Cruise lines hone hashtag marketing for new ships

“About to sail on the magnificent #regalprincess WYWH” — @mickyarison, Nov. 5, Twitter,l

FORT LAUDERDALE — The day before the Regal Princess naming ceremony, the excitement that accompanies a ship’s inaugural was starting to build. As guests of Princess Cruises stepped off the gangway and into the atrium, they began greeting friends, taking in the sights and sounds and pulling out their cellphones for a few selfies and snaps of the atrium.

Regal Princess/TwitterFor many, the resulting Instagram/Twitter/Facebook post was finished off with the hashtag #regalprincess.

At a table on the atrium’s first deck were two passengers with laptops out. One was Sara Dunaj, Princess Cruises’ social media manager. The other was Simon Duvall, also known as@simontravels and the host of #CruiseChat, a weekly Twitter chat about cruising.

“The Regal Princess hashtag,” he said, “is about to blow up tomorrow.”

A few years ago, with the advent of live Web streaming, consumers and agents could witness in real time the special events surrounding a ship launch: the entertainment, the CEO and captain making speeches, the bottle-breaking and the streamers flying.

But today, launching a new ship is a social media conversation, begun years before the vessel actually hits the open seas. A cruise line will begin using a hashtag — #regalprincess or #quantumoftheseas, to name the two most recently christened ships — and then seed social media with posts about the construction progress, itineraries and onboard innovations. Bloggers and social media influencers, not to mention the traditional news and trade media and everyday cruise fans, will pick up on the posts and rebroadcast them to their own friends and followers.

The result, cruise executives say, is a boon in terms of marketing for the ship and the brand. The resulting pins or posts, meanwhile, are marketing that will live on as cruisers contemplate a cruise on the #carnivalbreeze or #norwegiangetaway.

“I think at this point, social is … one of the most important elements of marketing a new ship launch,” said Gordon Ho, Princess’ chief marketing officer. “So in terms of magnitude, we spend so much time thinking about how our ship launch and marketing activities are going to be social.”

“Heading to NY to rejoin #norwegianbreakaway. Anything you haven’t seen yet that you’d like a picture of?” — @nclandy, May 6, 2013, Twitter

Norwegian Breakaway/InstagramSocial media “has become a critical aspect of telling a story of a new ship to consumers, to trade,” said Andy Stuart, Norwegian Cruise Line’s executive vice president of global sales and passenger services. “It’s expected. And it’s an opportunity to engage with a much broader audience in different ways and across different platforms.”

Norwegian took advantage of the siren call of social media in a big way when it debuted the Norwegian Breakaway in New York in May 2013. The line opened up the WiFi networks so they were complimentary to guests, and it invited nontraditional media to the ceremony — “people only telling the story through social media,” Stuart said.

A week after the ceremony, Norwegian and its communications partner, MTN, said that the line had set a “new record” for social media usage at sea during the inaugural events in New York from May 8 to 12.

“The result generated more than 429,755 Facebook visits over the five-day period, and Instagram registered more than 56,862 visits and 1,715 pictures uploaded with the hashtag #NorwegianBreakaway,” the companies said. “Guests utilized Twitter onboard, and as a result, Norwegian received a record number of mentions and retweets about the content shared from Norwegian Breakaway.”

Duvall said he considered the Breakaway to have been the first big-ship launch to embrace the social media and blogger community by inviting social media influencers onboard and promoting the #norwegianbreakaway hashtag.

“Oasis and Allure of the Seas were the beginning,” he said. “It wasn’t such a critical piece of it back then. It was the beginning of the trend.”

A suddenly dominant tool

MSC Divina/TwitterIf the Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas, in 2009 and 2010 respectively, were the beginning of the trend, there were several subsequent ship launches, such as from Celebrity or Disney, that showed up on major platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Pinterest. On the rivers, attendees at the multiship inaugural for Viking Cruises tapped out observations on their phones using the term #vikingchristening.

In June 2012 for the Carnival Breeze launch, Carnival Cruise Lines teamed up with cruise newbie and former “American Idol” contestant Janell Wheeler, who documented a trip to see the ship fresh from the yard on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and YouTube.

Flash forward to November 2014: Media interested in attending the Quantum of the Seas’ inaugural cruises in New York last weekend were asked to provide their Twitter handles as part of the preregistration process.

