Title: Winter 2001 Customer Profile
1 E-Surveys Made Easy Using Visitor Email
Addresses to Conduct Destination Research
Prepared by Jerry Henry Corporate Director of
Research Herschend Family Entertainment
2Presentation Overview
- Advantages and Limitations of E-Surveys
- Average Response Rates
- Do They Really Work?
- Real-Life Project Examples
- How To Get Started?
3Definition
- An e-survey in this presentation refers to
travel surveys that are posted on the web and
completed by a destinations (or attractions)
visitors. - This is accomplished by sending email messages to
past customers, inquiries or website visitors
offering an invitation for the respondent to
click on a survey link and complete a specific
online questionnaire. - While other types of online surveys can be
completed by consumers browsing a destinations
website, this type of study differs in that it is
completed only by those targeted in the initial
email blasteither visitors, past visitors,
inquiries, non-visitors, etc.
4Advantages
- Less Intrusive
- Pictures, Sound Clips and Video Clips
- More Detailed Responses
- Logical. Telephone Response Rates are Dropping
- Mainstreaming of the Internet
- Faster Response Time
- Less Expensive
- Free From Interviewer Bias
- Better Recall
5Limitations
- Privacy Legislation
- Self-Administered
- Not Everyone is Online
- Cannot Ensure Desired Respondent
- Spam Filters Zap 20 of Commercial Emails
- Non-Response
- Satisfaction Ratings May Vary
- Cannot Ask Follow-Up Questions
- Professional Survey Takers
6Conduct a Parallel Test
- The only way to find out how e-survey results
compare to your current methodology is to try it!
This can best be accomplished by conducting a
parallel teste.g. running your survey using both
methods simultaneously and then comparing the
data from both. Although the results are rarely
identical (for the reasons mentioned previously),
it is important to see if the core measurements
line up. - The following metrics should be the same if the
online research is to replace another type of
research - Is the top-of-mind (1) mention the same using
both methods? - Is the rating of products or concepts at a
similar level, using both methods? - Is any market movement equally indicated using
both methods? - Are stated behaviors (previous brand usage,
previous category involvement) similar using both
methods?
7Metrics May Differ But, Online Surveys May
Actually be More Accurate
- Unaided awareness because online respondents
generally take more time to think about their
responses, they will generally be able to recall
more brands, more ads, more experiences, etc.
This can make the results MORE accurate than
other approaches. - Complex questions because online respondents can
read and re-read questions, they are more likely
to respond accurately. In other approaches,
respondents rarely ask the interviewer to re-read
the question for them. (Note this can be
eliminated in either case if the questions are
kept very simple). - Detailed questions because online respondents do
not feel the time pressure to give an answer,
they may actually investigate the answers before
they respond.
8Results from Herschend Family Entertainments
Parallel Tests
- In 2001, Herschend Family Entertainment (HFE)
launched our pilot e-survey program by running
six different properties parallel e-surveys
concurrent with telephone surveys asking the same
questions. (Silver Dollar City, Dollywood, Stone
Mountain, White Water, Showboat and Splash
Country) - Phone and Email survey responses were compared on
party composition, age of party members,
household income, last visit to the property,
other area activity participation, and
satisfaction. - In all, we found that in 70 of the line item
demographic data elements there was no
significant difference in the results. The
largest disparities came in the areas of
satisfaction and age.
9Celebration City Packaging Research Example
- However, our most conclusive parallel test came
as we were preparing to launch Celebration City.
The purpose of this study was to determine which
combination of properties, days and pricing was
most attractive to our customers. - A total of 1,500 phone interviews began
simultaneously with an e-survey that asked the
same questions. Both studies were conducted
among past Silver Dollar City visitors. - How did they compare? The 1,500 phone calls were
completed in only 18 days at a cost of 14,000, a
bargain by most standards. However, over 1,700
email responses were received in just under 4
days at an incremental cost of less than 1,000.
