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The Business of Tour
Operation
Tour Operation
New terms
ā€¢ Inbound, Outbound and Domestic
ā€¢ Long haul - Short haul
ā€¢ Short haul: travellers coming or going from/to a
nearby area.
(Usually, if the travelerā€™s destination is further away
than one dayā€™s driving distance, they are considered
to be long haul)
ā€¢ Package travel, Group travel, Independent travelers (FIT)
Role of the
Tour
Operators
The Features of Tour
Operation
One of the
riskiest
businesses - the
reasons
ā€¢ Different currencies in use:
ā€¢ purchase and sales on different currencies ā€“ there is
long period of time between purchase and sales.
ā€¢ External factors:
ā€¢ changes in the demand;
ā€¢ political changes;
ā€¢ economic changes;
...
One of the
riskiest
businesses - the
reasons ā€¦contā€™
ā€¢ Special characteristics of packages:
ā€¢ Intangible ā€“ bought ā€žblindā€:
ā€¢ can not be seen, touched or experienced by the
consumer before use;
ā€¢ tour operators prepare brochures which
represent their products ā€“ but can not give
accurate impressions.
ā€¢ Discretionary product:
ā€¢ income and price elastic;
ā€¢ does not belong to the products what are
necessary to consumes.
One of the
riskiest
businesses - the
reasons ā€¦ contā€™
ā€¢ the package is heterogenous: (like the demand):
ā€¢ holidays are by their very nature varied.
ā€¢ Perishable:
ā€¢ are only saleable up to the date of the
departures, especially if you organize fixed date
trips.
ā€¢ Suffer fom inseperability:
ā€¢ The behavior of each participiant is involved in
the package (driver, porter, guides, ā€¦)
One of the
most creative
businesses
ā€¢ Pro-activity and creativity is needed.
ā€¢ Uniqueness is one of the keys of success.
ā€¢ Range of available products/services are unlimited.
ā€¢ Range of possible combination is unlimited.
Why Packages are Popular ?
There are benefits of packages both for
consumers and for participating businesses
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for the consumers
ā€¢ Ability to budget for trips:
ā€¢ packages include most of the
components what a consumer needs
during travel/stay and should pay for
them;
ā€¢ the consumers pay in one amount in
advance, so they have a good idea of
the total cost of the stay.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for consumer ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ Price benefits:
ā€¢ tour operators pass on benefits and discounts
they got from suppliers to final consumer:
ā€¢ tour operators frequently purchase from
suppliers at wholesale/discounted prices.
ā€¢ Tour operators calculate in the cost of
packaging and still can provide a competitive
price to the market.
ā€¢ The cost to the customer is usually more
economical than purchasing the package
components individually.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for consumers
ā€¢ Increased convenience:
ā€¢ planning and organising trips can be
time consuming and difficult to
arrange individually;
ā€¢ a package allows a customer to
arrange many components of a trip
with one call and one payment, saving
time and aggravation;
ā€¢ ā€œno hassleā€ elements, everything is
arranged for the traveller by
professionals.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ from consumers ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ Popular activities and programs can be included
ā€¢ Visitors and travelers are often unfamiliar
with many of the activities and attractions in
an area: a package can help customers find
them easily.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ from consumers ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ Wide variety of interests might be satisfied
ā€¢ Packaging provides a unique opportunity to
design components of a package for
specialised interests.
ā€¢ These "benefit bundles" can include
package components not readily available
to individual customers.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for consumers ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ Safety:
ā€¢ legal framework for the operation;
ā€¢ strict legislation of the package.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating businesses
ā€¢ Improved profitability:
ā€¢ tour operators can add value to an
existing product;
ā€¢ and they also can price their product at
a premium (felƔr):
ā€¢ by adding special goods and services;
ā€¢ by creation of limited or exclusive
availabilities (prestige products).
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating
businesses - contā€™
ā€¢ Smoother business patterns:
ā€¢ tour operators use packaging during
low demand periods to add attractive
features to the business's service or
product, thus generating additional
business;
ā€¢ other businesses may also be willing to
discount their services during this time:
ā€¢ adding these services to the
existing product mix may generate
new business.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating
businesses - contā€™
ā€¢ Joint marketing opportunities for the
businesses:
ā€¢ by joining to conduct a
marketing/advertising program, costs
can be reduced or a new program can
be started what one could not normally
afford;
ā€¢ this can be very effective if the
participating businesses have similar
target market.
