

The Complete Guide to Reducing No-Shows for Your Tours and Activities
No-shows are an unfortunate—and sometimes a too-often—occurrence that can have a negative impact on your tour or activity business, especially if you're counting on a certain number of attendees in order to properly coordinate an experience. And while no-shows are unavoidable to a degree, you can (and should) take precautionary measures to help prevent last-minute cancellations and no-shows to help mitigate their negative impacts.Whether you lead brewery tours or zip-line adventures, our complete guide to reducing no-show rates for your tour and activity business can help increase revenue, maintain good customer relations and boost employee morale.
How No-Shows Affect Company Operations
First, it's important to look at the negative effects no-shows can have on your business. Sure, as part of the booking agreement you may end up collecting a customer's deposit—or even their complete payment—when they fail to make their scheduled visit. But while you may have "earned" this revenue, consider this: No-shows also serve as an inconvenience to other guests if the entire trip has to be cancelled due to lac of enough participants. You might also lose revenue because other customers were previously turned away, or wait-listed because of no availability.
Here are some of the most significant ways no-shows affect company operations:
- Changes in employee schedules: If you're in the business of booking one-on-one tours or smaller group tours with a certain tour guide or expert, having to cancel the trip means the employee or contractor has to change their schedule to accommodate the next set of guests. This can be a significant disruption in the employee's schedule, and also creates more administrative work for your company when scheduling an employee's hours.
- Lost income for employees: If employees conducting a tour or activity earn a commission for each tour (along with a portion of any purchases the guests makes after their visit), they miss out on income opportunities when the guest doesn't show up.
- Lost employees or low morale: If no-shows start becoming a trend and occur frequently throughout the season, employees contracted to earn a commission or earn a base rate for each tour booked may become disgruntled and look for opportunities elsewhere.
- Lost revenue for your business: When you're counting on filling a certain number of slots in the calendar week after week to meet your revenue goals, you'll fall short at the end of the quarter when you run into no-shows. Even if the customer agrees to forfeit a deposit or pay a no-show fee, you'll still need to take care of other costs associated with the cancellation, such as paying for supplies or fees for tour guides. If you rent any type of equipment, such as kayaks, boats, bikes, or sailing gear, and have a limited number of units available, you may lose revenue when you turn away guests because all units are reserved, but the original guests fails to show up.
“Karen McLaughlin, owner of Karen’s Kayaks, says it costs her company $1,000 in revenue, on average, when someone cancels her trip. She reports a no-show rate of 15 to 20 per year, which equates to a significant loss in revenue without a firm cancellation policy.”
- Increased administrative expenses: When a customer cancels a reservation at the last minute or fails to show up, one of your staff members has to take care of administrative duties related to following up with the customer, re-booking the tour, and other tasks. This can increase administrative time and expenses that may or may not be covered by the deposit the customer has already paid.
- Disgruntled customers: If you're hosting a smaller group outing, such as a winery or food tour, for which you need a minimum number of guests to coordinate the tour, you may have to cancel and re-book the entire experience when a guest fails to show. Customers who were prepared to show up may be turned off by this and be less inclined to book again—even if they're granted a refund.
Reduce no-show rates, increase revenue, maintain good customer relations and boost employee morale with our world-class online booking software:
Confirming appointments and setting up a system of reservation reminders is one way to keep guests on track for their visit and, in some cases, reduce the risk of last-minute cancellations.
Here are some of the most effective ways to reduce no-shows:
- Charge a no-show fee or require a deposit. This may be just the incentive for guests to follow through on their booking. For example, Southwest Airlines has a straightforward no-show policy: customers who do not cancel or change their reservation within 10 minutes of departure forfeit their entire reservation. As a tour and activity operator, your time frame may be much longer. You could implement a policy where guests who fail to make changes to their reservation within 48 to 72 hours may be subject to your on show policy. Some companies also tack on a handling fee to all penalties, which helps deter no-shows and also takes care of extra expenses incurred as a result of the cancellation.
