (apart from the business details and directions) the only other thing Google is showing there are (a) any reviews - on Google or anywhere else Google can find and (b) a button inviting anyone to write a review.
Here's a very interesting 'heat map' that shows just how dramatically user behaviour has changed since Google introduced their carousel:
Once you have 5 reviews Google introduces star ratings:
Which, if you haven't enagaged with Google is more likely to look like this:
With reviews like this:
Some businesses have been very slow to appreciate the effect this will be having. Like it or not consumers want and read reviews (that's why Google is showing them). They also believe them (rightly or wrongly) - detailed studies by both Harvard and Cornell universities have proved this beyond all doubt.
The Good News
Google wants to become the No1 'go to' resource for consumer reviews. Why is this good for businesses? Because it enables you to simplify your strategy; if your potential customers don't need to search for reviews on specialist sites, you can focus on Google.
We're not saying that sites like TripAdvisor and Yelp (and small specialist sites like AllAgents and AllinLondon) will immediately wither and die, but they are bound to suffer by comparison with Google. After all, Google is the gatekeeper, your potential customers have to go there first.
Implement a strategy
Someone within your business, however large or small it is, should have responsibility for your Google Business page(s).
Everyone in your business should be focused on getting clients to write reviews to Google.
Help from HelpHound
We are here to help and advise. Dialogue can automatically invite your clients to post reviews to Google; we'll then work together with you we will make sure you have a great rating (and a steady flow of great reviews as well).
An important added benefit
Once you have an established presence on Google, other ratings sites will become less and less important - your prospective customers won't go to them if you have enough reviews on Google.
Ruth Watson Means Business
Ruth Watson's new series 'Ruth Watson Means Business' is currently showing on Channel 4. Although the series is not solely focused on hospitality over half the twelve programmes feature hotels.
So why are we blogging about it?
Because - unlike recent series like the Hotel Inspector on Channel 5 (who sometimes seem to go out of their way to find 21st century equivalents of Fawlty Towers), these hotels only have one problem: negative reviews. The hotels are all well-run (given their respective markets), but they aren't perfect (is any business?) and of course they get some adverse feedback. Here's the hotel from episode 5, Fawsley Hall in Northamptonshire:
After going through their complaints with the hotels, Ruth takes the reviewers back to see how the hotel have taken them on board.
The core comments that were repeated by every hotelier was how seriously they took negative reviews; how personally they took them, and how much they affected their businesses.
While some of Ruth's suggestions (that breakfast for wedding parties was separated from that for other guests, for instance) were valid, we think that there is a deeper issue at stake here, which is having control over communications with your guests. All of the hotels would have gained more direct feedback and been subject to far less negative reviews if they were using a system like Dialogue. As Ruth says on her blog: "You'll always have the cowards and bullies [who will hide behind anonymity]." But reasonable guests will use Dialogue rather than posting to TripAdvisor.
Interestingly, one of the guests was challenged by the hotel's marketing director: 'Why did you post a review online, rather than ask to speak to management?' her answer was 'That's what we do these days'. We're sure she would have been more than happy to post her review, and a have the hotel's response, through Dialogue.
So why are we blogging about it?
Because - unlike recent series like the Hotel Inspector on Channel 5 (who sometimes seem to go out of their way to find 21st century equivalents of Fawlty Towers), these hotels only have one problem: negative reviews. The hotels are all well-run (given their respective markets), but they aren't perfect (is any business?) and of course they get some adverse feedback. Here's the hotel from episode 5, Fawsley Hall in Northamptonshire:
After going through their complaints with the hotels, Ruth takes the reviewers back to see how the hotel have taken them on board.
The core comments that were repeated by every hotelier was how seriously they took negative reviews; how personally they took them, and how much they affected their businesses.
While some of Ruth's suggestions (that breakfast for wedding parties was separated from that for other guests, for instance) were valid, we think that there is a deeper issue at stake here, which is having control over communications with your guests. All of the hotels would have gained more direct feedback and been subject to far less negative reviews if they were using a system like Dialogue. As Ruth says on her blog: "You'll always have the cowards and bullies [who will hide behind anonymity]." But reasonable guests will use Dialogue rather than posting to TripAdvisor.
Interestingly, one of the guests was challenged by the hotel's marketing director: 'Why did you post a review online, rather than ask to speak to management?' her answer was 'That's what we do these days'. We're sure she would have been more than happy to post her review, and a have the hotel's response, through Dialogue.