(programmers and analysts are already on the
payroll). - And, the results? See for yourself
10Internet ResultsTicket Package Tradeoffs
3 Pk, S. Pass, 99 4 Days, 59 3 Pk, S. Pass,
99 4 Days, 69 1 Day, 1 Park, 32 Family of 4,
299 Family of 4 w/ Hotel 4 Days, 69 3 Pk, S.
Pass, 89 1 Day, 1 Park, 32 3 Days, 2 Parks,
55 4 Days, 59
n 584
11Phone ResultsTicket Package Tradeoffs
3 Pk, S. Pass, 99 4 Days, 59 3 Pk, S. Pass,
99 4 Days, 69 1 Day, 1 Park, 32 Family of 4,
299 Family of 4 w/ Hotel 4 Days, 69 3 Pk, S.
Pass, 89 1 Day, 1 Park, 32 3 Days, 2 Parks,
55 4 Days, 59
n 267
12Survey Facts Figures
- Over the past three years, HFE has conducted 58
different e-survey projects and distributed more
than 340,000 email survey links. Of those,
about 88 or 300,000 actually made it into
consumer homes. - Response rates among past visitors have averaged
11.5 over that time with a range from from 4.4
to 42.3 (based upon the gross e-blast).
However, HFE properties has a significant
affinity among their customers. Typically the
greater the affinity for the destination or
attraction, the greater the typical response
rate. Destinations tend to have lower response
rates in the 5 to 10 range. - Response rates from rental lists are generally
much lower. Typically, only 5-7 of these kinds
of surveys get opened and response rates average
only 0.5 on the gross e-blast. However, in a
recent Springfield study we got a 2.5 response.
13Herschend Family EntertainmentE-Survey
Statistical History
No of Projects 58
GROSS Emails Distributed 341,543 100.0
LESS Undeliverables (37,911) 11.1
LESS Suppressions (3,756) 1.1
NET Emails Delivered 299,876 87.8
Average Response Rate 39,277 11.5
Target Sample Size 400
Est. Email Blast Required 3,335
14Examples
- Springfield Visitor Profile
- Springfield Conversion Study
- Research Templates
- Silver Dollar City Non-Visitor
- Silver Dollar City Brand Assessment (incl.
Consumer Mapping) - Celebration City Concept Study
15Springfield Visitor Profile
- The Springfield CVB began conducting guest
profile studies via email in 2001. Intercept or
phone surveys were cost prohibitive at the time.
Given that well over two-thirds of all travelers
(and closer to 80 non-VFR travelers) have
internet access, the methodology seemed
appropriate even in 2001. - Visitor email addresses are collected by area
partners, hotels, the visitor center and the
airport. E-survey links are distributed each
month. Over the years annual sample size has
ranged from 700 to 1,200. - Traveler data is downloaded and processed into
tables on demand. Year over year trends appear
normal in every data category.
16Springfield Visitor Profile
- This information has helped define who visits
Springfield, what they do, when they plan their
visit, where theyre from, why they visit, and
how they spend in the areaamong many other
things.
17Party Composition
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
18Age Breakdown
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
19Last Visit to Springfield
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
ETY/LY Earlier this year or last year
20Distance Traveled
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
21 Spending the Night in Springfieldby Visitor
Segment
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
22Average Length of Stayby Visitor Segment
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
23Spending Per Party Per Tripby Visitor Segment
Springfield Visitor Profile Example
24Springfield Conversion Study
- E-surveys can also help one understand the impact
of the advertising materials sent out, how
prospects made their decision to visit one
destination over another, what converted visitors
did while in the area, etc. - BUT, conversion studies conducted using ONLY
EMAIL have additional limitations. Email surveys
are great for finding out more about a
destinations visitors, brand or past visitors.
But a conversion study must inherently attract an
objective ratio of the number of inquirers who
visited. Hence, you must also have a
representative group of non-visitors as well
--and that is difficult to accomplish with an
e-survey. - For that reason, I recommend conducting an
additional short phone survey that asks 1) Did
you visit? and 2) How much did you spend?by
medium.
