Social platforms are effective channels where online tourism firms interact with potential customers, and the travel industry must transform to keep pace with technological changes, experts have said.
La Quoc Khanh, deputy director of the HCM City Department of Tourism, said the fourth industrial revolution is making its way into people’s lives, with almost every device being connected with the internet, representing a new way of communicating and doing business.
With Industry 4.0, the tourism industry must figure out how to adopt new technologies to engage with a customer and gain market share, he told an online tourism forum held on April 13 in HCM City as part of the HCM City Tourism Fair.
Vietnam ended 2017 with GDP growth of 6.8 percent, Huynh Bich Tran, deputy director of Nielsen Vietnam, a global information and measurement company, said.
The service sector also saw significant growth, and contributing to this was increasing tourism and a number of government initiatives, she said.
The number of domestic tourists reached 73 million last year, a year-on-year increase of 20 percent, while the number of foreign tourists rose by 30 percent to 13 million.
Vietnamese consumer confidence finished 2017 on a high note as Vietnam continued to be ranked as the seventh most optimistic country in the world, according to the latest issue of the Conference Board Global Consumer Confidence Survey done in collaboration with Nielsen.
There was a sustained high confidence level among Vietnamese consumers through 2017, the survey found.
Vietnamese consumers were eager to spend on big ticket items to enhance the quality of life. Nearly half of all consumers were willing to spend their spare cash on buying new clothes (49 percent) and on holidays (44 percent).
There were 23 million “connected” spenders – referring to people who have access to the internet -- in Vietnam in 2015 and the number is expected to nearly double to 40 million by 2025, according to Nielsen.
By 2025 their spending is expected to account for a half of all consumer spending.
Smartphones sustain the growth momentum as usage and ownership keep increasing in Vietnam.
According to the 2017 Nielsen Vietnam Smartphone Insights Report, the number of people using smartphones accounted for 84 percent of all phone users in 2017 compared to 78 percent a year earlier.
In secondary cities, 71 percent of people use smartphones out of the 93 percent that use mobile phones.
More notably, in rural areas, while 89 percent of the population own a mobile phone, 68 percent of them possess a smartphone.
Social media could be a channel to bring customers to online tourism enterprises, and optimising access for connected customers holds the key to success, Tran said.
Some sources that customers consult before using services include social media (60 percent), friends and relatives (48 percent) and online travel forums (45 percent), she said.
The feedback and comments on forums from earlier customers have a strong effect on the decision of new customers, she added.
According to Jennifer Chau, business manager of Facebook Vietnam, on average Vietnamese customers spend three hours a day on mobile phones, more than on newspapers (56 minutes), television (1.4 hours) or radio (43 minutes).
It is expected that by 2021 half of online tourism revenues would come from mobile phones.
"There are 59 million active Facebook users in Vietnam, with 97 percent of them using smart phones to browse," she said.
All travellers are users of social platforms and Facebook is the top social platform, according to Chau.
Creative videos with good contents are the most effective way to touch potential customers.-VNA