“Our #FiatAtSea campaign is one way we generated buzz to launch #MSCDivina”–@KenMuskat #CSM2014 #cruisemkt” — MSCCruisesUSA, March 11, Twitter

For its introduction of the MSC Divina to the U.S. market last fall, the MSC Cruises team saw big results from a social media campaign: It loaded a bright red Fiat 500 onto the Divina and tracked the car and the ship as they made their way from Italy to Florida.

Every day, the ship’s photographer took a picture of the port — Malta, St. Thomas — then sent the pictures out on MSC’s Facebook page and on Twitter with the hashtag #fiatatsea. When the Divina entered Miami, it was escorted by a fleet of specially equipped Fiat 500 watercraft cars, with the hashtag emblazoned on the side, that appeared to drive on the water’s surface — a photo perfect for sharing.

“We got so many people talking about us,” said Ken Muskat, executive vice president of sales, public relations and guest services for MSC in the U.S.

Five bloggers were invited the day before the Divina’s arrival. The day of the inaugural there was a social media meet-up onboard with a stream of live tweets that ended in fireworks (the fireworks photos went viral, Muskat said). Free WiFi was provided for agents and other guests onboard to share their thoughts and photos.

Royal Caribbean Dashboard Quantum of the SeasFrom Nov. 12 through 23, 2013, the period surrounding the ship’s arrival, MSC said the hashtag #mscdivina generated 5,585 tweets and 1.5 million impressions on Twitter. Overall that month, the likes and followers of the line’s Facebook and Twitter pages grew 10%.

With an inaugural cruise a brand can only carry as many press, agents and guests as the berths can hold. But Muskat said social outreach is a way to build buzz and reach a global audience in real time. Muskat, a self-proclaimed Twitter addict, said the platform enables him to have a personal relationship with agents.

“And then there’s the crew,” he added. “They were the first ones tweeting.”

“The Love Boat cast is naming #RegalPrincess today! RT if you’re dreaming of ‘love, exciting and new!'” — @princesscruises, Nov. 6, Twitter

Last week, as the Regal Princess was counting down to its naming ceremony with the cast of “The Love Boat” and VIP celebrities from the show, the tweets and Instagram posts started flying fast and furious, right down to the posts about getting ready to board and pictures of the ship in Port Everglades.

Selfies with “The Love Boat” cast. Photos of the cabins. The atrium. The spa. The ceremony itself, followed by the fireworks.

Once the ship left port on a short preview cruise, the tweets and photos switched to the sail-away and a day trip to Princess Cays. More food, onboard entertainment, then regretful goodbyes — an entire cruise to be lived vicariously through social media.

One of Princess’ social media goals, Ho said, was to create “stories that are sharable;” for example, the cast of “The Love Boat,” who together named the Regal Princess, or the line’s new Chocolate Journeys program with chocolatier Norman Love.

“Inherently, chocolate is something that can be shared abundantly,” he said.

(I recalled my brief trip to the Regal Princess: Crew had passed out a complimentary cabernet-and-chocolate pairing, and I had instantly — automatically? — snapped a picture of my wine glass and chocolate and shared it via Twitter.)

A versatile social toolbox

Carnival Breeze/YouTubeEach platform offers a slightly different tool.

“On Facebook, we’ve been focusing on imagery, because it’s such an image-driven thing these days,” Princess’ Dunaj said. “On Twitter, we’re able to do a lot more live activity, so that’s where we’re doing the live tweeting of the event.” Instagram, of course, is “entirely visual,” and the line created a series of videos to drive buzz for the Regal on YouTube.

A hashtag’s activity can be measured by several metrics, including impressions, which means, roughly, the number of times a tweet with a hashtag could have been seen by a person with a Twitter account. Princess Cruises, for example, has 73,300 followers on Twitter, so each time @princesscruises tweets something, that tweet garners 73,300 impressions. On a busy hashtag, it doesn’t take long for the impressions number to reach into the millions.

Princess said last week that using analytics that enabled it to search for “#regalprincess,” “Regal Princess” or “The Love Boat,” from Nov. 4 through Nov. 11 it recorded more than 83 million Twitter impressions. More than 850 photos were hashtagged #regalprincess.

Companies are measuring social media returns on a more long-term basis — not just one hashtag but several iterations, and not just the hashtags but also what the tweets say.

This enables them not only to respond quickly to a problem or “like” a compliment but also to tailor and refine content to what users want to see.