"This hotel looks like a prison"
It's one thing to read damaging negative reviews about your business on an independent website - quite another to show them, or link to them, on your own website.
Our headline is a quote from the feed on a hotel's own website (as are the other two shown here). Now we all know that consumers want reviews, but we cannot think of a single positive benefit to be gained from showing reviews fed by external sites.
Even if your business looks great today, are you sure the review posted tomorrow is not going to be a 'killer'?
We can see the initial attraction, but given that a single adverse review can put off customers in significant numbers, we always advise our clients against this strategy.
Is there any way of quantifying the effect?
The straight answer is 'No', potential customers are not going to contact you to tell you they have been put off using your business, but you might like to try replacing the feed with Dialogue for three months and measure the change!
Our headline is a quote from the feed on a hotel's own website (as are the other two shown here). Now we all know that consumers want reviews, but we cannot think of a single positive benefit to be gained from showing reviews fed by external sites.
Even if your business looks great today, are you sure the review posted tomorrow is not going to be a 'killer'?
We can see the initial attraction, but given that a single adverse review can put off customers in significant numbers, we always advise our clients against this strategy.
Is there any way of quantifying the effect?
The straight answer is 'No', potential customers are not going to contact you to tell you they have been put off using your business, but you might like to try replacing the feed with Dialogue for three months and measure the change!
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Resolution - working for you and your customer
Resolution™ is a key component of Dialogue, so it's vitally important that all our clients understand exactly how it works; so first some background...
Why do consumers write negative reviews?
Sites like TripAdvisor and Google Places would like to think it's about warning others to avoid the business in question. Our experience dictates otherwise: they think it's the easiest way to get the business's attention
The introduction of Resolution
We brought in Resolution so that businesses and their customers could raise and discuss issues before a review was posted. So there would be an easier and fairer way to 'get the business's attention'.
Why?
Because running (and choosing) a business is just as much about how a company addresses issues where an element of their product or service has gone wrong. Reviews that simply highlight problems are often unhelpful to both the business and their potential customers.
We realised that a service that allowed them both an opportunity to resolve (hence the name) whatever issue had arisen would be helpful.
How, exactly, does Resolution work?
Let's itemise the steps:
That (enabling our clients to select or edit reviews) would mean that Dialogue (and all the reviews its shows) would lose all credibility.
Now let's look at results
HelpHound processes thousands of reviews every month, for all kinds of businesses, and this gives us very accurate feedback (remember that we see both sides of the conversation, and we speak with the business and their customer independently as well):
And how we achieve them...
Our moderators work very closely with our clients to ensure a positive outcome for every review that enters Resolution. They effectively 'mediate' between our clients and their customers.
And the effect for the business:
Resolution is seen by our clients as a valuable addition to their customer service efforts, and one that would be very difficult, whatever their resources (both human and financial) to replicate in-house, because it is HelpHound's very independence from the business that makes it work so effectively.
Remember: our reputation is at stake alongside your own!
Why do consumers write negative reviews?
Sites like TripAdvisor and Google Places would like to think it's about warning others to avoid the business in question. Our experience dictates otherwise: they think it's the easiest way to get the business's attention
The introduction of Resolution
We brought in Resolution so that businesses and their customers could raise and discuss issues before a review was posted. So there would be an easier and fairer way to 'get the business's attention'.
Why?
Because running (and choosing) a business is just as much about how a company addresses issues where an element of their product or service has gone wrong. Reviews that simply highlight problems are often unhelpful to both the business and their potential customers.
We realised that a service that allowed them both an opportunity to resolve (hence the name) whatever issue had arisen would be helpful.
How, exactly, does Resolution work?
Let's itemise the steps:
- The customer writes their review
- HelpHound's moderators read the review, posting positives straight away, but sending any reviews that contain issues to the business
- The business responds - through HelpHound
- This process is repeated until the customer is happy
- The customer is invited to post a new review*
That (enabling our clients to select or edit reviews) would mean that Dialogue (and all the reviews its shows) would lose all credibility.
Now let's look at results
HelpHound processes thousands of reviews every month, for all kinds of businesses, and this gives us very accurate feedback (remember that we see both sides of the conversation, and we speak with the business and their customer independently as well):
- For every 100 reviews posted through Resolution less than 1 results in the customer taking up the invitation to post a 'final' review.