- Be clear in your terms and conditions. Make sure any fees or charges you impose for last-minute cancellations and no-shows are clearly listed on your Terms and Conditions page, and guests agree to comply with your guidelines when they check out to complete the reservation.
- Phone reminders: If you have an administrative or sales team available to handle phone call reminders, consider setting up a system where every booked guest receives a friendly phone call one or two days before their visit to confirm their appointment. Medical practices do this consistently to reduce no-show rates. Statistics from Televox show that approximately 47 percent of practices who do not send appointment reminders had an average no-show rate of 10 percent, while just under 28 percent of practices who deliver appointment reminders to patients had no-show rates of over 10 percent. Interestingly, more than one-third of practices surveyed received actual complaints from patients who were not reminded of an upcoming appointment.
- Text reminders: This is another option, especially if you don't have a large administrative team that can call each guest with a phone call leading up to their visit. Craft a simple but impactful text message that communicates your excitement to see the guest soon, and provides details about their reservation. If you use text messages, you must state in your Terms and Conditions policy that guests can expect to receive text alerts, unless they notify you otherwise.
Keeping guests engaged up until their visit is a simple and effective way to encourage them to follow through
- Email reminders: Email reminders can be expected when a guest books online. Continue communicating with the guest in this way up until their visit, and also to follow up with them shortly after their experience. You can use an online booking software program to ensure every guest receives a detailed reservation confirmation immediately after booking, plus a series of automated emails leading up to the event. Provide details such as where to park, tips for dressing for the weather or trip, and any other relevant details to ensure guests are fully prepared for their visit—these messages also show you care that they make the most of their experience.
- Use an online booking system: Whether you want to send out automated email reminders, or ensure a streamlined checkout process that clearly outlines your cancellation and no-show policies, using a robust online booking software program like Peek Pro makes all these administrative tasks that much easier. Automating almost all of your customer contact tasks can eliminate administrative time and expenses related to following up with each guest that registers on the site or completes a reservation. Peek Pro even lets you completely personalize and customize automated emails with your logo, and include links to your social media pages if guests wish to stay in touch.
“Automating almost all of your customer contact tasks can eliminate administrative time and expenses related to following up with each guest that registers on the site or completes a reservation.”High no-show rates can negatively impact business operations and also affect your employees. If you want to continue meeting your revenue goals and maintain a loyal following of happy customers, make sure you are taking steps to implement a no-show policy and staying in touch with guests in a timely manner leading up to their visit. Reducing no-show rates will not only increase revenue but will also help you maintain good customer relations and boost employee morale—two areas of business operations that are essential for keeping you in business season after season.

The Rise of Solo Travel and What it Means for Your Tour Company
Activities previously enjoyed together with a companion can now be done on your own as more and more travelers are choosing to travel solo as opposed to planning groups or couple trips.
Solo travel on the rise among women and superboomers
In fact, according to a study across 25 countries conducted by Visa on Global Travel Intentions , one in five travelers aged 18-35 chose to travel by themselves in their most recent leisure trips. Solo travel has continued to grow among the affluent and first-time travelers and has increased among the so-called 'superboomers' group - these are adults over the age of 44.
Off-beat destinations preferred by solo travelers
In an interview with Jennifer Halboth, director of channel marketing for the Globus Family of Brands, she shared that solo travelers are in search for exotic and less traveled places, “Solo travelers gravitate more toward exotics and off-the-beaten-path Europe, because people want to be in a group environment when going to those types of places".Tour companies looking to target these travelers have the opportunity to customize trips by holding singles-only food tour, offering promo codes for exclusive for single travelers and incorporate 'feel-good' activities that they could try for the first time and participate with other solo travelers as a group and focusing on boosting promotions towards less-traveled destinations.