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating
businesses - contā€™
ā€¢ More effective target marketing
ā€¢ Packaging can be an effective tool to
tailor tourism and travel products for
specific target market ā€“ food tourism,
adventure tourism:
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating
businesses - contā€™
ā€¢ Greater holiday weekend business
ā€¢ Packaging can be used to highlight
special holiday weekends (Valentineā€™s
day, motherā€™s day, national holidays) by
developing approppriate services to the
theme of the weekend
Benefits of packageā€™s/package
toursā€™ for participating
businesses - contā€™
ā€¢ Redirected traffic to lesser-known attractions
ā€¢ Tour operators can redirect visitors to
overlooked (?) attractions
The Economics of Tour
Operators
ā€¢ What it is about?
ā€¢ Sales patterns/structure
ā€¢ Pricing/cost structure
ā€¢ Low return on sales
ā€¢ Market related impacts
Sales patterns
ā€¢ Bookings of vacation/holiday packages are
made much closer to the date of departure
(6-9 weeks)
ā€¢ While in the past the majority of bookings
happend 4-6 months before the journey
40%
36%
2%
10%
12%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
Accomodation, meal Flight, taxes Excursions, transfers Commission to the
agents
Gross margin
+
Direct costs of the package tour 88%
Indirect costs of
the package tour
33.33%
25.00%
16.67%
25.00%
Distribution of the 12 %
gross margin
Payroll (4% of the package price)
Marketing expenses (3% of the
package price)
Office expences (2% of the
package price)
Trading profit (3% of the package
price)
COST STRUCTURE
OF A
PACKAGE TOUR
Low return on sales*
ā€¢ 1-3 % net
*calculates how efficiently a company is at generating profits from its revenue.
Recent Challenges to Tour
Operators
ā€¢ Fast changes in demand
ā€¢ Politically or economically risky destinations
ā€¢ Dynamic packaging
ā€¢ New regulations
ā€¢ Distribution channels and integration
ā€¢ LCCā€™s (Budget airlines))
ā€¢ Maintaining the market share
ā€¢ Trend towards independent travel
Fast changing
demand
Tendency of the demand
changes
ā€¢ Increased interest in exclusive tourism
experiences
ā€¢ consumers are increasingly searching for
unique, exclusive products and services
ā€¢ Increasing demand for authenticity
ā€¢ travellers are looking for real
experiences in non-traditional
destinations (meaningful, life-enhancing
experiences)
ā€¢ More demand for customised travel
ā€¢ Customers want to control the process
of selecting and composing a holiday
and demand greater flexibility, as they
are more experienced
Tendency of the demand
changes ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ More specialised holidays instead of mass
products
ā€¢ adventure tourism, cycling and
diving,community based tourism,cultural
tourism, nature tourism,wellnes tourism,
wildlife tourism
ā€¢ Rise of new target groups
ā€¢ ageing population, changes in the
composition of households, singles, single
parents, disabled travellers, gay and
lesbian travellers, young travellers (15-29
years old), families with older children
(12-18)
ā€¢ Emergence of peer-to-peer travel
ā€¢ consumers offer private accommodation
or dining arrangements through online
platforms to other consumers around the
world (Airbnb)
Tendency of the demand changes
ā€“ contā€™
ā€¢ High-end segment remains a stable market:
ā€¢ For consumers with high discretional
incomes long haul travel remains
attractive
ā€¢ Social media is an integral part of travel
planning
ā€¢ key sources for travel information
purposes before, during and after a trip
ā€¢ very useful tool for customer relationship
management
Tendency of the demand changes ā€“
contā€™
ā€¢ ā€œMobile readyā€
ā€¢ extensive use of mobile devices to
obtain information
ā€¢ Blogging as a marketing tool
ā€¢ create awareness, build an image and
reach new target groups
ā€¢ Increasing concerns for sustainability
ā€¢ looking for more sustainable products,
especially in Northern and Western
European countries, so tour operators
expect suppliers to at least implement
sustainable practices
ā€¢ Increased liability concerns
ā€¢ European travellers are increasingly
being protected under central EU
legislation
Politically or economically risky
destinations
ā€¢ The traditionally most popular
destinations sometimes face to
difficulties.
