EyeforTravel: Innovations in Travel Search
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Presentations by the following executives…with a lot of good research data to follow:
- Krista Pappas, Microsoft Bing Travel
- Gary Jackson, Google Travel
- Anne Payne, BeDynamic
- Yen Lee, Uptake
Yen Lee of Uptake – “The Long, Fat Tail of Search”
Numbers that really matter
- 73% of consumers search before they make a booking
- They search an average of 10 times
- 86% of leads are generated by organic search (there IS a free lunch)
- Typical travel search is 3.1 keywords
- It’s becoming more specific: was ‘chicago’…then ‘chicago hotels’…now it may be ‘chicago family hotels’
- (this means they give us more context now)
- Always tailor unique content to consumer preferences
Krista Pappas of Microsoft – “Maximizing SEM In a Tough Travel Economy”
EyeforTravel: How To Use Mobile Across the Travel Buying Process
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Google and Microsoft explain how consumers are interacting with mobile…and how suppliers can reach them.
Thomas O’Neil, Google Travel
Mobile landing pages: designing the user experience
- landing pages are evolving
- 4 great examples
- Hotels.com/iPhone
- being first moving has big advantage
- have 1 million+ app downloads
- m.toyota.com
- m.cnn.com
- iPhone.fandago.com
- Hotels.com/iPhone
- key take-away: there needs to be optimized landing pages for the consumer
- not everyone has an smart phone…design for less
- search google webmasters: “mobile seo”
- search algorithm is different for mobile sites
Mobile search: what consumers are doing
- not usually willing to do more than one search
- probably won’t go beyond top 2-3 search result listings
- they search for roughly the same amount of words…but search less often
- SEO is extremely important. If you’re not in the top 1-3 results, you may as well not even be there.
Advertising on the go: opportunities to reach individuals
- 4 types of Google advertising opportunities
- WAP search
- HTML search
- content network (on other sites)
- YouTube videos
- understand which apps your audience is using to choose advertising opportunities
- Google provides a high level of reporting options
Read more…
What the new Microsoft-Yahoo deal means for hotel search advertising
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Microsoft and Yahoo recently announced a major partnership to develop their search technologies. This is an important development in the search industry, so I wanted to briefly share the facts with you.
What happened
Microsoft and Yahoo created a partnership where:
- Microsoft’s technology and Bing! algorithm will power Yahoo search
- Yahoo will become the exclusive sales force for both companies’ premium (large) advertisers
- Self-serve (smaller) advertisers will use Microsoft AdCenter for both platforms
- Each company will maintain their separate display advertising businesses
The agreement will last for 10 years. However, the deal must pass regulatory approval in 6 months, and will take at least 2 years after that to complete.
Why it’s important
Basically, this alliance was formed to make a stronger competitive alternative to Google. Since Google currently has around a 78% paid search market share, it was often not worthwhile to develop separate ad campaigns for the Yahoo and Microsoft platforms (especially for smaller properties).
Hotel advertising implications
Nothing will change immediately: this is a long-term deal. It will take many months (if not years) to fully realize. But it’s encouraging to see a serious competitor to Google in the search marketing space. The combined R&D capabilities of these two companies could drive innovation…which is always a good thing.
What’s your opinion on this development?

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