Challenging activities appeal to most 'wander women'
Solo travel has also been on the rise among female travelers with 50 percent embracing their solitude and independence during the trip.According to an interview by CTV News with Prof. Gabor Forgacs, from Ryerson University's Ted Rogers School of Hospitality and Tourism Management, rise of solo travel is a reflection of changing population trends. "The travel industry looks very carefully at demographics, and tries to understand people's changing travel pattern"."They noticed that there's a significant growth in single households; there are more people living alone than ever before, so logically there's a change in travel patterns", Forgacs added."Even people in relationships, more frequently than ever before, are electing to take a solo trip," Forgacs said, noting that different hobbies and interests usually lead couples to take separate holidays."And the industry is eager to capitalize on this growing group of travelers, by offering special packages, tours and accommodations geared towards single people", according to Forgacs.
Those in relationships are also taking solo travel trips due to differing interests
Customized and guided packages for solo travelers
As the numbers of solo travelers move up, more travel and tour companies are paying attention by offering guided tours and getaways customized toward activities preferred by solo travelers such as horseback riding, trekking and rappelling.Recommend activities based on tours taken by similar demographicsBy taking notice at the solo travelers travel behaviors, tour operators could start offering customized experience right from the booking process where they could proactively suggest trip locations and activities based on previously visited destinations by people within a similar demographic. For example, based on the data provided by the solo traveler, the tour operators could either automate the suggestion process or get their account managers to contact the customer by recommending the most popular travel destinations and activities taken by other solo travelers in the past.Other tour operators responded to the rising demand by adding more cabins dedicated to solo travelers and single supplements. Other companies including the taxi-booking app, Uber, decided to offer group discounts to solo travelers. In April, the on-demand car service Uber sent customers an email before a San Francisco Giants game that said, “If you're headed to today's game solo, or even with one friend, opt for uberPOOL. UberPOOL will match you with a rider going to a similar destination, and get you there for $7 or less."With the increase of the demand for solo travels, tour companies could make great use of the upward trend and demand to customize specific packages by providing its travelers a preview of the kind of experiences they would have on their website and social accounts to help solo travelers decide quicker during their planning stages. Incorporating “feel good" and extreme activities and making it really easy to book online will not only elicit interest from solo travelers but also easily convert visitors into loyal customers in the long run.

Increase Online Reviews by Creating Your Moment of Truth
Like it or not, online reviews can make or break your business. Hidden travel gems have been propelled to must-visit status on the back of a few effusive 5-star reviews, while lackluster destinations can suffer, or even go bankrupt entirely, if they start racking up 1-star feedback.As a tour and activity operator, it's important to do all you can to encourage travelers to review you. A Cornell University study found that there is a direct correlation between positive visitor reviews online and increasing revenue. In fact, a one-star increase in average review translates to nearly a 2-percent increase in revenue. (Read our tips on how to get more reviews here.)Asking isn't enough, though—you have to be smart about it. We've all had automated “Please review us" emails after buying something online or going to a restaurant, but how many times have you acted on them? Probably not very often.The key to getting a glowing review from a customer is to trigger an emotional response —called a “moment of truth" in marketing circles. If you can recreate the feeling they had on the tour they took with you, they're much more likely to give you a good review. This is why those “review your product" emails from Amazon always arrive just after you've taken delivery. You've just received a new toy and Amazon wants to capitalize on that feeling.
The key to a glowing review from a customer is to trigger an emotional response
Tour and activity operators are already in a great position to make this happen. The experience a lifetime—be it discovering decadent foods in a new city, or kayaking for the first time—is a much bigger occasion than buying some new headphones, and people are likely to have much stronger positive feelings about their first scuba dive, a guided hike, or skydiving.Your options for creating your own moment of truth are limited only by your imagination, and the more creative you are the bigger the potential for amazing results.Take a lesson from theme parks: They'll email on-ride photos to their visitors, and the smart ones include a request for a review. What could bring back the memories of an amazing day better than a photo of you having an amazing time?Activity operators are perfectly set up to use a similar tactic. Make sure your guides are taking photos (or even better, video) of your guests having a great time skiing, surfing, jumping out of a plane, or whatever types of activities you offer. Send the photos and videos to the guest shortly after they return from their trip (so your email isn't buried in their post-holiday inbox avalanche, and they have a reliable connection over which to view the video) and watch the memories come flooding back, and the reviews rolling in.For smaller or boutique operators, the best option can often be simply to ask guests. If your personality and customer service are big selling points for your business, it makes sense to ask for a review personally. Explain the value of those five stars to the visitor, and often they'll happily review you. Stephen Peters, director of the Pacific Sands Resort, reports that since he started proactively asking for reviews, their volume has tripled.Finding your moment of truth is as simple as looking at your current reviews—which part of their trip do your reviewers rave about? Find a way to bring back those memories when you ask for a review and both the number and star ratings will go through the roof.

