Tag Archives: dmo

Interview: Troy Thompson of Travel 2.0

3 Sep

Travel 2.0

Welcome to our series of interviews with local (and sometimes national) leaders in the social media and technology industry that will be featured on Social Mediarology. Today’s interview is with Troy Thompson of Travel 2.0, a Denver-based blog and digital consulting company focused on the travel and tourism industry

Travel2dot0.com
@Travel2dot0

Troy Thompson – Travel 2.0

Troy ThompsonTroy has been involved in interactive marketing for the past 13 years. After starting his career at NASCAR in Florida, he was integral in launching their interactive department in the late ’90s. After nearly a decade with NASCAR, Troy moved to Arizona to become the Advertising Manager for the Arizona Office of Tourism. During his time at AOT, Troy headed up the social media division and recently moved to Denver to manage Visit Denver‘s interactive marketing department, including social media, mobile, SEO and more. Earlier this year he decided to break out on his own and dive into tourism technology consulting.

The Travel 2.0 blog started while Troy worked for Arizona Tourism as regular email updates about interactive marketing to the AOT staff and quickly evolved into a blog that could reach people far beyond the Arizona Office of Tourism. Now, thousands of people throughout the world read the Travel 2.0 blog each week and Troy is considered a thought leader in the interactive travel and tourism community.

The consulting arm of Travel 2.0 launched in June, 2010 and focuses on social media strategy/social media audits, mobile strategy including iPhone applications, statistical analysis, training and tourism marketing plan development.

What are some current and upcoming trends in the travel industry as it relates to technology?

The two trends we’re in right now that are still progressing are mobile and location based services (LBS). They certainly go hand in hand, but mobile feels a lot like it did in the late ’90s and early 2000s, when everyone realized the web wasn’t going away so they started to shift more budget and create functional websites. I see this a lot within the mobile space. It’s following a very similar pattern where people are saying "I think this mobile thing is going to stick around, I think the iPhone is going to be a solid platform to build on" and they’re shifting some dollars over to address that need. The challenge is that you don’t want to fall into the same trap we all did when we built our first websites – looking for the cheaper option, just doing the basics and not thinking long term. I think a lot of us built a website in 10 years ago and have had to rebuild the site every couple of years, and I think we’re now getting to the point where people are thinking more long term and more strategically about what the site is and what it needs to be. I’m hopeful that we’ll start to take that same approach with mobile – thinking long term rather than short term. While I think there will be a lot of transition within the mobile space in the next decade or so, building a good base at the beginning will help set you up for success in the long run.

As far as location-based services go, Foursquare seems to be the media darling of LBS.

If 2009 was Twitter’s year, it’s fair to say that 2010 is shaping up to be the year of Foursquare. I think with the recent launch of Facebook Places, LBS’s will just become more important, particularly for the travel industry.

The fact that you’ll be able to have geographic information about your visitor while they’re in your area becomes very powerful. Right now, while the tools aren’t there to completely take advantage of that, those tools will surely come about soon. Taking advantage of a one-on-one communication with someone visiting your local Art Museum will be just as easy as setting up an email campaign or a Google Adwords campaign.

The final trend I’m seeing is tracking. It’s been the big demand of everyone, not just within the travel industry, but everyone who’s been involved in the mobile or social media field. How do we track all of these these things and connect the dots between websites, SEO, mobile marketing, social media marketing, and how do we get the accurate tracking to be able to quantify the ROI that we’re putting into these new spaces. I feel like that’s coming along. It depends on how much information the consumer wants to give out about themselves, but I think that’s an area where we’ll see some more big strides over the next two or three years.

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Hoosier Tourism Blogs

6 Nov

As I spend time online each day at work, I’ve been looking into the different DMOs here in Indiana who have already started blogging. Check out these great examples of Hoosier DMOs who are already blogging!

If I missed anyone, please let me know and I’ll add them to the list.

CVBs:

  • Grant County – Get some great tips about things to do in and around Grant County (home of my Alma Mater, Taylor U). You can even subscribe to their RSS feed (See the TTC RSS post for more info about RSS)
  • ICVA – Indianapolis does a great job with their blogs. Not only do they write their own internally, but they also act as a blogging aggregator by pulling in blogs from all across the city about a range of topics.
  • Bloomington – Bloomington has several regularly-updated blogs that talk about all things Bloomington!
  • Elkhart County – This is an example of a blog like the Visit Indiana blog. It’s housed at Blogger, so it’s absolutely free and a great way to break into blogging. This would be an example of a site where you might want to use a FeedBurner RSS feed.
  • Spencer County – Spencer County has been blogging since July 2006!

Attractions:

  • Holiday World – The Holiblog has been featured on here before. Paula has done a great job of interacting with her consumers through this and the Shared Memories blog. They also have some great Social Bookmarking elements on the blog and be sure to check them out on Twitter!
  • Indiana Beach – I’ve also mentioned Indiana Beach’s blog before. It’s a great example of an attraction taking advantage of blogging to reach out to their members. I think that if they put an RSS Feed option on the blog, they might be able to grab a few more readers.
  • Think Lincoln! – This blog details the “Lincoln Journey of Remembrance” – a riverboat ride down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers taken this summer.