Friday, August 28, 2009

Market your Bed & Breakfast through Word of Mouth





The most affordable method of advertising a Bed & Breakfast is through positive “Word of Mouth”, which can be achieved by making sure that each departing guest has had the best possible hospitality experience during their stay at your Bed and Breakfast.

Considering that a content B&B guest might tell one other person about their positive experience at your inn while an unhappy B&B guest will tell at least ten people about their negative experience leads to a simple conclusion. Your business needs consistent positive “Word of Mouth” to prosper.

This simple conclusion can easily be forgotten go during peak seasons when innkeepers and their staff are stretching themselves thin to accommodate the guests’ routine lodging needs. During such busy times, the innkeeper should take time out from the daily chores and focus on being host, in terms of guest relations and the art of true hospitality.

While the physical environment and setting of your Bed and Breakfast creates the ambiance and your culinary offerings may answer to the unspoken expectations of your guests, true hospitality can only be delivered by the host’s demeanor, availability, and personal attention given.

The innkeeper’s role as host will always be the key to continued success in the Bed and Breakfast industry. It is what sets Bed and Breakfasts apart from hotels, motels and other lodging environments where little, if any, interaction between guest and management /ownership takes place.

Innkeepers should master the following hospitality basics

• Getting to know the guests and enjoying their company
• Being available at the guests’ convenience, not yours
• Always making the guest(s) the center of attention
• Understanding the fine line between the guest’s need for privacy and their need to be entertained.
• Knowing when to be a raconteur and when to fade in the back ground
• Being knowledgeable of the local history, sights, dining options and customs
• Being an ambassador representing your town and county.

All these basics, properly exercised, will add to the guest’s level of satisfaction and ultimately lead to favorable “Word of Mouth” advertising without any financial cost.

Spending time with guests may at times be even more important that the perfectly set table or crisp ironed sheets on the bed. While striving for perfection, the human interaction trumps all. Getting to know the guests beyond their names and where they come from creates a bond which can only be achieved by relaxed conversation and skillful interaction. Making them feel truly welcome

“Word of Mouth” is more than just verbal communication; much of this “goodwill” is communicated by guests leaving comments in your guestbook, guest’s emails to friends and family, guests’ reviews written on internet directories & blog sites, and even letters written by your guests to magazines and news papers. Such enthusiastic notes, reviews and letters have “legs” on their own; they all add up to a positive image of your inn, attracting new guests.

You can use those quotes and writings successfully as an advertising tool by putting the material on your web site as guests’ testaments or by sharing them with travel writers and other media types looking for stories about guests’ experiences in your inn. No matter how you would represent your bed and breakfast in your own words, those sentiments expressed by guests are far more valuable.

The buzz created by your guests makes your bed and breakfast the “IN” place to stay and helps put your business above the competition.

Therefore making sure that each guest has a positive or, better yet, a superb experience at your inn is probably the most challenging but also the most financially rewarding aspect of the innkeeper’s function.

While the innkeeper has to make a profit in providing hospitality, the truly skilled innkeeper leaves the guests with the notion that they are treasured for whom they are and not for how much money they spent to stay with you.

This week's Blog was contributed by Johannes Tromp, a regular contributor to The B&B and Country Inn MarketPlace® Magazine. Johannes hails from Holland, where he was trained in the classical European manner to be a chef. He immigrated to the USA in 1973, where he started his own catering business. After moving to New York City in 1979 he became director of Catering at the Rainbow Room on top of Rockefeller Center and later became General Manager of the Windows on the World Restaurant complex on top the World Trade Center. He settled in Lancaster, South Carolina in 1998 to oversee the restoration of the Kilburnie Inn at Craig Farm.

Your InnMarketing Specialists



The B&B and Country Inn MarketPlace®
Claude & Mariette Gagne

If you have any comments pertaining to this week's Blog, kindly Email Mariette at innsales@charter.net











Friday, August 21, 2009

Niche Marketing for Bed & Breakfasts

Niche Marketing


As your InnMarketing Specialists, B&B Marketplace has been reading that a number of industry experts are forecasting a push in coming years towards differentiation in the lodging industry, as travelers demand more choice. Niche marketing is an approach through which that differentiation is achieved. It has the advantage of making a B&B or inn stand out from the competition and eliminates the pressure to lower prices which is the bane of mainstream players.

Developing a niche implies paying close attention to what different groups of consumers are looking for in a lodging experience and identifying an unmet need. For example, among business and pleasure travelers, nearly 50% travel alone. Yet, many lodging establishments give them less consideration than they do to couples and families. Niche players who have been paying close attention to the moans and groans of single travelers are shifting their operations to satisfy their desires: women-only B&B’s, extravagant hotels that appeal to men, etc.

Another important factor in developing a niche market is assessing how widespread is the unmet need. Visiting travel review websites, such as TripAdvisor.com, will provide important clues to what consumers are looking for… and not getting. If you spot a frequently recurring complaint among users of such sites and you can provide the solution, your future is promising.

Don’t overlook other sources of information such as customer satisfaction surveys of your guests, articles published in trade journals and on the web, studies conducted by universities and tourism development agencies, even conversations in elevators. When a staff member overheard pregnant women talking nostalgically about their vacations, the Woodside Hotels and Resorts Group introduced a new product called Babymoon aimed at future mothers looking for one last weekend of pampering before giving birth.

