Monday, November 23, 2009

Optimise your landing pages to ensure you retain your hotel’s website traffic

Often overlooked when one is tweaking bids and refining keywords lists within an AdWords campaign, is the importance of landing pages. You can have the most appropriate keywords, be targeting the best possible traffic and have perfectly crafted and compelling advert copy, yet lose reservations because your landing page is not effective. Making changes on your pages together with tweaking your campaigns, will improve the account and convert good click-through rates into lucrative reservations. Here are three simple steps you should follow to make sure you do this for your hotel.

1.Are your users getting what they want?

When a user clicks on your sponsored link advert, they already have specific expectations about the page they are being transferred to. If you’ve stated ‘beautiful golf courses within walking distance’ or ‘10% discounts online’, it is essential that these promises are repeated in a prominent position on the landing page. Cohesion of messages creates synergy between the sponsored link advert and the hotel and its facilities. If you fail to meet these expectations, your landing page will fail to resonate with the user. This, in turn, leads to a higher than necessary abandonment rate and far fewer reservations. To decipher which pages may be letting you down, you must critically analyse your adverts and their landing pages, and re-work the positioning of your “call to action” phrases where necessary. Google analytics will give you bounce rate statistics per landing page – this is valuable information and allows you to evaluate the effect that re-working your landing page has on your abandonment rate.

2.Are you using ‘call to action’ ?

A ‘call to action’ is a phrase that entices a web visitor to do something, for example the statement “buy now” is a call to action. Website visitors clicking through with the intention of making an enquiry or reserving a room on your web site, can falter if clear ‘call to action’ phrases are not used on the landing page. Hiding contact forms or ‘reserve online’ buttons amid unnecessary on-page clutter, dilutes the impact of the call to action. You must add a very clear call-to-action, such as a large button - this will increase web site conversions by giving the reader a clear path through to the web booking engine.

If your landing page has more than three or four paragraphs of text, or is otherwise quite ‘busy’ due to graphics, make sure you use ‘calls to action’ consistently throughout the page. You should not leave your website visitor scrolling back up and down the page in order to find the online reservation link. Remember you have paid for that click; therefore you must give your hotel the best chance of converting that click into a reservation.

3.Have you performance-tested your adverts?

Testing performance is a pretty simple piece of advice, but it is surprising how many advertisers let this basic good practice guideline fall by the wayside after the first flush of enthusiasm has passed. Testing a landing page’s effectiveness can be as simple as trying two different page titles or as complicated as changing form layout, number of fields, content length and style.

Getting the most out of your landing page will often also hinge on how visitors got there in the first place. So, while you’re in a testing frame of mind, you could at the same time check the messages used within the advert text. Typical parameters include changing titles, the inclusion of different special offers and discounts, and using varying ‘call to action’ phrases.

Following these three simple steps will ultimately optimise each of your landing pages and secure your hotel an increased return on investment from your paid adverts on Google. These activities are equally important to consider within best practice SEO. Whilst they may not turbo your organic rankings, they do play a positive role within your digital marketing strategy in its entirety.

About GlobRes

GlobRes provides hotel reservations and digital marketing solutions for hoteliers globally. GlobRes offers Google AdWords account management, online reputation management and social media management. Complete our online contact form for more information.

Editors Note: Samantha Hasler leads the Digital Marketing Team at GlobRes www.globres.com. Please direct all press queries to marketing@globres.com

Effectively manage your hotel’s reputation in the 21st Century

Long gone are the days of private complaints from guests. The birth of web 2.0 media has taken visitors’ complaints into the public forum of the internet, meaning that a hotel’s reputation is under scrutiny by all prospective guests. Guest comments and ratings are now openly accessible, yet countless hoteliers are not tracking what is being said. Published negative reviews can have a detrimental effect on your reservation levels because customers are able to apply a more thorough set of criteria and gain (what they believe to be) a truer picture of a hotel as it is based on past experiences. The 21st century traveller is savvy and far more driven to comparison shop. Review sites such as TripAdvisor provide visible quality measurements and yet a majority of hoteliers are missing out on the value these insights provide – to learn from these reviews and to respond effectively to them.