How to Handle an Influx of New Customers to Your Tour Business
There's a huge pool of potential customers that just keeps getting deeper. So how do you keep your head above water, and prepare yourself for a new wave of customers? Here are some tips on how to best handle an increase in customers.
1. Increase the manpower and implement necessary systems
To make sure you are well equipped to handle more customers, hire new, experienced staffers, while also rearranging current teams to maximize capacity, performance, and overall service. That includes implementing an online booking system and tour management software, and assigning supervisors to double check all forms to ensure smooth operations.Another aspect to maintaining a great customer experience with rising demand: renegotiating with suppliers. Work with suppliers to offer more possible destinations, activities, or pieces of equipment so that customers have more options (and existing tours won't be over-crowded).
2. Focus on your core customers
HVM Consulting, a Belgium-based tour agency, owes much of its 25 years of success to the relationships it builds with customers. “The success of HVM Consulting is founded on its personalized relationship with clients and suppliers—we simply build rapport with them in person, listen to their specific needs and requests, and ensure that their trip arrangements correspond to their expectations," says Hans Vanmaele, managing director of HVM Consulting. "Because of this, our best sales people are actually our satisfied clients." A core of their business practices: the Pareto Principle, in which they prioritize and recognize their clients' potential and productivity. "We maintain focus on the 20% of our clients who produce 80% of our sales," says Vanmaele.
Your best sales people are your most sastisfied clients
3. Match customer requests with complimentary offerings
To increase your revenue per customer, you need an efficient system, in which you offer personalized experiences alongside complementary offerings that will dramatically enhance the over-all experience for the customer.During the booking process, it's important to learn about each customer as much as possible to provide them their ultimate dream vacation, so ask if they have any specific requests to best prepare prior to their arrival. To achieve this, incorporate segmented email marketing campaigns on each of your website's landing pages, segmenting these visitors based on their previous travel history and upcoming trips. For example, a couple who recently booked a trip to Italy will get a complimentary quick guide to the city they're looking to visit. If your company has local partners in the area, include in special packages and discounts from those partners to sweeten the deal.While no business would complain about a new influx of customers, it could cause problems if you're not properly prepared. But if you reinforce the systems you have in place, you'll free yourself up to build and maintain relationships with your customers that will keep them coming back.

21 Free Tools for Tour and Activity Businesses
The Internet isn't just a place to peruse social media and complete BuzzFeed quizzes; it's a wealth of business tools- and resources-gold just waiting for you to mine. So whether you're on a tight budget or just looking to trim some fat, small business owners can find dozens upon dozens of free tools and resources available that can help their business grow. There are free apps that can help to streamline business operations. There are free apps that can manage administrative tasks. There are even apps to help strengthen your writing for email and website content.But, with the web being such a jam-packed and confusing place to roam, it can be hard to find those resources. So, just consider us your prospector: Here are 21 free tools tour, activity, and recreation businesses can take advantage of.
1. Free Accounting Software: Wave
If you're just getting your business up and running or working with a tight budget, take care of invoices and basic accounting activities with this free accounting software program. The company behind this program offers free, unlimited invoicing to make billing suppliers and vendors a breeze. Make use of the free accounting tools to manage expenses and few financial snapshots.
