How To Travel Vacation And Grow Rich Part 2 of 5

This is about taking advantage of the travel industry’s secrets. Taking that dream vacation at wholesale and making money!

Remember that Expedia was sold for $5.1 Billion Dollars! Wonder why?

I really wondered why such a high price was paid for an internet travel store until researching some important facts.

People love to travel. It is the number one (1) thing that people say that they would do if they had the money and the time to do it. Because of the major trends that are taking place, more and more people now have the time and the money to travel.

So They Are Traveling!!

82% of all travel is booked online meaning, through the internet. 79 million Americans booked their travel on line in 2005.

In the last decade, more than 200,000 travel agents have lost their jobs. By 2004 there were only 103,000 travel agents left in the United States.

People like you and me were buying travel from the Internet Travel Stores.

The travel industry today is a 1.3 Trillion dollar business here in the US.

7 Trillion worldwide. Wouldn’t you like a piece of that! That amounts to $56 million a minute spent on travel in the U.S. alone.

The travel industry is growing 23% faster than the global economy.

Of that economy, tourism accounts for 11% of all consumers spending worldwide.

The travel industry is bigger than the oil business.

There is continued growth of Internet e-commerce. Consumers spend billions on the Internet, and travel is the fastest growing segment of that trend.

Consumers are comfortable buying things such as cars, homes, and, of course travel online.

Baby boomers are retiring at the rate of 1 every 8 seconds and what do they want to do? That’s right, Travel.

Because of this the travel industry is about to experience an explosive boom: it is expected to double to $14 Trillion worldwide in the next 10 years.

Why Would You Or Anyone, Not Want to Own An Internet Travel Store!

Let’s See Why:

You and the people you know are going to travel anyway, so, doesn’t it just make sense to…

1.Get paid for that travel?

2.Make a substantial amount of your personal travel tax deductible rather than paying for it with after tax dollars?

3.Travel as an insider, with potential perks and benefits, rather than as an outsider?

WHY WOULD ANYONE WANT TO THROW MONEY AWAY FOR NO REASON? This Is So Unique—It Has Two Opportunities in one!

1. You own your own travel business with a company supported website and Earn 60% of the commissions from all travel booked on your site!

2. You benefit from the greatest referral compensation plan in the industry and Make money every time you and your Rep team refer someone to the travel business. Just like I am showing you!

I don’t want you to be confused, so the first one is an Online Travel Agency where you have travel credentials and are referred to as a referring travel agent. This is where you make 60% of all commissions on all travel booked on your travel site. You, your friends and family do the booking on your site.

The second is as an Independent Marketing Representative showing your friends about this opportunity. The Company Is Financially Solid

The company was founded in January 2001 and is a wholly owned subsidiary of YTB International, a publicly-traded company (YTB.PK) The last three years the company has gotten the highest award from Carnival Cruise line for travel bookings. WOW

Does Your Culture Support or Sabotage Your Strategy?

“An organization’s capacity to execute its strategy depends on its “hard” infrastructure–its organization structure and systems–and on its “soft” infrastructure–its culture and norms.”

Amar Bhide

(Harvard and Columbia)

Is your organisation one which invests a considerable amount of time and effort (and, therefore, cost) in looking to the future and creating a strategy and strategic plan? I hope so! However, what happens if the plan is not successful and the objectives not achieved? Is the blame put on to the market, the competition, the planners, the staff, or even the plan? The problem may be something more fundamental – the culture is not right for the strategic direction!

There are a number of variations about what is a strategy and what is involved in identifying and creating a strategy. The definition below is one which covers most of the key elements.

“An effective strategy is an integrated array of distinctive choices about which markets a company serves, what unique value proposition it offers to the customers, and how it arranges its functions to deliver that value.” Prof Jan Rivkin

In creating a strategic intent, Michael Porter suggests asking 3 questions:

What is the business doing?

What is happening in the environment?

What should the business be doing?

For many years, when working with organisations in various sectors on creating their strategic plan we found that people approached the process with good intentions and wanted to be thorough and professional. The tools and techniques are generally well-known and are applied with varying degrees of effectiveness. Many managers know about the 7S’s, SWOT and PEST and suchlike. (How well they use them is another matter!) The better organisations have customer feedback data and may carry out some market research. Their analysis of the external environment is based on good information plus knowledge and experience. However, when they come to analysing the internal environment, they may not have such a clear understanding even presupposing they carry out the Strengths and Weaknesses thoroughly.

Combine running the day to day business with looking to the future and leading the people and the organisation and today’s executives and managers have plenty to deal with. Is it any wonder that they do not consider the culture of the organisation? Anyway, surely the culture is what it is, we cannot do anything about it can we? Not strictly true.

Corporate culture happens – the only doubt is if it is the culture you want to have (or be part of.) What is the culture of an organisation – or the corporate culture? The simple statement (probably first used at McKinsey) saying, “the way we do things round here” is a good start point. A more wordy definition is “the moral, social, behavioural norms of an organization based on the beliefs, attitudes and priorities of its members.” This does provide for a better understanding of where cultures start to emerge. Corporate cultures evolve from a number of factors:

  • The top management and how they behave and operate
  • The history and traditions within the organisation
  • Strong groups within the organisation
  • The policies and practices – including rewards, recognition and promotion

Whether the present culture has been created by accident or design, it is what you have and is the platform from which the business will continue to operate. Before you can set out on the new strategic plan you need to know whether the culture and strategy are aligned. If they are, you have a chance of success. If not, ……..?

