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PARTNERSHIP
OF SALES AND TECHNOLOGY --
USING TECH TOOLS TO "SELL" THE HOTEL |
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The
hospitality industry has used innovation and imagination to manipulate and
maximize tech applications for everything from revenue management to customer
relationship management. Why then have we not given more thought to the creative
uses of technology in the hotel sales process?
One answer is that while we have provided
upgraded tech access to our guests, the sales department and administrative
offices usually get hand-me-down hardware and sometimes are not even included in
the high-speed Internet equation. In my consulting practice, I often go into the
sales departments of relatively sophisticated hotels that are still on a manual
system or have an automated contact management system that no one has ever
trained them on because the sales staff has turned over several times since it
was installed. YIKES!
We need to put the same amount of
creativity into applying technology to the sales function as we have in other
functions of the industry – and it needs to be done at all levels of selling,
especially at the property level! The use of technology in sales is then only
limited by the imagination of the sales staff.
In my seminars, I often ask the
participants how they are using their web site and virtual tours in the sales
process. Those that have them indicate that they always refer clients or email a
link to their site or virtual tour if one is posted. They are using the site as
their primary fulfillment collateral and I re mend that. Save the money on the
threefold color brochures and invest it in web site development. However,
pictures only tell, they don't sell. Pictures depict features not benefits.
I have often thought that hotel web sites
should have tabs that are geared to the different market segments of a hotel. In
this way, the copy and photography can be geared to the specific benefits of
each market segment. Current web sites are often like the old cover letters that
sales people used to use for every inquiry and follow-up. Those were the letters
that "feature spewed" (pardon my language) by having a list of every conceivable
feature in bullet points regardless of the type of client that it was addressed
to.
The following are a few of the ways that
hotel sales can use these tech tools to sell customers on the benefits of the
hotel not just tell them about its features:
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Voice Guided
Virtual Tours. Virtual tours are great tools. However, those
that spin in a 360-degree view of a guest room make me a bit dizzy. As busy as
most people are today, it is often difficult to get potential customers even
from the same city to a hotel for a site inspection. However, rather than have
the customer log onto the web site or take the virtual tour alone, why not
establish a telephone appointment so that the client and the sales person can
walk through the site while on the phone together? This allows the sales person
to point out the features of the hotel that are true benefits to this customer
and to sell the hotel's services. The sales person should prepare for this site
presentation in the same way that they would for a "live" site inspection. The
good news is that with a virtual tour, you don't have to pre-inspect the rooms
and it usually doesn't cost you lunch.
In developing virtual tours on the web
site, keep in mind that the average attention span of most people is relatively
short. Pick the most representative digital photography for inclusion but limit
your selections to those that will have the broadest appeal. I visited one
hotel's site and they had eighty pictures posted -- way too overwhelming for
most site visitors. Granted it was a large hotel but when you have seen one
boardroom, you've pretty much seen them all.
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Bank of Digital
Photography. I learned this from one of my seminar
participants from a resort area reservation service. The participant was the
manager of the rescom office and she kept digital photography of all the properties
and the destination on the hard drive of the computer, or a "bank" of digital
photography. While on the phone with a potential guest, she would discover what
"benefits" they were looking for in their destination and property selection.
She would then ask them if they were online or if they could go online and she
would email them photos of the features that fulfilled their expressed desires.
She would then describe the picture in terms of the benefits to the potential
guest. Need I tell you what her "capture" rate was for reservations?!
The "bank" of photography was the same as
those used to build the web site. However, there were also some that were not
used on the site. Most of the phone calls were from potential customers who had
visited the site but had questions or concerns or simply wanted to speak to a
live human versus making their reservations on-line. (Yes, there still are some
of those around!)
Photography more often "sells" when it
includes people using a feature of the hotel. For example, rather than simply
having a photograph of the children's camp or playground, photos of children
playing and having fun using these facilities sell the concept rather than just
telling that the facility is there. Recall those stock photos of a hotel
restaurant where people are sitting at the table staring at each other but not
actually eating or drinking or appearing to have fun. The people in those photos
were like the furniture.
