
How do sites like
TripAdvisor affect travel? Do you
read and take heed of the reviews on such social media sites when planning your next trip?
In last Monday's
New York
Times Susan Stellin explored the effect of TripAdvisor's 40 million reviews
on how folks travel. At issue, especially from the hotelier and outfitters' perspective
is the fact that some reviews go beyond to-be-expected complaining and honest criticism about
"filthy toilets and snooty staff"
to become inflammatory, some reviews accuse hotel staff of criminality.
TripAdvisor says it's simply a forum for travelers' remarks
and reviews while hoteliers reply that it steps beyond neutrality in some
instances.
To my mind, it doesn't seem TripAdvisor will be going
anywhere soon. In fact, its existence has given birth to a whole new type of
company, one like San Francisco's Revinate, a firm that for $200-$600 a month
will track and analyze a hotel's online reviews.
And, checking on TripAdvisor right now, I see they've grown
from just restaurant and hotel reviews to offer ideas of things to do while on
the road as well as provide a venue for travelers to review cruises and
vacation rentals.
Let us know if you
depend on TripAdvisor before booking a hotel, tour, vacation rental or merely
heading out to dinner. Do a handful of negative reviews scare you away from a
hotel/cruise/restaurant? How do you use TripAdvisor and other sites like it?
Post originale:
http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/2010/11/the-tripadvisor-effect.html
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