|
Omega Study Uncovers Traveler
Priorities
By Bill Poling
FAIRFAX, Va. -- Omega World Travel here knows that
over 50% of air travelers would be willing to pay up to $25 extra
for a nonstop flight.
It also knows that a comfortable bed is the top priority
for 35% of hotel guests, followed by a quiet room, which is favored
by 13%.
How does Omega know this? Simple: It asked.
Omega, a mega-chain with 100 full service branches
and some $750 million in sales, recently resumed its periodic Omega
World Travel Poll, which asks Omega clients, and random Web surfers,
to put in their two cents worth about things that matter to them.
The most recent poll reveals that 68% of respondents believe the
proposed United/US Airways merger will cause fares to rise.
The poll also shows that most business travelers (about
two-thirds) with free time tend to work in a little sightseeing
or just relax; 12% go shopping, 8% relax at the pool and only 3%
take in a cultural event.
Thirty-nine percent of respondents said that when
they're on the road, they read the main section of the newspaper
first, while only 10% first turn to the sports page.
Not every one of these nuggets of information is going
to improve Omega's bottom line, but agency president Gloria Bohan
thinks it's a good thing anyway.
"It's interesting," she said, and it allows the agency
to find opportunities to "add extra value" by building up a storehouse
of information about traveler preferences.
And every once in a while a tidbit from the poll comes
in handy during a supplier negotiation, Bohan said.
It's one thing to say "We think our clients prefer
this," but it's something else to say "Our research shows that 72%
of travelers feel this way," she added.
A little hard data, Bohan continued, "gives us a little
more of a realistic approach."
In addition, it reinforces the agency's ongoing practice
of soliciting feedback from clients about their trips, which reinforces
the idea that the agency cares about how things go. In short, "We
want them to know that we want to know," Bohan said.
Omega is a travel agency with a heavy emphasis on
corporate and government business travel management, and as such,
it does not employ an army of trained statisticians to conduct rigorously
scientific statistical research on traveler preferences.
But the poll results from known clients who respond
by fax, track closely to results from random visitors to the Web
site, which the company thinks is a good sign.
Omega tries to keep things simple to avoid quirks
and ambiguities. A characteristic question on the latest poll offered
just two possible responses: "What do you think of baggage templates
or sizers on airport x-ray machines?"
The question elicited 509 answers; 77% said "favor
them," and 23% said "don't favor them." No fuss. No footnotes.
Next question.
Return to Omega in the News
|