2. Free Legal Docs: KISS
Approaching investors for seed funding? Then you'll want to make use of Keep It Simple Security (KISS) docs—a set of free legal documents that small business owners can customize without missing out on key legal details and terminology, while also outlining investor rights. The company behind the open-source documents, 500 Startups, consulted a number of law firms to design the documents—so they contain all the necessary legal features, while also keeping it fairly customizable. Just add a few prompted figures and information, and you'll be on your way to getting funding—without the cost of lawyers.
3. Create and Sign Legally Binding Docs: Shake
If you need to create legally binding agreements for a vendor, employee, or contractor, you don't have to pay high fees for a lawyer to put together your documents. Make use of Shake to create legally binding documents within minutes and send it to the recipient for a digital signature. The free version allows you to create, sign, and send unlimited agreements from any device with a set of starter forms.
4. Create Stunning Graphics: Canva
It can cost a pretty penny to buy graphics and fonts (or to pay someone to create them for you), create attractive blog posts and content to share on social networks with the Canva design tool. The tool contains dozens of designs, shapes, illustrations, icons, and charts. And everything is drag-and-drop, which means you can create stunning graphics, Facebook covers, posters, and other visual media within minutes.
5. Image Editing Tool: Pixlr Editor
Since you practically need a PhD to use Adobe Photoshop these days, use Pixlr to edit and enhance existing images for your blog posts, social media sites, and website. This free online editing and image re-sizing tool has almost all the features of Adobe Photoshop—but is easy to learn and use. Tour, activity, and recreation businesses that want to post high-quality images can make use of this tool to edit and enhance all types of professional and candid shots within minutes.
6. Content Editing and Grammar Check: Hemingway Editor
Why does everyone love Ernest Hemingway so much? He wrote clearly and to the point. And that's a lot harder than it sounds—until now. So whether you're publishing blog posts or tour descriptions, make sure your content is free of grammar errors and has good, easy-to-read sentence structure. This cuts the cost of hiring a freelance editor or blogger, while also making your content clear and more relatable for potential customers.
7. Advanced Grammar Checker: Grammarly
Don't rely solely on your word processor or personal editing skills to catch grammar mistakes. This tool is downloaded on your web browser to help you write without mistakes no matter what you're doing. It corrects mistakes on everything from Facebook posts to email messages. Your text is checked automatically as you type and the program monitors activity in an editor panel. You can also upload documents for a quick check.
8. Marketing Lessons: Primer
If you don't have much experience running your small business and navigating the digital world to coordinate a marketing strategy, read up on the basics with this free online learning program. The mobile app features five-minute lessons with practical advice about marketing basics. Use it as a guide or refresher to put together your marketing strategy for your tour, activity, and recreation business.
9. Blogging Guide: FirstSiteGuide.com
Blogging takes a good deal of effort and know-how to make the most of it. So if you're just about to launch a blog to compliment your business website or are completely new to blogging, use this free guide to learn how to launch, maintain, and grow the blog. The guide serves as a blueprint with step-by-step guidelines from expert bloggers, covering everything from customizing and designing the blog to adding content and blog promotion tactics.
10. Schedule Instagram Posts: Latergramme
Promoting your business via Instagram with a series of candid shots, behind-the-scenes images of tours and activities, or even professional shots to give viewers a glimpse of what you offer? Well, you no longer need to worry about posting to Instagram in real-time. Use Latergramme to schedule and manage your Instagram posts so you simply upload a collection of images, add captions, and let those posts get released on a certain date.
Use Latergramme to schedule and manage your Instagram posts, saving you time
11. Automated Social Media Posts: Buffer
Instead of worrying about the best time to schedule your Facebook posts and Twitter updates, just upload all of your content into the Buffer queue and let the program release those Facebook updates and tweets at the best time of the day. The posts are spaced out and posted at optimal times based on Buffer's algorithms, so you can free up administrative time on social media and just update the Buffer queue with fresh content whenever it's convenient for you.