25Conversion Rate Comparison1998-2003
Springfield Conversion Study Example
Included Reader Service
262000-2003 Conversion Ratesby Advertising Campaign
Springfield Conversion Study Example
27Revenue Per Visitor Partyby Advertising Campaign
Springfield Conversion Study Example
Overall Revenue Per Visitor Party 649
28Total Revenue Generatedby Advertising Campaign
Springfield Conversion Study Example
Total Revenue Generated 21,998,462
29Return on Gross Investmentby Advertising Campaign
Springfield Conversion Study Example
Overall Revenue Generated for Every Ad Dollar
213.23
30Research Templatesa.k.a. Research-in-a-Box
- Some destination marketing organizations (DMOs)
take responsibility for helping smaller
destinations, attractions or festivals help
themselves. - They are starting to create research templates
that smaller entities can use to collect data for
themselves. This is essentially a research study
in-a-box. Each template includes a standard
questionnaire, input file, legend, data summaries
and applicable charts. - The survey can be launched, have the data
collected and input by virtually anyone with a
computer. Once the data is input, the template
processes the data automatically and creates both
a set of data tables and relevant charts.
31Silver Dollar City Non-Visitor Study
- E-surveys work great for a wide variety of types
of surveys conducted among visitors. But, at
Silver Dollar City we have found that even our
past customers have a passion for helping us
improve our products and services. Response
rates among old visitors is nearly as good as it
is among active customers. - Silver Dollar City has used these kinds of
non-visitor assessments to determine why some
people just dont come back. These kinds of
surveys work wonderful for open-ended responses
giving respondents an opportunity to write
exactly whats on their minds. - Over the past couple of years we learned that our
park had begun to experience, brand drift. We
are now taking action to correct some of the
issues we identified.
32Reasons for Not VisitingSampling of Actual
Customer Responses
SDC Non-Returning Visitor Study Example
- It has become too amusement park oriented. It
used to be that the park was full of crafters,
but that seems to have given way to amusement
rides. We went every year for about 15 years to
the Fall National Crafts Fair, but within the
last 8 years or so, that has become a joke.
There used to be crafters and artists lined up
and down the sidewalks of the park, with the
count at least at 200. Now the National Crafts
Fair has pretty much fallen the same way 76
Boulevard has - very few crafts and crafters,
and more commercial shops, restaurants, and
hotels. - It is boring and always offers the same stuff for
an elevated cost - It seems that it has been the same for some time.
My children wanted something new for a change. - It's changed---not for the better
- It's gotten "old". Nothing new, and we have done
it so many years in a row. - Less music. The combining of weeks such as music
with crafts. Seems that creativity and variety
have been sacrificed for moneys sake. - No new roller coasters.
- We chose to spend our money on one long vacation
instead of several quick trips to Branson
33Rate Reasons for Not Returning to SDCInactive
Visitor Responses
SDC Non-Returning Visitor Study Example
34Silver Dollar City Brand Assessment
- E-surveys also work very well at helping decision
makers assess the value of their brands and
measure how satisfied their visitors are with
those aspects of the visit that are most
important to them, called consumer mapping.
35Describe Silver Dollar City
SDC Brand Assessment Example
- A great place for clean family fun. The only
place I know that still has christian values. We
LOVE that!!!! - "A wholesome fun experience for your entire
family!" - 1800 Theme Park with some rides and musical
shows. Craft work for sale - A "SAFE" PLACE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!!!!
- A christian, family oriented place that I can
take anyone and have a good time. I like the
fact that there are rides that aren't too wild
that I (as an adult) can ride and have fun along
with my children (who like the wilder rides) - A family oriented park where one can feel safe.
The park employees for the most part are very
courteous. The food is tasty. - A fun place to visit
- A great place for couples and families
36Silver Dollar City's craftsmen and entertainers
seem to be more friendly today than they were a
few years back
SDC Brand Assessment Example
B R A N D Q U E S T I O N
37I/we are more likely to visit Silver Dollar City
today than we were a few years ago
SDC Brand Assessment Example
B R A N D Q U E S T I O N
38As SDC's prices escalate I find myself choosing
different entertainment options for my family
SDC Brand Assessment Example
B R A N D Q U E S T I O N
39Silver Dollar City is more unique and attractive
to my family today than it was a few years back
SDC Brand Assessment Example
B R A N D Q U E S T I O N
40Knowing the storylines behind SDC's rides and
attractions make them more enjoyable for my
family
SDC Brand Assessment Example
B R A N D Q U E S T I O N
41Consumer Mapping
- Consumer Mapping entails combining attribute
importance and performance to define the target
issues and strengths of the bank. - It provides information about the relative
strengths and weaknesses among attributes of the
attraction or destination only, rather than a
specific destination relative to the competition.
