Willowpondgj
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They are only #13 on our hits.Happyjacks,I use the word 'slimy' as it pertains to deceptive sales tactics. When John posted two weeks ago about the new credit review program, it was in the guise of sharing info with the innkeepers here. It seems to me that it was about self-promotion and not informational sharing, otherwise he would have shared the whole story on the changes to the pricing structure--namely the rate increase which essentially negates the credit.Kathleen,
No, we do not offer the rebate credit on annual payment plans, only monthly. Sorry to see you turn a creit porgram for somethign that helps innkeepers sell more rooms, into a negative...
Why do you feel our pricing is not fair? I understand we are the most expensive, but when we look at basically every metric that is available to us such as: innkeeper's Extremne Tracker pages, the Google analytics for the sites we host for innkeepers stats from companies like Moriah and INsideOut, or even to simply comparing us to other directories on independent third-party sites like Quantcast - they seem to unanimously support our pricing as fair. If you do the math on traffic, conversions, reservations or dollars - we deliver an order of magnitude more business to our member inns than other directories, and we do not charge an "order of magnitude higher price". So we are actually a better deal than most if not all other directories when you look at ROI. You seem to be solely looking at the cost. Why do you not look at the return? I do not understand, but would like to understand the logic behind this reasoning
You also make it sound like it is bad that we have acquired other companies in this industry that we are going ot force innkeepers to "Pay up or go out of business". What the heck are you talking about??
If we wouldn't have bought BBCOM back from WorldRes, who knows what would have happened to it since WorldRes basically went out of business. WorldRes also owned Guest Tracker and made us take them with our purchase of BBCOM back from WorldRes. Had we not done that, Guest Tracker would probably also be out of business. We just acquired Webervations and while it is a greta product that many innkeepers love, it had one programmer that basically worked his entire live on maintaining this product to keep it from crashing, add functionality, etc. (David Swain). The man had not had a vacation in 10 years and had a cot in his office... You think that is a good way to run a company? It certainly is not fair for you to expect David Swain to not have a life so you can save a few bucks. His business was not sustainable. You cannot run a business long-term without a family or personal life. THAT IS WHAT IS NOT FAIR. Now that we have acquired it, aside from a few short0lived issues with transitioning an entire website and database - which should be expected), we have made a lot of improvements to the back-end that will protect innkeepers using the product with things a core piece of any innkeeper's website should have that were lacking. Things like security, redundancy, back-ups, exception reporting, etc.). Had we not acquired it, at some point David would have thrown in the towel - and he was close. Then if you look at the actual facts around Property Management Software - since acquiring Guest Tracker, we have brought the price down from $599 to $199 (and many times it is completely FREE) while becoming Microsoft Gold certified, spending 6 months and lots of money to become security certified (soon), created an agreement with Intuit (industry first) to integrate with Quickbooks, moved to a much more robust SQL database, added much morte online support (videos, FAQ, Wiki's, etc.). We have also led th eindustry in dropping the price of our real-time online booking engine product from 5% er reservation to a flat monthyl fee that saves innkeepers 80% over what they use to pay for this product. And you say we are forcing innkeepers to "pay up or go out of business"..??? The ONLY thing we have increased pricing on is for listings on BedandBreakfast.com and we have already clearly explained by how much per average per year, and why we did. So how on earth are you saying it is bad that we kept these comapnies alive and continued ot invest in and improve them and dropped prices for many things.???
To answer your question about the Bronze level, it is for folks to get a listing on our wesbite. Not everyone wants a link. So we offer those that don't a level without a link. Again, I don't see where that is bad...??? It is our lowest number of members by category, but these folks get business or we would not see the renewal rate as high as the other levels and these folks would drop off.
