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INDUSTRY NEWS
Travel Industry
Announces Thousands of Jobs for Workers Displaced by Hurricane
Katrina
The
travel industry announced thousands of jobs available to workers
displaced by Hurricane Katrina. The positions appear on www.katrinajobs.org,
a clearinghouse for travel and tourism industry jobs developed
jointly by The Travel Industry Association of America (TIA), in
partnership with the Travel & Tourism Coalition and the Travel
Business Roundtable.
The travel industry in the affected areas of
Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama accounts for $18.3 billion
in travel-related business annually and more than 260,000 industry
jobs. The travel and tourism industry is the largest private employer
in New Orleans.
Hundreds of hospitality and travel & tourism
companies currently have posted positions on the site, with others
expected to join the effort and list open positions. Furthermore,
businesses from any American industry can also post available
jobs. Job seekers have the opportunity to post their resumes,
job qualifications and search the available openings.
TIA is also creating a special section on its
website to gather information and provide links to efforts performed
by others in the travel industry in support of those affected
by the recent hurricane. The site will also include statistics
that show the travel-related economic impact on the devastated
regions.
Companies that wish to post positions should
go to www.katrinajobs.org.
Source www.tia.org
Travel Industry
Association and D.K. Shifflet & Associates Ltd Partner to
Provide "State-of-the-Art" Travel Research
Two leaders in the travel industry announced
a market research partnership that will significantly improve
the travel industry’s research-based information. This new
partnership will better serve the U.S. destination markets and
launch new research information products for other sectors such
as cruise, gaming and timeshare.
The Travel Industry Association of America (TIA),
whose renowned TravelScope program has been widely used among
its 2,000 members and others in the travel industry to monitor
U.S. travel volume and profile existing and emerging travel markets,
and D.K. Shifflet & Associates (DKS&A), which has specialized
in market research for the destination marketing, travel and lodging
industries under the umbrella brand name DIRECTIONS®, announced
they will combine survey operations and jointly release an enhanced
product under the name TIA TravelScope®/DIRECTIONS® by
DKS&A.
“While maintaining our reputation for independent
analysis and insight, we will be able to take advantage of DKS&A’s
sophisticated ongoing survey, as well as their research capabilities
and user-friendly software, DIRECTABSSM, to provide additional
information and to offer an even better TravelScope product to
our members and clients,” said Suzanne Cook, TIA’s
Senior Vice President of Research. “This new partnership
will enable us to focus on providing richer information that is
even more relevant and timely by leveraging more than two decades
of experience and expertise from each of the two industry leaders.”
Doug Shifflet, President of DKS&A, said:
“With the support of and input from TIA, we have now created
one source of ongoing consumer intelligence and benchmarking of
total industry volume and traveler activity in each sector, including
destinations, airlines, lodging, traveler activities and more.
We will be providing a state-of-the-art product developed and
reviewed by the most experienced minds in the business.”
Source: www.tia.org
Price not Always
King in Leisure Travel Decisions
The latest study from the Travel Industry Association
of America (TIA), Leisure Travel Planning: How Consumers Make
Travel Decisions, shows that leisure travelers decide where
they want to go and for how long before they consider the price
tag.
The study helps travel industry professionals
understand leisure travel decision-making among U.S. residents
and the role of pricing in a highly competitive environment.
Based on the responses of more than 5,000 consumers
who had taken at least one overnight leisure trip in the past
year, leisure travelers most often decide on the trip destination
before other decisions. Also, travelers tend to make the key decisions
of destination and trip duration before deciding on a trip budget.
“Travelers continue to shop mercilessly
for the lowest prices after they’ve made these two decisions,”
TIA’s Suzanne Cook, Senior Vice-President, Research, commented
on the report. “Obviously the destination or company that
gets travelers interested in their offerings before the question
turns to price has an advantage.”
Many factors affect leisure travel decisions:
The trip occasion has the greatest influence overall (52% reported
this as very or extremely influential). Travel companions (46%),
time available (43%), and available finances (42%) also were important
influencers. The time of year (38%), travel prices (32%), and
information sources (21%) played lesser roles.
The most popular leisure trip occasions are:
entertainment (for vacation or short getaways), family-centered,
outdoor recreation, and combined business/pleasure. Findings suggest
that money may not be travelers’ first concern when planning
travel. In fact, more than half (55%) do not stick to a rigid
budget as they travel, allowing themselves to stay flexible with
their spending. Only about 14 percent of travelers stick to an
exact budget while they are taking a leisure trip and 31 percent
of leisure trips do not have a budget at all.
When selecting a leisure travel destination,
important factors for travelers include a destination where they
feel safe (46%), available activities (45%), and nearby friends/family
(43%). Deals and discounts (22%) mentioned as the least important
factor when choosing a destination.
Leisure Travel Planning also takes an
in-depth look at the accommodation and transportation choices
among U.S. leisure travelers. The study shows that location (60%)
and comfort (57%) are priorities in choosing accommodations. Also
important are the cost of the room (47%) and privacy (42%). Of
slightly lesser importance are amenities (32%), the ability to
accommodate the size of the travel party (28%) and special deals/promotions/discounts.
Also included in this report is data and
analysis regarding information used for planning a trip and the
parties involved, as well as methods for booking various components
of the trip. Overall, the report helps to illustrate the complexity
of leisure travel planning.
Source: www.tia.org
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