- That review often reads along the lines of "I had a problem but ABC business resolved it."
- Less than 1 in 500 feel the need to post about their experience anywhere else on the web
And how we achieve them...
Our moderators work very closely with our clients to ensure a positive outcome for every review that enters Resolution. They effectively 'mediate' between our clients and their customers.
And the effect for the business:
- Very valuable feedback
- Increased customer retention
- Improved online reputation
Resolution is seen by our clients as a valuable addition to their customer service efforts, and one that would be very difficult, whatever their resources (both human and financial) to replicate in-house, because it is HelpHound's very independence from the business that makes it work so effectively.
Remember: our reputation is at stake alongside your own!
Monday, 2 December 2013
Hotels: will reviews like these help you?
The three reviews below were all written in the last four days...
They were all posted by first-time reviewers
They were all written as a direct result of the invitation embedded in the hotel's Dialogue module
...and they were written during the first week of the hotel's membership of HelpHound
They were all posted by first-time reviewers
They were all written as a direct result of the invitation embedded in the hotel's Dialogue module
...and they were written during the first week of the hotel's membership of HelpHound
Saturday, 30 November 2013
What's new? - Dialogue another year on
It's the nature of our business. The world of reviews is moving so fast, and we're at the forefront of that movement. So this post is to summarise everything that has happened in 2013 (we'll link to relevant posts on this blog and elsewhere...
Across the web
Reviews have continued to grow in importance, for businesses and consumers. All research points to the fact that consumers are becoming more and more conditioned to looking for reviews before they choose which business to patronise, and leading businesses are embracing the concept of serving reviews on their own websites so consumers aren't driven off to comparison sites where they may be poached away by their competitors.
Retailers are at the forefront. This is not surprising as they have the evidence to support the effect: the sheer volume of business the big online retailers do every day of the week makes it very easy for them to measure the effect of consumer reviews. John Lewis didn't introduce reviews by accident...
Amazon don't do it for fun...
Nor have Hyundai based their entire 2013 marketing campaign on reviews by chance...
Other changes in 2013 that will impact on businesses in 2014 (and beyond)...
Across the web
Reviews have continued to grow in importance, for businesses and consumers. All research points to the fact that consumers are becoming more and more conditioned to looking for reviews before they choose which business to patronise, and leading businesses are embracing the concept of serving reviews on their own websites so consumers aren't driven off to comparison sites where they may be poached away by their competitors.
Retailers are at the forefront. This is not surprising as they have the evidence to support the effect: the sheer volume of business the big online retailers do every day of the week makes it very easy for them to measure the effect of consumer reviews. John Lewis didn't introduce reviews by accident...
Amazon don't do it for fun...
Nor have Hyundai based their entire 2013 marketing campaign on reviews by chance...
All these (highly successful) companies introduced consumer reviews for one simple reason: reviews are now recognised as one of the primary new business drivers. Consumers want them, so these companies give their consumers what they want.
So the question every business should be asking itself is: how can we imitate them?
But why have some businesses hesitated?
Here are the main reasons:
- No business wants to read negative comments about itself on its own website
- There are a plethora of websites dedicated to consumer reviews, so why not leave it to them?
- The administrative burden - managing (responding to) the reviews
- Negative comments: Resolution - the system where we feed negative reviews straight to the business for response has been around for longer, but it really proved itself in 2013. Less than one in one hundred negative reviews makes it as far as our clients' Dialogue modules - issue number one sorted!
- External review sites: Ask any hotel! Seriously, those websites are run for their own benefit. They don't care which business the consumer chooses through them (be it a hotel or a lawyer), just as long as they choose one. Businesses must invite and show reviews on their own websites. You wouldn't think of not showing images or descriptions of your product or service on your website; no more should you hesitate to show your customers' opinions.
- Administration: in 2011 we became aware that some clients would value a service that managed the 'back-end' of the reviews process for them. So in 2012 we introduced Feedback Manager™ and Feedback Manager Plus™ to do just that. They've been a huge success and are now handling the whole interaction, from initial review to response and any communication in between, with Feedback Manager Plus responding to reviews on public sites.
Other changes in 2013 that will impact on businesses in 2014 (and beyond)...
