About Travel Industry

BNET Travel provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives into all aspects of the travel and tourism industry. In addition to detailed airline and hotel company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new travel and carrier routes, bankruptcies, mergers, tourism figures, investments and a host of other important business issues.

Should Airlines Pay More Attention to Their Online Reputations?

By Brett Snyder | May 27, 2009

How much do you know about your online reputation? More and more often, companies are paying closer attention to their online reps because of the impact it can have on business. A company’s online reputation can have a significant impact on the ability to convert shoppers into buyers on their own website. It doesn’t cost much to maintain, but it does require some effort. According to one recent study, many airlines are not paying enough attention and need to do better.

Before I get into this, let’s have a couple disclaimers. This study was prepared by a company that specializes in improving online reputations for companies. So the determination that airlines need to hire reputation consultants is far from a surprise. I don’t know that airlines need to bother hiring a consultant - some of this stuff is easy enough for the marketing/PR crew to handle on their own.

Now back to the study. It seems to focus primarily on Google search results and YouTube video searches. It’s true that most people search via Google, so that’s a great place to start. This study focuses on the first 10 results when searching for an airline’s name. That’s the first page of results and it’s where the majority of searchers will make their choices. At the top end of their study was Southwest Airlines, which, when I searched, appears to have 7 of the top 10 results. The other three were Yahoo Finance, New York Times topics, and a random Las Vegas Sun article. So there’s nothing bad there, and that’s important.

On the other end of the spectrum is Ryanair, and airline which has never really paid much attention to its online presence. My search brought up only two Ryanair-controlled links. The third is an independent site called Ryanair Sucks. Uh oh.

So should Ryanair try to create more, relevant web properties that could rank highly in the results? Absolutely. But then again, Ryanair looks at things differently than most of the world. Still, I can’t imagine that having the third link being negative is something from which they benefit.

Not all of this study makes sense to me. They advocate trying to make corporate blogs rank better, but I’m not so sure. You want to keep all eyes focused on the booking path. If someone just searches for an airline name, they probably just want that airline’s website. Usually, that means they want to book. So if your blog does too well, you’ll end up pushing the most important info out of the way.

But you get the point. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that the better search results you have, the more likely you are to get traffic to your site. So do airlines need to pay more attention to their online reputation? Everyone should be paying close attention if they aren’t already.

In addition to writing BNET's travel industry blog, Brett Snyder also pens the award-winning consumer travel blog, Cranky Flier. You can follow him on Twitter under the name crankyflier.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Mac OS X's Reputation for Security Wearing Thin

    eWeek - 109 days 10 hours 31 minutes ago

    Mac OS X's Reputation for Security Wearing Thin( Page 1 of 2 )News Analysis: After Apple announced 18 security fixes to Mac OS X on Aug. 5, the reputation of the operating system as a more secure personal computing platform is starting to wear thin. Is it finally time for the company to admit that its operating system is as susceptible to...

  • Behavioral Insider: Tearing Down the (Data) Walls

    MediaPost - 278 days 6 hours 29 minutes ago

    Behavioral targeting is driven by the premise that by paying attention to how people express their interests and needs, brands can connect and communicate more relevantly with the people who most want to hear what they want to say. Unfortunately, advertisers and publishers too often artificially limit their ability to do just that by confining...

  • 2009 Large Market Benchmarking Report: Sizing Up Large Market Travel Buyers

    Business Travel News - 1 day 4 hours 44 minutes ago

    By David Meyer

  • Highly Regarded Hotel Asset Management Firms Converge to form Strategic Alliance

    Hotel News Resource - 146 days 14 hours 9 minutes ago

    Highly Regarded Hotel Asset Management Firms Converge to form Strategic Alliance Over the years, our group and affiliated companies have experienced multiple down cycles, have had 'hands on' involvement with various complex issues involved, and are able to quickly and effectively deal with these challenges.We are available to assist owners and...

  • Atari Apparently Learns Nothing From EA's Bad Experience With DRM

    TechDirt - 229 days 8 hours 21 minutes ago

    Last September, (despite warnings to avoid overly cumbersome DRM), EA discovered just what sort of backlash annoying DRM could have when thousands of reviewers on Amazon slammed the game Spore for its overly limiting DRM from Securom. EA eventually backed down (somewhat), and on newer games seems a lot more sensitive to community concerns...

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    TheNudger

    05/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Should Airlines Pay More Attention to Their Online Reputations?

    Vanno is a good place to learn more about company reputations - how they treat their customers, employees, communities, the environment and society in general. Robert Scoble calls it one of his top tools for tracking company reputations online.

    Here is Vanno's ranking of travel companies, which includes dozens of airlines worldwide. Southwest , Air France/KLM and Alaska are near the top, for example, with American, Northwest and Ryanair near the bottom.

  •  
    2

    tripglobe

    10/30/09 | Report as spam

    http://www.globester.com

    Ah! This is really touching, would like to read more stuff like this.

  •  
    3

    tripglobe

    10/30/09 | Report as spam

    globester

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement