Carnival vows to ‘rock the UK’ as it unveils agent loyalty scheme

Image result for The @CarnivalFamily in their Travel Agent Rocks t-shirts

Carnival Cruise Lines has promised to “rock the UK” as it pledge to put travel agents at the heart of its UK business.

The cruise line launched its Travel Agents Rock campaign at the Vineyard in Newbury on Wednesday November 30.

The campaign features a new loyalty rewards scheme, online training programme and a chance for top selling agents during the wave period to win a trip to Ibiza next June.

Speaking at the event, vice president for UK and international sales Iain Baillie said: “Carnival is going to rock the UK, we are going to come rocking on your doors and bringing lots of fun, so let us in.

“We want agents to know that Carnival Cruise Line puts them in the centre of everything we do.

“We have restructured our UK business so that everyone internally will support you more.”

Agents at the event welcomed the new campaign with head of cruise at TravelBag, Kevin Coles, saying the Travel Agents Rock campaign offered a “unique proposition”.

Coles said: “This sends out a clear message that they want to work closely with their trade partners.

“They have really invested in their sales team meaning they have really invested in us as agents.

“Carnival Cruise Line has always been important to us and it is the lines who put themselves in front of agents that are the winners. Travel Agents Rocks is a winning promise to us.”

The company will also hold Travel Agent Rock roadshows across the country in London, Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle, Scotland and Ireland.

Karen Lake a sales executive from Cruise Nation said the regional shows would really benefit agents.

“The Travel Agents Rock programme is just amazing and will be so good for agents.

“The fact they’re coming to regional places is fabulous.

“Its so hard for agents like us to get to London all the time so for them to come to us or near us is great.”

The top 15 selling agents during the wave period will win a place on Carnival Cruise Line’s trip to Ibiza Rocks, in association with Travel Weekly, in June next year.

Managing director of Cruise Nation, Phil Evans, said: “The Ibiza trip is just amazing and something I know all of my agents will really get behind.

“This is such a great way to help our agents learn more about Carnival Cruise and sell more of the product.”

Head of product at Jetline Cruise, Martin Tanner said the loyalty programme rewards would also get agents supporting Carnival Cruise Lines.

Tanner said: “The Travel Agents Rock club will be great especially with agents able to earn £10 per point during December.

“Points really do me prizes and that is what our agents deserve.

“Agents can do all they can when selling cruise but they need the cruise lines to help them do that. This is now even more possible with the loyalty programme and the online training.”

Carnival will also hold its first ever Rockstar Awards at the end of 2017 to honour their top selling agents as part of the loyalty programme.

Cruise agents demand simpler technology and more aggregation

Cruise agents demand simpler technology and more aggregation

By Travolution
By Travolution

Travolution’s sister site Travel Weekly and Amadeus invited agents to discuss cruise technology o the day the GDS unveiled its Cruise Shop system

Agents bemoan lack of aggregation as lines steer trade to own systems

Agents are battling a lack of aggregation in the cruise sector as operators entice them to use their own in-house booking systems.

Amadeus Cruise Shop features most of the main cruise lines in the UK with the notable exception of Carnival UK’s brands: P&O Cruises, Cunard and Princess Cruises.Carnival UK trade arm Complete Cruise Solution pulled out of the Amadeus system in 2011 to save on distribution costs.

Amadeus hopes to entice lines back with a new trade platform developed with CWT Digital to give agents a one-stop shop to search for and compare product easily and quickly.

However, many lines are incentivising agents to use their own technology – resulting in agents switching between multiple systems to earn more commission.

This is slowing agents down, hampering their ability to compare deals and sell cruise and even putting some off selling cruise entirely, the round-table heard.

Paul Frost (pictured right), marketing director at Jetline Cruise, said: “Lines have pushed everyone away from Amadeus because they want to entice you to sell their product.

“This is no bad thing, but to ask an agent, who has a customer who does not know what they want, to log in to Norwegian Cruise Line, to Cruising Power for Royal Caribbean and Celebrity, to Complete Cruise Solution, to Polar for Carnival, well, no agent’s going to do that.

“To run an effective business you can’t have an agent spending three or four hours on one customer trying to find something when they don’t even know what they are trying to find. Agents are fighting against what should be a really simple process.”

Andy Stark, managing director of Global Travel Group, said: “There is aggregation for every other type of product but it seems to me there’s no aggregator for cruise.”

Frost said: “There used to be Amadeus, but cruise lines decided to invest money to keep the agents within their own framework.”

Cruise Shop has solved a key failing of existing systems, according to Frost.

Frost said one of the major failures of cruise booking systems is they do not enable agents to search for a selection of ports with the required dates.

“It will be interesting to see if Amadeus has solved this as this has been one of the biggest problems for agents,” he said.

“You can never ask an agent to make such a search. I would not want my agents to do that sort of enquiry because it would take them three or four hours and they would end up with nothing.”

Having been shown how the new Amadeus system enables a search by multiple destinations, Frost said: “You have just solved a huge issue the industry has.”

 



Quality of cruise content is key issue in battle for sales

Cruise operators could generate more sales through agents if they ensured the content they have on their own sites was available to the trade.

Leading agency consortium Advantage Travel Centres represents a wide range of cruise sellers, from Cruise.co.uk at one end of the market to single-brand high street stores at the other.

To help its members it has developed its own Gateway booking platform with Multicom.

But Claire Brighton, Advantage commercial account manager, said:

“All our agents are looking for some technology that would allow them to quote a cruise in a quicker way.

“We have built our own gateway and tried to put cruise lines on that. The issue is the content that you pull via XML has not got as much information as on their own sites.”

Dan Caplin, managing director of CWT Digital, said there was a wider issue with online content, with neither agents nor operators answering the questions people have.

“It’s the responsibility of cruise lines to get over what makes their product different. And agents need to get content online to change people’s perceptions.”

Jetline’s Frost said many deals loaded on to systems were overly complex, as cruise operators constantly tweaked offers and incentives to drive sales.

“At times there are five different options to book exactly the same cruise,” he said. “People just want simplicity.

“We are a reasonably-sized agent but we have to put huge resources in just to update our website because none of this comes through any technology feed.”

– See more at: http://www.travolution.com/articles/2013/10/11/7171/cruise-agents-demand-simpler-technology-and-more-aggregation.html#sthash.CV5Ni3sg.dpuf