According to TripAdvisor, 57% of consumers read reviews before deciding to book a hotel. Other statistics put the total influence at around 40% to 65%. Statistics aside, with around 24 million consumers reviewing hotels on TripAdvisor alone every month, it is clear that the amount of guests relying on other people’s opinion, is growing. Though hoteliers do consider reviews to be important for their reputation, many do not monitor and track what is being said about them on the internet. But is tracking alone enough? To combat negative reviews and ensure hoteliers protect their hotel’s good name, action must be taken. For many smaller properties, the problem lies in stretched resources - without adding hotel reputation management to everyday activities. Reputation management requires a commitment of time, time to track reviews and to create management responses or, where necessary and for more escalated cases, to communicate via telephone with the said reviewer.

Understanding negative reviews is vital for successful reputation management. If time and time again the same problems rear their heads, it is vital action is taken. Often, negative reviews are rooted in the hotel simply not meeting the expectations of the traveller. Perhaps the resort is described and rated as a 4 star on the website, but it simply does not measure against other 4 star hotels and therefore causes disappointment. Reviews can be very insightful in terms of the expectations of the visitor – expectations that may have been set by the website content. Hoteliers should be prepared to be flexible and adapt according to the feedback they receive from past guests. However, only by tracking reviews and dialogues about the hotel, can the hotel achieve this.

There are hundreds of automated review management tools available on the market. These range from free tools to tools that require a monthly management fee. Paying over the odds for an automated tool is not wise, especially if you don’t have the resources available to actually “do something” about what you read. Finding an agency you can trust to manage your online reputation in its entirety, would certainly be preferable, especially since hiring a full-time person on staff would be far more expensive. If you are in the favourable position to dedicate time to reputation management, ensure you follow these vital tips to increase your success:

1. Track what is being said about your hotel online.
2. Respond publicly to the review.

Do – Thank the reviewer for their comments, apologise for any genuine negative experiences, explain the measures you are putting in place to prevent such an occurrence again, make yourself available for an offline chat should the reviewer wish to contact you.

Don’t – Be Angry, derogatory or get personal with the reviewer, do not accuse the reviewer of being a fraud (this may happen, however it is hard to prove and will not solve the issue of the review and your response being public), do not reply publicly offering a discount or complimentary stay – this could encourage abuse. If you do wish to offer this, do it offline and request that you would expect the review to be removed in return.

3. Make appropriate changes within the hotel or to the website to address issues that consistently manifest themselves through your reviews.
4. Advertise that you have fixed the problem! Add this information to the review site if appropriate.
5. Be proactive and encourage your guests to leave their positive feedback when they exit the hotel.

Ultimately, the manner in which you respond to reviews will shape your hotel’s public persona to potential guests. The fact that you are able to do this publicly creates a unique opportunity to address and resolve issues and guarantee you do not have the same problem again. This will lead to better reviews in the future, the power of which should not be underestimated.

About GlobRes

GlobRes provides online reputation management services and social media management services to hotels globally.

GlobRes connects hotels with their guests through increased exposure via all channels including GDS, IDS, Digital Marketing and the hotel’s own website. Complete our online contact form for more information.


Editors Note: Please direct all press queries to Samantha Hasler. Tel +41 41 500 0111 or email marketing@globres.com www.globres.com

Monday, November 2, 2009

On-page optimization tactics that ‘win big’ when it comes to organic rankings

Ensuring your website is search engine friendly, must be one of hoteliers’ most important online marketing considerations. Unfortunately, if this is overlooked during those vital months of website design and implementation, you could be left with a website and no organic traffic. But, all is not lost! Previously I have discussed the importance of off-page SEO techniques to increase your website presence, namely, quality link building through content production and distribution. However, there are also simple on-page tweaks you can make to your website to improve your organic rankings or, in the very least, give your website the best opportunity for indexing by the search engines.

