Where’s Our Business Going?
with Martha Chapman

Susie Grynol, Charlotte Bell, Jada Graves, Laurel Greatrix and Dorothy Dowling

Colleagues and co-panelists
Dowling and Grynol

If you want to know what’s happening in the Canadian travel
industry, you needn’t go much further than some of the most powerful leaders in
the biz.  All of them women, we should
add.

That’s what we learned this week at the 9th annual Leisure
Travel Summit, hosted by Best Western Hotels & Resorts.  On the panel were Susie Grynol, President of
the Hotel Association of Canada, Charlotte Bell, President and CEO of the
Travel Industry Association of Canada, Laurel Greatrix, Director of Global
Communication for TripAdvisor, Jada Graves of the Brand
Fuse division of US News and World Report and Dorothy Dowling,
Senior Marketing Officer and Senior V.P. of Best Western.

Over a wide-ranging number of topics, the ladies shared
their insight and expertise and we all left better informed as to Canadian
travellers, what makes them tick, and what turns them off. Here then, are 9
of the gems of knowledge I gleaned:

  1. Last year, tourism injected $91.6 billion into our
    economy and employed 1.7 million people. Tourism is the highest employer of youth in the country.

  2. 65% of Canadians who had planned trips to the US this
    year have changed their intentions to domestic or overseas travel. Of those, most cite the strong US/weak
    Canadian dollar, but the number 2 reason is Trump.

  3. When it comes to loyalty
    programs, Canadians are “points junkies” says Dowling. What do we love? At Best Western, it’s free overnights,
    followed by gift cards. What do we hate? Programs with expiry dates and those with blackout dates (Best Western’s
    top tier of rewards has no blackout dates).  

  4. Two thirds of Canadians start their trip research with a
    visit to TripAdvisor, which gets 390 million views per month worldwide. The
    site now boasts 500
    million reviews.
    Hoteliers who respond to reviews are 25% more likely to get bookings.

  5. It’s not just boomers who are into learning and
    experiential holidays.  15% of
    millennials have done one.

  6. Number 1 in importance (even over free WiFi) for
    business travellers? “Good service.”

  7. Yes Canadians love their affordable, sunny vacations to
    Cuba, the D.R. and Mexico. But look for
    more “off the beaten path” experiences to become trendy in affordable
    destinations such as Colombia and South Africa.

  8. Top regions in demand in Canada? Ontario, BC, Quebec and
    Atlantic Canada. 

  9. In future we’ll be seeing changes in how we communicate with
    our hotels, even during our stay.  Facilities
    such as the spa or gym will ask for your instant input as you leave them. You
    may have already seen posts with happy/indifferent/unhappy face buttons to push
    in airports.  Dowling predicts more
    texting communication (e.g. to request fresh towels) as opposed to today’s
    phoning down from your room. As Charlotte Bell said with a laugh: “It’s just
    like the Jetsons!”

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