“I’ll be on it on the 18th! YAY!” — Chris Voegele, Nov. 7, Facebook

“Only a few more days of anticipation, Chris! How excited are you to join us onboard?” — Royal Caribbean International

The Quantum of the Seas has been billed as the most highly anticipated new ship of the year, so it’s not surprising to see a flood of information showing up as a constant stream on the social media “dashboard” on Royal’s public relations site.

“It’s been four years since we launched a new ship, and the whole online landscape has changed,” said Tracy Quan, Royal Caribbean’s associate vice president of global corporate communications.

“Right from the very beginning, we knew we had to do it differently than just doing traditional launches; we knew we had to leverage all the social channels out there.”

Royal, which has also refined the art of the “reveal” — i.e., producing a splashy event to draw attention to new facilities or programs onboard — incorporated social media. For example, company President Adam Goldstein co-hosted a Google Hangout to coincide with the reveal of its Dynamic Dining program (aka #dynamicdining on #quantumoftheseas).

Quantum of the Seas/FacebookFor travel agents, in addition to being able to repost, repin or retweet Royal’s public posts, Royal said there have been daily Quantum-related posts on the Facebook page of Vicki Freed, the senior vice president of sales and trade support and service, and Freed conducted a Facebook chat with travel partners earlier this month.

It also houses social media sample copy and images on its LoyalToYouAlways.com trade site for agents to share with clients. A Facebook campaign for the trade is forthcoming.

The line has refined some of its early strategies from the Oasis and Allure debut. For example, on the Quantum debut it’s partnering with “experience advisors” outside of the travel industry to extend its reach, such as Michael Schwartz of the Michael’s Genuine gastropub on culinary (4,000-plus Instagram followers, to use one statistic), former NFL linebacker Dhani Jones on sports and fitness (75,000 followers on Twitter) and HGTV personality Genevieve Gorder on cabin decor (70,000 likes on Facebook).

“It’s not about who we know; it’s about who they know, who they reach,” Quan said. “So they can just amplify. … In our bid to always try to expand our audience reach, we want to be able to speak to new-to-cruisers.”

It has also continued to post making-the-ship videos to YouTube, but the company has been publishing shorter videos, which Quan said was more in line with viewer preferences today.

On Royal Caribbean International’s YouTube channel, a video about the robotic bartender in the Quantum’s Bionic Bar had been viewed nearly 10,000 times as of last week; a video titled “All New Technology Onboard Smartship Quantum of the Seas” posted in August has been viewed more than 42,000 times.

Quan said the videos serve two purposes: to satisfy media and consumers who are hungry for new content and also to serve as story ideas.

Viking Cruises/Pinterest“If we talk about the behind-the-scenes on the making of the Bionic Bar, we get media who wouldn’t typically cover us, like the tech media, approaching it,” she said. “How did we come up with the concept? How did we come up with the development?”

And of course, during the ship launch this weekend the line threw down the barriers to the wireless network to enable all who sailed onboard to Facebook, Instagram, tweet, Vine and pin to their hearts’ content.

Halo effect

Stewart Chiron, aka the Cruise Guy (@cruiseguy) and the owner of Leisure Pros, was one of the social media aficionados fresh off the #regalprincess who last week was readying for #quantumoftheseas.

“Social media is so vitally important to businesses today to get your messages out and communicate with people,” he said. The Quantum, he said, “is going to have a halo effect. It is going to be able to showcase what cruising is all about.”

J.D. Andrews, a travel videographer and photographer who goes by @earthxplorer, said that when he’s onboard, he “constantly” posts on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook with his phone (and shares more “professional” photography on his website, earthxplorer.com, when he gets home). He doesn’t have a minimum or maximum number of posts or a concrete plan. “The only ‘plan’ I’ve ever had is to share my adventure, the things that I find fun and interesting,” he wrote in an email.

Andrews, who said he had been using social media since 2007, said he loved the interaction with followers: “they can ask me questions in the moment, and if I don’t know it’s easy enough to find them the answer.”

He said he thought that change has come to the cruise industry. “It seems that, finally, each cruise line has come to their own ‘tipping point,’ either by necessity or trying to keep up with their competition, and it’s about time. It’s the only way to post what your company is doing, assist in customer service and share the exciting world of travel directly to your consumer.

“And it’s free.”

Cruise Lines Focus on Meetings at Sea

Onboard meetings are a lucrative market for travel agents

 

<p>Seabourn Cruise Lines is one brand ready to host meetings on the move. // © 2014 Seabourn Cruise Lines</p><p>Feature image (above): Given the...