- Google has finally got its review act together and has introduced Google Places for Business
- Yelp is coming - the world's largest review community is investing heavily in the UK
- Facebook is now dedicating massive resources to drive its own review function
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
It's the individual comments that drive business to your door
Here we look at the individual headlines on two of our client's Dialogue modules. Why? Because it's those headlines, combined with the comments below then, that drive business through their doors; giving prospective clients (for estate agency) and guests (for hotels) the confidence to pick up the phone to make an appointment or book a room...
Here are the last 10 headlines for an estate agent client:
And the for a hotel client:
Of course, the individual reviews support those headlines, but we feel that the headlines alone convey the right message and impression for anyone considering using either business.
The key question is: "having read those headlines (and the reviews below them), how many more would you need to see (and would you need to consult any other websites) before contacting (the estate agent) or booking (the hotel)?"
Here are the last 10 headlines for an estate agent client:
- 'Professionalism above and beyond anything their peers can offer'
- 'A well managed process'
- 'Personal and professional service. Highly recommended'
- 'An unparallelled experience'
- 'Very impressed with Paul's service'
- 'Outstanding service'
- 'Professional and friendly'
- 'Very happy'
- 'Impeccable service - highly recommended'
- 'Excellent professional service'
And the for a hotel client:
- 'Really fine hotel'
- 'Highly recommended'
- 'Thoroughly recommended'
- 'Excellent hotel'
- A***** service'
- 'Lovely place, lovely people'
- 'A very comfortable stay'
- 'A good choice'
- 'Definitely recommended'
- 'Perfect!'
Of course, the individual reviews support those headlines, but we feel that the headlines alone convey the right message and impression for anyone considering using either business.
The key question is: "having read those headlines (and the reviews below them), how many more would you need to see (and would you need to consult any other websites) before contacting (the estate agent) or booking (the hotel)?"
Dialogue: Driving business for our clients
Monday, 25 November 2013
Responding to reviews - kill two birds with Dialogue
A survey by Choice Hotels Europe has identified the amount of time their hotel management are spending addressing and responding to online reviews - and it can be up to half a day a week.
Now, we're firm believers that it's part of a modern hotelier's job to address their online reputation, but there may come a point when this is at the expense of service in-hotel; and that is why we introduced Feedback Manager™.
To remind everyone what Feedback Manager does:
With Feedback Manager Plus:
And Feedback Manager is excellent value for money: just add up what a half-day a week over a full year is costing (a) in pure time alone and then (b) in distracting the GM (or someone in a very senior position - you won't be delegating your review management to an inexperienced member of staff) from their other responsibilities.
Now, we're firm believers that it's part of a modern hotelier's job to address their online reputation, but there may come a point when this is at the expense of service in-hotel; and that is why we introduced Feedback Manager™.
To remind everyone what Feedback Manager does:
- We respond to all your reviews in Dialogue on your behalf, thanking those who posted positive reviews and answering those which incorporate criticisms or suggestions (referring to you as necessary)
- All negatives are sent to you for comment and input before we post a response
- Every review is sent to your nominated inbox as soon as it is posted
- Every response is sent to your nominated inbox as soon as that is posted
With Feedback Manager Plus:
- The same for all your reviews on TripAdvisor and Google
- all your guests' comments are responded to
- in a timely fashion - before they resort to posting negatives elsewhere
And Feedback Manager is excellent value for money: just add up what a half-day a week over a full year is costing (a) in pure time alone and then (b) in distracting the GM (or someone in a very senior position - you won't be delegating your review management to an inexperienced member of staff) from their other responsibilities.
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Do you need 'Reputation Management'?
Does our business need reputation management?
It's a question we are being asked with increasing frequency lately. Several (mostly US based) reputation management businesses have started operating on this side of the Atlantic. So let's examine what we mean by reputation management - the perception, and the reality...
The Perception
The Reality
Both the above are true; in part...
'Getting rid' of negative comment is shorthand for 'driving negative comment far enough down the Google search results that very few people will look far enough to see it', and that's fair enough. We tend to see this kind of SEO-driven activity as akin to standing on a football in a swimming pool: as soon as you take your foot off (stop paying), the ball (negative comment) pops up again.
But more important than that, it pits your business (and your reputation management) against the might of Google. Google's core objective is to provide the best possible search results, so they invest very heavily in addressing reputation management. Simply put: they don't want the value which is their life's blood tampered with. And they have the determination, combined with the resources, to fight reputation management all the way.
Reputation managers will focus on getting your customers to write positive comments on sites that you feel matter to you; but beware this siren call. This may initially appear to be a good thing; but it almost always ignores the one site that matters most of all to you and your potential customers: your own! And...