Dynamic packaging
ā€¢ Travellers use the internet to
research their holidays and make
their own travel arrangements
direct with suppliers
ā€¢ greater flexibility
ā€¢ less expensive offerings
38
New regulations in the
EU
ā€¢ They have a profound impact on
the way in which travel is sold
across Europe.
ā€¢ The regulation is extended to the
online businesses as well.
Distribution channels
and integration
ā€¢ Traditional vs online.
ā€¢ Travel companies become
integrated:
ā€¢ vertical integration;
ā€¢ horizontal integration.
ā€¢ New distribution methods:
ā€¢ dis-intermediation;
ā€¢ re-intermediation;
ā€¢ cyber-mediation.
40
LCC - Low cost carriers
(Budget airlines)
ā€¢ Greater variety of destinations at
reduced prices.
ā€¢ Travellers are using the LCCs in their own
holidays by-passing the need for a tour
operatorā€™s services.
41
Maintaining market
share
ā€¢ Through mergers and takeovers
(integration).
ā€¢ By reducing prices.
ā€¢ By increasing promotion.
ā€¢ By improving quality.
ā€¢ By training the staff.
42
Tour Operatorsā€™ Pricing ā€“ in
general
Highly competitive industry
with limited flexibility to set
prices
ā€¢ There are no self-produced elements
included in the packages.
ā€¢ The prices of the combined elements are
set by the suppliers:
ā€¢ possibility of the cost reduction is
limited ā€“ might threaten the business;
ā€¢ the only discretional part of the price is
the mark-up.
ā€¢ Uniqueness enables producers to establish
higher prices and more flexibility to
determine their prices:
ā€¢ no or low level of comparability;
ā€¢ higher value for the customers.
ā€¢ Uniqueness means being different:
ā€¢ to differ from the competitors (USP is
the key point of differentiation).
ā€¢ Areas of uniqueness
ā€¢ Product related ones:
ā€¢ combination of the elements;
ā€¢ new destinations ;
ā€¢ schedule of departures;
ā€¢ quality of package elements.
ā€¢ Sales related ones:
ā€¢ new sales methods;
ā€¢ sales campaigns.
ā€¢ Customer relationships related ones:
ā€¢ clubs;
ā€¢ personal mailings;
ā€¢ well established follow ups.
ā€¢ Pricing tactics:
ā€¢ discounts.
What is the right price?
ā€¢ Must be right for the target market:
ā€¢ the customers who we would like to satisfy
with the products can afford those products!
ā€¢ Must be right in comparison to the competitorsā€™
prices:
ā€¢ price and value relation is highly comparable.
ā€¢ Must be right in comparison to the price of other
packages offered by the company:
ā€¢ re-allocate or not to re-allocate the demand?
ā€¢ the image must not be threatened.
How Tour Operators Can
Keep their Prices Low ?
ā€¢ By efficient negotiaton with the suppliers for
lower prices:
ā€¢ volume buying (good projection is needed);
ā€¢ creative payment strategy.
ā€¢ By restraining profit:
ā€¢ markup ratio reduction.
ā€¢ By changing the cost structures:
ā€¢ finding the most efficient way of product
creation and sales;
ā€¢ operational costs cut.
Factors determining the
price setting of the
packages
Factors
determining
the pricing in
general
Demand
Production costs
Competitorsā€™ prices
Product line
Demand
ā€¢ Productā€™s life cycle
ā€¢ there is no pressure for
immediate profit;
ā€¢ the product is promoted to
create awareness;
ā€¢ if the product has no or few
competitors, a
skimming price strategy is
employed;
ā€¢ limited numbers of products
are available in
new channels of distribution.
.
ā€¢ competitors start to attract the
market with very similar
offerings;
ā€¢ products become more
profitable ;
ā€¢ spendings on advertisements
are high ;
ā€¢ market share tends to stabilise.
ā€¢ those products that survive the earlier stages
spend longest in this phase
ā€¢ sales grow at a decreasing rate and then stabilise.
Producers attempt to differentiate products and
brands are key to this.
ā€¢ Price wars and intensive competition occur. At
this point the market reaches saturation.
