With nearly seven in 10 Chinese leisure travellers accessing destination websites, and about six in 10 using online travel discussion forums
to source information, travel operators and tourism promotional bodies will need an effective Internet presence to capture the opportunities
presented by Chinese outbound tourism, according to a new research study conducted by The Nielsen Company in partnership with
PATA.
The new China Outbound Travel Monitor 2007 reveals that traditional travel agents rank only second behind online sources (63%) as the
most popular source of information for potential travellers while the use of traditional media is found to be much lower (40%) for newspapers
and magazines.
Conducted in October 2007, via a combination of telephone and online interviews, the Monitor surveyed 1,500 travellers in Beijing, Shanghai
and Guangzhou, about their behaviour, attitudes and opinions of various destinations and provides insights into their decision-making
processes, information sourcing, booking choices, accommodation preferences and more.
The Monitor covers all outbound leisure and business trips taken over a 12-month period between 2006 and 2007. Findings covering a
further 23 cities throughout China will be released in early 2008.
"China's outbound travel market is recognised as one of the key emerging outbound travel markets in the world and has evolved faster than
any other Asian outbound market," said Dr Grace Pan, head of Travel & Leisure Research, The Nielsen Company, China.
"It is important for industry participants to keep a close eye on this lucrative market by tracking how Chinese travellers are evolving, in terms
of their travel behaviour, travel motivations and satisfaction levels with tourism suppliers around the world."
PATA Strategic Intelligence Centre Director Mr John Koldowski
said, "PATA is proud of our solid working relationship with The Nielsen
Company. The Chinese outbound market in 2006 represented 35 million visits and continues to grow dramatically. We are confident this
latest study will provide invaluable strategic insights, which in turn will help our members tap deeper into this burgeoning market."
Chinese outbound travellers from the three key cities are also turning to the Internet for their travel bookings. While the majority is currently
using traditional travel agents (61%), Chinese travellers booking via online travel agents and hotel or transport operators websites (29% and
16% respectively) are on the rise, with their numbers expected to continue to increase.
"Given the astounding growth in China's online population, the Internet will become the most efficient way to quickly understand
consumers across China's vast markets; marketers have to innovate to leverage the Internet to reach consumers as standard online
advertising may not be adequate to capture the attention of the increasingly technology-savvy Chinese online population,"
added Dr.
Grace Pan.
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