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THE GREAT ESCAPE: Rethinking Travel’s Path to Purchase.
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INTRODUCTION
KEY FINDINGS
It’s hard to think of a time when holidaying was as easy as choosing a destination, packing a bag, and hitting the road. An annual necessity for most, travel is our tonic to monotony. It is daily life done better, our best selves, better - the world as we know it but with a big juicy cherry on top.
Unfortunately, when a global pandemic like COVID-19 strikes, governed heavily by tough restrictions, lockdowns and quarantines, our dreams have felt more fantasy than reality. The road to recovery for the travel industry has had so many twists and turns that we can’t decide if we are more lost now than we were 18 months ago. With several hurdles, from red lists to cancellations to refund policies, it’s hard to envisage whether things will ever really go back to how they were. This being said, with the world becoming a more vaccinated place, pent-up demand has never felt so surface level and ready to burst. Because, if anything, a worldwide lockdown only makes us want to escape more, right? Essentially, the real clarity going forward is not going to come from us, the marketers, or the brands, but the consumers themselves. The dreamers, the planners, the buyers, and the holiday-lovers. And not just where they’re clicking or what keywords they’re searching, but how they’re feeling . If 2022 is the big travel come-back, what is it going to look like? Having been out of practice for so long, what are consumers valuing the most for when they return and how have these values been affected by the pandemic? How are people getting from A to B, and from that we mean wanting to get away to actually getting away? To find these answers, we’ve asked them ourselves. Together with Travelzoo, Accord Marketing have surveyed holidaymakers to find out what the past 18 months have done to their perception of the travel industry and how they’re navigating their way through the new (or perhaps same- old) consumer journey.
The dreaming stage begins when the ‘need’ for a holiday becomes a reality but, against COVID-19, crossing this line is easier said than done. Now the destination is the first functional decision.
During the pandemic, a new stage has emerged: the period of pause that sits right at the end of planning and just before booking.
Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Key findings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Methodology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Setting the scene . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Travel path to purchase . . . . . . 8 What is the path to purchase? . . . 15 Dreaming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Booking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Advocacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 What sources of information are used across the journey? . . . 34 How have consumer travel purchase behaviours changed? . . 36 What this all means for travel marketers . . . . . . . . . 38 Summary & key takeaways . . . 46
To talk to planners, brands must, above all, be helpful and be a reliable source of information. Marketers should move messaging from the purely emotional into the helpfully functional.
45% of people want to speak to a travel professional whilst dreaming and planning (vs 46% when ready to book).
‘What’ brands say must be appropriate and empathetic and, as our research shows, should prioritise messages around flexibility and transparency. This is most important at the end of the booking stage, to address one of our new behaviours, the ‘fear of cancellation’.
Whilst on holiday a key motivator is that of an enriching holiday experience, often one caused by that initial emotional trigger when dreaming.
The pandemic’s dent on the travel industry means advocacy has never been so important. Word of mouth has always been the most powerful form of advertising and, right now, people really need reassurance from those who have gone away that the magic is still there.
3
Method ■ 10-minute online survey ■ Fieldwork conducted in August 2021 >Page 1 Page 2-3 Page 4-5 Page 6-7 Page 8-9 Page 10-11 Page 12-13 Page 14-15 Page 16-17 Page 18-19 Page 20-21 Page 22-23 Page 24-25 Page 26-27 Page 28-29 Page 30-31 Page 32-33 Page 34-35 Page 36-37 Page 38-39 Page 40-41 Page 42-43 Page 44-45 Page 46-47 Page 48
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