Improving user interaction and user experience, will ultimately increase your search engine rankings. A primary concern of any search engine is the accuracy of its search results. If they send a user off to your web site, will that user be happy to land there? Will your site be relevant to his query? If so, users will happily go back to that search engine, knowing that it can direct them to useful, relevant sites. On-page optimization is a vital component of any successful SEO strategy. It encompasses everything you see on the page; unique page titles, URL structures, meta tags, image labeling, and more….

Do all your pages have unique page titles?
This may be a basic consideration, but unique and accurate page titles are the foundation on which more dynamic search engine optimisation changes are built. As new content is uploaded, page titles can be overlooked. If you have a large site, running through all pages will take time. The title tag of a page tells the search engine and the user what that section of your site is about and, more importantly, will normally be used by the search engine to populate the site’s listing information in the search engine page results (SERPs.) The title can include not only keywords but details of your geographical location – showing search engines and users that this page is relevant to their query.

When checking page titles, take the time to cast your eye over the ‘meta description’ tag. While a succinct summary won’t turbo power your rankings on Google, it will tell the search engine and user what the page is about.

Are your URL structures suitable?

An organised site is one that is easily accessible and easily readable by the search engine spiders. A logical file structure with information arranged into folders should be accompanied by a URL that uses recognisable words and that could be used to ascertain what the page is about. For example, rather than www.thisismywebsite.com/web/docs/page677890/x/0078.html, a URL such as www.thisismywebsite.com/articles/seo-site-audit.html would be far more effective. Site users and search engines would be able to make an educated guess as to the content of the page. The first example is unwieldy, which may also cause problems when targeting backlinks. The second URL can easily be copied and pasted and any missing parts, such as the second half of the title of the page, would be apparent – whereas a structure using parameters and codes, as in example 1, is not easily readable. In this instance, it would not be apparent if a section of the link had been missed when copying and pasting for a backlink.

Is your site navigation as simple as it can be?

Google’s guidelines state that, while its results are shown at page level, their spiders like to have a global overall view of where each page sits in relation to the rest of the site. So, a logical navigational structure will help the search engine build a more accurate view of your site as a whole.

Site navigation can be thought of as the layers of an onion; users peel back each layer to go from one stage to the next and travel deeper into the hotel website. Each time changes are made, don’t forget to update your sitemap (the on-site directory of pages within the site) and the XML Sitemap (the sitemap submitted to the search engines).

Is your content compelling?
Easily the most important of all on-page aspects, a site rich in compelling and unique content, will win big in the search results and with conversion rates. Is your content compelling to the search engines? This requires more in-depth keyword research as you’ll want to be sure you’re including the phrases that searchers will key in when looking for your product or service. Search trends change, so keeping an eye on keywords proving popular will help content appear relevant and up-to-date.

Keyword placement is equally important in content, so check the titles and sub-heads used on each page of information. If newly discovered keywords or phrases, that you have only recently begun to favour, are not prominently positioned on the page, it’s time to get editing. When revising and creating information for the site, look at how you have linked from one page to the other. This anchor text is just as important on-page as it is off-page. Descriptive anchor text guides search engines through a site in much the same way roadside signposts help guide a driver to their ultimate destination. What’s more, the better the anchor text is within a site, the easier it is for customers to find what they are looking for.

Have your images been overlooked?

No matter how large or small your site, you’ll have at least one or two images on show to your visitors. However, there is a lot more to including a photo on your site than simply uploading it with a relevant caption. As a file based addition, an image will have a file name and (hopefully) alt text.

File names and alt tags should be straightforward. Alt tags in particular should describe the image as accurately as possible, so visitors, unable to see the image, still get an idea of what should fill that space. In the case of an image being used as a link through to another page within the site, the filename will perform much the same function as anchor text, making keyword inclusion and relevant information essential.

While basic points, these are easy to overlook as a site develops over a period of time, It really should be checked routinely, to make sure the most is made of the limited optimization possibilities afforded by pictures.


About GlobRes

GlobRes provides hotel reservations and marketing solutions for hoteliers globally. GlobRes offers hotel website design for free when purchased with hotel reservation systems. Complete our online contact form for more information.

Editors Note: Samantha Hasler leads the Digital Marketing Team at GlobRes www.globres.com. Please direct all press queries to marketing@globres.com