You can fool...
If you look for examples of reputation management in operation they soon become obvious. Why? Because it's impossible to stem the flow of negative comment right across the web. You will see the reputation managers' clients begin to look really good on whichever site they choose to flood with positive reviews, but they find it very difficult - and expensive for you - to focus on more than one site at a time, simply because it's not possible to ask hand-picked happy customers to post to more than one site.
We looked at one high-profile example (of a client of a reputation management company). The ten natural search results for "company name + reviews" consisted of the following:
Isn't this very like what HelpHound's Dialogue™ does?
We are in the business of managing consumer relations through reviews.
We enable our clients to show consumer feedback:
We then set about enabling them to get that feedback to sites that matter, and Google loves this. Why? Because verified (and therefore credible) consumer comment is a very valuable commodity for Google.
If you're in hospitality we'll get reviews posted to Google and/or TripAdvisor, if you're an estate agent we'll get them to Google and/or your key review sites. It won't necessarily be a quick fix, and it will mean that your core business practices must be sound, but it is the only viable long-term solution for well-managed businesses.
Then you won't need to hide behind reputation management.
If you're interested in finding out more about how reputation management works (and can sometimes backfire) where positive consumer relations and an open attitude to PR might be a much more effective (and less costly, in pure £'s and in terms of lasting brand damage) solution, then read this great article first posted in the San Francisco Examiner. Another unwanted outcome can be the 'Streisand Effect' - the online community doesn't take kindly to overt reputation management either!
So...
It's important to differentiate between effective customer relations and reputation management, whilst they may at first appear to be closely related, the harder you look, the further apart they are.
It's a question we are being asked with increasing frequency lately. Several (mostly US based) reputation management businesses have started operating on this side of the Atlantic. So let's examine what we mean by reputation management - the perception, and the reality...
The Perception
- "Our business has negative comments showing up in a Google search - reputation management will somehow 'get rid' of those (or at least bury them)
- "Reputation management will get positive comments written about us on the web - to show up in Google searches
The Reality
Both the above are true; in part...
'Getting rid' of negative comment is shorthand for 'driving negative comment far enough down the Google search results that very few people will look far enough to see it', and that's fair enough. We tend to see this kind of SEO-driven activity as akin to standing on a football in a swimming pool: as soon as you take your foot off (stop paying), the ball (negative comment) pops up again.
But more important than that, it pits your business (and your reputation management) against the might of Google. Google's core objective is to provide the best possible search results, so they invest very heavily in addressing reputation management. Simply put: they don't want the value which is their life's blood tampered with. And they have the determination, combined with the resources, to fight reputation management all the way.
Reputation managers will focus on getting your customers to write positive comments on sites that you feel matter to you; but beware this siren call. This may initially appear to be a good thing; but it almost always ignores the one site that matters most of all to you and your potential customers: your own! And...
You can fool...
If you look for examples of reputation management in operation they soon become obvious. Why? Because it's impossible to stem the flow of negative comment right across the web. You will see the reputation managers' clients begin to look really good on whichever site they choose to flood with positive reviews, but they find it very difficult - and expensive for you - to focus on more than one site at a time, simply because it's not possible to ask hand-picked happy customers to post to more than one site.
We looked at one high-profile example (of a client of a reputation management company). The ten natural search results for "company name + reviews" consisted of the following:
- Two critical press articles
- Two critical forum threads
- A link to reviews on their own site - all uniformly positive
- A link to reviews on a well-known review site - almost all uniformly positive
- Four links to other sources of reviews - almost all uniformly negative
Isn't this very like what HelpHound's Dialogue™ does?
We are in the business of managing consumer relations through reviews.
We enable our clients to show consumer feedback:
- On their own websites - the number one priority for driving new business, and
- manage any negative feedback in private
We then set about enabling them to get that feedback to sites that matter, and Google loves this. Why? Because verified (and therefore credible) consumer comment is a very valuable commodity for Google.
If you're in hospitality we'll get reviews posted to Google and/or TripAdvisor, if you're an estate agent we'll get them to Google and/or your key review sites. It won't necessarily be a quick fix, and it will mean that your core business practices must be sound, but it is the only viable long-term solution for well-managed businesses.
Then you won't need to hide behind reputation management.
