I just read a GREAT article by Gregg Swann of
Bloodhound Realty
entitled
"Why Do We Link In a Web 2.0 World?" While the blog post is
geared toward real estate professionals, the observations and wisdom
are worthy of anyone in commerce to consider, especially innkeepers.
It's all about transparency.
At the
PAII conference we heard about "Transparency Tyranny," and lots
of innkeepers continued to fret about online reviews and how bad
they are. Gregg Swann points out how the issue of transparency is
really about honesty. People want to buy a product or a service, and
they just don't know whom to trust. The old fashioned marketing as
monologue was where you told me how great your product was, and I
was supposed to believe you. But, too often, you told me what you
wanted me to hear, and when I thought was buying a rabbit, in
actuality I got an empty hat.
With Web 2.0 and Travel 2.0, marketing is a dialogue between the
provider and the consumer and between consumers. To the extent that
a prospective guest at your bed & breakfast can read what others say
about you, they gain a measure of confidence, especially if those
comments and reviews reinforce what you have said about your inn.
That shows honesty.
"Transparency and verisimilitude both mean the same thing in
this context: This is real. People are so used to marketing trickery
that they expect it everywhere. The challenge for anyone seeking to
change minds in the Web 2.0 world is to take away that expectation.
Transparency doesn't mean I am obliged to disclose to you the color
of my underwear. Transparency means that if there is any possibility
that you could entertain the smallest doubt that I am effecting some
kind of sleight of hand to trick you into doing something you
otherwise would not do, I have to give you the means of eradicating
that doubt to your own satisfaction." (Gregg Swann) The means to
eradicating that doubt in travel is reviews. To the extent that you
promote them, encourage them, and make them accessible, travelers
will trust your honesty, that you have nothing to hide.
Gregg concludes his post with words that are very apropos
to innkeepers and which echo what we have been saying for a long
time. "...Web 2.0 consumers are already pretty sophisticated [the
i.guest] - and everything they do on the nets teaches them how to be
more sophisticated. If you are not willing to be completely
transparent in your online marketing presence, consumers will
gravitate, one by one, to people who are willing to back up
everything they say."
At The B&B Team we buy into
this concept for ourselves as well as our clients. One of our
mantras is that you hire us to tell you what you need to know, not
what you want to hear. We think that's the honest thing to do. And
we have absolutely no qualms about giving you every opportunity to
interview past clients. In fact, we think you should. Your
reputation for honesty and transparency is something that no one
should take away. And if you feel that people are seeing the color
of your underwear, then maybe you have to examine what you're
wearing!
Peter
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