12. Create Surveys: Free Survey Creator
Free Survey Creator makes it a breeze to collect customer feedback. Use this free tool to create a free survey to learn more about your guests and customers. You can post the survey form right on your website or embed it within a blog post to start collecting feedback from visitors. Creating the survey only takes a few minutes and the survey can be placed virtually anywhere on your site.
13. Free Stock Photos: Stock Up
If you need some high-quality images for a blog post or website page but don't want to pay a premium for them, check out the collection at Stock UP. The company adds 28 new photos each week and you can choose from 26 free photos on the site at any time.
14. License-Free Images: AllTheFreeStock.com
This is another free resource for a library of images, videos, music, and icons in one place. Use the free search tool in the left sidebar to search by keyword across multiple sites, including Finda.Photo and Unsplash Search—all in one place. Use keywords like "adventure", "travel," and "trips" to open up a library of high-quality images you can use free of charge.
15. Organize Projects: Trello
Create boards of information to share with employees and team members so that everyone is on the same page about a project or upcoming event. This program makes it easy to organize projects with visual materials and notes. You can also add members to each board so that everyone has access to it and can contribute on their own time. This can eliminate a lot of back-and-forth emailing and also makes it easy to create a to-do list for various projects.
16. Keep Track of Notes: Evernote Basic
If you currently email yourself random things you've found or ideas you think of on the go, make use of this app to store everything in one place to view and organize later. Evernote is designed with virtual "Notebooks" and "Notes" where you can capture screenshots, text, and links with ease. The free version allows you to use all of the basic features to improve productivity and stay organized. There's also a built-in chat feature to invite colleagues or employees to view a note you've created.
17. Synced Cloud Storage: Dropbox
Keep track of files, video clips, and other important documents by uploading everything to Dropbox and organizing it into folders. You can access all of these files from the cloud and authorize other users access to certain documents when you need to share them. Dropbox has a free and paid version depending on how much storage you need. The free version includes 2GB of space and simple file sharing features.
18. Organize Online Search Findings: Pocket
Capture everything from articles, video clips, photos, and anything else you find on your web search with Pocket. You can save directly from your browser or favorite apps to view or read later. This can make it easier to research something or just keep track of notes and ideas when you're exploring and brainstorming ideas for a project.
19. Small Business Templates and Tools: SCORE
Whether you want to measure the effectiveness of your marketing strategy, put together a marketing budget, or read up on tax tips for running your small business, you'll find a wealth of free resources and guides available from the SCORE Association. Download free templates to create important business documents with little effort.
20. Expense Reporting: Expensify
Take the guesswork out of tracking and recording expenses with this app that makes it easy to categorize expenses based on different expense accounts you set up, while also linking card transactions with cash expense reports for accuracy. Make use of the SmartScan tool to upload and store a receipt to link it to each reported expense.
21. Back Up Your Files: Google Drive
If you currently use a variety of Google apps and want to keep track of documents, images, and other types of content in one place, make use of the Google Drive. The free version gives you 15GB of free Google online storage to store all types of media and files. You can pull up the files from any smartphone, tablet, or computer and also share files and folders with others via email.

Travel Trend: Indian Travelers Make Decisions Based on Activities Over Destination
The tourism industry is a series of ebbs and flows, as different trend rise and fall. And right now, if you're a tour or activity operator, you should be attentive to two evolving trends: overseas travel from India and adventure tourism.Here's a closer look at these trends and some ways tour and activity operators can capitalize on it:
Tap Into India
How do you capture the vastness that is India? According to Expedia of India, nearly half of Indian travelers make their travel decisions based on the activities available rather than the destination. More than half of those surveyed preferred to book the activities online in conjunction with hotel and flight bookings while 25 percent booked their activities at the venue itself.Tour and activity operators can position themselves as a "destination" for these types of travelers instead of relying solely on locals and interest from travelers who just happen to be in the area. Adventure seekers from both overseas and domestic markets may be planning their trips around a tour or experience you offer so you can tweak your marketing strategy to cater to this active market.