If you're interested in finding out more about how reputation management works (and can sometimes backfire) where positive consumer relations and an open attitude to PR might be a much more effective (and less costly, in pure £'s and in terms of lasting brand damage) solution, then read this great article first posted in the San Francisco Examiner. Another unwanted outcome can be the 'Streisand Effect' - the online community doesn't take kindly to overt reputation management either!
So...
It's important to differentiate between effective customer relations and reputation management, whilst they may at first appear to be closely related, the harder you look, the further apart they are.
Sunday, 17 November 2013
TripAdvisor leapfrogs OTAs as top source of hotel bookings
In a dramatic surge TripAdvisor now rates as the top source for hotel bookings, overtaking recommendations from friends and family and referrals from OTAs.
Read the whole article on Tnooz.
Lessons to take away from these findings:
Read the whole article on Tnooz.
Lessons to take away from these findings:
- Your TripAdvisor listing, both in terms of ranking and lack of negative posts, is now more important than ever before
- Allocate the kind of resources (human and financial) that recognise how important your image on TripAdvisor is to your property
- By all means dedicate some time and resource to Facebook and Twitter, but not at the expense of doing all you can to maintain and improve your TripAdvisor listing
- Reply to guest reviews - it is a great way of enhancing your image in the eyes of TripAdvisor visitors (your potential guests)
- Reward repeat guests - upgrades/name-checks and everything you can do to make them feel special
- Seriously consider introducing some kind of 'friends and family' reward, so you make the most of your guests' goodwill
Friday, 15 November 2013
A simple Q & A
This post was prompted by a new client. They had asked themselves the following question:
"Is their potential customer more or less likely to use a business that...
We spend a great deal of time explaining the multitude of benefits that Dialogue brings to our clients, and even more time collating results, and that's only right, but we felt that this short 'checklist' goes right to the core of what HelpHound is for all our clients, no matter what their business.
"Is their potential customer more or less likely to use a business that...
- Invites reviews from its customers
- Has them moderated by an independent agency
- Publishes all of those reviews
- Responds to all those reviews
- Responds to reviews posted anywhere on the web?"
We spend a great deal of time explaining the multitude of benefits that Dialogue brings to our clients, and even more time collating results, and that's only right, but we felt that this short 'checklist' goes right to the core of what HelpHound is for all our clients, no matter what their business.
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Estate Agents - looking forward to 2014
Building on Proven Success
2013 Has been the year that Dialogue proved its effectiveness for our estate agent clients. More than that, it has been the year that those clients helped us (and each other) understand just how to maximise that effectiveness.
Back at the beginning of 2012, building on our experience with the hospitality industry, we expected that the management of our estate agent clients' online reputations would be a big part of the value we would add; what we did not foresee was the direct effect it would have on driving new business. 2013 has been the year that proved...
Come aboard!
More than ever before, the facts, results and our clients' opinions of Dialogue speak for themselves. So we will be continuing our policy of ‘no contract’ for the first six months of membership up until 1 Jan 2014 - enabling you to test and prove Dialogue for your agency with the minimum of risk. Join now and see the results blossom in the spring!
2013 Has been the year that Dialogue proved its effectiveness for our estate agent clients. More than that, it has been the year that those clients helped us (and each other) understand just how to maximise that effectiveness.
Back at the beginning of 2012, building on our experience with the hospitality industry, we expected that the management of our estate agent clients' online reputations would be a big part of the value we would add; what we did not foresee was the direct effect it would have on driving new business. 2013 has been the year that proved...
- credible reviews drive enquiries through agents websites
- they are an invaluable aid to conversion
- they are an invaluable aid to client retention
Come aboard!
More than ever before, the facts, results and our clients' opinions of Dialogue speak for themselves. So we will be continuing our policy of ‘no contract’ for the first six months of membership up until 1 Jan 2014 - enabling you to test and prove Dialogue for your agency with the minimum of risk. Join now and see the results blossom in the spring!
Hotels - looking forward to 2014
Building on Proven Success
2013 has been a very big year for us at HelpHound: supported by and in constant conversation our clients we have learned so much more about how many benefits Dialogue can bring.
2013 has been a very big year for us at HelpHound: supported by and in constant conversation our clients we have learned so much more about how many benefits Dialogue can bring.
Here we are going to share this with you all (we’ve linked to the relevant detailed articles)...