ā€¢ Producers begin to leave the market due to poor
margins.
ā€¢ Promotion becomes more widespread and use a
greater variety of media.
ā€¢ at this point there is a downturn in the
market. (more innovative products are
introduced or consumer tastes have
changed).
ā€¢ there is intensive price-cutting, special
offerings and many more products are
withdrawn from the market.
ā€¢ profits can be improved by reducing
marketing spend and cost cutting
Production costs
ā€¢ Indirect costs
ā€¢ operational costs of the company.
ā€¢ Direct (product) costs of the
packages
ā€¢ fixed costs;
ā€¢ variable costs.
ā€¢ Fixed costs (of the packages!):
ā€¢ DO NOT vary, they stay the same no matter how
many rooms/seats you let or tourists you carry
ā€¢ Price of the services contracted with
guarantee
ā€¢ Price of the chartered transportation
facilities
ā€¢ Tour leaderā€™s cost
ā€¢ Special coachā€™s costsā€¦.
ā€¢ Total fixed costs do not increase if the number
of sold packages increase
ā€¢ Per unit fixed costs are high at low number of
packages and decline as number of packages
expands
ā€¢ Variable costs (of the packages!):
ā€¢ they are dependent on how many
rooms/seats you let or tourists you carry.
ā€¢ Rooms,
ā€¢ F&b services
ā€¢ Tickets
ā€¢ Regular transportation, etc
ā€¢ Total variable costs increase as the number
of sold packages increases
ļ‚ž Break-even price:
the price per unit for a given volume of
output, at which total revenue is exactly equal
to total costs.
ā€¢ the minimum price required to earn profit
can be set by good projection of direct and
indirect costs.
Competitorsā€™ prices
ā€¢ What other products on your market
compete most directly with your offering(s).
ā€¢ Tools for being competitive :
ā€¢ cut the price;
ā€¢ offer another / new destination on the
same/lower price (for the same or similar
target market);
ā€¢ employ market leader pricing policy;
ā€¢ make the same product more unique.
Your other productsā€™
prices
ā€¢ The objective:
ā€¢ to maximise profit across your
entire product line
Additional factors that affect
the pricing of tour operators
ā€¢ Seasonal effects
ā€¢ ROE (HERE: Rate of Exchange)
ā€¢ Promotional campaigns (early booking
reward, last minute)

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The business of tour operation

  • 1. The Business of Tour Operation Tour Operation
  • 2. New terms ā€¢ Inbound, Outbound and Domestic ā€¢ Long haul - Short haul ā€¢ Short haul: travellers coming or going from/to a nearby area. (Usually, if the travelerā€™s destination is further away than one dayā€™s driving distance, they are considered to be long haul) ā€¢ Package travel, Group travel, Independent travelers (FIT)
  • 4. The Features of Tour Operation
  • 5. One of the riskiest businesses - the reasons ā€¢ Different currencies in use: ā€¢ purchase and sales on different currencies ā€“ there is long period of time between purchase and sales. ā€¢ External factors: ā€¢ changes in the demand; ā€¢ political changes; ā€¢ economic changes; ...
  • 6. One of the riskiest businesses - the reasons ā€¦contā€™ ā€¢ Special characteristics of packages: ā€¢ Intangible ā€“ bought ā€žblindā€: ā€¢ can not be seen, touched or experienced by the consumer before use; ā€¢ tour operators prepare brochures which represent their products ā€“ but can not give accurate impressions. ā€¢ Discretionary product: ā€¢ income and price elastic; ā€¢ does not belong to the products what are necessary to consumes.
  • 7. One of the riskiest businesses - the reasons ā€¦ contā€™ ā€¢ the package is heterogenous: (like the demand): ā€¢ holidays are by their very nature varied. ā€¢ Perishable: ā€¢ are only saleable up to the date of the departures, especially if you organize fixed date trips. ā€¢ Suffer fom inseperability: ā€¢ The behavior of each participiant is involved in the package (driver, porter, guides, ā€¦)
  • 8. One of the most creative businesses ā€¢ Pro-activity and creativity is needed. ā€¢ Uniqueness is one of the keys of success. ā€¢ Range of available products/services are unlimited. ā€¢ Range of possible combination is unlimited.
