Title: WORLD TOURISM ORGANIZATION. E-tourism. Electronic Commerc
1 E-tourism Electronic Commerce Strategies for
Development Promoting an International
Dialogue Tunis, 19-21 June
2Access
3The On-line Market is there
Forecast for European markets
300
250
216
244
212
237
230
223
200
208
200
192
150
100
- - 64 of Internet sales are direct sales.
- UK sales represent 34 of Western
- Eurepean sales.
- Airlines are 60 of total sales and half
- of this is from low-cost airlines
50
14.7
12.8
10.9
6.77
8.45
4.73
0
2.64
0.227
0.811
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Market M(000)
Internet salesM(000)
Market share
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
4- Distribution costs are a growing area of
potential savings - 20 billion per annum 4 of overall costs and
growing.
5The Electronic Marketplace in tourism
Source Buhalis D., eTourism
6New Business Models
7Three online firms now control over 55 percent of
all online travel bookings
Source Peter OConnor, IMHI, 2003
8- WTO activities in E-tourism
- Publications
- Marketing Tourism Destinations Online, 1999
- E-Business for Tourism, 2001
- Seminars
- Capacity building
- Courses for National Tourism officials of
- WTO member States
- Partnership with IFITT
- Bench-marking scheme for Destination Web Sites
- Harmonise
9(No Transcript)
10As it was in the beginning.
Source Peter OConnor, IMHI, 2003
11Is now..
Source Peter OConnor, IMHI, 2003
12Critical tourism and hospitality functions
supported by ICTs
- Front office reservations, check-in, payments
- Back office accounting, payroll, human resources
management, marketing - Customer entertainment and service
- Communication with consumers and partners
- Marketing research
- Reaction and management of unexpected events
- Flexible and dynamic pricing through yield
management - Differentiation and personalization of products
- Monitoring performance indicators and building
feedback mechanisms - Control of business processes and personnel
13Examples of information technology applications
used in tourism
- Entire range of hardware, software and netware
- Stand alone computers and network devices
- Office automation, reservation, accounting,
payroll and procurement management applications - Portable/wireless communication devices
- Internal management tools such as management
support systems, decision support systems and
management information systems - Tailor-made internal management applications
- Databases and knowledge management systems
14Examples of information technology applications
used in tourism
- Internet/intranets/extranets
- Networks with partners for regular transactions
(EDI or extranets) - Networking and open distribution of products
through the Internet - Computer reservation systems (CRSs)
- Global distribution systems (GDSs) (e.g. Galileo,
SABRE, Amadeus, Worldspan) - Switch applications for hospitality organizations
(e.g. THISCO and WIZCOM)
15Examples of information technology applications
used in tourism
- Destination management systems (DMSs)
- Internet-based travel intermediaries (e.g.
Expedia.com, Travelocity.com, Preview Travel,
Priceline.com, etc.) - Mobile/WAP-based reservation systems
- Traditional distribution technologies supporting
automated systems (e.g. videotext) - Calling centres
- Interactive digital television (IDTV)
- CD-ROMs
- Kiosks and touch-screen terminals
16Internal systems and intranets
- Improving capacity management and operations
efficiency - Facilitating central room inventory control
- Providing last room availability information
- Offering yield management capability
- Providing better database access for management
purposes - Supporting extensive marketing, sales and
operational reports - Facilitating marketing research and planning
- Providing travel agency tracking and commission
payment
17The small e-business
- The ICT illiteracy of the entrepreneurs
- Lack of marketing and technology understanding
- The cost of ICTs being perceived as prohibitive
for entrepreneurs - Inability to control the equipment
- Perceived dependence on trained staff
- Lack of standardization and, often,
professionalism - Seasonality and limited period of operations in
resorts - Insufficient training and established
organizational practices - Small size multiplies the administration required
by CRSs to deal with each property - The unwillingness of SMTEs to lose control over
their property
18Tourism is a very information intensive
activity. In few other areas of activity are the
generation, gathering, processing, application
and communication of information as important
for day-to-day operations as they are for the
travel and tourism industry Poon 1993