The sales staff can use this photography in
much the same way. Even if a planner has e for a "live" site, they often
forget certain features. Many of them are coming to look at many hotels on the
same trip. Depending upon the number of hotels that they tour, their memory will
often place the bathroom of one hotel in another hotel's guest room. An emailed
photo will refresh their memory or speak to question or concern. It can be a
powerful tool to reinforce their initial impression and over e a potential
objection. For other groups, it can also provide an image of a benefit that a
client requires in one situation that they didn't require in a previous meeting.
Photography of your destination and area
attractions can assist you in making the sale and promoting off-site activities.
This is more powerful than simply referring them to the local tourist
organization's web site where they will also be exposed to other properties and
perhaps rates.
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Email
Postcards. Sales people are always looking for creative ways
to stay in touch with accounts. Email postcards can fill this requirement if
kept fresh and not overused.
I believe that everyone understands by now
that unsolicited mailings in the form of letters never get opened. Postcards, on
the other hand, receive a glance prior to being thrown away. You at least have a
shot at gaining the recipients attention.
Unsolicited attachments to emails are like
mailings in envelopes. Busy people trying to manage their Inboxes most often
delete them prior to opening. In addition, people are loath to open attachments
that they are not expecting due to viruses.
An email postcard opens automatically. The
visual appears in the recipients Inbox and is at least glanced at prior to
deleting. This is an opportunity to gain the recipient's attention. Be very
careful about not using this medium in a manner that could be considered "spam"
-- it should not be blasted to anyone who hasn't given "permission" to receive
information about your hotel.
Let's differentiate between email "blasts"
and approaching a potential new client. Email blasts to large number of
recipients are extremely useful in informing past and potential customers about
new developments or promotions at a property to those who have indicated a
desire to receive them.
An email postcard can be a way to approach
a prospect when telephone contact has failed as it does frequently. This is a
tailored communication to one person versus a mass communication to many.
Email postcard templates are available on
newer versions of Microsoft Publisher 2002/deluxe Edition. They can be modified
to contain your message or approach (remember to sell benefits to the prospect)
and can contain a stock image or use an image from the bank of photography.
Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express have
a Stationary feature that allows you to customize designs and colors for emails.
One of my seminar participants uses this to send attention-getting emails to
clients and potential clients.
These are not to be used for email "blasts"
but for customized communication to prospects and clients, especially when phone
calls and regular emails get lost in the "chatter" of hotel solicitations. These
postcards can set you apart from your competitors.
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It's
a tough market out there. Sales people need creative tools to push the process
forward. Those who are able to relate to their clients in a technologically
sophisticated way exemplify that the property and the sales staff are prepared
to offer their clients the services required in a high-speed environment.
Sales is the engine that drives revenue.
Investing in tech tools and training sales people to use them enables them to
sell in such an environment. By ensuring that they have access to these tools,
the property's exposure is enhanced.
I believe there ought to be a teaming of the
sales department and the IT function to ensure that tech tools that are
available sell -- not just tell. Imagine the power of those two creative forces
-- the possibilities are endless!
Carol Verret is President of Carol Verret
Consulting and Training, a company offering consulting and training seminars to
the hospitality industry in the areas of sales and marketing and customer
service. The company's newest product, The Training
Byte Series, offers short, real time webcasts on a variety of sales
training issues. Visit
www.carolverret.com or email her at
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Carol Verret, Owner of Carol Verret Consulting & Training, is a twenty-year
veteran of the hotel industry. She arrived in Denver in 1984 in the midst of an
economic downturn and quickly established herself as an expert in sales and
marketing in hotel turn-around situations, applying her formula for REVPAR
improvement. To learn more about Carol Verret, Consulting and Training, visit
her web site at http://www.carolverret.com
Send email to
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ResultsWoW Sales and Customer Service Newsletter by Carol Verret
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| copyright © Carol Verret, 2002-2003 |
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