- The positive effect on any (and every) given hotels’ online reputation is proven
- The direct link between improvement in online reputation (rankings on TripAdvisor, scores on Booking.com and the other OTAs, and, increasingly important, Google and increased revenue is proven
- The effect of Feedback Manager Plus - responding to reviews on our clients' behalf - is proven
- The success of combining Dialogue with back-end systems like ReviewPro and Revinate to refine guest feedback and aid guest retention is proven
On top of this, the experience we have gained
in managing the process for our hotel clients has proved invaluable: how to
maximize the harvest of guest emails and dovetailing our systems with the
hotels’ PMS – crucial to the effective operation of Dialogue – is making the
whole process easier and much more effective for our clients.
To summarise
There are no longer any lingering doubts about the effectiveness of Dialogue and its ability to drive revenue for hotels. We are able to positively guarantee that Dialogue will produce results, no matter where your hotel is currently ranked
Come aboard!
There are no longer any lingering doubts about the effectiveness of Dialogue and its ability to drive revenue for hotels. We are able to positively guarantee that Dialogue will produce results, no matter where your hotel is currently ranked
- If you're number 1 - Dialogue will considerably enhance you chances of remaining there
- If you're anywhere but number 1 - Dialogue will improve your ranking
- Dialogue will ensure that you can maintain and increase RevPAR
- Dialogue will positively impact on your guest retention rates
Come aboard!
Friday, 8 November 2013
HelpHound at the Negotiator - the Risks and Rewards of Reviews
A very full day on Tuesday, with Karen and Gabriella on our stand meeting clients and prospective clients and our CEO Robin Bruce speaking about 'the Risks and Rewards of Reviews'...
Here's a brief synopsis of Robin's presentation:
If you would like more detail on any of the above please contact Karen - on karen.hutchings@helphound.com or 020 7100-2233
Daniella and Karen await the surge! |
Here's a brief synopsis of Robin's presentation:
- Like it or not (and you should like it) your potential clients are looking for reviews
- So you should be serving them on your website
- Testimonials are so 2010 - they lack credibility
- You must have a strategy for managing negative comment
- Reviews must be verified and credible
- Don't link to external sites - return rates are very low
- Whatever system you adopt it must be moderated - so you can manage negatives
If you would like more detail on any of the above please contact Karen - on karen.hutchings@helphound.com or 020 7100-2233
Hotel websites are B-O-R-I-N-G!
Not our words, but straight from the BHA's blog: Hotel Websites are Boring! We recommend you read the whole piece. Here are just two extracts...
"...boring
your guests and sending them off to review sites where they feel like they get
real, straightforward information...”
And..."Don’t make them go to TripAdvisor..."
Our clients and other regular readers of this blog will have heard this before, but it's good when an industry leader like the BHA confirms our thinking.
Dialogue: showing your guests one of the things they want the most: verified credible reviews, where they will do you the most good: on your own website
Sunday, 3 November 2013
Rankings up = Revenue up - confirmed in a major Cornell report
At the end of last year Cornell (ranked one of the top 20 universities in the world) University Center of Hospitality Research conducted an in depth study of the 'Impact of Social Media on Lodging Performance'. This report is now available online direct from Cornell and we commend it to all our clients.
Here we will extract the key findings; if you have any questions at all please do not hesitate to contact your Karen or one of her team.
The core finding:
"The analysis finds the following. First, the percentage of consumers
consulting reviews at TripAdvisor prior to booking a hotel room has steadily increased over time, as
has the number of reviews they are reading prior to making their hotel choice. Second, transactional
data from Travelocity illustrate that if a hotel increases its review scores by 1 point on a 5-point scale
(e.g., from 3.3 to 4.3), the hotel can increase its price by 11.2 percent and still maintain the same
occupancy or market share."
And...
"Third, to measure the impact of user reviews on hotel pricing power, consumer demand, and revenue performance the study uses matched-sample data from ReviewPRO and STR. By matching ReviewPRO’s Global Review IndexTM with STR’s hotel sales and revenue data, a regression analysis finds that a 1-percent increase in a hotel’s online reputation score leads up to a 0.89-percent increase in price as measured by the hotel’s average daily rate (ADR). Similarly this
And...
"Third, to measure the impact of user reviews on hotel pricing power, consumer demand, and revenue performance the study uses matched-sample data from ReviewPRO and STR. By matching ReviewPRO’s Global Review IndexTM with STR’s hotel sales and revenue data, a regression analysis finds that a 1-percent increase in a hotel’s online reputation score leads up to a 0.89-percent increase in price as measured by the hotel’s average daily rate (ADR). Similarly this
1-percent increase in reputation also leads to an occupancy increase of up to 0.54 percent. Finally, this
1-percent reputation improvement leads up to a 1.42-percent increase in revenue per available room
(RevPAR)."