- Those attributes that most impact loyalty and
whose performance is better than average are
called Strengths. Those issues that are high
impact where performance is lower are designated
Target Issues. - Secondary Opportunities are those where the
attraction or destinations performance is lower
than average but the attributes have lower impact
on loyalty. - Similarly, Low Priority Issues have low impact on
loyalty and are better in performance for the
destination.
42Issue Targeting
Strengths
Secondary Opportunities
More Satisfied
These are the "primary strengths" of the brand.
These attributes are not crucial. Immediate focus
should be on target issues.
Satisfaction
Customers needs are being met, though these
attributes are not important. Potential for
resource misallocation.
These are "target issues" to improve customer
loyalty. The brand is performing below average
and these attributes are important.
Less Satisfied
Low Priority
Target Issues
Importance
More Important
Less Important
43Consumer Mapping-EXAMPLE-
Better
Strengths
Secondary Opportunities
Friendliness
Safety/ Security
Variety
Number of Restaurants
Performance
Ease of Getting There
Value for the Dollar
Scenic Beauty
Low Priority
Target Issues
Worse
Importance
Less Important
More Important
44SDC Brand Assessment Example
45Celebration City Concept Study
- E-surveys are ideal for testing new ideas, e.g.
advertising positioning, headlines, or new
concepts. Perhaps the most important types of
research HFE conducts by e-survey is our concept
testing program. Before we add a new festival or
build a new ride, we ask our customers to tell us
what they think about the options we are
considering. - You cannot blindly ask people what they would
like to see us add because they typically dont
know or cannot verbalize it. BUT, they can
review several different options and tell you
which ones they like, which ones they dont, and
which ones would be most likely to cause them to
visit. - At HFE, weve conducted 21 such studies and
tested nearly 60 different concept ideas over the
past four years.
46Concepts Overall AppealFamilies with Children
Celebration City Concept Evaluation Example
10-point scale
47INTENT-TO-VISIT These Concepts Families with
Children
Celebration City Concept Evaluation Example
10-point scale
48 Concepts Perceived as BeingMOTIVATIONAL HOOKS
Families with Children
Celebration City Concept Evaluation Example
Top-Box Ratios
49Summary of Appeal and Likelihood of Visiting
Concept Ratings
Celebration City Concept Evaluation Example
APPEAL APPEAL LIKELIHOOD OF VISITING LIKELIHOOD OF VISITING
Concept Families Overall Families Overall Overall
MGM 6.8 6.9 6.9 6.8
Hallmark 6.9 6.8 7.0 6.7
Nick-at-Nite 7.1 6.8 7.2 6.9
ET 5.4 5.1 5.9 5.6
No Limits 6.9 6.7 7.1 6.7
Pop Nights 6.6 6.3 7.0 6.7
50Favorite Concept of AllFamilies with Children
Celebration City Concept Evaluation Example
51NET FAVORITE Less LEAST FAVORITEFamilies with
Children
Considering the net results of favorite minus
least favorite concept, this chart shows that
Nick-at-Nite generated the largest margin of
favorite votescompared to least favorite
votes.
Ratio of Favorite Least Favorite
52How Can You Get Started?
- Call Your IT People. I started with the idea and
didnt know anything about programming, web
design, etc. - Order WebSurveyor.com or SurveyMonkey.com. Its
pretty easy to learn and they do the tough part. - Pay a Consultant. For less than a few hundred
dollars you can have your survey blast to your
customer list, posted on the web, and the results
downloaded into an input file. For less than
several thousand you can have the whole thing
done for youturnkey. - Hire a Research Company. This will likely be
quite a bit more expensive. For whatever reason,
research companies are typically charging nearly
as much for online surveys as they do for phone
surveys.
53Summary
- E-Surveys are typically faster, less expensive,
and not as intrusive as traditional phone
surveys. While not everyone has internet access,
travelers are far more likely to have access than
the average U.S. citizen. Hence, they provide a
very attractive alternative for most destination
marketing organizations. - Response rates today rival phone surveys and
because people can complete such surveys on their
own time, responses tend to be more thorough. - Bottom line, e-surveys are effective and
affordable. They offer DMOs the unique
opportunity to gain a better understanding of
their customers without breaking the budget. - For many it is the difference between being able
to conduct customer research and continuing to
operate with ones best guesses.