Fewer Consumers Using
Internet to Make Travel Plans
Rising Gas and Other Costs, and Slowing Economy Could Be Influencing
Decisions
The Conference Board Consumer Internet Barometer Tracks Who's Doing What
on the Internet
NEW YORK, June 21 /PRNewswire/ -- U.S. consumers are still largely satisfied
with making travel plans online, but fewer are using the Internet to meet their
travel needs than two years ago, according to the latest Consumer Internet
Barometer, released today. The Barometer, produced by The Conference Board and
TNS, the world's largest custom research company, covers 10,000 households
across the country.
Only 28 percent of all men and 25 percent of surveyed women plan to research
airline rates and availability online over the next three months, compared to
41 percent of all men and 25 percent of women in 2004. More men are using the
Internet to make travel arrangements, with more consumers going online to
research travel options and opportunities than to actually book trips.
"Vacation plans may have fallen victim to higher gas prices, rising
travel costs and an increasingly uncertain economic outlook," says Lynn
Franco, Director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center. "The
latest consumer confidence survey shows consumers' vacation intentions are at a
two- year low and this slowing in the rate of travel-related activity online
only adds to overall concerns."
Three other major findings from the latest Consumer Internet Barometer: -- The top online travel searches are for driving instructions, with weather and temperature patterns and lodging information next. -- Some 19 percent of surveyed men and 15 percent of women say they will book airline tickets online during the next three months. About 17 percent of the men and 14 percent of the women plan to book motels, hotels and other lodging. "The nature of business travel, which is still dominated by men (68 percent of the total), may require men to have more need and more familiarity to research and purchase airline tickets online," explains Ruth Sharp, Vice President of Analytic Services at TNS. -- About 10 percent of all consumer travel arrangements are influenced by promotional emails from airlines, hotels and travel websites. Satisfaction Runs High, and Email Promotions Can Make a Difference
Among those using the Internet to make travel arrangements, satisfaction
levels are high. More than 95 percent are "extremely" or
"somewhat" satisfied with their ability to get general destination
information online; more than 94 percent are "extremely" or
"somewhat" satisfied with their ability to make flight arrangements
online; nearly 93 percent express those same levels of satisfaction about making
lodging arrangements; and nearly 91 percent are "extremely" or
"somewhat" satisfied about their ability to rent a car online.
Eighty-nine percent of respondents said they were "extremely" or
"somewhat" satisfied with their ability to make entertainment
arrangements online.
Promotional emails are used most effectively by airlines and register more
success among men than women. Some 66 percent of men versus 59 percent of women
say these promotional messages have influenced their travel within the past six
months. Hotels making use of email promotions were more likely to entice women
(38 percent) than men (28 percent). Travel websites also fared better with
women than men - 45 percent versus 31 percent, respectively.
About This Survey:
The Consumer Internet Barometer is based on a quarterly survey of 10,000
households. A unique sample is surveyed each quarter. Return rates average 70
percent, which ensures highly representative data. Data is weighted as well to
reflect the latest U.S. household demographic information. The latest survey
was conducted during the second quarter of 2006. For more information, please
email f.tortorici@conference-board.org
or lynn.franco@conference-board.org.