Adventure Tourism Travel Trends
As a tour and activity operator, you know there is a hungry market seeking out activities and experiences you offer. Some may even be choosing to travel to your location to participate in certain activities.According to Venngage, 88.2% of travelers find gastronomy a defining element of the brand image of travel destinations. If you're a food-tour operator, winery owner, or conduct any type of food and wine tours, you can attract more guests by promoting your experience as a "foodie destination" by highlighting your roots in the area and sharing information about your connections with local farmers or artisanal food suppliers.
Ways to Capitalize on These Trends
Whether you're a winery tour operator or conduct kayak excursions, there are several ways you can promote your business to travelers who are seeking out activities over a specific destination. Here are some ways to capitalize on the latest trends:
Harness the Power of Social Media
We Are Social reports a 26 percent growth rate of active social media users and 5 percent increase in active mobile social users in India. Becoming a part of the social conversation is more important than ever before. Increasing awareness about your company via social networks can help you attract travelers who are searching for activity ideas and want to learn more about your offerings. Deloitte Consulting, LLP, reports on consumer behavior trends that show digital channels are a "source of inspiration" when someone is planning a trip—approximately one-third of those surveyed stated they started daydreaming about a new holiday while using a social site or when they noticed a friend checking in to a destination.Skift highlights some of the ways top media travel brands are using social media platforms to their advantage, pointing out the value of travel videos, sharing high-quality images, and leading conversations on major social sites like Facebook and Twitter. Promoting your tours and activities by dropping links to descriptions on social media platforms, sharing photographs or videos of different experiences on social sites, and engaging in conversations on Twitter and Facebook could help you stay in mind of those travelers who are seeking out what you have to offer.
Maintain a Mobile-Friendly Site
In this blog post, marketing expert Frederico Gonzalo points to studies that indicate almost half of users browse or look for destination and vacation ideas on a mobile device and 37 percent of mobile travelers consume content related to 'things to do' on their trip.Making sure you have a mobile site available for prospective visitors to browse and book can also help. You need to have a mobile-friendly site available for these travelers who prefer to browse and book travel using a smartphone or other mobile device. Make sure you have a large "Book It" button placed on each page of the mobile site so the visitor doesn't have to spend a lot of time figuring out how to make a reservation—it should only take a few screen swipes and taps to proceed with the checkout process.
You need to have a mobile-friendly site available for travelers who prefer to book travel using a smartphone or tablet
Provide Lodging and Flight Tips
Position your company as a go-to destination for a certain type of experience by encouraging travelers to take advantage of area lodging and easy access to the airport when planning their visit. Whether you choose to partner with area companies or just provide insider information on where to stay and how to get to your location, the goal is to give travelers as much information as possible to make their trip-planning process easier. In the case of Indian and overseas travelers, consider setting up a dedicated page or section on your website with plan-your-trip tips that include maps, links to area hotels and resorts, and other relevant information a prospective traveler might find useful if they are planning their entire trip around your tour and activity experience.
Build Your Customer List
Capture the attention of interested travelers the moment they visit your website by setting up a newsletter subscription form or encouraging visitors to register with the site for updates. Building your email list will make it that much easier to stay in touch with these prospective guests and steer them towards the booking and checkout process. You can promote the benefits and highlights of different tours via an email newsletter, send out special offers and promo codes throughout the year, or just send informational tips and guides about maximizing the experience with your company to subscribers. Focus on the activities and your company as a destination to keep in mind when booking travel in the upcoming year to cater to travelers looking for something new to do and experience this season.Use an online booking software program like Peek Pro to organize and maintain your customer list in a secure database. These programs make it easy to send out personalized emails automatically so you can keep up with your email marketing strategy with little effort.As more travelers start to make their booking decisions based on activities rather than a particular destination, you can tweak your marketing efforts to cater to these groups. Use these tips and strategies to capitalize on this emerging trend.