A close fit between the culture and the strategy will increase your chances of success. Where the culture encourages the right behaviours and actions to support the strategy, the people will have clear guidelines and kpi’s about what is good performance. If the culture has clear values, beliefs and behaviours which link to the vision, objectives and strategy – people will feel (and be) aligned and deliver more.

Where your culture does not fit with the strategy implementation, and required behaviours, you send mixed signals. People are in conflict. Should they be loyal to the culture and company traditions and resist actions and behaviours promoting better strategy execution? Or should they support the strategy by engaging in behaviours that run counter to the culture?

When a company’s culture is not right with what is needed for strategic success, the culture has to be changed as rapidly as can be managed!

How can you decide what your culture is – and whether it will fit the strategic plan?

There are a number of ways of looking at corporate culture. There are some which assess the styles of the top leaders and can define the culture based on their behaviours. There are tools such as the Hofstead Cultural Orientation model, which look at various paired factors each on a continuum. The Johnson and Scholes Cultural web offers a more anecdotal and subjective view using 6 inter-related elements. The one we have used with a number of organisations is the Denison Organisational Cultural model. This tool has been around for over 16 years and benchmarked across over 1,600 organisations. It provides a more objective view of organisations into 4 areas, based on axes which consider External – Internal focus, Stable – Flexible

Involvement

commitment – ownership – responsibility

Are our people aligned and engaged?

Adaptability

patterns – trends – marketplace

Are we listening to the market?

Mission

direction – purpose – blueprint

Do we know where we are going?

Consistency

systems – structures – processes

Do our systems create leverage?

The Denison Organisational Culture Survey has 60 items that measure specific aspects of an organisation’s culture in each of these four traits and twelve management practices identified in Dr. Dan Denison’s research. Individual surveys are collectively tabulated into a graphic profile that compares your organisation’s culture to that of higher and lower-performing organisations. The results are presented in a typical circumplex with reports being produced in bar charts.

One of the main strengths of this tool as that it provides a snapshot of the organisation’s strength and weaknesses. For example, when we used it with an organisation which was the result of a merger of two companies we could see that there were low scores in the “involvement” area which told us that staff morale was low and they needed attention quickly if the good people were not going to leave! Also, the “consistency” result was low – which meant that the systems were likely to lead to customer and service problems which was one area they wanted to compete on! This had the potential to sabotage their strategy! We created “action teams” to look at the detailed reports on each trait to address the major issues highlighted in these areas. Within 6 months they could see (and measure) significant improvements in these. Another client had a new strategy which involved re-positioning their business and becoming a lot more proactive in their market and towards their existing clients. The Denison results showed that they were low on the “adaptability” trait – and this is currently being addressed.

Another plus which Denison offers is that you can judge your culture against high performing companies and see how well you compare.

There are many examples of organisations recognising the need to do improve their culture, driving this from the top and then seeing the benefits in their bottom-line.

The characteristics of organisations with a strong corporate culture will include most of the following:

  • A clearly defined and communicated vision and mission
  • Clearly stated values which underpin the behaviours throughout the organisation
  • A clear indication of the behaviours to be followed by EVERYONE in the organisation from the boardroom down
  • The top management work at creating and keeping the desired culture

To ensure that the corporate culture supports your strategy it might pay dividends to carry out an assessment before you commit too much time and effort to the strategic planning process. Changing the culture is not necessarily easy, or even a quick task – but it can be done. Your strategy needs solid foundations to build upon, make sure that the culture is strong and that you align the strategic intent and plan with it. You will achieve the business success you want, create and even stronger culture and develop the corporate resilience to succeed even more.

Luxury Hotels In Kolkata – Redefining Hospitality

Kolkata, “City of Joy”, is one of the four major metros in India and also the erstwhile capital of the country. The city is presently the capital of Bengal and the most important business and economical hub in eastern and northeastern India. Apart from business and corporate visitors, who visit Kolkata on a regular basis, Kolkata – with its still very much prominent colonial appearance and superlative cultural heritage also attract a great number of heritage and cultural tourists from all over the world.

Bengal, stretching from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal is a state with extraordinary natural beauty and along with the numerous tourist attractions scattered all over the state Kolkata also acts as the gateway to the North Eastern states like Assam, Tripura, Manipur or Arunachal Pradesh and is a must visit place for tourists en route to these destinations. Compared to other cities of its category accommodation in Kolkata is less expensive and the luxury hotels in Kolkata are especially preferred by tourists for their state of the art living conditions and exceptional hospitality.

Until a decade ago, available options for accommodation near Kolkata international airport was limited for most of the 5 stars and luxurious hotels in the city were located at the heart of the city and around it. But for increasing demand and with government patronization, a number of star rated luxury hotels near Kolkata airport has already come up and are especially popular among frequent flyers to and from the city. As the Kolkata international airport is located on the northern outskirts of the city, and well connected with most other parts of Kolkata with strategically constructed roads tourists can travel to the popular tourists’ destinations in the city in minimum time.

Most of the business hotels in Kolkata are located near Kolkata airport and in order to felicitate their business and corporate guests, many of them offer facilities like seminar and meeting rooms, banquet halls and party spaces. Over a period of time luxury hotels in Kolkata have created a unique identity for themselves in the hospitality industry in the country furnishing state of the art facilities and world class amenities to their valued guests. In the luxury hotels of Kolkata commerce and culture effortlessly coalesce against the colonial backdrop of the city and with their culinary heritage and range of other facilities and amenities Kolkata hotels can certainly satisfy every single tourist visiting the city.

Most hotels near Kolkata airport are strategically located close to the major shopping and entertainment hubs of the city and as transport to different parts of the city is also easily available they are the perennial favorite among tourists visiting the city.