  • 9. Why Packages are Popular ?
  • 10. There are benefits of packages both for consumers and for participating businesses
  • 11. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for the consumers ā€¢ Ability to budget for trips: ā€¢ packages include most of the components what a consumer needs during travel/stay and should pay for them; ā€¢ the consumers pay in one amount in advance, so they have a good idea of the total cost of the stay.
  • 12. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for consumer ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ Price benefits: ā€¢ tour operators pass on benefits and discounts they got from suppliers to final consumer: ā€¢ tour operators frequently purchase from suppliers at wholesale/discounted prices. ā€¢ Tour operators calculate in the cost of packaging and still can provide a competitive price to the market. ā€¢ The cost to the customer is usually more economical than purchasing the package components individually.
  • 13. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for consumers ā€¢ Increased convenience: ā€¢ planning and organising trips can be time consuming and difficult to arrange individually; ā€¢ a package allows a customer to arrange many components of a trip with one call and one payment, saving time and aggravation; ā€¢ ā€œno hassleā€ elements, everything is arranged for the traveller by professionals.
  • 14. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ from consumers ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ Popular activities and programs can be included ā€¢ Visitors and travelers are often unfamiliar with many of the activities and attractions in an area: a package can help customers find them easily.
  • 15. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ from consumers ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ Wide variety of interests might be satisfied ā€¢ Packaging provides a unique opportunity to design components of a package for specialised interests. ā€¢ These "benefit bundles" can include package components not readily available to individual customers.
  • 16. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for consumers ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ Safety: ā€¢ legal framework for the operation; ā€¢ strict legislation of the package.
  • 17. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses ā€¢ Improved profitability: ā€¢ tour operators can add value to an existing product; ā€¢ and they also can price their product at a premium (felĆ”r): ā€¢ by adding special goods and services; ā€¢ by creation of limited or exclusive availabilities (prestige products).
  • 18. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses - contā€™ ā€¢ Smoother business patterns: ā€¢ tour operators use packaging during low demand periods to add attractive features to the business's service or product, thus generating additional business; ā€¢ other businesses may also be willing to discount their services during this time: ā€¢ adding these services to the existing product mix may generate new business.
  • 19. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses - contā€™ ā€¢ Joint marketing opportunities for the businesses: ā€¢ by joining to conduct a marketing/advertising program, costs can be reduced or a new program can be started what one could not normally afford; ā€¢ this can be very effective if the participating businesses have similar target market.
  • 20. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses - contā€™ ā€¢ More effective target marketing ā€¢ Packaging can be an effective tool to tailor tourism and travel products for specific target market ā€“ food tourism, adventure tourism:
  • 21. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses - contā€™ ā€¢ Greater holiday weekend business ā€¢ Packaging can be used to highlight special holiday weekends (Valentineā€™s day, motherā€™s day, national holidays) by developing approppriate services to the theme of the weekend
  • 22. Benefits of packageā€™s/package toursā€™ for participating businesses - contā€™ ā€¢ Redirected traffic to lesser-known attractions ā€¢ Tour operators can redirect visitors to overlooked (?) attractions
  • 23. The Economics of Tour Operators
  • 24. ā€¢ What it is about? ā€¢ Sales patterns/structure ā€¢ Pricing/cost structure ā€¢ Low return on sales ā€¢ Market related impacts
  • 25. Sales patterns ā€¢ Bookings of vacation/holiday packages are made much closer to the date of departure (6-9 weeks) ā€¢ While in the past the majority of bookings happend 4-6 months before the journey
  • 26. 40% 36% 2% 10% 12% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% Accomodation, meal Flight, taxes Excursions, transfers Commission to the agents Gross margin + Direct costs of the package tour 88% Indirect costs of the package tour 33.33% 25.00% 16.67% 25.00% Distribution of the 12 % gross margin Payroll (4% of the package price) Marketing expenses (3% of the package price) Office expences (2% of the package price) Trading profit (3% of the package price) COST STRUCTURE OF A PACKAGE TOUR
  • 27. Low return on sales* ā€¢ 1-3 % net *calculates how efficiently a company is at generating profits from its revenue.
