Sunday, 25 September 2011

Practical Tips for Improving an Hotel Website


To create a website is a simple task. To create a website which generates revenues, builds your customer-base, increases ROI and builds your brand is a completely different ballgame. For hotel owners, the option of having a website for the sake of it is increasingly becoming a non-option.

In today's economy and with more and more customers going online, the hotel website must:

1. Support and Sell your brand
2. Sell your products (and special offers)
3. Be easy to Use
4. Allow users to book and pay online
5. Allow users to contact hotel

Now, let's take these in turn.

Support and Sell your hotel brand

First off, your website is not a separate entity from your hotel in the users' mind. It is part and parcel of your business and if users are getting the wrong impression about your brand from your website, then you clearly stand to lose out on a very lucrative market. The website must boldly declare your brand for all to see. You don't want your customers coming to your site and wondering whether they are really at the right place.

For added comfort, why not go one step further and provide your customers with location information. If you hotel is close to the train station or 10 minutes from a popular, cosy restaurant for couples, why not share that information. Oh and how about information about local transportation services and how you can help your customers find whatever information they are looking.

Tips for building your hotel brandthrough your website:

(1) Feature highly informative and persuasive content

(2) High-resolution images of your logo, your offerings (rooms and other amenities), and possibly your staff (with smiley faces). For an added touch of class, you might want to add photos of happy customers (not necessary).

Both these two working together must answer basic questions about your brand: why should people want to stay at your hotel? What makes it unique? What kind of experience should they expect? Your website should make me want to visit the hotel. That's the whole point of persuasion.

Websites generally are highly effective branding tools (or maybe not) depending on how much attention you pay to planning.

Sell your products and any special offers

A superb brand-building website with scarce product information is akin to a well-groomed, well-dressed and well-spoken salesman without knowledge about the product. Quality information on your products is one major key to selling online. Whatever it takes to persuade your customers about your products, the website must take care of it. Photos, reviews (if you customer expects that), videos (if you can afford it), and as much content as is necessary (but not more).

In addition to selling your product, the hotel website must highlight special offers to website users. Don't make them grovel before you present your tantalising offer.

Two simple tips apply here:

(1) Provide comprehensive, accurate and relevant product information (including images and video if appropriate)

(2) Make the product information easy to find through easy and clear navigation systems

Customers have a right to know what they are buying, and especially with the unique (intangible) nature of hospitality products, it is important that your website users can picture what they are getting so they can make an informed decision.

Be easy to Use
Your website is designed for human use and as such, you really cannot substitute usability with flashy designs. For a website which is serious about making money, your customers must be able to use it. Navigation, accessibility, functionality are all part of the big usability picture.

This is one area in which you need significant investment. You don't need to add new features, just make sure that the features on your website work in the way they are supposed to work; how your users expect them to work. Links must work as links (not colored text). Speaking of, links must show up as links (different from the rest of the text).

Tip:

(1) Hire a web designer who knows a thing or two about user-centred design

Must allow users to book and pay online

This one is tricky. If you haven't got the budget for an online booking system, your website must have at the very least, information on how to book or purchase products on offer. If you have the budget and resources for an online booking system, I urge you to spare no expenses in getting the very best within your budget. Consult widely on what technologies are available and go for the very best you can afford.

Online booking systems come in all forms. You can choose to subscribe to a service like Pegasus or Synxis (now part of SABRE hospitality solutions). You also have the choice of installing one for your organisation where you control everything about the software. The options are many.

Tip:

Consult widely on what options are available to you.

Provide contact Information to your users

Your website cannot answer every question your customers may have. One thing is guaranteed. Your customers will have questions and you are well-advised to provide useful and accurate contact information.

It goes without saying (but it still must be said), customers like it when a vendor responds promptly to inquiries. Also, the responses are better appreciated when they are relevant to the question.

Tip:

(1) Provide a contact form to make contact via email easy or provide an email address

(2) Provide one (or preferably) more telephone numbers to comfort those customers who may feel apprehensive otherwise.

So there you go� simple tips to improve your hotel website and make it tick. There are more than a hundred ways to improve hotel websites. If you'd like to learn more about web and content strategies, head over to Joom Advisor and sign up to our bi-weekly newsletter.


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