Relatively few travel agents are sales specialists in the lucrative meetings market. That could change, however, as cruise lines increase their focus on attracting meetings business and develop specific tools and services to help agents tap into the market.

Meetings are big business in the U.S., according to a study released earlier this year by PricewaterhouseCoopers US. The study, which quantified the size of the U.S. meetings market in 2012 and updated a similar survey conducted in 2009, sized the market at 1.8 million meetings that drew 225 million participants and generated $280 billion in direct spending. The participant volume represented a 10 percent increase over the results in 2009.

Given the sheer scope of the market, it is no surprise that the cruise industry is embracing onboard meetings by designing vessels with state-of-the-art meeting space and high tech audio/visual capabilities that rival — or exceed — what is available at land-based resorts.

“Over the past several years, there has been an explosion in the popularity of conducting meetings and conferences at sea,” says Lori Cassidy, director of global corporate meetings, incentives and charters for Royal Caribbean International. “For the past three years, our line has shown consistent double-digit growth in group meetings at sea.”

Why the upswing in corporate and special interest bookings? When comparing a land-based resort to a similar-class cruise ship and including costs for meals, entertainment, presentation equipment and meeting space, an all-inclusive meeting on a cruise ship can shave 20 percent to 30 percent off the cost of the event.

“Cost savings are historically in the double-digit range, considering the wide scope of inclusive amenities and experiences aboard a cruise ship,” says Ron Gulaskey, global director of corporate, incentive and charter sales at Celebrity Cruises. “These benefits, along with the seamless support we offer agents both in selling tools and event planning, make meetings at sea a no-brainer.”

Tax breaks are a major incentive for businesses considering booking a meeting at sea. According to IRS tax codes, any ship that holds a meeting program within the North American region (including the U.S., Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Pacific Islands, Canada and Mexico) will qualify for a tax deduction.

While this can become a major selling factor for agents whose clients are looking for the biggest bang for their meeting buck, there are many caveats to the tax code. The best approach is for agents to consult with the cruise line directly for clarification on applicable tax deductions — if that is the client’s goal.

Another major selling point is the novelty and fresh perspective a meeting at sea offers corporate clients.

“Taking people to an environment they don’t experience often or have never been to shifts their perspective altogether,” says Jo Kling, co-founder of Landry & Kling.  “They’re not in a hotel ballroom, thinking: ‘Here we go again.’”

How to Get Started
There is considerable help available for agents interested in getting involved in booking meetings at sea.

One resource is the Landry & Kling. The company was founded in 1982 as a distribution channel linking the cruise industry and corporate America. Landry & Kling arranges meetings at sea for its own clients and works with travel agents who want assistance on booking onboard meetings based on a revenue sharing program. The company’s website contains numerous documents on tax implications and cost savings available to clients who book meetings at sea.

Inspirational Journeys, another company that specializes in arranging corporate meetings at sea, also has information on its website regarding tax implications of onboard meetings.

Travel agents can also get help from individual cruise lines.

Holland America Line (HAL) prides itself on taking a highly personalized, concierge-style approach to helping travel agents plan and sell meetings at sea, according to Eva Jenner, vice president, North America, of field, charter and incentive sales for HAL and Seabourn. One key service offered is a pre-cruise conference call with all critical shipboard managers, the booking travel agent and a representative of the client, to ensure that everything goes as planned onboard.

While the market for meetings at sea is booming, many travel agents are unaware of the meetings facilities and services available onboard.

“Perhaps the biggest challenge our cruise line faces is getting agents who haven’t sold a meeting at sea onboard a ship,” Cassidy says. “Once they see what we can bring to the table, they get it.”

MSC offers free Caribbean cruise with purchase of Med sailing

By Tom Stieghorst
MSC Divina 410MSC Cruises said it will give a free, transferable cruise on select 2014 sailings of MSC Divina in the Caribbean for anyone who books the ship for a Mediterranean cruise next summer before Oct. 31.

A $500 deposit on the Mediterranean cruise is required to take advantage of the offer.

Divina began sailing in North America about a year ago on seven-day Caribbean itineraries out of Miami. It will return next summer to Mediterranean itineraries from May 16 through Sept. 19.

MSC is promoting a $1,899 package that includes roundtrip airfare to Rome or Barcelona, a seven-day cruise, a two-night post-cruise stay in a four-star hotel and all transfers needed.

Travel gateways are New York, Chicago and Miami. Government taxes and fees are extra.