Other key findings...
User Generated Content During Consumers’ Hotel Search
Other key findings...
User Generated Content During Consumers’ Hotel Search
TripAdvisor is by far the dominant source for online
reviews in the hospitality space, with more than 75 million
reviews generated by some 32 million users.4 In terms of
the hotel choice process, as reported by Market Metrix,5
the tipping point came in 2010, as shown in Exhibit 1. At
this point, the guest experience mentioned in customer re-
views became the dominant factor in hotel selection, with
51 percent of survey respondents indicating they factored
guest experience factors into their hotel selection decision"
"The close proximity (to the purchase) of consumer visitation to TripAdvisor perhaps indicates that user reviews are some of the final and potentially pivotal criteria in the hotel selection process."
"More generally, OTA reviews, their quality and numbers, lead to increased conversion rates and improved pricing power
"Better reviews lead to higher prices, while lower reviews force prices lower at the OTA."
"Hotel operators have suspected that the effect of social media and user generated content on hotel performance has been strengthening. This paper provides a numerical confirmation and estimate of those effects. Reviews and review sites continue to be in the forefront when consumers are planning a hotel room purchase."
"...a 1-point increase in user review score (on an OTA’s 5-point scale) would allow a property
"The close proximity (to the purchase) of consumer visitation to TripAdvisor perhaps indicates that user reviews are some of the final and potentially pivotal criteria in the hotel selection process."
"More generally, OTA reviews, their quality and numbers, lead to increased conversion rates and improved pricing power
"Better reviews lead to higher prices, while lower reviews force prices lower at the OTA."
"Hotel operators have suspected that the effect of social media and user generated content on hotel performance has been strengthening. This paper provides a numerical confirmation and estimate of those effects. Reviews and review sites continue to be in the forefront when consumers are planning a hotel room purchase."
"...a 1-point increase in user review score (on an OTA’s 5-point scale) would allow a property
to increase price by 11.2 percent and maintain the same
purchase probability or market share."
In Summary:
For our clients:
- Rankings and scores are critical to increasing profitability
- Negative reviews must be minimised
- Positive reviews must be maximised
- Pure volume of reviews is critical; more (positive) reviews = higher profitability
- The OTAs' capacity to influence GoPPAR continues to increase
For our clients:
- You're doing everything right! But the more email addresses you can harvest, the more successful (and profitable) you will be
Friday, 1 November 2013
London's No 1 Hotel joins HelpHound
Welcome to the Zetter, voted London's No 1 Hotel by the Good Hotel Guide.
To see Dynamic Display working away on their home page go here
To see Dynamic Display working away on their home page go here
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
HelpHound - the Gold Standard for estate agents*
*A client's words - not ours.
If you did not see Channel 4's Dispatches programme last night it's available on 4OD; and here's Estate Agent Today's comment.
Dispatches has yet again highlighted the need for respectable estate agents to find a way of differentiating and distancing themselves from this kind of negative publicity. And what better way than to show credible client comments?
Well, that's what Patrick Rampton of Rampton Baseley said to us: that it was his fervent wish that HelpHound become that 'Gold Standard'. Awards and membership of professional bodies are all well and good, but prospective clients want (and need) the reassurance that Dialogue brings. It's why all our clients' review modules are headed by this...
...and it's the reason that the footer of the email inviting the review explains why you're working with HelpHound...
If you did not see Channel 4's Dispatches programme last night it's available on 4OD; and here's Estate Agent Today's comment.
Dispatches has yet again highlighted the need for respectable estate agents to find a way of differentiating and distancing themselves from this kind of negative publicity. And what better way than to show credible client comments?
Well, that's what Patrick Rampton of Rampton Baseley said to us: that it was his fervent wish that HelpHound become that 'Gold Standard'. Awards and membership of professional bodies are all well and good, but prospective clients want (and need) the reassurance that Dialogue brings. It's why all our clients' review modules are headed by this...
'Unbiased' and 'Independent' - the keys to credibility |
...and it's the reason that the footer of the email inviting the review explains why you're working with HelpHound...
Dialogue - showing you subscribe to the 'Gold Standard'