Norwegian Breakaway arrives in Southampton

Norwegian Breakaway arrives in Southampton

By Phil Davies

Norwegian Breakaway arrives in SouthamptonNorwegian Breakaway becomes one of the biggest ships to make its debut in Southampton today for a special trade preview.

The latest Norwegian Cruise Line ship made a pre-inaugural overnight sailing from Rotterdam to arrive in the UK port this morning.

Hundreds of agents will be on board as the 4,028-passenger ship is showcased today by senior executives led by chief executive Kevin Sheehan.

They will be able to earn up to 4% bonus commission for their agencies by attending educational sessions onboard.

Norwegian believes the Engage and Reward initiative on board new ship Norwegian Breakaway is a first for the travel industry.

Agents will be given a unique barcode on arrival, which they will have scanned as they attend ship tours and presentations from senior managers, Ace and Travel Weekly among others.

The maximum bonus commission they can earn is 4%, which will be available to all staff in their agencies between May 15 and June 14 for sailings before the end of 2013.

Agents are being given the opportunity to meet representatives from key cruise destinations as they move through check-in and embarkation at Southampton.

Participating destinations include Alaska, Seattle, Miami, Clearwater Beach, Barcelona, Malaga and Palma.

Breakaway

Norwegian is also providing £25 bonus commission on new bookings made by May 14 as part of promotional campaign involving price cuts of up to £150 per cabin across various ships in the fleet.

UK & Ireland business development director Nick Wilkinson said: “Our Partners First philosophy recognises the central part that the trade plays in product distribution, and the Engage & Reward programme idea is rooted in that.

“Attending agents will have the opportunity to earn incremental commission for their organisation through attending the various educational elements of the launch activity.”

Norwegian Breakaway leaves tomorrow for its homeport of New York where it will be officially named on May 8. Summer cruises to Bermuda start two days later.

Norwegian Breakaway features seafood restaurant Ocean Blue by New York celebrity chef Geoffrey Zakarian, three Broadway shows, a quarter mile long ‘broadwalk’ and five water slides.

The vessel will be joined in April 2014 by sister ship Norwegian Getaway.

Norwegian Cruise Line pulls out of CruiseCompete

Norwegian Cruise Line pulls out of CruiseCompete

By Tom Stieghorst

This article has been clarified.
Norwegian Cruise Line has asked CruiseCompete to stop using its proprietary materials and wants its contracted agents to refrain from submitting bids on Norwegian voyages to the Des Moines, Iowa-based company.

In a memo sent to some travel outlets the week of March 18, Norwegian Vice President of Sales Camille Olivere said Norwegian would not sign new contracts with agencies that use CruiseCompete.

Further, under some circumstances Norwegian said it could cancel existing contracts with agents found to be submitting bids on Norwegian cruises to CruiseCompete.

“I very much appreciate your willingness to support our decision as it relates to CrusieCompete,” the memo said.

Olivere could not be reached to elaborate. A Norwegian spokeswoman said she was traveling and unavailable.

Account holders at CruiseCompete can request bids on cruises on a particular itinerary or ship, specifying dates and cabin preferences. The company tells consumers that more than 300 agencies are available to bid on the cruises. Consumers are notified of the bids and can contact the agencies when and if they want.

Olivere’s memo cited several frustrations with the way agents interact with CruiseCompete. In particular, she said, contracted accounts have access to higher commissions than smaller retail accounts, can use group discounts and get marketing funds from Norwegian.

She said a contract partner’s ability to sell its own “packaged product” during periodic timeframes is disrupted by having Norwegian cruises on a “facilitated site” like CruiseCompete. She also said rebating can’t be monitored in such an environment.

In addition, some Norwegian travel partners have bid down commissions or have offered net rates intended for packaging purposes.

“Not only is this activity a breach of the sales and marketing agreement that travel partners like you have signed with Norwegian, it is also negatively impacting the great progress we have made with the Norwegian brand and business,” Olivere’s memo said.

Olivere said Norwegian officials would “avail ourselves of all contractual remedies” up to and including the cancellation of accounts found to have bid on the site.

In a statement, CruiseCompete CEO Bob Levinstein said, “We have reached out to Norwegian Cruise Line to address their concerns. The door is still open, as far as we are concerned, to find a solution.”

Levinstein said 55% of cruises booked through CruiseCompete are not with the lowest bidder.

“We are all about providing the consumer with choices and fair competition in the marketplace, as mandated by ethics and the law.”
 

Clarification: Norwegian Cruise Line has asked CruiseCompete to stop using its proprietary materials and wants its contracted agents to refrain from bidding Norwegian cruises on the site. A previous version of this report said that Norwegian was asking retailers to stop working with CruiseCompete, but it didn’t specify that the action was limited to bidding Norwegian’s product, and to agencies with a Norwegian contract.

Correction: The article misspelled the name of CruiseCompete CEO Bob Levinstein.

Norwegian Cruise Line unveils magic-themed dinner theater

Norwegian Cruise Line unveils magic-themed dinner theater

By Tom Stieghorst
IllusionariumMIAMI BEACH — Norwegian Cruise Line unveiled a magic-themed dinner theater called Illusiionarium for the Norwegian Getaway ship, a ship that will debut in Miami in early 2014.

Speaking at the Cruise Shipping Miami conference, Norwegian CEO Kevin Sheehan said the concept was inspired by magicians, the science fiction of Jules Verne and popular blockbuster movies featuring supernatural characters.

Illusionarium will replace the space occupied by Cirque Dreams on Norwegian Epic and Breakaway. It will have between 230 and 240 seats and the charge will be in the range of $35.

The centerpiece of the restaurant will be a video dome 30 feet in diameter that will serve as a projection screen for mystical places and scenes.

“When we saw some depictions of this, it was unbelievable to me that we could actually pull this off,” Sheehan said.

The Illusionarium will offer 12 shows a cruise, two shows a night.

Norwegian also announced it will feature a fireworks show on each Getaway cruise.