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Cheap rates drive agents online

10 Aug 2016 - by Debbie Badham
Comments | 0



TRAVEL agents are

bypassing tour

operators and heading

online to source cheaper

hotel bookings.

“I do 80% of my bookings

online now,” says Stuart

Goodall, owner of Travel

15. He says there is

sometimes thousands of

rands’ difference between

a hotel price given by an SA

operator and the price that

can be accessed using an

online search engine.

“Let’s say the operator

is offering the booking

for R12 000 and you can

access it online for

R7 000, you can offer it

to the clients for R9 000

and still earn a R2 000

service fee.”

“I’ve switched a lot of

business away from the

GDS and tour operators

to Expedia,” agrees David

Pegg, md of Sure Viva

Travels, adding that Expedia

pays agents commission

but also allows them to

accumulate points that they

can then use to discount

their customers’ rates.

“I certainly always book

what’s best for my clients

and this often requires

booking directly online

for hotels,” says Travel

Counsellor, Debbie Beckett.

“Every hotel I book is

cheaper directly with the

hotel than on agent booking

tools and not just by 10%

but by over 30% in most

cases. It seems that the

out-of-country operator

gets 10% commission, the

local operator gets 10%

commission and then we

get 10% commission. The

price knock-on effect for the

client is huge.”

She says for more

experienced consultants,

who know what they want

and can package it all

together themselves, the

operator has become

redundant.

Md of Club Travel, Wally

Gaynor, says it still has

a lot of business with

local operators when it

comes to hotel bookings.

“However, most of our

bookings are done online

with our overseas partners/

aggregators.” He says

Club Travel often finds that

local operators are making

use of the same overseas

partner but adding on their

own mark-up. As such, it

makes sense for the agency

to cut out the middleman,

access the cheaper rate

and add on its own service

fee, making more money in

the long run.

Stuart says one of the

reasons many consultants

are going online is stiff

competition. “Agents are

trying to compete with

one another to find the

cheapest deal.” He says

it’s not only online search

engines but hotel websites

as well. “Some hotel

websites even guarantee

that you can find their best

rate online.”

Do relationships rule?

Stuart thinks the trend is

problematic for operators,

and says the argument in

the past has always been

that it is preferable to deal

with an operator because

they are there to assist

when things go wrong.

“However, search engines

like Expedia and Booking.

com have 24-hour helplines

to assist in exactly these

situations.”

However, John Ridler,

PR and media manager

of Thompsons Holidays,

argues that there are

problems agents can

encounter that a 24-hour

helpline can’t necessarily

fix. “There are snags, which

include misrepresentation

of the location, false

representation of services

and false picture of the

hotel. Via the Internet,

agents have little recourse

if the property does not

live up to its promise or if

travellers have to change

their itinerary at the last

minute.”

Stuart thinks the

impact on operators will

depend greatly on which

destinations they package.

“Operators selling the

Indian Ocean islands are

thriving because they are

still able to negotiate great

bulk rates.”

The package is where the

operator can still win, says

Debbie. “With the lower

negotiated airfares, they

can come in cheaper than

the Internet and everyone

gets commission. However,

with simply a basic hotel

booking in London or

New York, the Internet

or online agent booking

engines are the way to

go. Unless operators can

negotiate exclusive deals

with hotel chains, I do see

them losing a big chunk of

agents’ business.”  

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