  • 28. Recent Challenges to Tour Operators
  • 29. ā€¢ Fast changes in demand ā€¢ Politically or economically risky destinations ā€¢ Dynamic packaging ā€¢ New regulations ā€¢ Distribution channels and integration ā€¢ LCCā€™s (Budget airlines)) ā€¢ Maintaining the market share ā€¢ Trend towards independent travel
  • 31. Tendency of the demand changes ā€¢ Increased interest in exclusive tourism experiences ā€¢ consumers are increasingly searching for unique, exclusive products and services ā€¢ Increasing demand for authenticity ā€¢ travellers are looking for real experiences in non-traditional destinations (meaningful, life-enhancing experiences) ā€¢ More demand for customised travel ā€¢ Customers want to control the process of selecting and composing a holiday and demand greater flexibility, as they are more experienced
  • 32. Tendency of the demand changes ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ More specialised holidays instead of mass products ā€¢ adventure tourism, cycling and diving,community based tourism,cultural tourism, nature tourism,wellnes tourism, wildlife tourism ā€¢ Rise of new target groups ā€¢ ageing population, changes in the composition of households, singles, single parents, disabled travellers, gay and lesbian travellers, young travellers (15-29 years old), families with older children (12-18) ā€¢ Emergence of peer-to-peer travel ā€¢ consumers offer private accommodation or dining arrangements through online platforms to other consumers around the world (Airbnb)
  • 33. Tendency of the demand changes ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ High-end segment remains a stable market: ā€¢ For consumers with high discretional incomes long haul travel remains attractive ā€¢ Social media is an integral part of travel planning ā€¢ key sources for travel information purposes before, during and after a trip ā€¢ very useful tool for customer relationship management
  • 34. Tendency of the demand changes ā€“ contā€™ ā€¢ ā€œMobile readyā€ ā€¢ extensive use of mobile devices to obtain information ā€¢ Blogging as a marketing tool ā€¢ create awareness, build an image and reach new target groups ā€¢ Increasing concerns for sustainability ā€¢ looking for more sustainable products, especially in Northern and Western European countries, so tour operators expect suppliers to at least implement sustainable practices ā€¢ Increased liability concerns ā€¢ European travellers are increasingly being protected under central EU legislation
  • 35. Politically or economically risky destinations ā€¢ The traditionally most popular destinations sometimes face to difficulties.
  • 36. Dynamic packaging ā€¢ Travellers use the internet to research their holidays and make their own travel arrangements direct with suppliers ā€¢ greater flexibility ā€¢ less expensive offerings 38
  • 37. New regulations in the EU ā€¢ They have a profound impact on the way in which travel is sold across Europe. ā€¢ The regulation is extended to the online businesses as well.
  • 38. Distribution channels and integration ā€¢ Traditional vs online. ā€¢ Travel companies become integrated: ā€¢ vertical integration; ā€¢ horizontal integration. ā€¢ New distribution methods: ā€¢ dis-intermediation; ā€¢ re-intermediation; ā€¢ cyber-mediation. 40
  • 39. LCC - Low cost carriers (Budget airlines) ā€¢ Greater variety of destinations at reduced prices. ā€¢ Travellers are using the LCCs in their own holidays by-passing the need for a tour operatorā€™s services. 41
  • 40. Maintaining market share ā€¢ Through mergers and takeovers (integration). ā€¢ By reducing prices. ā€¢ By increasing promotion. ā€¢ By improving quality. ā€¢ By training the staff. 42
  • 41. Tour Operatorsā€™ Pricing ā€“ in general
  • 42. Highly competitive industry with limited flexibility to set prices ā€¢ There are no self-produced elements included in the packages. ā€¢ The prices of the combined elements are set by the suppliers: ā€¢ possibility of the cost reduction is limited ā€“ might threaten the business; ā€¢ the only discretional part of the price is the mark-up.
  • 43. ā€¢ Uniqueness enables producers to establish higher prices and more flexibility to determine their prices: ā€¢ no or low level of comparability; ā€¢ higher value for the customers. ā€¢ Uniqueness means being different: ā€¢ to differ from the competitors (USP is the key point of differentiation).