If you really wan tto be helpful to aspirings, tell them all of the directories, their cost, the amount of traffic they get (check Quantcast or something), their page rank on Google, and an estimated ROI. Otherwise that is like saying that newspaper A cost X, newspaper B cost Y, and newspaper C cost Z. Without knowing their circulation, the information is not that useful/meaningful. The prices are based on their reach (number of eyeballs).
Man, I really thinnk this group is full of a bunch of "glass half empty" folks. HappyJacks - Our new offer for international members is less for international members because we drive less traffic to them - and therefore provide less value - and therefore charge less. It really is pretty simple and straightforward. It is not because we are trying to screw anyone...?
The free 3 month membership is for ANY new member, not just international. So now we are bad guys for offering innkeepers 3 months up-front with absolutely no risk?????????????????
There is never a "devil-may-care" attitude here about our rates for ANY product. We spend lots of time making sure we price our products and services fairly.
How is it HappyJacks, that we have over 7,000 members with a 90+% renewal rate if we have "poor customer relations"?? I seriously cannot figure out where you are coming from unless since this board allows people to post without identifying their true indentity, you are from a competiting directory.
So we realize we do not have a smuch traffic in Europe as we do in the US, so we offer discounted rates, free trial, invest in SEO and SEM, and you feel we are bad for doing it. Hmmm... Sorry, you lost me...
We launched a program to offer innkeepers an opportunity to earn a $60 credit per year and you say it is "slimy"...? We raise our rates every year. We were not hiding anything. The "credits" starting applying immediately to all monthly paying members regardless of if they are on the new pricing or not. It is not only working for folks on the new pricing. So how exactly is it slimy?
Kathleen - If you can put your money to work somewhere else and get a better return, we have advocated that ALL ALONG (even on this board). But what is up with such negativeness? I am sorry if our ROI is not enough for you. But just as innkeepers have to price their room and cannot price so every single perosn that wants to stay there can stay there, we also have to price our business at the level that gives US a fair ROI on OUR investment. I promise you though that if I come across a B&B/Inn?Hotel that is charging more than I am willing to py, I won't begrudge them. This is capitalism. They should charge a fair price for the value they provide. I am not going to throw them under the bus for it...
Have a nice weekend folks.
Eric
PS. Here is a comment I JUST got from an innkeeper. a BRONZE innkeeper. Maybe this will help you understand that we have to meet the needs of many differnt types of innkeepers and as I stated above, some of them only want a Bronze membership with no link - so we offer it. You don't need to beat us up for it because you don't need it or you think it is a rip-off. It works or innkeepers would not buy it and we would not offer it.
"Thank bedandbreakfast.com for all of your help and quick responses to my questions. A huge percentage of my guests the first year of membership have been from bedandbreakfast.com and I'm thrilled! I love this site.
Carolsue McCue
THE HERB COTTAGE".
Eric, if you think customer relations is only about keeping your happy customers happy, you are doing a disservice to your company. It's also about how you service your unhappy customers, and how you relate to the portion of the market who are not your current customers but have the potential to be.
Take this credit review program and rate hike for example. John could have posted that there were some changes coming to the price structure, explaining the rate increase up front and then giving the good news that members could reduce their fees by earning review credits. This would have gone over better than the one-sided back-patting story and possibly mitigated some of the backlash here that has you reacting defensively. Effective customer relations policies are proactive, not reactive.
A company cannot control it's reputation. It can only control the interaction and communication it has with its customers. The customers decide the reputation. A company that ignores even a small portion of its unhappy customers takes a big chance, especially in these times where the internet makes it so easy for customers far and wide to share their grievances with a larger audience.
You have a unique opportunity here with this forum (and its predecessor) that many companies spend big bucks to replicate: focus group feedback. One way to use it to your benefit (and your customers') would be to compile the feedback you get, spend a round-table meeting with your staff/partners actually considering how any of it may fit the company, and then here's the key: come back and tell your feedback group customers what the results of that meeting are. People want to be communicated with, not talked at and marketed to.
