Internet European Travel Monitor |
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July 19, 2000 This study was produced jointly by IPK international and Luc Carton, founder of the Internet research company, eMarket Strategies, and editor of eTourism newsletter. Its conclusions, founded on 400,000 interviews conducted in 33 European countries, make it a unique instrument and a reference for eManagers working in the field of European and worldwide eTravel. Many Internet studies are based on interviews limited to a few thousand users. The Internet European Travel Monitor's study is incomparably more reliable thanks to the size of its base. In addition, it should be noted that the populations interviewed are totally representative of European travellers. The methodology adopted by IPK is based on many years' experience and is recognized throughout the world today. |
1. - Typical profile of European online travel bookers |
The table below gives a quick summary of the profile of the typical European traveller who books online. Although only a rapid indication compared to the whole study - which presents a large number of figures, analyses and specific graphs for each section - it does, nonetheless, give a general idea of the European online traveller
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2.
- Holiday travel, the outright winner of online European bookings in 1999 |
The overall results of our European study show the predominant share taken by online reservations in the holiday and leisure travel sector, a far higher proportion than for travel reservations usually made in this sector offline. On the other hand, far fewer business trips were booked online than offline by Europeans in 1999. It shows how immature the European business travel market is, since, according to Forrester Research, online business travel in the US is expected to represent a third of the total online travel turnover by 2003. In fact, 82% of large American companies interviewed said that they will be buying all their travel online by 2001. It should also be noted that these figures are particularly significant in that they only represent bookings actually made online and do not include users who have looked for information on the Internet but have subsequently booked offline. Given the reluctance of Internet users to pay online - a reluctance which is far less pronounced in the business world - the lead taken by the leisure sector as compared to the business sector in European eTravel is even more striking. It also shows that the business travel sector in Europe still has more trust in traditional travel agencies, a trend which has already been completely reversed in the US. This disparity between leisure and business travel means that, in 1999, the BtoC (Business to Consumer) sector was the biggest Internet market in European eTravel. |
3. - Destinations booked online by Europeans |
Here we are referring to "final" destinations chosen by travellers, and not the country the user comes from, or the state of development of online bookings in these countries. Some of the widest differences are found in bookings for Austria, which more than doubles its potential in its share of destinations booked online. It alone represents over 12% of destinations booked online. b) European Internet users' favourite destinations. However, it should be noted that European Internet users are particularly drawn to destinations in northern Europe and in western Europe, which accounts for more than 40% of online bookings. |
4.
- Seasonal character of bookings, types of trips, length of trips booked online by Europeans |
a) The seasonal character of bookings made by Europeans: significant differences between online and offline bookings. Apart from the actual reasons for taking trips, which can, as we have seen, be the cause of many disparities between online and offline bookings, there are also wide differences depending on the season when the trip is taken. Although traditional booking methods are preferred in the first eight months of the year, this trend is completely reversed from September to December. b) Types of trips. The type of trip is another factor which has a bearing on the online travel shopper's behaviour. Special events, for example, are very often booked via the Internet. Similarly, and this comes as a big surprise, winter sports have made a spectacular entrance, since skiing holidays are three times more highly represented in online bookings. These differences also occur for trips to special events. |
5. - Travel expenditure |
Although the average amount spent by trip or by night is approximately the same for online and offline bookings, there are wide differences depending on the amount spent, as shown in the detailed analysis. For example, for amounts of less than 250 euros, the difference in favour of offline bookers is 74%. b) Euros spent per night %. To try and highlight these disparities and better define the profile of the European online traveller, we also asked travellers how much they spent per night. The analysis of amounts spent by online bookers, not per trip, but per night, reveals a different Internet profile. It confirms the previous results and also shows that the Internet traveller spends more per night, sometimes by quite high proportions, than his alter ego who has booked offline. This is a further confirmation of the large amounts spent by travellers who reserve online. |
6. - Demographic factors |
The European online traveller's place of residence also provides us with a wealth of information. As is to be expected, Internet travellers usually live in large towns. Interestingly, people who live in rural areas book slightly more often online than they do offline. However, people living in small and medium-sized towns are vastly under-represented online. b) Online travellers' age. We note that there are wide differences in online and offline booking methods according to which age group the traveller belongs to. In the 25-34 age group, 30.2% buy online as compared to 22% offline, a relative difference of 37% in favour of Internet bookings. This trend is completely reversed in the 45-54 age group. |
7. - Social Status |
a) Social status: relative differences between travellers booking online and offline. Following these detailed analyses of the online and offline travel behaviour according to social status, household income and educational level, we thought it would be interesting to compare the relative difference between European travellers who reserved online and those who reserved offline within each of these categories. It is immediately obvious, depending on the approach adopted, that the relative disparities between online and offline bookings are totally different. |
Summary of the study |
European bookings: Comparison on/off line: Types of trips:
Means of transport:
Destinations:
Internet impact:
Online Travel Expenditure:
Place of residence:
Age, sex, family unit:
Social Status, demographics:
Profile of the European Online eTravel Bookers:
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Methodology |
IPK International is a team of experts based in Munich, Germany. The reports and missions carried out by the group are based on in-depth, up-to-date knowledge of the evolution of worldwide demands in travel consumption. This study was conducted by the group in 1999. They interviewed 400,000 people in 33 European countries by telephone and in person. About a hundred series of interviews were carried out, among a population representative of European tourists. The tourists were questioned in their homes, on their return from trips abroad last year. The report, the "Internet European Travel Monitor" is based on these questionnaires. Throughout the year 2000, IPK International will be interviewing 750,000 people in Europe and North America with identical questionnaires; the results will be collated in the World Travel Monitor. The questionnaire, which the Internet European Travel Monitor is based on, covers all the information required to correctly interpret the travel phenomenon: the destination country, main and secondary means of transport, travel arrangements, type of accommodation, the date of the trip(s), the length of trips, the different types of business and leisure travel, travel expenditure, activities the tourists took part in and information about the travellers' socio-professional levels. The questions concerning travel arrangements allowed IPK International to observe, for the first time in 1999, the way the Internet is used on the European continent for booking and/or paying for travel services This measurement concerned all the travellers interviewed, i.e. about 400,000 people, whether they did or did not use the Internet to book trips abroad. The pan-European range of this survey allows IPK International and eMarket Strategies to present a series of informed conclusions in the report about the impact of the Internet on the behaviour of European tourists. This is the first time that the eTourism phenomenon has been observed on such a large scale. |
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