As consumers
around the world make plans to travel again, a new study across 10 countries finds that the industry must regain their trust by addressing issues related to transparency
and communication about pricing, health and safety and usage of their personal
data.
Travelport
commissioned the study of 11,000 travelers by consulting firm Edelman, which
has analyzed consumer trust through its Edelman Trust Barometer since 2000.
“This is a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hit reset. You don’t get a lot of those with
consumers, so it’s important we take the lessons of this study and apply them
quickly to the recovery so the industry can bounce back faster,” says Jen Catto,
Travelport’s chief marketing officer.
Catto says the
results show that consumers have developed certain expectations around online
shopping, driven by brands like Amazon, and they believe the travel industry –
both agencies and suppliers – can do more to create a trustworthy e-commerce
experience.
“What we
learned from the study is that our assumptions around consumers being trained
to purchase in the ways that they are accustomed to – through personalization,
through an appropriate application of data to create relevance, through
convenience and price transparency – those are things that carry over from
whatever you are shopping for into the travel space, and I think our industry
has been slow to adapt to that,” she says.
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Respondents
indicate the top two factors for them to trust travel companies are “no hidden
costs” (55%) in the shopping process and “fully flexible or refundable products”
(45%). But while they select those as the most important factors, the majority of
respondents also indicate they do not believe the industry is succeeding in
meeting either of these expectations.
“The
importance of price transparency can’t be overstated,” says Travelport CEO Greg
Webb.
“To put it
into context, having no hidden costs is a full 16% more influential on trust
than an airline’s long-term safety record. The request from consumers here is
clear; the time has come to eliminate hidden fees and improve the overall transparency
of pricing and communication.”
Trust the source
The study
finds consumers are also wary of the sources of travel information, with the
most trusted sources being friends and family (67%) and the least trusted being
influencers (30%) and celebrities (25%).
“It’s
important to look at the next generation of travelers who are going to make up
an enormous part of our economy – Gen Z – they had the least amount of trust in
almost every single category,” Catto says.
“So being
really transparent about information is key with this segment of consumers. I
think they understand the game, they understand how sponsored content works,
they understand how influencers work – pay to play - and they are very
mistrusting of information that comes through that, particularly for the travel
industry.”
And while
the majority (56%) of travelers say the industry has done well in implementing
COVID health and safety measures, many expressed a lack of confidence in suppliers’
enforcement of these measures. Only 46% of respondents say they believe
suppliers have taken steps to improve air filtration and only 50% trust them to
enforce social distancing and manage boarding and queuing.
The importance of price transparency can’t be overstated.
Greg Webb - Travelport
Catto says this
is an area where, despite the best efforts of the industry to take appropriate
measures, a lack of communication has created a gap in trust.
“I’ve been so
protective of myself for 15 months and now I’m ready to travel - will they be
mindful of my health and safety experience the way I have been? These are the
kinds of questions travelers will have right now,” she says.
Data privacy
is also a concern for respondents, with just 40% indicating they trust travel
companies to use their personal information in accordance with appropriate use
guidelines.
Travelers
indicate they are comfortable with travel companies using data they have actively
shared through one-to-one conversations (46%), past booking behavior (46%) and
loyalty activity (44%). But they are less comfortable when travel suppliers and
agencies source information indirectly, for example through social media, public
records such as credit scores and past shopping, search and booking behavior
with other companies.
The good
news for travel companies is that engendering trust can directly relate to
booking behavior, with nearly half (46%) of respondents saying they prioritize
trust over all other factors when choosing a travel supplier.
“Part of
this reset is sort of understanding what those trust gaps are and rebuilding
relationships with consumers, knowing just how valuable their dollars are,”
Catto says.
“As the
world recovers economically, spend on travel is precious. People are watching
their money, and we have to be really respectful of the fact that travelers are
being very selective of how they spend their money. And so we need to rethink
our communication with them as an industry.”