The third key to a lucrative niche is to make sure that your target clientele is accessible, i.e. that you can easily reach it through your various advertising tools, that it is cost effective to serve and that you are conveniently located.

Finally, check out the competition or lack thereof. Ideally, no one player has a stranglehold on the market. But, beware! If there are no competitors, ask yourself why. Have others tried before and failed? What went wrong? Can you use a different approach that will assure you success while, at the same time, making it difficult for your competitors to follow in your tracks?

As for determining who to target, start by looking at yourself. With whom do you have the greatest affinity? Are you concerned about the environment? If so, transforming your B&B into an eco-friendly establishment would certainly fulfill the needs of those who share your concerns, reduce your impact on the environment and lower your operating costs. By targeting those who share your values, life experiences, hobbies, activities, etc. you can offer them highly personalized services because you are better attuned to their needs.

Another area to explore is the emergence of new trends. Society is constantly evolving and what was considered acceptable a decade ago is no longer so today. For example, trans fats are out and unsaturated fats are in, which means meals served at your inn are expected to be cooked with olive, canola or sunflower oil. In fact, as awareness of the obesity epidemic increases, there will be a growing demand for B&B’s and inns that serve truly healthy, freshly prepared meals as opposed to processed foods.

As we enter an era of global warming, consumers increasingly reduce, reuse and recycle at home, and they expect to see the same practices being followed at the lodging establishment where they choose to stay. It won’t be long before we’ll see B&B’s routinely selling carbon offsets.

Other trends include finding destinations where every member of the family benefits (not just the kids), traveling with an emphasis on doing rather than seeing, combining pampering with contributing to the well-being of the local community where they are staying. Finding out all you can about these trends will reveal avenues that you are in a position to exploit.

The last step in developing a niche is to determine the viability of your concept. Begin by surveying your friends, family and preferred guests. Then, seek the opinion of experts at your area economic development agency, college or university where there is a tourism program, consulting firm doing tourism research, etc.

If you and the people whose opinion you trust find that your idea has lots of potential, proceed on a small scale and fine tune as you go along. When you are satisfied that it can’t be made any better, take the plunge and enjoy the ride!

Dominique Lavigueur and Robert Chiasson contributed this blog. They operate Moka & Pyjama, a consulting firm that caters to aspiring and current B&B operators. They also teach and write about many aspects of innkeeping. The couple can be reached at 1-418-452-1132, by e-mail at info@moka-pyjama.com or through their web site.


Your InnMarketing Specialists
Claude & Mariette Gagne
The B&B and Country Inn MarketPlace®




Friday, August 14, 2009

Bed and Breakfast Seminars at Sea

This is the first blog posted by the The B&B and Country Inn MarketPlace®. We will be posting these informative blogs regularly to keep everyone up to date about new events or marketing ideas that might enhance your B&B profits or help you buy or sell a B&B.

Have you ever cruised or attended our Seminars at Sea?
Get away from your Inn for a week and enjoy yourself cruising the Caribbean on the NCL Pearl. Enjoy a few days of relaxation and learn how to make your Inn more profitable.

On January 9-16, 2010, we will be hosting the 10th Annual Seminars at Sea Cruise on the Norwegian Pearl. January is a generally a slow time for innkeepers and a great time to get away for a few days. You can also bring friends and family along and spend time with them on days in Port. The seminars are held on days the ship is at Sea, and we offer our participants an information-packed agenda.

Seminar leaders will be Sandy Soule and Marie Lanier. Sandy Soule is a well known travel writer/speaker and key member of the Bedandbreakfast.com/Inns.com/RezOvation team. She offers a unique perspective on the B&B industry, derived from her decades of experience as a freelance writer, book author, editor, and Internet pioneer, combined with the fact that she's visited more inns than anyone else in the United States. As the Marketing VP, Sandy is responsible for communicating a wide range of company products and services to both consumers and the innkeeping industry.

Sandy will explain how to sell the value of B&Bs through packaging, PR and promotion, and how to use your Internet presence to effectively convert lookers to bookers.

Marie Lanier is a VP and Marketing Guru at LanierBB.com and TravelGuides.com, publishers of The Complete Guide to Bed and Breakfasts, Inns and Guesthouses International. Marie will be sharing some of her secret social networking and marketing techniques with us. She is young, enthusiastic and a dynamic speaker.

Both of these gals have conducted seminars on past cruises and were highly praised with requests coming in to hear what’s new in technology to help us all make more money.

NCL’s FreeStyle Cruising is the Best!. You don’t have to worry about getting there on time for dinner as NCL does not assign a dining time or a dining-room to its guests. There are several choices for dining and there are also a few up-grade restaurants aboard this beautiful ship. A cocktail party is planned for this group so as Innkeepers can get acquainted and share marketing ideas with each other.

This cruise is a real vacation! No beds to make, no breakfast to prepare or cleaning to do – Fantastic! And best of all you will learn new marketing techniques to help you book more rooms.

Book now for best cabins. 1-800-871-8977 or 1-828-324-7291 ask for Mariette

Email Mariette at innsales@charter.net

www.innmarketing.com/cruise.php

Your InnMarketing Specialists
Claude & Mariette Gagne