Certainly, one of the most important parts of a consumer’s travel experience is their initial point of meaningful contact with the guide, outfitter or adventure lodge. This ‘welcome’ stage is defined as that pivotal interaction where a customer has explicitly requested something from you or has initiated contact, they have read your brochure, requested information, read your ad in a magazine, visited your web site, signed up for your newsletter, opened a direct mail piece, stopped at your trade show booth or however the contact occurs.
Consumers who actually request something from you or initiate contact are interested, thereby qualifying themselves as a potential guest. Economically, these consumers deserve more of your marketing attention and budget. At this initial welcome stage, consumers are free of prejudice and preconceived notions toward your services, therefore more open and receptive to what you have to say than at any other time in the relationship.
Utilizing a well-planned and designed welcome strategy has the power to move the consumer from simply ‘shopping around’ to seriously considering your service in their short-list. For the guide, outfitter or adventure lodge, this key interaction represents a significant and unique opportunity:
Use phone-answering scripts designed to ask all significant questions on the first call – demonstrating your attention to detail and professionalism.
Design and use reservation forms with detail trip expectations – meal preferences, room location and view, guide preference, shoe and clothing sizes, beverage choices, level of exertion expected – leave no detail out.
Send pre-visit confirmation and information – confirm all the information you collected from reservation form – demonstrate that you were listening to them and you care.
Use a pre-visit guide phone call script – what could be better than their guide calling the guest and discussing what equipment they need, want they want to do and learn, any pre-work or practice the guide may suggest, setting the stage for a great trip.
Have itinerary for their trip and small welcome gift waiting in their room – tell them where things are and when things happen.
These points of interaction set the stage for the rest of the relationship between the guest and you.
Your guest’s experience with you is simply one of a linked series of contact points, where you have the opportunity to exceed their expectations. As for when it stops, preferably it never should, once they are a guest, your goal should be to make them a guest for life.
Call or send an email – one or two days after departure, just checking to make sure they made it home safely.
Design and use client experience report filed by the:
- Guide – how did the guide think the trip went, details of client’s successes, skills and experience?
- Manager – did you exceed their expectations, room, lodge, staff and bill?
- Chef – what did they like and dislike?
Send a survey to the guest asking about their experience – one week after departure, ask the hard questions and compare to the guide, manager and chef comments.
Set this in place so it is easy and will get done, use web based forms and programs like Outlook to set reminders. Compile this information for marketing to client for their next visit.
realy good information