I've seen more than a few examples over the past four years of what I consider missed opportunities and missteps in customer relations and business strategies. The good news is I've managed to use them to help others with their own businesses.
.
The review credit applies to anyone - regardless of when their rate hike goes in place. If you paid the old rate in November, or December, you still get the review credit. So it is completely independent of the rate hike. If I hadn't posted in this forum, and the innkeepers here didn't hear about this program - then they would be mad they lost their chance to earn their rebate.
The opportunity in this forum is great, there is fantastic feedback and we take a lot of it. But there are so many posts where the point is "just give me something cheaper..." I get it - cheaper is better - but ultimately we just don't agree on the "value" of our website. Sometimes I feel like this is like the age-old issue of B&B's being more expensive than cheap hotels. A Motel 6 customer stays there for a reason - it is a room, a bed, a TV, and it is cheaper. But B&B's deliver more service, amenities, and a better experience than a Motel 6 - and they are more expensive. B&B owners think they are worth the higher price. Motel 6 customers probably don't think it is worth the price - and I don't agree with them or I wouldn't be here.
But asking you, as B&B owners, to justify your higher price compared to a Motel 6 is like asking us why we are not as cheap as some other websites. Afterall - you have a room, a bed, and a lot of times there isn't a TV in the room... Yet B&B's are generally far more expensive? How do you justify it?
So why are we more expensive than our competitors? We spend far more money on our website, our advertising, our services, our staff and try to achieve far more than our competitors. That may not make any difference to you - you may just want "a bed and a TV at a cheap price," but we also usually back it up by sending you far more reservations. If we don't, then I'm the first to say you should spend your dollars elsewhere. Doing this costs more money, and we charge more. We feel we are worth it, just like most B&B's feel they are worth more than a Motel 6.
Now clearly some of you don't think we are, and we understand that. If you are looking for a site where you can just save money on your fees, and you think any listing is as good as the next on the internet, then I can understand where you would want to send your business elsewhere. But you are likely going to wind up with one that has less traffic, less ad spend, less features, less staff, and that is going to send you far less revenue as well.
At one point I read in another post someone saying they were going go join two other sites for the price of our one silver listing and drop us. I found it it ironic since the two sites combined put together about 1/3rd of our monthly traffic... so this property now is paying the same for 1/3 of the traffic... and somehow that is supposed to be a good idea? What are we to learn from that - that we should fire our staff, cut all advertising, quit releasing new products, stop attending tradeshows, lose a lot of site traffic - so we can afford to lower our price?
We've had properties post that on a per visitor and per reservation we have been significantly cheaper than our competitors... it always makes me wonder why there aren't more complaints about other sites being too expensive. In fact - I have a proposal to make...
Lets get all of the B&B sites together (or at least the five that everyone mentions). Lets find out what the lowest cost per user or reservation site is (and lets not include BedandBreakfast.com in that mix). Then lets have all the sites agree that we will all switch to a pay-per-click model and price exactly the same - we all price at the same level as the current lowest cost-per-click or cost-per-reservation site, and go from there.
That way if a site sends you more business, they make more money, and if they send you less business, they make less money. I can tell you right now that BedandBreakfast.com would be ecstatic to switch to that kind of business model since our average cost per click to a property, and cost per reservation is generally far lower than anyone else - it would be nothing but upside. It would be completely fair - we'd all be charging the same - and the sites that generate the most users would make the most money - but no one would ever pay any site more per each user they are getting, and no one could complain they were getting charged more. If we busted our butts to find more business for the industry, we'd get rewarded, and if we sat on our duffs doing nothing, then we wouldn't make money...
Anyway, that is my rant for the night!
.BandB.com is still #11-#15 on my referrer list for the month of January. You are not sending everyone an overabundance of business. "if you don't like it don't renew" okay. Sounds about right after being with BandB.com since 2003.JBanczak said:Happyjacks,
The review credit applies to anyone - regardless of when their rate hike goes in place. If you paid the old rate in November, or December, you still get the review credit. So it is completely independent of the rate hike. If I hadn't posted in this forum, and the innkeepers here didn't hear about this program - then they would be mad they lost their chance to earn their rebate.