  • 44. ā€¢ Areas of uniqueness ā€¢ Product related ones: ā€¢ combination of the elements; ā€¢ new destinations ; ā€¢ schedule of departures; ā€¢ quality of package elements. ā€¢ Sales related ones: ā€¢ new sales methods; ā€¢ sales campaigns. ā€¢ Customer relationships related ones: ā€¢ clubs; ā€¢ personal mailings; ā€¢ well established follow ups. ā€¢ Pricing tactics: ā€¢ discounts.
  • 45. What is the right price? ā€¢ Must be right for the target market: ā€¢ the customers who we would like to satisfy with the products can afford those products! ā€¢ Must be right in comparison to the competitorsā€™ prices: ā€¢ price and value relation is highly comparable. ā€¢ Must be right in comparison to the price of other packages offered by the company: ā€¢ re-allocate or not to re-allocate the demand? ā€¢ the image must not be threatened.
  • 46. How Tour Operators Can Keep their Prices Low ? ā€¢ By efficient negotiaton with the suppliers for lower prices: ā€¢ volume buying (good projection is needed); ā€¢ creative payment strategy. ā€¢ By restraining profit: ā€¢ markup ratio reduction. ā€¢ By changing the cost structures: ā€¢ finding the most efficient way of product creation and sales; ā€¢ operational costs cut.
  • 47. Factors determining the price setting of the packages
  • 48. Factors determining the pricing in general Demand Production costs Competitorsā€™ prices Product line
  • 49. Demand ā€¢ Productā€™s life cycle ā€¢ there is no pressure for immediate profit; ā€¢ the product is promoted to create awareness; ā€¢ if the product has no or few competitors, a skimming price strategy is employed; ā€¢ limited numbers of products are available in new channels of distribution. . ā€¢ competitors start to attract the market with very similar offerings; ā€¢ products become more profitable ; ā€¢ spendings on advertisements are high ; ā€¢ market share tends to stabilise. ā€¢ those products that survive the earlier stages spend longest in this phase ā€¢ sales grow at a decreasing rate and then stabilise. Producers attempt to differentiate products and brands are key to this. ā€¢ Price wars and intensive competition occur. At this point the market reaches saturation. ā€¢ Producers begin to leave the market due to poor margins. ā€¢ Promotion becomes more widespread and use a greater variety of media. ā€¢ at this point there is a downturn in the market. (more innovative products are introduced or consumer tastes have changed). ā€¢ there is intensive price-cutting, special offerings and many more products are withdrawn from the market. ā€¢ profits can be improved by reducing marketing spend and cost cutting
  • 50. Production costs ā€¢ Indirect costs ā€¢ operational costs of the company. ā€¢ Direct (product) costs of the packages ā€¢ fixed costs; ā€¢ variable costs.
  • 51. ā€¢ Fixed costs (of the packages!): ā€¢ DO NOT vary, they stay the same no matter how many rooms/seats you let or tourists you carry ā€¢ Price of the services contracted with guarantee ā€¢ Price of the chartered transportation facilities ā€¢ Tour leaderā€™s cost ā€¢ Special coachā€™s costsā€¦. ā€¢ Total fixed costs do not increase if the number of sold packages increase ā€¢ Per unit fixed costs are high at low number of packages and decline as number of packages expands
  • 52. ā€¢ Variable costs (of the packages!): ā€¢ they are dependent on how many rooms/seats you let or tourists you carry. ā€¢ Rooms, ā€¢ F&b services ā€¢ Tickets ā€¢ Regular transportation, etc ā€¢ Total variable costs increase as the number of sold packages increases
  • 53. ļ‚ž Break-even price: the price per unit for a given volume of output, at which total revenue is exactly equal to total costs. ā€¢ the minimum price required to earn profit can be set by good projection of direct and indirect costs.
  • 54. Competitorsā€™ prices ā€¢ What other products on your market compete most directly with your offering(s). ā€¢ Tools for being competitive : ā€¢ cut the price; ā€¢ offer another / new destination on the same/lower price (for the same or similar target market); ā€¢ employ market leader pricing policy; ā€¢ make the same product more unique.
  • 55. Your other productsā€™ prices ā€¢ The objective: ā€¢ to maximise profit across your entire product line
  • 56. Additional factors that affect the pricing of tour operators ā€¢ Seasonal effects ā€¢ ROE (HERE: Rate of Exchange) ā€¢ Promotional campaigns (early booking reward, last minute)