The opportunity in this forum is great, there is fantastic feedback and we take a lot of it. But there are so many posts where the point is "just give me something cheaper..." I get it - cheaper is better - but ultimately we just don't agree on the "value" of our website. Sometimes I feel like this is like the age-old issue of B&B's being more expensive than cheap hotels. A Motel 6 customer stays there for a reason - it is a room, a bed, a TV, and it is cheaper. But B&B's deliver more service, amenities, and a better experience than a Motel 6 - and they are more expensive. B&B owners think they are worth the higher price. Motel 6 customers probably don't think it is worth the price - and I don't agree with them or I wouldn't be here.
But asking you, as B&B owners, to justify your higher price compared to a Motel 6 is like asking us why we are not as cheap as some other websites. Afterall - you have a room, a bed, and a lot of times there isn't a TV in the room... Yet B&B's are generally far more expensive? How do you justify it?
So why are we more expensive than our competitors? We spend far more money on our website, our advertising, our services, our staff and try to achieve far more than our competitors. That may not make any difference to you - you may just want "a bed and a TV at a cheap price," but we also usually back it up by sending you far more reservations. If we don't, then I'm the first to say you should spend your dollars elsewhere. Doing this costs more money, and we charge more. We feel we are worth it, just like most B&B's feel they are worth more than a Motel 6.
Now clearly some of you don't think we are, and we understand that. If you are looking for a site where you can just save money on your fees, and you think any listing is as good as the next on the internet, then I can understand where you would want to send your business elsewhere. But you are likely going to wind up with one that has less traffic, less ad spend, less features, less staff, and that is going to send you far less revenue as well.
At one point I read in another post someone saying they were going go join two other sites for the price of our one silver listing and drop us. I found it it ironic since the two sites combined put together about 1/3rd of our monthly traffic... so this property now is paying the same for 1/3 of the traffic... and somehow that is supposed to be a good idea? What are we to learn from that - that we should fire our staff, cut all advertising, quit releasing new products, stop attending tradeshows, lose a lot of site traffic - so we can afford to lower our price?
We've had properties post that on a per visitor and per reservation we have been significantly cheaper than our competitors... it always makes me wonder why there aren't more complaints about other sites being too expensive. In fact - I have a proposal to make...
Lets get all of the B&B sites together (or at least the five that everyone mentions). Lets find out what the lowest cost per user or reservation site is (and lets not include BedandBreakfast.com in that mix). Then lets have all the sites agree that we will all switch to a pay-per-click model and price exactly the same - we all price at the same level as the current lowest cost-per-click or cost-per-reservation site, and go from there.
That way if a site sends you more business, they make more money, and if they send you less business, they make less money. I can tell you right now that BedandBreakfast.com would be ecstatic to switch to that kind of business model since our average cost per click to a property, and cost per reservation is generally far lower than anyone else - it would be nothing but upside. It would be completely fair - we'd all be charging the same - and the sites that generate the most users would make the most money - but no one would ever pay any site more per each user they are getting, and no one could complain they were getting charged more. If we busted our butts to find more business for the industry, we'd get rewarded, and if we sat on our duffs doing nothing, then we wouldn't make money...
Anyway, that is my rant for the night!
btw no innkeeper here is wanting CHEAP they want the best bang for their limited buck. To remind you all once again - these are family owned and operated small businesses, we are not big corporations, to pay a HIGH fee to be listed on BandB.com takes MONEY away elsewhere. Most of those in this business STRUGGLE to make ends meet.
In fact I would PREFER to pay a fee PER BOOKING! Per click. Go ahead make my day. I would agree to that.
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Oh, and, YOU GO GIRL!